Summary: Four years have passed since a certain peroxide blond vampire was last seen in Sunnydale losing the Gem of Amara to the Slayer. Since that time the Initiative has introduced chipped vampires into a form of slavery, available to selected bidders. Weary and disillusioned, Buffy succumbs to her absent Watcher’s advice to obtain a vampire bodyguard to help her in the fight against evil.
Rating: NC-17
By the time he departed the Council’s Headquarters, later than he would
have liked, Ethan could feel the beginnings of a stress headache
settling behind his eyes. Little wonder, considering the amount of work
he’d put in over the last few hours.
Pausing at the head of the steps leading down to the almost empty
London street, he pinched the bridge of his nose as he made a quick
mental inventory, a last check before making his break for freedom.
Inside the leather pilot’s bag, slung loosely over his shoulder, he
carried a variety of appropriated items to assist him now…and later.
Along with a handful of Council credit cards, various charms and texts
purloined from the depths of the vaults, Ethan had stashed away several
vials of the Cruciamentum concoction in a thermally chilled container.
The last had been an act of impulse, after he’d taken pleasure in
destroying the instructions for making the stuff and its use – from
books and databases alike. He’d love to be able to see their faces the
next time they tried to use it on one of their slayers.
Ethan also had possession of four passports besides Giles’. A spot
check had rewarded him with several he could use with a simple glamour
to subtly alter his appearance, as each passport owner’s height and
general build matched his own closely enough. He’d downloaded and saved
to CD enough new spells and recently documented prophecies to keep him
occupied for the foreseeable future…if he was a Watcher. Dear Giles had
been more than lax when it came to computer security, and it wouldn’t
surprise Ethan in the least if the silly old fart had no clue about the
latest technological advances – and had been too priggish to listen and
learn from others.
Not unhappy to squander the Council’s dosh, Ethan had booked himself on
three different flights to the States under three different names. His
final destination had yet to be decided, although Sunnydale was
beckoning him with the pull of its Hellmouth, and, as insurance, there
was an additional flight booked to Australia under the name of Rupert
Giles. With luck, it would be enough to throw the Initiative stooges
off his scent.
Murmuring a supplication to Janus under his breath, Ethan tripped
lightly down the stone steps and strode off in the direction of the
nearest Tube station…and escape.
***
In his wildest dreams Angel had never thought it would come to this.
Not once had it occurred to him that Buffy, his Buffy, would chose to
defend and protect his worthless grandchilde in preference to handing
him over. For a moment he teetered on the edge of capitulation, but the
moment was fleeting and in its place crept a cold determination to have
his own way. If his Golden Slayer, she who had set him on his road to
redemption, was turning away from him then he had no other choice but
to take his fate firmly into his own hands…whatever the cost.
However much it hurt him – and it did, truly it did – Angel could not
turn his back on The Powers who had declared him to be their Champion.
It was remarkable that Buffy had lasted this long, really; a slayer’s
normal life expectancy being so much shorter than the almost seven
years she had so far survived. She’d been a wonderful servant for good,
a shining example of everything a Chosen One should be, but it was
obvious now to Angel that somehow Buffy had been corrupted if she
couldn’t, or wouldn’t, admit to his superior understanding and need of
Spike. So much promise gone to waste, his beautiful girl tainted beyond
his ability to save.
Fortunately for him, Angel’s advisers had foreseen just this situation
and had insisted measures be taken to cover it’s eventuality. He made a
mental note to authorise a bonus once this night’s work had been
successfully concluded. Steeling his unbeating heart, the souled
vampire looked across the seemingly unbridgeable divide of the table
separating him from Buffy. He thought she’d never looked more beautiful
than now, her tawny gold hair reflecting the muted lighting, a flush
colouring her cheeks and her hazel eyes flashing fire his way. Sighing
inwardly, regretfully, he made ready to prepare for the end game.
“Let’s not be too hasty about this,” he said, forcing a smile. “I’m
going to get another drink from the bar, can I get you another?”
Buffy glanced down at her barely touched glass of water, her raised
eyebrows telling Angel without words how redundant his question was.
