Strawberry
Fields
Author: Ameeya Hawke
Rating: NC-17
Timeline: S.2, I Only Have Eyes For You. Veers drastically
from canon.
Summary: Spike blanks out while searching for the Slayer, and finds
himself in a magic-induced liplock. In the heat of confusion, he offers
Buffy a truce, and throws a series of events in motion that will change
both their lives forever.
Disclaimer: I don't own 'em; I'm just playing. Please oh please, do not
sue me.
A/N: Okay, so I suck. But hey! I'm
writing. Quite a bit, actually. And I promise...I'm still as into this
story as I am any of my other stories. I guess in my head, I need to
finish the fic that's supposed to be short and easy to write before
writing my real WIPs.
Again I say, I don't blame anyone if you've dropped this off your
reading list. But I am eternally grateful to those who are sticking
with me and feeding my muse. Thank you to all my readers. I can't tell
you how much your support and enthusiasm means to me.
Oh, and yes...I did a major cop-out and stole lines from Becoming
Part 2 toward the end. You'll know 'em when you see 'em. I really
hate doing this, but it's very important that some things remain as
they are, and this was the best way to do it. I tried to make it as
original as possible, but...well...yeah.
Heh. I have no problem with stealing lines from Aaron Sorkin all over
the place and plugging them into fics ('cause even he said the best
writers steal from others outright) but whenever it's actual BtVS
dialogue, I get all sheepish. >.<
Anyway...and I can't say this enough...THANK YOU to everyone who's sticking
with me. *snuggles readers*
Chapter 12
"Drink this."
"I said I'm fine."
Spike rolled his eyes and shoved the glass of orange juice fully under
her nose. "I don' sodding care if you feel well enough to tap-dance on
a forklift, you're gonna drink this bloody juice if I have to pour it
down your throat."
Buffy arched a brow, her gorgeous eyes sparkling with amusement. God, a
man could lose himself so easily in those eyes. After this rot about
the apocalypse was in the past, Spike was definitely going to take
Buffy-gazing up as his favorite hobby. She was so glorious; so wonderfully
glorious in everything she did. Every sodding move she made took his
proverbial breath away.
"Bossy McBossy," she replied, accepting the proffered juice with a
feigned sigh.
"I drank your blood."
"A fact I'm well aware of, considering it was my blood."
"An' I've been around long enough to know you need sweets once you've
donated." He held up a hand at the burning question flashing across her
face. "Don' bloody fight with me."
"Sorry," she cracked unapologetically, shrugging. "It's against my
nature."
Any other night and he would've gotten a brilliant kick out of her
jesting; this was the sort of camaraderie which had him falling in love
with her in the first place. She'd grown so used to being around him in
such a short period of time, whether she wanted to acknowledge as much
or not was another question. But for the way she sparred with him,
verbally and with that piece of walking poetry she called a body, his
insides filled with just enough hope to keep him afloat amidst troubled
waters. "Jus' drink," he said, determined to betray nothing.
"The words 'slayer healing' really mean nothing to you, do they?" Buffy
replied dryly, arching a brow as she lifted the glass to her lips. If
he didn't know better he'd swear she was relishing every second of
this.
"Not when we're about to go up against your wanker of an ex an' my
sword-happy sire, not to mention Angelus's brainwashed apostles."
She snorted appreciatively. "Don't tell me you're intimidated," she
replied, shaking her head. "But I suppose there's nothing wrong with
being at full strength."
Spike smiled gently but didn't reply. There wasn't much time to waste
in the seclusion of Buffy's home, but the longer they stayed, the less
inclined he was to leave. While he appreciated the severity of the
accumulating situation around them, he was increasingly convinced Buffy
wasn't ready. Oh, she could take Angelus out. There was no doubt
there. The conviction in her eyes was unlike anything he'd ever seen,
but God her body was so worn. Perhaps she was immune to recognizing her
own limitations, but she couldn't hide the exhaustion in her eyes. Not
from him. He'd tasted her blood now—he had a part of her inside him.
He'd tasted her power and as a result, he knew her strength.
And because of that, he did know her limitations. He could see
them clearly because they were not his own. Buffy was tired. Not just
physically—physical exhaustion was manageable. Buffy was worn by every
feasible stretch of the definition. And Angelus would know it. He'd
know the second her scent hit the air.
