Disclaimer: The story's
mine - the characters aren't. Neither
is Sunnydale, LA, or...well, heaven for that matter. I'm time-sharing the Oracle's chamber, though - does that
count?? Don't sue me. Please.
Spoilers: All of it - the
whole kit and caboodle. Every single
one of the 100 eps are fair game here (If you haven't seen 'The Gift' yet you
may not want to read this)
Distribution: I'm thinking
yeah...as long as I know where it's going beforehand and my name is on it.
Summery: Spike gets tapped
by the Powers That Be to restore the way things should be. Problem is, Spike doesn't work and play well
with others. He is none too pleased
with the PTB's suggestions, either. S/B
eventually, otherwise what's the point?
Rated: R
Note: "Italicized
words" equal mind speech.
Dedications: Kelly, I
don't have the words to tell you what you mean to me. You are the reason, and I thank you. Helen, Trish, and Isabelle – you've all been staunchly
supportive, and you deserve a bucketful of gratitude for being patient with my
many neurosis. Thanks.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
When Eternity
Lies In The Balance
Chapter 9
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
"Have they started yet?"
Giles jumped a little at Dawn's voice, he was just closing the
separating doors between the living room and hallway to give Willow and Tara
some privacy and he hadn't heard Dawn come up behind him.
"Oh, no. They're just
finishing setting up now." Giles tried
for a supportive smile but it came off rather sickly looking. "I'm sure they'll be starting momentarily."
Dawn studied Giles's expression, searching for signs of what he
was feeling. He was the hardest of the
group for her to read. Probably the
whole old British guy thing. Of
course, there's always the hard way...actually asking him what he thought. Not normally her first choice, but a girl's
gotta do what a girl's gotta do.
"So," Giles asked her, wondering why she was staring at him so
intensely, "did you finish the dishes?"
His question earned him another large eye roll and a deep
sigh. Oh, the horrors the average teen
must go through in life. Not that Dawn
was your average teen - in any aspect.
"Are you, like, okay with this spell stuff now?" Dawn needed to find out just where he stood
in the matter. It was important to have
everyone working together.
Giles actually watched in wonder as the teen gave way to the young
woman right before his eyes. She was
terribly focused on this Spike business and it made Giles uncomfortable. He was in no way going to hide that from
her, as if he could, but he didn't want to seem too overbearing and risk
alienating her, either.
"I'll be honest with you, Dawn, I don't believe Willow is fully
aware of just what she's getting herself into.
The aura of a vampire is bound to be vastly different than that of a
human. I know you want Spike back, but
I don't believe it's worth risking Willow's safety, o-or Tara's for that
matter. I know you are still grieving
for your sister, we all are, but this isn't the way to deal with that."
Dawn frowned and crossed her arms over her chest, angry and
surprised at the Watcher. "Is that what
you think? That I'm trying to bring
Spike back because...what...because I can't deal with Buffy dying?"
Giles had tried to let the girl go through the grief process in
her own time, but it had come to a point where another's well being was at
risk. He knew that Willow wouldn't put
an end to it, she was doing this for Dawn, but if he could get Dawn to see, and
to admit that she may just be using Spike's disappearance as a crutch, then she
may be willing to stop it before it goes too far.
"I believe," Giles chose his words carefully and spoke slowly,
"that, subconsciously at least, you may be transferring your desire to have
Buffy back onto Spike."
He had been well aware that finally telling her what he thought
about her obsession with Spike would get a reaction, he hadn't anticipated that
reaction coming in the form of being grabbed by the wrist and pulled down the
hallway to the kitchen. But that's what
Dawn did. She closed the kitchen door
behind them and sat down at the table.
Giles, moving a bit cautiously because he had no idea what to expect,
lowered himself to a chair across from her.
The eyes that bored into him were positively ancient. She had lifted the barrier to her soul so
there would be no question about her pain.
Giles was left feeling quite small when compared to the anguish he saw
there. When she spoke, her voice - that
of a normal fourteen-year-old girl instead of the wise woman he saw in her eyes
- was trembling with emotion. It was a
decidedly surreal experience.
"Okay, first...transference?
Please. How old do you think I
am? 'Cuz that would be understandable
if I was, like, ten. Secondly, Buffy
died. There's no coming back from
that." As soon as she said it, she remembered what happened with her mom and quickly
clarified, "Well, no way that leads to goodness, anyway. Do I still hurt? Yeah, a lot."