She watched as he weaved his way through the tables of the slowly
filling restaurant and disappeared from sight into the adjoining bar.
Without warning a shudder shook her body, someone was walking on her
grave. Unbidden, a memory surfaced of a family day out at the funfair
when she’d been young - maybe nine or ten. It had been a gloriously
sunny day full of laughter. Her parents were still very much together
then, smiles never leaving their faces as they moved from rides to
attractions and back again. Even Dawn was there, face and fingers messy
from cotton candy and whining when she couldn’t go on the rides meant
for those bigger than her small self. She knew the Dawn memories
weren’t really true, of course, that they were just an addition to her
memory implanted by those monks, but they were precious nevertheless.
The only blot on an otherwise perfect day had been when they’d entered
the Hall of Mirrors. Mom and dad had been giggling like teenagers as
they watched their reflections distort and throw back twisted views of
themselves. Buffy had been amused to see herself impossibly long and
tall – not so amused at the short and squat with a squished face. But
Dawn, poor Dawn… Her sister had taken one look in the first mirror and
screamed, “That’s not me! That’s not me! I don’t look like that!”
It had taken a while before the hysterical sobs could be quietened and
Dawn could be persuaded to look again. Buffy had held her sister’s
sticky hand firmly as they both stood in front of the mirrors again.
This time Dawn had been fascinated, peering at the changes in her
reflection as she bounced up and down, waved her arms and pulled faces.
Buffy recalled clearly her small sister’s solemn announcement. “They’re
lying mirrors, aren’t they, Buffy? They’re fun but bad, ‘cos they don’t
tell the truth.”
Why was she thinking of that now? What did it mean?
“Miss Summers?”
With a start, Buffy found Walt had silently materialised beside her. “Yes?”
“I do apologise for interrupting your evening, but I have a message for
you…from Willy,” he spoke softly, waiting until he had her full
attention before continuing. “Your home is currently surrounded by a
group of gentlemen who accompanied your…dinner partner from LA. In anticipation, transport
has now arrived to convey you back home. I trust this is to your
satisfaction.”
Relief, and a not unexpected surge of adrenalin, flooded through Buffy.
Despite her truthful promise to stand between Angel and his obsession
with Spike, there was no doubting she would feel better back down in
the valley, back on her home turf, if the worst came to the worst. Even
now, after everything that had been said tonight, she could barely
grasp that Angel was prepared to go to such extreme lengths to regain
Spike. His reasoning for why he wanted to take Spike away was as off as
everything else about tonight. There had been more than a touch of
Angelus in his attitude, his arrogance, the attempted manipulation, yet
she didn’t doubt for one moment that his soul was still attached. This,
somehow, only made it worse.
Anger at Angel was swiftly replaced with concern for Spike and her
friends as she nodded to Walt and stood. Gathering her purse before
following him to a rear exit adjacent to the kitchens, Buffy glanced
back once, relieved that there was no sign of Angel returning to the
table. That confrontation, and she knew there would be one, could wait.
Once they had slipped outside, Walt felt free to speak openly to the
Slayer. “There are six of his people outside your house, Slayer.
Willy’s got a bunch of regulars standing by to give assistance. They’re
at 1615 Revello. Clem’s waiting to take you there now.”
Buffy had been walking beside him, almost trotting to keep up with his
long strides as they passed the cleanest looking dumpsters she’d ever
seen and made their way round to the car park. She filed away for
future delving the question of how Willy knew where she was – though
she thought Walt could probably answer that question right now – and
what he was doing on Revello.
Once she would have let little things like this distract her and gone
all kablooey, losing sight of the big picture as she niggled at the
details. Now only two things mattered to her: get away from Angel and;
get back to Revello to protect her friends – Tara, Willow and Spike.
Though if the chance to beat up something, or someone, presented
itself, well, she’d grab, and maybe even throttle, the opportunity with
both hands.
Clem’s funny little red car was easy to spot. How the large grey demon
managed to fit into it was a testament to the TARDIS effect which
seemed to be built into these small, foreign models. Buffy couldn’t
help but glance towards the sleek monster Angel had driven, stopping in
surprise when she noticed its former perfection marred by two flat
front tyres.