However, it wasn't likely Angelus would be open to postponing the
apocalypse on account of white-hat exhaustion. It was very much now or
never; it didn't mean Spike had to like it. He was too worried about
Buffy to give a damn about logic or rationality. In the state she was
in, she'd be lucky to be a blip on Angelus's radar.
Buffy sipped her orange juice, a long sigh rolling off her shoulders.
"Happy?" she asked.
"Over the bloody moon, kitten."
She made an adorable face which he would have kissed right off her lips
were they not pressed for time and suffocating under the heavy burden
of the looming apocalypse. "I don't like orange juice," she complained.
"I'm not particularly fond of pig's blood, but it din't stop me from
drainin' three bags, now did it?"
Buffy's eyes narrowed. "Not the same thing."
"So says you," he scoffed playfully.
"Well, beyond the obvious factors of yuck, you were all but drained."
Spike shuddered, his gut aching on prompt. Yes, he had nearly been
drained, and were it not for the fiery woman sitting on the kitchen
counter, he might not be standing where he was. Fuck, chances were he
wouldn't be standing at all. Either his blood would have drained
completely and he would have withered away, or the sun would have
finished him off.
Buffy's blood had given him life. He was forever in her debt.
"Same could be said for you," he countered softly, then clarified when
she shot him a questioning glance, "Drained, an' all."
She rolled her eyes. "How many times do I have to tell you I'm fine?"
"Dunno. Let's find out." Spike arched a brow pointedly and nodded at
the glass in her hand. "Drink up."
"This is crazy."
He grinned and shrugged. "Welcome, friends, to the show that never
ends."
"You lost way more blood than I did."
"I had your blood to make it up for me. An', again, it din't stop me
from drinkin' more." Spike paused. "This is a pointless argument, love.
I'm right, you're wrong, t'was ever thus. Drink the sodding juice."
Buffy hesitated a beat, but her eyes were dancing. "Well, as long as
we're concerned with my blood sugar, you might wanna get me a poptart,"
she replied coyly, waving with her free hand. "Second cabinet on the
right."
He arched a brow but did as she instructed, unable to hide his mirth
when his back was to her. "You need to be at full strength if we're
gonna do this thing," he said, fishing out a pack of brown sugar
pastries from the open box in the cupboard. "Angelus isn't one to fuck
with half-mass."
"Kinky," she replied with a smirk, catching the individualized
poptarts-package off his toss.
Spike fought off another grin. If he kept smiling at how bloody cute
she was, she'd never take him seriously. He could appreciate the need
to ward off reality with humor and deflection, but she couldn't afford
to ignore the danger looming around them. Buffy had placed a lot of
stock into Spike's help, and while her faith was something he didn't
take lightly, no amount of wishing could change the fact he was still
just one vamp. He'd dust at her side of it meant keeping her alive, but
if he met his maker before the apocalypse was averted, she'd have no
one to rely on but herself.
Granted, if they got out of this alive, it wasn't like their problems
were over. Buffy had this crazy notion in her head that things were
going to revert back to the way they'd been before. Before the ghosts
at her school pitted them against each other. Before he'd gotten a
taste of her soft lips. Before he'd felt the heat of her skin and
dreamt of how her hot pussy would feel around his cock.
Before he'd started falling in love with her.
He didn't know what it was going to take to convince her tonight was
the end of Angelus and Angelus alone. Whatever they shared—whatever was
happening between them—was only beginning.
"What happens when this is over?" Buffy asked, startling him with the
sudden seriousness in her tone. Either she was amazingly attuned to his
every thought and concern or this was weighing on her mind more than
she betrayed. And honestly, for either of their sakes, he wasn't sure
which he preferred. "When Angel's dust and...what happens?"
The unspoken question dwarfed her actual words, but he wasn't about to
make things easy for her. "Not sure I follow, love."
Buffy sighed and took a quick bite of her poptart. "I don't think...no, I
know...and telling you this is probably the dumbest thing I could do, but
I can't go into this thing without knowing what's going to happen next."
"Slayer—"
"I can't go back to the way things were, Spike. I know...I've talked
about it and joked about it and pretended it's gonna happen but I
can't..." She broke off, emotion-choked words lodged in her throat. "I
can't go from...from, well, this..." She motioned between them. "To wanting
you dead again. If I have to kill Angel and then...turn around and kill
you, too...it's going to break me. I can't turn off whatever I'm feeling
like a switch or something."