Dawn, losing a touch of her bravado as she admitted just how much,
looked down at her clenched hands and picked at one of her nails
nervously. "Sometimes, when I wake up
in the morning, I forget that it happened, I smell breakfast cooking, something
mom or Buffy would cook for me - well, okay, mostly mom...Buffy wasn't all that
culinarily capable - and it's like nothing ever happened. No Glory, no Key business, nothing. Then it hits me and I remember. And I can't breathe because my chest hurts
so bad."
Dawn couldn't look at Giles, her eyes filled with tears that
spilled over and fell down her cheeks.
There was a lump in her throat and she had to swallow to be able to talk
around it.
"But I have to. I have to
breathe, I have to eat, I have to go to school. I have to grow up, grow old.
Because that's what life is.
Buffy gave me that."
Giles didn't know what to say.
He didn't know if he could say anything. He reached up and slowly removed his glasses and set them on the
tabletop, wiping at his eyes quickly as he did it. Dawn sighed and raised her head, pinning him with her gaze. The anguish was there, he could see it, but
it had muted slightly when she spoke, when she released some of the pent up
emotion. It wasn't so raw and aching.
"Plus, you know, in a way I haven't really lost Buffy at all. You guys don't realize just how much of
Buffy is in all of you, but I see it."
Curious, Giles asked, "What do you mean?"
Dawn's brow furrowed in thought as she tried to explain it to him. "Well, it's like each of you is a different
part of her. You're her responsible
side, her adultness kind of, and her smarts.
And now, thanks to the Dawn-sized addition to your family, you're the
caretaker side, too."
Giles smiled tenderly at her.
"Willow is kind of like Buffy's spirit, her love and her
conscience. Xander's the loyalty, the
dedication and willingness to fight, no matter what the odds. It's like he's her heart, ya know?"
Suddenly, Giles started to really hear what Dawn was saying. How eerily similar it was to the parts they
all played in the adjoining spell they did against Adam before Dawn was even
with them. They never told Dawn about
the spell. Or, better put, there were
no monk-induced memories about telling Dawn about the spell. It chilled him. There was destiny in Dawn's words; Giles could sense it, and
fate.
Spiritus...Spirit.
Animus...heart. Sophus...mind.
And Giles just knew what would be coming.
"I'm not transferring, Giles.
I swear. I love Buffy, but she's
gone. Spike isn't. He was taken, but he's still alive. And…I need him. I can't explain it any better than that. I love all of you, and I love him too. Like a big brother, though, so don't freak
on me, okay?"
When she was sure Giles wasn't going to lecture her on having
feelings for Spike, yet anyway, she picked up where she left off.
"He's a big part of Buffy, too, I guess. And I know he'll protect me, protect all of us - like Buffy
did. He's the fighter, the warrior side
of Buffy. I need him, but I also think
we need him."
And there it was.
Manus...hand.
It could be just a coincidence, Giles thought as he turned the
ramifications of Dawn's words over and over in his mind. But there wasn't much, in his experience,
that was coincidence when you lived near a Hellmouth. Giles didn't know what it was, but it wasn't coincidence.
"Plus," Dawn's voice had become little more than background music
to Giles' musings, "you gotta know that as soon as the bad guys spread the word
about an un-Slayer protected Hellmouth in Sunnydale, this place is going to
turn into a really scary, and...you know, way uglier version of Mardi
Gras."
Dawn looked at Giles and stopped talking. He looked kind of dazed, like he just got
some disturbing news. Oh geez. I knew I shouldn't have told him all that
stuff about how I feel about Spike.
He's totally wigged. Way to go,
Dawn, now he's never going to want to help getting Spike back. She gave herself a few good mental kicks,
trying to make a note never to do the deep confession thing with him
anymore. The man just couldn't handle
it.
In so thinking, Dawn was jolted a bit when Giles finally refocused
his eyes and looked at her.
"I think you might be right, Dawn. I think we may need to get Spike back."
Dawn didn't know what to say.
Okay...that was a little easier than I thought it would be. But then, she WAS fourteen, and there wasn't
a fourteen year old alive that ever looked a gift horse in the mouth. She beamed a grateful smile on the man that
would always be the closest thing to a father she would ever have and he
reached out, covered her hand with a supportive squeeze.
