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
Buffy woke slowly, a cough tickling at her throat.
The alarm on her bedside clock had obviously sounded and switched
off—or hadn’t sounded at all—because not a mark reflected an angry
slayer fist objecting to the time of day.
It was an effort to sit up in bed and Buffy realised she was sick. Her
tummy felt woozy, her head was stuffed with cotton, her throat was raw
and on fire, and just everything hurt. Nausea rose quickly as soon as
she dragged herself out of her covers and found her feet, forcing her
to the bathroom down the hall before she’d even had time to put on her
fluffy pink piggy slippers. Retching drained her remaining strength and
Buffy dragged herself up to rinse out her mouth and barely made it back
to bed before she was unable to move her body any further.
She hadn’t been this sick for a long time. In fact, it was so long she
couldn’t remember ever being this sick. Not even years ago when she’d
landed in hospital had it seemed quite this bad—she’d been able to
still get up and dress, heading off to patrol even if it was a crazy
thing to do. Right now Buffy doubted she could pull her jeans on or
find her shoes.
So, she didn’t have to go to class today. No biggie. It
wasn’t like things were going so well this year anyway. She missed
sharing a dorm room with Willow, though. Right now some good old
fashioned Willow concern would have boosted her spirits to be sure.
It’d probably take at least until lunchtime before anyone even realised
she was missing.
Buffy sighed, and then groaned at the pain that sigh cost her. Closing
her eyes, she succumbed to the weakness that washed over her and fell
back toward sleep.
~ * ~ * ~ * ~
“A new slayer has been Called.”
Quentin Travers’ news bounced around in his head for what felt like
hours before Giles shook himself back to the present and fought to
focus. “But…but what can that mean? Is Faith—?”
“I’ve already been in touch with the prison and Faith has been in the
infirmary with some kind of fever since early this morning. She is
apparently too weak to even move.” The Head of the Council sounded
mystified even as he relayed the facts. “I’ve had a Council doctor
examine her. It would seem that Faith has lost all of her slayer
powers.”
Giles felt chilled. He was sure that he wasn’t even residing in
Sunnydale anymore, hearing Quentin’s voice from a further distance than
the phone at his ear. Buffy rushed to the forefront of his thoughts and
hesitation battled with urgency to go and investigate how his own
slayer faired this morning.
“I must go and find Buffy,” he muttered, already trying to sift through his knowledge for a demon that could have done this.
“Rupert, whatever this is, it’s powerful. I fear that it is magic of
some kind. It’s almost as if the slayer centre has been torn from Faith
and left behind a frailer girl than when she first gained her powers.
Just…be careful.”
Quentin’s uncommon concern lifting his spirits somewhat, Giles’s
thoughts suddenly snagged on one obvious piece of information relayed
at the beginning of the conversation.
“The new slayer,” he began, filled with trepidation. “Who is it?”
“Her name is Charlotte Robinson. You might remember her mother,
Susannah?” The question was pointed and Giles knew it. Travers was
stepping on a part of his past that he’d buried long ago—the Ripper
phase—and it made him feel ill to revisit it in even this small a
capacity. A name. A child he’d never been able to have. A decision
ripped away from him as if he was as inconsequential as the dirt that
decorated his shoe.
An unsteady hand rubbed at his forehead and Giles wished he’d had
something stronger for lunch. His best bottle of cognac would have done
the job nicely.
A word bounced around the inside of his head and hope flourished in
spite of his greatest fears. ‘Magic.’ The amulet Spike had sent Buffy
should have protected her against whoever had attempted something so
dangerous and selfish as to strip a seasoned slayer of her power. For
the first time he thanked the Powers for Spike and the wisdom the
master vampire carried about him.
“I remember.” The admission felt torn from his throat and Giles sat
hard on the chair by the phone. He’d never forgotten Susannah. Never
forgotten the pregnancy she’d ripped away from him the second he’d
decided he could be a father. Within a week he’d found himself so
disgusted by the sight of her that he’d taken the first bus back to
London, railing against his own confused grief to put a chequered and
destructive past as far behind him as he could.