Spike inhaled sharply, barely daring to hope. "Your feelings?"
"You know things have changed," she replied, her eyes narrowing as she
shifted self-consciously, placing the poptart on the counter beside
her. "I don't make out with men at random."
"I should bloody well hope not."
"And..." Buffy trailed off on a long sigh. "Well, I don't know. I don't
know anything anymore. Except I don't want to kill Angel if it means
things go back...and then I have to kill you, too." A still beat settled
between them. "But if I...if I had to...God, please don't make me,
Spike. Don't make me—"
He frowned. It'd been cute at first—this line of completely erroneous
thinking—but if the chit was actually serious, they really needed to
work on their communication skills. "You think I could go back from
this to wantin' to kill you?"
Buffy frowned. "I thought...I don't know. I thought you and Dru—"
Oh bloody hell. Was she serious? Did she really think so little of him?
"Are you completely daft?" Spike demanded, eyes blazing. "Dru tried to kill
me."
"Well," she replied, shifting self-consciously, "you're a vampire."
Spike's brow furrowed, irritation surging through his veins. "An' I'd
wager you thought attempted murder between lovers—"
She threw her hands in the air. "I don't know what I thought. Only...pain
and blood...I thought you guys were all about the kinky."
"Sweetheart, there's a big bloody difference between enjoyin' a rough
shag to tryin' to kill your..." His voice faded, inhaling deeply. First
thing after the apocalypse was averted, he was going to take Buffy
somewhere secluded and perfect her education on vampires. She had some
entertaining delusions, granted, but he didn't want her developing a
complex when, in actuality, she was the sort of woman which inspired
complexes in others. There wouldn't be another for him after this. He
wanted Buffy—just as she was. "I admit," he continued carefully. "Dru
can make things a li'l unclear. There were a few times over the years
when her sex games got so bloody, you'd wonder if she wasn't really
aimin' to off you good an' proper."
Buffy's nose wrinkled, and he didn't blame her. He probably could have
done a better job of phrasing that. "Nice girlfriend you've got there,
Spike," she drawled.
"Well, when you love someone—"
"You let them beat you bloody?"
"Oi! Don't knock it."
Spike swore inwardly the second the words left his lips. He was just
digging himself a deeper trench, but now it was more a matter of
defending his character. Truth be told, while he'd never objected to
whatever Drusilla wanted to do in the bedroom, he'd never shared her
affinity for sadism. Never. Spike preferred his sex fairly straight
forward: rough or gentle, depending on his mood. But despite that, he'd
never wanted to deny his savior anything. If she wanted him to bleed,
he'd bleed for her.
"Sorry," Buffy retorted, her brows arching. "I just really don't see
the appeal."
"We're off the bloody point anyway," Spike replied. "Dru tried to kill
me. That's not somethin' you jus'...forgive an' forget."
She licked her lips and grew very still. "I...I thought you loved her."
So did he. It was amazing how much could change in such a short amount
of time. How much a goddess of light could drown out any want of a
princess of darkness. How he could watch this tiny human with such
adoration when, not too long ago, he would have withered at the idea of
leaving Dru—no matter how much she'd hurt him.
Things had changed. Things had drastically changed. He could no more
harm a hair on Buffy's head than he could take a daylight stroll.
There was no good way to convey his feelings about his sire to the
woman he'd unwittingly fallen in love with. While his love for Drusilla
had withered away to nothing more than a shadow of gratitude, he could
never completely strike her from his heart. He owed Drusilla his
existence, but for the first time, he felt he'd finally repaid his
debt. And while he would always remain grateful to her for introducing
him to the night, the wealth of what he'd once felt had deflated into
almost nothing.
Dru had tried to kill him. Really tried to kill him. There was
no forgiving that.
"What I had with Dru is over," Spike said, watching her intently. Was
she really so oblivious to how gorgeous she was? How painful it was to
be this close to her without touching her? Without nibbling on those
succulent lips and exploring the forbidden contours of her body with
his eager hands? He wanted to touch her so badly. He wanted to feel her
skin beneath his fingers and drown in her kisses. He wanted her to
cleanse him of Drusilla's poison and bathe him with glory only a slayer
possessed.
"I don't know what that means," Buffy replied a long minute later.
"So...you and Dru are of the past. Does...does Dru being out of your life
doesn't make you any less a vampire, Spike."