"Come on," he said, "we'll just go see how the girls are
progressing, shall we?"
Giles hurried down the hall, Dawn close on his heels. He opened the door to the living room where
the girls were. No sooner had they
stepped into the room than a blinding ball of light burst forth from where
Willow sat, cross-legged, on the floor beside Tara. Giles and Dawn had to shield their eyes at the glare.
The ball of light raised up, floating toward the ceiling and then
passing through it. As soon as it
vanished from sight, the room started to shake and a strong wind started to
materialize, spinning like a small vortex around Willow.
And then all hell broke loose.
********************
It had taken Willow and Tara a lot longer to prepare for the spell
than they had thought. But Willow
wanted to be as sure as she could that she was really ready. Much of the confidence she had shown to the
group after dinner had been all show.
She wasn't brave, she knew that.
She'd always been the first person to admit she was not happy in the
role of 'go to' guy.
But this spell was more important that trembling in fear. It was the only way Willow had to try to get
rid of some of her guilt issues since Buffy died. And she did have issues.
A lot of issues. Not that she'd
told anyone about them.
Ever since it happened, Willow had been plagued with the knowledge
that she had not been a very effective member of the team in the fight against
Glory. Buffy had been counting on her,
going so far as to label her with the terrifying burden of being 'The Big
Gun'.
Big gun, right, more like a peashooter. Where had Willow been when Buffy was keeping Glory away from
Dawn? Knocked out. And when she came to? All thoughts had been of Tara. The dimensional walls were getting ready to
fall, her friends and loved ones were fighting for their lives, and all she had
done was go to Tara. By the time she'd
turned her attention back to the fight, that Doc guy…demon…whatever, had
already gotten up to Dawnie. Sure,
she'd been impressively commandery with her little mind works, getting Spike up
those stairs, but it had been too little, too late.
And the sad thing is if she had it to do all over again, Willow
knew she'd do the exact same thing.
Hence the heaping portions of guilt.
But she should have been more prepared. What about that transportation spell they had tried once before
on Glory? That had worked. Sure, big honkin' migraines for weeks with a
hearty side order of daily nosebleeds, but, hey...still better than a dead
Buffy.
She could have transported Glory out of there until the time ran
out on the ritual. Then Buffy could
have gone and gotten Dawnie and squished Doc like the big, ugly, long-tongued
demony cockroach that he was. It's not
like Glory wouldn't have shown back up after the fact for some God sized
payback - and Willow could have brain drained her then to help Tara. Without the universe's destruction and
Dawn's life hanging in the balance.
Point being, there were a lot of things she could have done and
none of them got done, so Buffy's dead.
And if Willow really examined her motives, that was why she was so
willing to do something that was so scary.
Merge auras with a vampire? Oh,
sure, no problem. Just a walk in the
park. Yeah, like Central Park...at
midnight...wearing lots of jewelry...in skimpy clothing...yelling, "Please come
rob me, kill me, and rape me now!"
But she was going to do it.
For Dawn. For Spike. For herself.
When Tara had suggested in that sweet way she had that they may
want to try some meditation exercises before they proceeded, Willow had leapt
on the idea. Meditation should help get
her aura straightened out before it came in contact with one that was
sure to be just chock full of snaky, evil badness.
By the time they had gotten that done Willow did feel better. More in tune with herself. And everything else that could possibly be
used as a stall tactic was forcibly pushed to the back of her mind. It was time.
They sat next to each other, legs crossed and almost
touching. Willow was facing the window,
Tara, the doorway leading into the dining room. There were candles lit in a circle around them, and incense
burning.
Clasping hands tightly with Tara after leaning in for a quick,
supportive kiss, Willow started to gather her magickal energies. She could feel Tara calling hers. It was a comfortable feeling, a familiar
feeling. They had worked so many spells
together, it was as easy as sliding into your favorite pair of sneakers.
Then Willow started to recite the merged spells.
It was powerful, she could feel it pulling her mind, drawing her
into the nether realm. Again, something
that she had a lot of experience with lately.
This part didn't frighten her at all.
She let her aura slip away from her body and follow the siren call into
the abyss.