“You wouldn’t know anything about…” she trailed off, waving a hand
towards the vandalised auto. A sly grin answered her. Buffy smiled
back, grateful for the help in hindering Angel’s undoubted pursuit.
“Thanks, Walt. Just don’t be around when he finds out.”
“I won’t, Slayer,” he promised, raising his hand in farewell as he turned to retrace his steps.
Clem barely waited for Buffy to pull the passenger door closed before pulling away as if the devil was on his heels.
Maybe he was.
***
Spike was trying to feel positive but, in view of the information he’d
wheedled out of Tara and Willow, it was difficult. The eavesdropping
wards they’d so carefully set earlier were now being adapted. Spike had
impressed upon them the importance for the occupiers of the house -
namely the Slayer and himself - to be able to sense who or what might
be lurking outside, so they were now busy changing the smothering
curtain they’d erected into something more resembling a one-way mirror.
He’d been impressed with how quickly the two women grasped what was
needed, agreed on the amendment to be made and worked in perfect
unison. But in other areas things weren’t looking so good.
Willow had enthusiastically extolled the merits of her fireball spell,
until it had been made apparent that she’d need an open window or door
to allow it to leave the house – and that would only work once the
wards were down or had been altered. The biggest drawback was that in
order to use magic they would need to see who they were directing their resources against, and lowering their defence
would leave them vulnerable to attack. As Spike had suspected, the
wards would be great in blocking magical devices but not so good for
the more mundane type of weapon normally used by humans: guns, grenades
and other, less mystical but equally as deadly, projectiles would need
a better barrier than they had at their fingertips right now.
There was another problem, too. Tara was loathe to harm anyone if there
was some other way to protect themselves. She’d been against the idea
of Willow using her fireball spell in a residential area and, for the
first time, Spike was given an insight into just how much Willow relied
on Tara for guidance with her magic use. It was somewhat refreshing to
find he was not the only being who believed magic had consequences,
even the relatively small stuff. And whilst he would have happily
argued in favour of torching the rest of the neighbourhood if he could
be sure it would leave Buffy’s house standing, he somehow couldn’t see
the Slayer beaming to find her home in the middle of the smouldering
wreckage of her community.
A compromise of sorts had been reached when Willow had suggested using
a binding spell instead, something to hold off the enemy and give
Willy’s crew time to intervene. It had its drawbacks as the two lovers
would still have to be able to physically see their targets, the
redhead being adamant on limiting the use of her power.
“Sorry, recovering addict here,” she’d told the vampire apologetically. “Need to keep things small and focussed or…”
Spike had nodded in understanding. Bloodlust was a bit like that, from
what he remembered; easier to control when you weren’t hungry, but hard
to ignore when the taste took over. He knew they’d do their best, he
just didn’t know if it would be enough for whatever they faced.
There was no doubt when the wards had been adjusted. Immediately, Spike
could hear the vague heartbeats of several humans, and at least one
demon, on the periphery of his senses. Without the warning from Willy
he would have assumed they belonged to neighbours or passers-by. Hell,
he probably wouldn’t have picked up on them at all until they moved
nearer, trespassed the boundaries of the Slayer’s home - their home.
He nodded at Tara when she rejoined him in the hallway. “I can sense
out now, Glinda. Mostly human, but there’s at least one demon out
there. Don’t know if it’s one of theirs or one of Willy’s mates.”
Tara rubbed along her arms, suddenly feeling chilled. It had been a
long time since she’d found herself in a similar situation, facing a
threat without Buffy present to steer the path clear to safety. An arm
sliding around her waist signalled when Willow joined them.
Wait. That was all they could do for now.
***
Snapping his cell phone shut, Angel turned back to the bar to collect
the wine he’d used as an excuse to give himself time and some privacy
to call Smith. His instructions had been explicit and the fool had
better get things right this time or he’d be seeing just how angry
Angel could become when disappointed. The Sunnydale Heights had filled
noticeably since he’d arrived, and most of the crowd appeared to be
have flocked around the bar indulging in pre-dinner drinks and
convivial chatter. He forced himself to patience as he waited to be
served, then carried his spoils back into the restaurant proper.