A long sigh tore off his lips and his shoulders slumped. And that was
the sodding problem, wasn't it? He should have known the entire evil
thing would arise at some point to nip him in the arse.
"What I am, Slayer," he said carefully, "is yours."
Buffy froze. "What?"
"'m yours. There's...God, pet, there's no sodding way for me to go back
after this." He shook his head, shaking harder than he wanted to admit.
"I din't plan it. This...this thing we have. Whatever it is."
"Whatever it is?"
Spike arched a brow. If she wanted to be the first to verbally define
their relationship, she was welcome to it. But they were both licking
their wounds right now; they were both trying to find themselves. And
while he knew he wanted Buffy beyond the shadow of a doubt, he wasn't
about to pressure her into the same realization. Not right now. Not on
the eve of the apocalypse her ex-honey had orchestrated. Not when she
was so miserably lost.
Perhaps his advanced age gave him perspective. Or perhaps he'd been
prepared to walk away from Drusilla all along. He didn't know.
Buffy, though, was all of seventeen years old. Things at seventeen
seemed endless. He remembered being seventeen all too well; he'd never
thought anything could last forever as much as he had in his
adolescence. Not even after Dru found him sniveling in the alleyway.
Teenagers thought of forever in ways demons never could. And while
Spike had thought his life with Dru would be forever, time and
experience had rounded the corners of expectation.
Without Buffy, things would be different. Without Buffy, he never would
have realized what he could have in comparison to what he did. Without
Buffy, he'd be a wallowing mess of devastation.
But there was no without Buffy. She was right with him, and he
was walking away from his old life by choice. Dru wasn't leaving
him—he'd left her. And he'd left her with the knowledge his heart
belonged to someone else. It'd happened fast, yes, but he'd never been
more certain of anything in his life.
Never more certain of anything. He had absolutely no idea how it'd
happened, but it had. And if Buffy thought she could shake him off
after this was over, she was sorely mistaken.
Buffy wet her lips when she realized he wasn't going to make anything
easy on her, her eyes dropping to her lap. "Spike—"
"'m yours." He had the idea the words were frightening her, but with
the threat of the apocalypse breathing down his neck, he didn't care.
If nothing else happened—should the worst come crashing down—he wanted
her to know he was at her side. He wanted her to know to whom he
belonged. "'m yours."
His fingers slid just under her chin, his palms cupping her jaw as his
lips brushed hers. It'd been too long since he'd kissed her. Since he'd
had her taste in his mouth. Since he'd felt her hot tongue licking his.
He loved the way her lips moved, the way she whimpered into his mouth
as though her control was about to be compromised. She was light. She
was innocence personified. She was everything he wasn't, and everything
he wanted.
"Buffy," he murmured against her lips, soaking in her warmth.
"Uhhh..."
Just one more taste. One more...
It wasn't to be. He leaned in for seconds only to be interrupted by the
crash of the front door as it flew open. Buffy jumped and shoved him
away before her thoughts caught up with her, and while he knew she
wasn't acting out of shame, the sudden force in her movements couldn't
help but sting.
Perhaps it was fortunate his thoughts weren't allowed to dwell on the
matter.
"Buffy! Buffy, are you here?"
The Slayer's head jerked up, her eyes fixing on his in manner of an
animal staring down the headlights of an oncoming truck. He knew it was
her mum without needing clarification—one didn't tend to forget the
voice of a woman wielding an axe, especially if she had a famous
daughter. He reckoned by the look on Buffy's face that she hadn't given
her mum a moment's thought since toddling off for school. When would
she have had time? Today had started with a flaming vamp-memo from her
ex and had yet to end. This was just the intermission. There was no
time for mums.
"I'm in here, Mom!"
Before Spike could blink, Joyce Summers had barreled into the kitchen,
her wide suspicious eyes drinking in the scene before her. He could
only imagine what she saw. Her daughter in a blood-stained shirt
standing beside a strange man. Well, not entirely strange, but Spike
had the distinct memory of being in game face and under a chunk of wall
the last time he and the woman made eye contact. He didn't expect to be
recognized.
"Are you all right?" Joyce demanded. "You're not hurt?"
Buffy's hands came up. "I'm fine."
The woman's eyes fell to the blood on her shirt. "Whose is that?" She
didn't bother waiting for a response, shaking her head resolutely.