In the back of her mind she could feel Tara, gently reaching out a
tendril of grounding energy, like a life line, that would keep the two of them
connected just enough for Tara to be able to pull her out if things didn't go
according to plan. She got a quick jolt
of love and acceptance when it brushed against her aura, then she felt it
burrow in, grab a hold, and prepare for what was to come.
Willow used her mind's eye to see what was going on and followed
mentally as her aura continued on into the nether realm. It didn't take long, it's not like the first
few times when she had to tentatively 'feel' her way through this long
passageway. No, this was a path well
worn by use, and soon she could see Spike's aura glowing brightly in front of
her.
There was always a little emotional trill of relief that danced
through Willow every time she came upon Spike's trail. It was a constant assurance that he was
still alive.
Willow started to direct her aura down the pathway, toward where
the barrier cut off the trail. That was
the plan. She would merge auras with
Spike right at the cutoff point, so she could see what he had seen when the
door opened.
The first indication that things weren't going to go according to
the plan came almost immediately after Willow gave the first mental nudge to
her aura. It pushed against her
slightly, resisting just a fraction instead of floating away like it
should. Then, when it was finally
moving forward a bit, and Willow was getting ready to follow it, it
stopped. Before she could reach her
mind out, she saw it turn and move towards the starting point of Spike's
trail.
That was not supposed to happen. It wasn't supposed to move on its own and it certainly wasn't
supposed to change direction as if making a conscious choice. Willow, quickly filling with dread and
starting to get the 'big spell gone bad' wiggins, tried to reach her mental arm
out to stop it but it breezed past her, just out of reach. There was nothing she could do but watch in
horror as it spread out and neared Spike's aura, brushing it slightly.
There wasn't even time to sever the connection and return to her
own plane.
She was hit with a wave of debilitating emotion so intense that it
almost made her retch. Stunned, she
watched as her aura infiltrated his, green mixing with the coppery color,
swirling together as one. She tried to
send out a mental call to Tara for help, but it was stopped before it began as
the next, even more powerful surge of tsunami-strength feelings battered her.
Then, there was a physical wrenching sensation from her body. Something - her soul, her essence, Willow
didn't know - separated from her core and hurtled into the realm. Her mind's presence was in the way and got
bowled over as it passed through. It,
too, was being attracted by Spike's aura and Willow watched it join with the
shimmering thread. It was the last
thing she saw, that she recognized, as an observer.
Suddenly, all she could see was blackness. All she could feel was agony, hatred, wrath,
vengeance, loss, heartbreak, and sorrow.
The maelstrom of emotions overwhelmed her, stripped everything that was
Willow away from her. It was
Spike. She was Spike. And all she knew were his feelings. All she was were his feelings.
With a tug and a jolt, she moved down the path of Spike's trail,
knowing - in some dark corner of what was left of her individual mind - that
she would now experience everything he had as he'd experienced it. And she knew, too, that it just might kill
her.
********************
Buffy glared down at the beaten vampire with disgust and
contempt. How had she ever thought this
creature could ever be anything more than a monster? The things he said...the sick pleasure he took in saying
them. God, the gang was right, she
really was a poor judge of character to let this thing anywhere near her
family.
And the things she told him, the way she'd confided in him before
he went all pedophile vamp on her, it made her want to bite off her own
tongue. The bastard.
Buffy pulled an unresisting Spike to his feet and threw him away
from her, as if touching him, having him anywhere near her was too revolting to
deal with.
He shuffled back a bit, trying to keep his balance after being so
abruptly discarded, and he winced at the pain in his side. Bleedin' hell. I think she broke another rib.
Wish she'd just stake me. Be
better than seeing that look in her eyes.
Don't blame her though, if it'd been me hearin' some prig talk about
Nibblet like that, I'd a ripped out his beatin' heart - chip or not.
"Start talking, Spike."
Buffy crossed her arms over her chest and glared at him, waiting to see
how he was going to worm his way out of what had just happened. Not that she was going to believe a single
apology or attempt at reconciliation.
She'd fallen for that one just about a dozen times too many from him.
Spike saw the woman standing a few feet from him with absolute
clarity. He had no illusions that she
was perfect - she was bloody well far from perfect. She was arrogant, irritating, bossy, and way too quick with the
'hit first, ask questions later' bit...well, okay, so that was actually
something he admired about her. Except
when it was directed at him. She blamed
him for everything that went wrong in her life and she thought he was just a
few steps farther down on the 'Things I want to Have Around' list than dirty
knickers. All in all she was a
not-so-pleasant person.
