Summary: Sequel to Show Me Something Blue. Set at the beginning of Season Five but will branch off-canon. Spike is in LA and about to return to Buffy when he runs into some trouble. A new threat to the Slayer appears, bringing his own brand of blackmail and magic that will tear all their lives apart.
Author's Notes: When I finished SMSB many people called for a sequel. That's not usually a road I travel, but an idea sparked and I actually wrote it down for future reference and now here it is! this is written for the LJ community Seasonal_Spuffy.
Rating: NC-17
No amount of retail therapy was going to make it easier to return to
being plain old Buffy Summers, Slayer the. She’d had the most amazing
convergence of power zinging through her body and it had allowed her to
take out Adam like he was nothing more substantial than a moth. Now she
felt empty and useless—ordinary—and it was the second most deflating
experience she’d had lately. The first of course was that she’d lost
the second vampire that had meant anything to her. Her stupidity had
forced distance between her and Spike and Buffy still didn’t fully
understand why that fact made her ache inside.
Buffy flopped back on her bed, sucked in a huge breath and contemplated
her ceiling. It was amazingly cobweb free and just that alone gave her
a happy. Man she was pathetic. Just lying still, she could almost feel
the remnant buzz of all that primitive power. It amazed her how it
manifested. How connecting with her friends and Giles had made her into
something that could beat anything—and with pretty butterflies to boot!
But with the end of the fight went the end of her power. They’d been
damned lucky to get away with the spell at all, left exposed to the
fury of freed demons and monsters as they had been. With no Spike to
watch their backs.
Not that they needed Spike watching their backs—or their fronts.
Especially not Buffy. She didn’t need a coward who ran at the first
sign of things not going his way.
A churning guilt in her belly pushed Buffy into a roll and she buried
her hot, tear-streaked face into the comforter. This was the last thing
she needed right now, feeling all vulnerable and alone. Thoughts of
Spike had been brutally banished to that part of her brain she only
visited on rare occasions when she was up for a bit of
self-flagellation. It was kind of unexpected for Buffy to be reaching
for those moments after one of the biggest highs of her life. She
should be out celebrating, partying like it was 1999, but instead, here
she was, alone and brooding.
Why did Spike leave her?
She knew the short answer. Riley. Not that her overbearing TA really
had a shot so soon after the other romantic disasters of her life. But
was seeing her at the Bronze with another guy really enough to send a
chipped vampire into the world with nothing but his name to pave his
way?
As much as she wished she could deny it, Buffy knew that being with
Spike had started an emotional stir in her heart. Had he felt something
for her as well? Was that why he hadn’t wanted to stage their break-up?
Was that why he’d run from Sunnydale faster than a roadrunner on speed
at the possibility she might be interested in someone else?
She hadn’t been. Buffy wasn’t sure what Spike had thought he’d seen,
but all she’d done was speak to Riley. She’d barely even noticed him
there when she’d felt the vampire’s approach.
These questions were going to make her head explode—she just knew it.
Sniffling miserably, Buffy resolved to ignore the stab of longing for
the black-clad thorn in her side. The sound of the doorbell was exactly
what she needed to launch that objective and so she jumped from her
bed, swiped at her face with the sleeve of her sweater, and bounced
with determined peppiness down the stairs.
Flinging it open, the smile froze on her face as Buffy encountered the
strangest looking courier she’d ever seen. Tan-coloured fur covered his
hands and neck, his face startlingly bare except for the swollen green
lips and luminous yellow eyes.
“Got a delivery for Buffy Summers,” he informed, clucking his tongue
impatiently as Buffy struggled to come to terms with the weirdness.
“That’d be…uh…me?” She shivered at his piercing glare and took a comforting step back inside and closer to a weapon.
“You sure about that, sweetheart?” The oily expression seemed shocking
when teemed with the endearment and Buffy struggled against her
revulsion.
“Um, yeah. The surest.”
“Right. Sign here.” He held out a clipboard and Buffy hastily scribbled
her name and caught the smallish parcel the demon courier tossed her
way. His focus had already left her as he jogged down the porch steps
and back to his van. Gunning the engine, he was down the drive and
spinning into the street in less time than it took Buffy to blink.
So she did it twice.
Closing the door on the bizarre experience, Buffy looked at the box
wrapped unassumingly in brown paper, and frowned. It was no bigger than
the palm of her hand. Perplexed, she walked to the kitchen and
retrieved a sharp knife to cut open the seal. And it was with a sense
of fascinated apprehension that Buffy held her breath and popped off
the lid.
There was a note. The first thing she saw was a note with an
old-fashioned script. Something about it caused a fire to rise to life
in her stomach and her body flushed with wonder. Fingers shaking, she
took out the sheet of folded paper with her name written prettily on
the top flap, and sighed.
Slayer,
Searched far and wide for a remedy to your little problem. Make sure
you burn this paper as soon as you understand its intent, though, won’t
you, pet? Don’t want the wrong sort to get their hands on it.
This pendant is more than something pretty to adorn your neck. It will
protect you against all those who might choose to impose their magical
will upon you. No one will be able to look at it and identify its
purpose. Your little witch friend might get a headache with trying to
decipher its secrets, but she never will. To her, it’s just a pretty
accessory for your varied wardrobe, but it will keep you safe. You have
my word on that.
I can’t make you wear it, luv, but I hope you’ll do me the honour of doing this one little thing for you.
Till we meet again,
Yours,
Spike
As four long months had passed, following Spike’s cowardly run from the
Hellmouth, Buffy had been positive he’d forgotten all about her. How
she’d believed that was slightly beyond her, being that Spike had
proven on more than two occasions previously that he’d never
surrendered his desire to kill her and make her his third slayer notch
on his belt. Here was the evidence that not only had she remained on
Spike’s mind—to wherever he’d vanished—but that he was plotting ways to
keep her safe and protected. And alive.
She could never have anticipated how happy that fact would make her feel.
Placing the letter from Spike safely on the bench for one more
read-through before she destroyed it, as requested, Buffy poked her
finger into the box and admired the pretty pendant. It looked old, a
metal disk made possibly of brass, flattened around the edges to make
it look Aztec in origin. Buffy fell in love with it at first sight, but
the second it touched her skin she was warmed with the knowledge that
this piece was sourced especially for her.
There was no argument in Buffy’s head as she lifted the pendant and
clasped it at the back of her neck. It fell heavily and low between her
breasts and she shivered for the promise it held and the remnant touch
of Spike. Closing her eyes to better savour this momentous occasion,
Buffy breathed in deeply.
Spike hadn’t forgotten her.
As happy tears stung her eyes, Buffy laughed out loud. There’d be no
getting rid of him now that she wore his jewellery. Strangely, she was
totally all right with that.
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