The empty table bore mute witness to his fury on finding Buffy gone.
***
Without a doubt, Buffy would have rather faced another apocalypse than
be sitting beside Clem as the small car hurtled down the suddenly
life-threatening road. And, yeah, she knew her driving skills were
almost non-existent, but even she would have touched the brakes with a
little more sympathy than the saggy skinned creature beside her, the
one who seemed intent on seeing if her heart would fall out of her
mouth as they slid into each and every bend on the long way down. No
time to stare at the pretty sights as they flashed past the windows.
Buffy’s eyes were firmly fixed on the snaking road ahead and if it
hadn’t been for fear of distracting him, she’d have taken to screaming
at Clem after the first hundred yards.
One thing was for certain, her adrenalin would be pumping fast and
furious through her veins once they reached Revello Drive. She’d hit
her home turf running and look out anyone, or anything, which stood in
her way.
***
Smith slipped the cell phone back in his jacket pocket and pursed his
thin lips. Was it wrong to feel more than a little smug that his boss
had failed to sweet talk the Slayer into giving up her recent
acquisition? Possibly, but he was only human - or at least, mostly. At
the snap of his fingers two of the security personnel selected to
assist on this project soundlessly approached to receive whispered
instructions. Once they had left to retrieve the bait from the van, he
straightened and left his hiding place in the bushes of 1628 Revello to
walk the short distance to the Slayer’s front door. Not bothering to
knock or ring the bell, he delivered the agreed ultimatum.
“Hostile Seventeen, you have five minutes in which to join me before
more drastic measures are taken to persuade you to comply.” Smith could
hear nothing from inside the house and motioned for the D’ral shaman,
hanging back by the tree, to join him; the magic dealer always gave him
the creeps but was a necessary evil – so to speak. “What are you
picking up from in there? He is there, isn’t he? Would just be our luck
if the Slayer has him stashed somewhere else.”
The robed demon tilted his head to one side and stared at the closed
front door with gleaming green eyes. “It has protection, the house. I
cannot see inside. Why would the Slayer remove her slave from protected
place? Does not sense make.”
Not what Smith wanted to hear. He had no choice but to carry on as if
it were a given that the vampire were in there. For all they knew he
could be chained in a cage in the basement, unable to reach them. No
matter. They’d try it this way first and then just break in if they had
to. As long as the Slayer stayed away there should be no problem and
enough time to take whatever measures they deemed necessary for
success.
A scuffling noise drew his attention away from the shaman and towards
the two black-clad members of the brawn-set, returning with a
dark-haired woman almost floating between them. The boss’s current
favourite toy, one about whom Smith had separate, and completely
confidential orders, from the Senior Partners - all unknown to Angel.
Something to smile about...so he did.
Dark eyes settled on the porch before dropping shut as she lifted her
head and sniffed the air. A small smile, a secret smile, curved her red
mouth as she started to whisper to herself. “Destiny calls, my sweet
dark knight. No more dances for you in the silver light, now all must
be gold or you will refuse to mark a lady’s card and take her for a
whirl across the floor.” Her lips trembled once, the smile slipping
before blooming wider and brighter. “Ah, such things you will do to
annoy daddy, bad daddy, sad daddy, mad daddy. Daddy takes such paths,
twisty ones laid out by masters; he is lost and knows it not. Not for
him the shiny prize he seeks so hard. And soon his consolation will be
gone too.” A pout, then silence. Drusilla swayed lightly, eyes closed
fast and looking more like a sleepwalker than anything else, a
sleepwalker in a crimson gown of velvet.
Smith frowned at the vampire seer. “See, it’s that loose mouth of yours
which is going to get you offed, Drusilla. Your tittle-tattling has
gone on for long enough. If only you could have learnt to be discreet,
well…”
Drusilla glanced at him, another smile hovering. “The stars are
screaming, can’t you hear, silly man? Are you deaf to the wonderful
wrongness, or is your head so full of lying scribbles on dry parchment
that you close your ears to their cries? Tsk! Bad dog! Grrrr! No bone
for you, naughty puppy. No Christmas presents tied up with bows for the
deaf and blind. I know.” She laughed then, a tinkling girlish giggle.