So why did he love her so much that it physically hurt him more to
suffer her contempt and hatred than her punches and kicks? Because of the rest of it, the loyalty, the
passion, the caring, the strength...everything else in her made it impossible
not too. You're royally buggered,
mate. She'd sooner spit on you right
now as look at you, and you still can't even stand the thought of life without
her. Not like that's a bloody concern,
what with knowin' how this play's gonna end.
After waiting for Spike to say something, preparing for his
excuses and apologies, Buffy started to get very impatient when he just stood
there...well, okay, so he's really more swaying than standing, but still, she
didn't appreciate the wait. She stormed
up to him and shoved him hard in the chest to get his attention.
He fell back into the trunk of the tree and even Buffy winced a
little at the grinding sound of a broken bone in his chest. He didn't make a single sound of complaint
at the pain.
"I don't think we're communicating, Spike, because I appear to be
the only one speaking. I'm waiting for
you to say something."
Spike hung his head, the only person that could possibly hate him
more right now than Buffy did was himself.
He wished he could her tell how sorry he was for doing what he did, but
he just couldn't. He couldn't ask her
to forgive him because he couldn't forgive himself.
He didn't want to have to say all the going back stuff again,
either. He'd hoped she would come back
to herself and just decide to go.
Didn't look like he had any more luck on him than he did cigarettes.
"I told you, Slayer. I was
sent here to get you to go back. Told
you were the only one that could stop a major redecoratin' of the entire
planet. Pair that tapped me didn't tell
me how it's to start, but I saw the end.
Not somewhere you want to bundle up the kiddies for a nice family
vacation, if you get my meanin'."
That wasn't what she expected him to say, and something about the
fact that he wasn't apologizing bothered her for some reason. But what did she expect? No soul, no conscience, no apology. It's funny, though, she'd gotten used to him
being more repentant of late. It made
her mad that she cared that he wasn't sorry.
Her voice lashed out at him unmercifully. "Who sent you?"
"Oracles, they said.
Called themselves 'seerers' and 'guides'. Right odd bunch, those two.
Big on the mind speak. Seem to
be some kind of mouthpiece for a group called the Powers."
Buffy's eyes narrowed at the story. It didn't make sense. Why
send Spike? He was a vampire, he wasn't
even on the Power's side. "Why
you. Why did they send you?"
There was no way in hell Spike was going to explain to this
hostile chit in front of him about the first idea the Oracles came up with, and
why they had thought he'd be amenable to it, and he couldn't tell her about why
he believed they had sent him to heaven.
If she found out that his little wake up call had been a ruse, she may
let go of that anger. He didn't know if
that would trigger the Slayer part to slip away again, but he couldn't risk
it. He didn't want to lie to her, but
then again he didn't have to.
"They never actually said why they chose me, Slayer. One minute I'm in the construction site
after the Glory thing went down, next I was talking to a couple of green and
gold, toga wearin' entities. They're
big on the ancient Rome theme, in case you're interested."
He couldn't help the sarcasm.
It just slipped out. Spike had
been having one long series of bad times after another and he was feeling a
mite bit confrontational. It was better
than being a big wanker and standing there feeling sorry for himself.
It wasn't the sarcasm that bothered Buffy, though, it was the
belief that he wasn't telling her everything.
"What aren't you telling me, Spike?"
A hell of a lot, actually, and I'm not gonna tell you,
either. But it's nothin' that you need
to know, so don't go the rogue Slayer route and stake a poor bloke just tryin'
to do the right thing here.
Spike hid his thoughts well...of course, the bruising and swelling
in his face helped. He shrugged one
shoulder laconically. "You don't go
back, our lovely little Sunny D is goin' to be a demon's wet dream in about
three years. The new look catches on,
and it spreads from there. They told me
you were the only one who could stop it.
They were big into the balance thing.
Kept sayin' you're the 'Keeper of the Balance', whatever the bloody hell
that means. But you seem to be the
chippy they want. You're THE
Chosen One."
Buffy grinned but there was no humor in it. "Gotta love the mystical guide spiel. Somehow they always manage to tell you
everything you need to know but in such a way that you never understand it
until it's too late to help. I've had
enough experience with that, I could write a book."