"You're not fine. We need to—"
"Wouldn't worry," Spike said without thinking, wincing inwardly when
Joyce's head snapped in his direction. He really would have preferred
to remain as invisible as possible, but he similarly didn't want Buffy
to find herself under more pressure than necessary. The girl was going
to snap and they still had a world to save. "'S mostly mine."
She blinked. "What?"
Buffy elbowed Spike hard, though her eyes shone with gratitude.
As it was, his interference didn't distract the woman as long as he
would've liked. Satisfied the blood wasn't due to a mortal wound, the
look in Joyce's eyes swayed from concern to suspicion, and her tone
followed suit. "Buffy," she said levelly, "terrible things have
happened. What were you doing?"
Spike blinked and said perhaps the worst thing he could have said.
"What, your mum doesn' know?"
Yeah, definitely the worst thing. The glare Buffy shot his way verified
as much.
"Know what?" Joyce demanded.
Buffy was trembling so hard he feared she'd inadvertently drill a hole
through the kitchen floor. He wanted so badly to reach out and reassure
her with a touch, but something told him it wouldn't be much help under
the mother's wary eyes.
Though perhaps a touch would have prevented the Slayer from completely
falling off her rocker. "That I'm, uhh...in a band. A-a rock band with
Spike here." She shot Spike a sharp glance, silently begging him to
back her up.
Bugger. He was such a fool for her.
"Right," he heard himself saying. "She plays the...the triangle."
"Drums," Buffy corrected quickly.
He fought off a grin at the visual, but he wasn't about to contradict
her. If his girl wanted to play the drums in their lie, by God, she'd
play the drums. "Drums," Spike echoed with a nod. "She's hell on the
old skins."
Something told him their brilliant cover story wasn't sticking.
"Hmmm," Joyce mused, clearly unconvinced. "And, uh, what do you do?"
He cleared his throat. "Well, I sing."
There was a thick pause. Buffy plastered on her brightest
aren't-I-the-picture-of-innocence grin, which, as expected, had the
reverse effect. Joyce palpably wavered between confusion and
incredulity, ultimately falling completely over to suspicion again. Her
eyes landed on the blood-splattered shirt once more before she
completely took in Spike's appearance.
"Buffy," she said carefully. "A girl is dead. The police were here
earlier; they're saying you're responsible."
"Rot," Spike growled before he could stop himself.
"Spike!" Buffy hissed.
"No, that's complete rot. I can't believe your mum would even..." He
turned to the woman, eyes flaring dangerously. And he noted, with more
than just some satisfaction, his love for the Slayer hadn't affected
how menacing he could look when it was necessary. The barest hint of
accusation in the woman's voice had red flashing across his eyes.
Cowering right now would be the smart thing to do.
Joyce was a lucky woman. Had she been anyone but Buffy's mum...
"The police said—"
"The police?" Spike barked incredulously. "Are you naturally
this thick?"
Buffy elbowed him again, but he ignored her. There wasn't any oomph
behind it anyway.
"If you think she's capable of killin'—"
Intimidated or not, Joyce was going to hold her ground. "I'm not going
to be lectured by a stranger in my own home." She crossed her arms, her
eyes narrowing. "Why don't you show yourself out?"
Spike huffed. He wasn't going anywhere. Regardless, he couldn't help
but swell with warmth when Buffy grabbed his wrist to keep him from
moving. She knew just as well as he did that he wasn't budging; this
was her way of providing support, and it meant the world.
"Mom, I need him."
"Oh Buffy, come on—"
And for whatever reason, something in the girl snapped. It was
unprecedented. Unpredictable. Not even Spike saw it coming. One second
she was standing there, her small, powerful hand wrapped around his
wrist, and the next her eyes were flashing and her shoulders were
thrown back with courage unlike anything he'd ever seen. He was used to
Buffy the Confident Slayer. Buffy the Confident Girl was a completely
foreign concept, and she had him enchanted upon first glance.
"You want the truth?" she snapped, plowing ahead before Joyce could get
a word in. "I'm a vampire slayer. Spike here? He's a vampire."
Spike nodded awkwardly when the woman turned her eyes to him in
question. What else was there to do?
"And right now, we have to go save the world." Buffy nodded at him, and
that was that. He moved immediately for the back door, collecting the
sword they'd propped between the cabinet and the door-handle and
resting it against his shoulder. He moved and Buffy kept talking,
standing across from her mother, who was frozen with astonishment. "The
girl who died? Kendra? She was a friend of mine. A good, good friend.