“All your fine plans with be for nought, pride before the fall. And the
meek shall inherit the earth, and the lion will lay with the wolf to
guard the flock, all those little lambs protected from poachers. Such
tender shepherds will allow no mint sauce, no vinegar. Where will the
meat be then? What shall we eat?”
Before he could give in to the temptation to strike the smile from her
face, Smith’s cell phone demanded his attention. One curt phrase was
thrown at him, and the news was not good.
Turning back to face the door he called out, to what he hoped was an
audience within. “Time’s up. Come out now or your Sire becomes dust.”
***
Tara hadn’t thought it possible for the vampire beside her to become
any paler, but she’d been wrong. When the man outside had given his
demands both Willow and Tara had giggled slightly, nervous hysteria
pulling at them both. It had taken just one look at Spike’s face to
kill even that wonky semblance of mirth. Fear and resignation were
there, staining his eyes and tensing the fine muscles of his gaunt
face. None of them had expected such openness from the enemy outside;
it wasn’t what they’d prepared for, in as much as they had prepared for
anything. This directness was off-putting but easily fielded. They
ignored it, simple.
The second time they heard the voice there was no inclination toward laughter.
***
He’d felt her presence, of course he had. A shock after so long apart,
a sudden reconnection to the way things had been when he’d been whole,
as nature had meant him to be. Conflicting emotions tore through him
and his demon. The residue of man he had been stymied by the response
the demon cried out for; wanting to tear through the door and welcome
his family, his dark princess, but also wanting to warn her away from
his home and send her packing.
Spike could feel Red and Glinda, feel their agitation and fear. It took
him a moment to understand that they were afraid of what he would do,
or try to do. And that was his stumbling block.
So much in him had, for so many years, been in the habit of protecting
his Ripe Wicked Plum, and it was his first instinct was to do it
again…now. But the demon had made its choice and it was screaming at
him to stay. Dru had left him, pushed him away when all he’d ever
wanted was to be hers. The Slayer had chosen him, wanted him to be by
her side, picked him out from hundreds of others, given instead of
taken, and made him feel again.
Old loyalties warred with new.
“You can’t go out there, Spike,” Tara’s voice wobbled, but held firmly enough. “I’m sorry, but you just can’t.”
He glanced up from his unseeing perusal of the floor to find the good
witch positioned between him and the door, determination fixed on her
usually placid face. Spike was about to concede, agree – it was what he
wanted, right? – when the tosser outside upset the applecart once and
for all.
“And if that fails to move you, then we’ll just have to remove your
current custodian from the mix. Your choice. It’s make your mind –“
Tara stepped back, frightened to her bones as Spike’s face shifted,
golden eyes glaring at her momentarily before he threw his head back
and howled, a sound of anger and loss which caught her in its
reverberation. As quickly as it had come it was gone, the golden eyes
now an agonised blue eyes looking between her and Willow.
“Let me out. Can’t let them hurt the Slayer.” Spike strove to keep a
handle on his fear, gladly welcoming the support of his demon; together
they could do this, give it up to ensure her safety, watch her back.
Even if it meant they never saw her again, were forever parted from
their unknowing sanctuary. He watched as the two birds communicated
wordlessly, and added his voice to the mix, as low and persuasive as he
knew how to be. “Gotta let me do this. You know that. Tell her…tell her
I’m sorry we didn’t get to dance together, didn’t get a chance at the
nasties. Tell her…thank you, for everything.”
It was strange, watching as the vampire pulled himself up to his full
height and squared his shoulders, all emotion gone now from his face.
Impulsively, Tara moved forward and embraced him, ignoring the way he
held himself stiffly in her arms and only just catching his whispered,
“Thanks, pet.” Then he was going past her, opening the door and
stepping outside.
“Upstairs, Joyce’s old room. It looks over the front of the house and
if we can get the window open without being noticed…” Willow tugged at
Tara’s hand and they flew up the stairs together, eager to be ready if
opportunity – or fate – gave them an opening.