Suddenly, standing there against the tree, staring at the woman
that he loved who completely detested him, fighting against wave after wave of
Slayer induced and realm induced pain, Spike realized he just wanted all of
this to be over. He couldn't do it
anymore. The atmosphere had quieted
when they stopped fighting, but the storm was still gathering. He knew it was coming for him. And this time, he would welcome it. But he had to make sure Buffy got out of
here, first.
"Not that I'm not havin' a real good time here, Slayer, but are
you goin' back or what?"
Buffy, startled at the raggedness in his tone, at the tiredness
she heard there, was faced with the question she had wanted to avoid. Leave it to Spike to cut to the heart of
the matter. Always the shortest
distance between two points for him.
Buffy glared again briefly and turned away, stalking the backyard
like an irritated panther. Her mind was
on overload. She really was through, it
wasn't fair that she was being asked to go back. What did the Powers want from her, what did they expect? The first peace she'd known since she was
Chosen and they strip it away like they strip away everything else. She didn't want to go back.
Spike watched her pace through narrowed eyes. He knew her so well, he could just bet what
she was thinking. Probably goin' on
about how unfair her life is. Could
tell her about what's bleedin' unfair, ya know? Doesn't want to give up the peace of this place, I bet. Least she got a chance to feel some
peace. Got a chance to see her mum
again, too. And now she knows, really
knows, that when it is her time, she's got an eternity of good times
waitin' for her. More than I got, ya
know? Silly bint. God I'm gonna miss her.
He dropped his head and stared at the ground. He couldn't watch her any more, it just hurt
too much.
She didn't want to go back.
But what choice did she have?
She couldn't turn her back on the duty.
It was a part of her. And she
could take some of the peace with her.
She got to see her mom again, too, that was such a gift. And so much of the burden had been lifted
from her shoulders just in coming here.
Things in the past, mistakes she'd made were so much clearer and easier
to forgive. When she sacrificed herself
for Dawn, she had done it with the newfound knowledge that the Slayer was much
more than a killer. She was a
protector. And now, according to these
Oracles Spike mentioned, she was also the 'Keeper of the Balance'. That didn't sound too bad.
And she'd get to see Dawnie.
Oh God. Dawnie. She would be able to live without the fear
of Glory hanging over them all like a thick cloak of terror. Dawn would be free, for the first time
really, to live the life of a normal teenager, and grow up with the love of a
sister instead of just the memory of one.
Then there was the gang.
She couldn't wait to see their expressions. Look guys, can't keep a good Slayer down! She wanted to see that. Yeah, sure, they would have to keep fighting
the fight, keeping the balance, but that sounds a touch better than taking on a
Hell God.
It wasn't going to be easy.
It was never easy. There would
be fear and pain and maybe loss, too.
But it was where she belonged.
It was where she was needed.
And she had originally turned her back on it completely. When Spike first told her, she said no. The world was going to end, the Powers sent
a vampire to heaven to get her back because she was the only one who could stop
it, and she turned him down. That's why
he...
"Oh God."
Buffy stopped mid-pace and turned to look at Spike's lowered head
and dejected stance. She saw it, she
didn't know how she'd missed it before.
Suddenly she flashed back to when she first saw him at the bottom of the
stairs earlier. He had looked up at her
with such naked longing and love, but there was something else there, too, and
she hadn't been able to identify it. It
was the reason she'd reached out to him and touched his jaw, an unconscious
attempt to comfort.
Sorrow and resignation, that's what it was.
He had known. He had known
he would have to make her want to go back.
That's what he was apologizing for.
Shit.
Buffy's anger and fury at the vampire dissipated and she could
feel the Slayer in her receding a little.
It left room for her soul to reclaim the lost space until each part was
perfectly even. A calm descended and
she once again felt the peace of this place seeping into her. Not so much that it would affect her
decision to go, but enough that for the first time ever, she was in perfect
balance within herself. She'd never had
that before. It was an amazing feeling.
It was a feeling of rightness, of destiny, of victory. It was as if a bell chimed one perfect note
into the realm and echoed back congratulatory blessings from all the Slayers
that had come before and had never known this perfection.
Another memory drifted back into her conscious mind. "You think you know, what's to come, what
you are. You haven't even begun." She'd been told that twice, once by a
Tara-shaped guide in a dream, and again by Dracula. Since then she'd forgotten it.