Just the mention of her name threw him in a spin.
Emotions swirling pathetically inside, Giles cut the inquiry short and
said goodbye, refraining with difficulty from slamming the phone back
into its cradle.
Despite feeling a degree of confidence that whatever affliction Faith
had suffered Buffy had escaped, Giles made his way to her campus
housing with a gut twisted with worry. A quick call had been
unanswered, but that might have meant nothing more than a sudden
determination on Buffy’s part to attend all her classes for the day.
He’d noticed a distinct dimming of Buffy’s effervescent nature since
Spike had taken his leave, and while initially Giles had been grateful
Spike had done the responsible thing, he couldn’t help but wish him
back. At least for Buffy’s sake.
He couldn’t help but remember the fake engagement fondly. Buffy had
never confided in any of her friends the true nature of the union, so
Giles felt blessed she’d trusted him so deeply as to share the
details—even if it was only once Spike had left her with an ever
deepening well of confusion. In hindsight, he really had to
congratulate the pair of them for their courage to put their dislike
aside in order to fool everyone. If the wider community had worked out
the damage that magic could perform on the Slayer, Buffy might have
faced many unpredictable dangers. It went against everything he knew as
a watcher to allow his slayer to stay in close contact with someone as
powerful as Willow, but the amulet meant much more than protection for
Buffy. It kept her safe from her own friends. That was worth more than
anything in the world—even if it saddened him beyond reckoning.
Giles walked with partial familiarity to Buffy’s new abode, smiling
nervously to the young students that studied him with a knowing leer.
He felt cheapened until he remembered he was her only paternal
influence. Out puffed his chest as he glared at those that he felt
challenged his right to come and visit his slayer.
His knock on the door went frustratingly unanswered. Looking at his
watch, he discovered that it was past two and perhaps she’d gone from
lunch to her afternoon round of classes. He hoped that’s where she was
as it would indicate no difference to her usual routine and would give
him a much welcomed sigh of relief.
Just as he’d determined that this was indeed the case, Willow came at a
quick walk down the corridor, her face creased with concern. Giles’s
every instinct indicating doom went on alert and he swallowed
convulsively.
“Oh hey,” the redhead said by way of greeting. “Buffy not answering?”
Her tone betrayed both surprise and worry and the knot of foreboding
that was twisting his gut into a series of knots increased.
“Not as such, no. I take it by your presence that she hasn’t presented
herself in class today?” It came as no surprise that he’d failed to
keep the alarm from his voice, feeling only momentarily guilty at
Willow’s surge in concern.
“Worry not,” she ordered, “for I have a key.”
“Oh thank God,” Giles breathed, sagging against the door as if he was a good twenty years older than he was.
The lock clicked and they both filed in, eyes immediately going to the
slayer in the midst of some kind of nightmare, sweat making her hair
cling to her forehead as her legs twisted jerkily amongst her bedcovers.
Giles knowingly looked to her bedside table and felt the world rock
beneath his feet. The amulet sat next to a pair of hoop earrings,
leaving Buffy as vulnerable in the night as a baby. Only whatever curse
that had befallen her would have much more dire consequences.
Willow rushed forward, feeling Buffy’s cheeks and forehead with the
back of her hand before turning fearful eyes to Giles. “She’s burning
up, Giles. This looks worse than when she ended up in hospital. What
could be wrong?”
The horror of the situation crashed over him and sent him fumbling for a chair, grateful to find one just inside the door.
“I fear that everything is wrong, Willow. Faith is experiencing the
same illness. I…I believe…they’ve both been stripped of their powers.”
He had no inkling how Buffy would deal with this—if indeed she was
supposed to make it through this malady. She’d claimed to want a normal
life for as long as he’d known her. With a sense that only terrifying
prospects stood before them, Giles turned to his slayer and held off
the urge to weep.
“She’s no longer the Slayer.”
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