***
In the end it was decided to take only the most inconspicuous onto the
streets. Not a popular move as they were all more than keen to be a
part of the action, agreement only coming when Willy pointed out that
at this rate they’d be too late if they didn’t get a move on. Seeing
the vampiress taken from the van and being closely escorted down to the
Slayer’s house had caused more than a little consternation…and
triggered the need for action. Now.
Willy knew the Slayer was on her way back, should be here very shortly,
but it didn’t take more than a moment for things to go wrong and if
Wolfram & Hart’s minions were making moves, well, time for them to
be covered. The dirty dozen left to circle - as inconspicuously as
twelve variously sized, shaped and coloured demon beings could - to
cover their opponents, all with strict instructions to do their utmost
not to take out any humans unless absolutely necessary or they’d have
the Slayer to answer to.
The two Wolfram & Hart morons stationed at the rear of the Summers’
residence had been knocked unconscious with ease, demons taking their
places as the others moved as close to the front of the house as
possible without giving themselves away. Willy had heard the threat
levelled at the Slayer and quickly sent two of his troop back with the
intel, confident that his comrades would think of something to keep her
safe.
When Spike left the house, presented himself to the arsehole in a suit,
Willy began to wonder if this was all going to end badly after all.
***
The last few days would soon seem like a dream, if he lasted long
enough to be bothered by dreams again. It had been too good to last;
he’d known that on some level. Seemed like nothing would ever be right
in this skewed world where the food owned its predators and
demon-orientated organisations, like Wolfram & Hart, stood beside
them. But it had been something to have a respite from the new reality,
to be seen again, to be real in some way to another being. ‘Slayer.’
Spike stepped off the porch, his eyes never straying from the form of
his Sire, the one who had made it possible for his demon to escape a
distant hell dimension to take up residence in his undead flesh. As
always, Drusilla looked beautiful. Her lustrous dark hair emphasised
her paleness and rich red lips, lips he’d known so well once upon a
century. ‘Ah,
the things we did, my lovely. The fine times we had travelling the
world, taking what we wanted, when we wanted, and not a thought for the
morrow. Fucking and feeding across continents, fighting anything we
fancied for the hell of it.”
“’Allo, princess,” Spike respectfully greeted his maker before being
pushed to his knees by the devil-claimed suit he’d seen at the auction.
He held himself still, fixated on his once and for so long lover as
experienced hands placed the leather-covered metal braid collar around
his neck, leaving it deceptively loose in the knowledge that the only
way to remove it with force would take his head off too. A connecting
strip at the front of the collar led down to the cuffs now being
fastened about his wrists. He ignored the man completely, his senses
taken over fully with the presence of family.
Dru felt the purposes of greater beings coming to bear, the ones who
had whispered such things to her the last few days, shown her path
after path that had – or had not– been taken by her, by Spike, by Daddy
and Grandmum.
Some things stayed the same in all of those possible worlds, some were
reached via a different path. Daddy, the bad one with a soul, always
dusted Darla. Sometimes she came back. Spike always made that deal with
the Slayer to stop Angelus – well, except for the one time he didn’t,
and the world ended. She always pushed Spike away, eventually. Angel
always joined Wolfram & Hart – except for that time he’d ended the
world – and was nearly always blind to the corruption seeping into him
and twisting his cursed soul. Spike always sought out the Slayer. Most
times that ended very badly for her poor dark knight, so eager for love
and belonging, trying to be what he was not for she who wielded the
flaming sword of righteousness. Only when the Slayer had freely chosen
Spike to stand by her side had that path taken better turns, when her
Chosen-ness could look upon his pain as a kind of payment for all that
had gone on before the nasty chip fizzled its blue torture in his head.
Knowing the path before her, having been shown, she delivered the
message she’d been entrusted with, in her own way. “Happy twenty-first,
William. Now you have the key of the door best look after it, sweet
childe. Mummy loves you.”
It only took three strides then he was behind her, stake slipped from
his pocket and with a perfect view of Hostile Seventeen’s face he
thrust it home and withdrew. Dust clouded the devastation on the other
vampire’s face for a second, but not enough to make this less than a
most satisfactory moment for Smith.
There was a moment of perfect stillness, and then all hell broke loose.
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