It came back to her just as the pieces of herself slipped into place,
into alignment.
What's to come? A lot of
changes, that's for sure. What am
I? The Keeper of the Balance. Have I finally begun? Oh yeah, I think I really have.
Buffy smiled widely. It
was a good day.
And it was a good day thanks to Spike. He had given this to her, had made it possible. She couldn't believe she'd even thought that
he could have done those awful things to Dawn.
He loved her, too. She had known
that, always known that.
Before they had gone to take on Glory, he'd sworn to her that he
would protect her to the end of the world.
Buffy had believed him, still believed him. There was such sincerity in his face that night. Such pride at being asked.
The gang loved Dawn, Buffy knew, but Spike was the only one
besides her that loved Dawn in a 'damn the consequences, no one's harming a
hair on her head' kind of way. And as
she had told Spike earlier, there was no longer any doubt in her mind that he
was capable of it.
What had the spirit guide told her in the desert? Right, you only lose love if you reject
it. There was something Buffy was really
through with. Rejecting love. No more of the big push away Buffy.
Oh yeah, bleach boy and I are going to have a very interesting
conversation when we get back home.
She wished she had time now, but something was telling her it was
time to go. First, though, there was
the small matter of collecting one very depressed vampire. And giving him the shock of his undead life.
Buffy strolled over to where he still stood with his head down and
shoulders bowed. She tilted her head
and stared at him for a while before he noticed her presence and felt her gaze
on him. He raised his head, his eyes
searching and finding hers.
As before on the stairs, her heart ached at the sorrow and pain
she saw there, right before he shuttered his expression and blocked out his
true feelings. She saw the sardonic
glint that was so familiar and so aggravating snap into place and knew, without
one shadow of a doubt, that he did it on purpose.
Spike was getting uncomfortable under her close scrutiny. She didn't say anything, just stared. Finally he couldn't take the suspense any
longer. "Well," he practically growled
in frustration, "have you made up your bleedin' mind yet, Slayer? Not like I don't have better things to do
with my time, ya know. Heaven is just a
touch uncomfortable for a vampire with my stellar personality."
Buffy winced a little mentally when he called her 'Slayer'. Before tonight, it had been months since
he'd done that. She'd gotten used to
the lilt of his accented voice when he said 'Buffy'. She missed it.
Trying to make her voice as imperious as possible she glared at
him. "You lied to me, Spike."
Spike's eyes flew wide in affront. "Lied? I did no such
thing. I told you everythin' about the
Oracles and why you need to go back.
It's all bloody true, Slayer. I
swear." Bloody hell. If she didn't believe him then she was never
going to go back. Sod it all.
"Oh, I believe you about that, Spike. Have no fear. And just to
assure you, I am going back."
The relief was amazing, blinding.
But...
"Well then, what do you mean I lied?" Spike tended to get suspicious when he couldn't figure out what
Buffy was on about.
"That night in my house, before we went to fight Glory. You lied."
Okay, it was obvious this place either affected a persons mind, or
it affected a vampire's hearing. Either
way, things were not adding up in Spike's brain. "Sorry, Slayer, you're going to have to spell it out for the
lowly vampire. I'm afraid I'm not
followin'."
Buffy grinned internally, and fought to keep the serious expression
on her face. This was going to be
fun. "You told me you knew that you're
a monster. You lied. You're no more a monster than I am, not
anymore. You haven't been for quite
some time. You know it, and I know it."
She couldn't hold back the smile any longer when Spike's eyes flew
wide and his jaw dropped in stunned disbelief.
And Spike honestly couldn't believe what came out of his mouth
next, it was like his brain had lost all control over his mouth. "Oh yeah?
Only a monster would hit you like I did. Threaten Nibblet like I did.
You're wrong, Buffy. I am a
monster. I'm a vampire, not a shred of
soul anywhere on me. And what's more, I
don't want one."
Buffy sighed. Well, at
least he went back to 'Buffy'. "I
know this is going to come as kind of a shock to you Spike, but quite frankly,
it doesn't really bother me you don't have a soul. It has come to my attention lately that souls are vastly
overrated. As for hitting me, and what
you said about Dawn...well, hitting me is easier to forgive, I'll give you
that. But you were doing what you
needed to do. There was no warrior left
in me, Spike. You needed to bring that
back. You are probably the only one
that could. That's why they sent you,
wasn't it?"