And the people who killed her are going to end the world. They have
Giles, too. Spike and I are going to stop it. So you stay here. We'll
take care of everything."
A smirk tugged on Spike's lips. His girl had balls of brass. He knew
her heart was thundering. He knew her pulse was racing. He could smell
waves of tension rolling off her small, perfect body. But her voice
didn't waver or crack. There was nothing but conviction when she spoke.
She was a vision of perfection—a tower of fortitude unlike anything
he'd ever seen. And if he lived a millennia, he'd never forget this
moment. Never.
She was perfect. And he was lost to her.
"They have Mr. Giles?" Joyce echoed, dumbfounded.
"Angelus an' Dru," Spike confirmed with a nod, even if his input was
unneeded. "They'll decorate the rug with his librarian guts if we don'
get a move on."
Buffy's nose wrinkled in disgust but she shot him a grateful glance
nonetheless. She knew what he was trying to do. She knew without
needing to be told.
"We should call the police."
Spike rolled his eyes. Again with the sodding police.
"No. We're not calling the police. Spike and I are handling it."
"Handling what? What is happening?"
There was a long, tempered pause. "I'm sorry, Mom, but we don't have
time for this." Buffy turned to him fully and nodded. "Spike?"
"The night awaits, pet."
"No!" Joyce protested. "I am tired of I don't have time or you
wouldn't understand. I am your mother, and you will make
time to explain yourself."
Buffy didn't even spare her a glance. "I told you, I'm a vampire
slayer."
"Well, I just don't accept that!"
Spike snickered and shook his head, fully prepared to ignore the
psychotic woman and get to it, but he noted almost immediately that
Buffy wasn't budging. And when he turned around, he could feel anger
rippling off her body like tiny shock waves. She was frozen in the
doorway, and he knew without having to be told the last strain of her
will had snapped.
"Buffy," he said softly, encouragingly. He didn't even know if she
heard him.
And a few agonizing seconds later, he had his answer.
"Open your eyes, Mom," she said slowly, her voice trembling, every inch
of her fighting for strength he feared the day had already stolen.
"What do you think has been going on for the past two years? The
fights, the weird occurrences. How many times have you washed blood out
of my clothing?" She fisted her red-smeared shirt demonstrably. "Blood like
this, and you still haven't figured it out?"
"Well, it stops now!"
"No! It doesn't stop. It never stops!"
Spike remained silent, but he could smell her tears and it tore him
apart.
"Do-do you think I chose to be like this?" Buffy continued, her
voice dangerously close to teetering toward a shrill. "Do you have any
idea how lonely it is? How dangerous? I would love to
be upstairs watching TV or gossiping about boys or...God, even studying!
But I have to save the world. Again."
"No. This is insane. Buffy, you need help."
It was truly amazing how people could listen without hearing a damn
word. And Spike wasn't about to stand idly by; he'd already seen
something too personal for words, and while his insides were quivering
with rage, he knew how it sounded to outsiders. The woman hadn't seen
anything but blood. She had no proof.
Well, she was about to get some.
"She bloody doesn't, you infuriating bint," he snarled, fangs
descending. He drank in Joyce's horror with grim satisfaction,
motioning quietly for Buffy to join him. "Accept it or not, the girl's
on a timetable. If you wanna be here to chat this out in the mornin', I
suggest you stop preventing us from—"
"What the hell are you?"
Buffy rolled her eyes. "He's a vampire, Mom. Get over it."
"I don't—"
"We're leaving."
"No. No!" Joyce paraded forward intently. "I am not letting you out of
this house. Not with—"
"You can't stop me."
"Oh yes, I—"
It was over too quickly for Spike to appreciate; all he saw was the
aftermath. There was a crashing sound as the woman toppled back, and
when it was over, Joyce had been shoved against the island in the
middle of the kitchen. She was gasping for air as though her head had
been held under water, and staring at her daughter like she held the
face of a stranger.
Buffy turned back to him, her heavy, determined eyes ready. She looked
ready to cry, but her voice betrayed nothing. "Let's go," she said.
"You walk out of this house," Joyce screamed after her, barely
recovered, "don't even think about coming back!"
Buffy didn't even pause. She reached for his hand, and he gave it to
her.
There was no more time for pausing. No more time.
They had a world to save. There would be plenty of time once this nasty
business was behind them.
God, he hoped.
TBC
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