So completely flabbergasted, so overwhelmed by each and every
syllable that fell from Buffy's mouth, Spike was back to nodding like a
hypnotized idiot.
Staring hard at her, he didn't understand what his eyes were
telling him. First, he had seen the
serenity of her soul, then he had witnessed the power of the Slayer. But this, what he was seeing in her now,
this was completely different. This was
both at the same time. Something
completely new.
He finally managed to say, "They never told me, I didn't lie about
that. But, yeah, that's what I
figured."
Buffy nodded, understanding why he hadn't told her. If she hadn't had her epiphany before she
realized he was doing it on purpose, she may have lost the Slayer in her
forever. She stepped forward and
touched his cheek with a fingertip. For
a long moment she stared into his eyes, felt the power and emotion in
them. They were supposed to be windows
to the soul, but he didn't have one of those.
Whatever his eyes are windows to, it's a nice place.
Speaking slowly to make sure he understood just how serious she
was and how truly she believed, she said, "You would never hurt Dawn. You would die to protect her. You would die to protect me, too. Thank you."
She thought she saw those eyes of his get suspiciously damp, but
she closed hers and leaned in to brush her lips gently against his before she
could be sure. And when she did she was
hit with something very powerful, very visceral, and very delicious. It shook her.
Oh yeah. You are going to
have one very long talk with the vampire after you get home. He was right about that, too, damn him. Heat.
Desire.
Buffy pulled back and stared, wide-eyed, at him. He matched her expression perfectly.
She was the first to be able to form words. "You know Spike, about that other thing you
said to me that night. When you said
you know I'll never love you..."
Spike's face fell, convinced she was going to say something that
he may not recover from. He'd been
riding along on a tidal wave of perfect emotions. She had given him forgiveness and light. She had kissed him and removed the guilt
that had been weighing him down. The
way his life had been since entering this realm, it was just about time to be
crushed down again.
He didn't even realize he'd dropped his head to his chest until
her small, warm palm was lifting it again.
He saw her compassion - it wasn't pity, thankfully - and she gave
a little mock frown to him.
"Didn't anyone ever tell you it's impolite not to let a person
finish their sentences before you get all gloomy?" She grinned mischievously at him, "I don't really know what I
feel, Spike, not right now anyway. But
I know I don't hate you, and never...well, never is a really long time."
That was the single most bittersweet thing he could ever imagine hearing. He had been simultaneously granted entry
into paradise, and had the door slammed just before he entered the gates.
Oh, luv. You're killin'
me. Never is no time at all, pet. Not for me.
I tried, Buffy, I did what I could.
I went about it the wrong way for a good long while. I made mistakes. And I didn't realize until coming here, that you were dealin'
with your own demons, all be it the less 'Grrr and fang' internal kind. But lemme tell you, luv, you and me? We would have kicked ass and taken
names. Nothin' would have stopped
us. It would have been bloody amazin'.
He said nothing, he didn't let her see the anguish ripping at him,
tearing him into pieces and blowing those pieces away on the hot, desert-like
wind. He couldn't tell her.
Instead he forced a gentle smile to his face and took advantage of
her openness to brush a strand of hair away from her face. It didn't really need to be brushed away,
but he needed to touch her one more time.
He needed to drown in that heat for a second more before he prepared to
step off the dance floor that had held him a captive of her for so long.
She smiled at the gentle caress and turned away, playfully teasing
and as carefree as a wood sprite in the fall.
"Come on, 'Big Bad'. I want to
say good-bye to mom, then we can go.
The gang is going to flip! And I
can't wait to see Dawn."
She was so at peace with herself, she didn't notice the weight
that was dragging down the blonde vampire following slowly behind her. She didn't notice his haunted expression or
the pain in his eyes. She didn't notice
him lift a tense fist to his face to quickly dash away the single tear that
fell gently down one chiseled cheek.
She doesn't love you, mate.
She'll be fine. Once she gets there
the Scoobies will take good care of her, they'll take care of each other. It's what those bleedin' white hats always
do. She'll be happy now. She's changed. It's different. She'll
live, and every once in a while maybe she'll think back on you, on the two of
you, and smile a little.
That one wish was all that he had left.
TBC