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.
Chapter 23
In all honesty, Buffy didn’t know
whether or not to be grateful when Fred neglected to demand answers. It
was hard enough closing the door with Spike on the other side; a
lengthy discussion would positively wear the Slayer out. And she knew
this from experience; were she home and in different company, her every
encounter would be a topic of dissection and interpretation.
Though
admittedly, a thousand years ago and under different circumstances, she
and Fred likely would have bonded over fatty snacks as Buffy related
the silky contours of Spike’s lips in full detail. But things had
changed, and she was so much older now. So much older than she’d been
just a few months ago. She was the mate of a vampire—the eternal
mate of a vampire, from what Spike had related. She was tied to him
forever through blood. Because of the night they’d shared. The night
wherein she’d selfishly jumped his undead bones and used the feelings
she knew he had for her to erase all remnants of Sunnydale from her
grieving mind.
She’d used him, and she’d been rather shameless
about it. But it wasn’t as though she’d felt nothing for Spike—quite
the contrary, she’d felt more than she rationally should have. Ever
since he’d cornered her in the halls of Sunnydale High, no matter
they’d both been under ghostly influence, a spark had ignited in her
belly. A spark she’d done her best to ignore since he first stepped out
of the shadows and into her life. He was gorgeous. He was dangerous.
Compared to her roll in the sack with Angel, Spike had been warm and
considerate, as well as a surprisingly good shoulder on which to lean.
Not only that, he’d cared for—and about—her. He’d genuinely cared about
her. She might have fucked him silly upon arriving at their motel, but
he’d made love to her afterward. In the shower. On the bed. After
violence came solace, and Spike was there to provide it.
Now,
however, her feelings for Spike were caught in a tangled web of
confusion. Never had she thought his reentrance into her life would
coincide with a crisis of this magnitude. Even before he reappeared,
she’d wanted him back, she’d regretted leaving, and while every part of
her ached for his touch, things were different now. Perhaps Buffy was
feeling things due to the claim. She didn’t think so—she felt no less
conflicted now than she had before leaving Sunnydale.
Buffy simply hadn’t been prepared for forever.
She was only seventeen, for crying out loud. She barely knew how to
reconcile her feelings for Spike with what she’d already been through;
now they had forever hanging over them. It was too soon for her healing
heart to be tossed into another relationship—a relationship like the
one she was seemingly destined to have with Spike. One twisted with
passion and anger and fire. Everything she never wanted to touch again.
Not so soon after killing Angel.
Not when she hadn’t yet determined if she was truly grieving him or if
her pain came from being the one who killed him.
Either
reality wasn’t pleasant. Every time Buffy thought she was on her way
out of the hole in which she’d dug herself, her foot would catch and
her hands would slip and she’d feel herself sliding further into
darkness. She’d thought she was over killing Angel a couple times now
only to be proven wrong by the way her stomach would churn every time
she recalled the betrayal in his eyes. But that was it—guilt. She felt
guilt. She didn’t think she actually missed him, and the strange thing
was, it felt wrong not to pine for his arms or ache for his lips or the
soothing reassurance he provided in…well, turning up cryptically to
tell her she was about to die.
It felt wrong not missing him.
Almost
as wrong as the unfair allegations she’d leveled at Spike tonight.
Perhaps she had overreacted to killing Angel and under-reacted to what
Dru had done to Spike because Spike had walked away.
Mentioning Dru as a possibility for Spike had been a low blow—one she’d
known to be impossible for reasons which had nothing to do with the
insane vampire’s tendency to shish kabob her former lovers.
The
way Spike looked at her before she’d left him, Buffy had known he
wouldn’t go back to his sire. He might not come after her for the sake
of pride, but she’d known Drusilla would be at the very bottom of the
last resorts.
And yet, she’d thrown that out there. She didn’t know why.
Buffy
sighed. Perhaps it was because an angry Spike was a less confusing
force than the Spike who looked at her like she was a treasure buried
by God. She knew how to respond to anger; responding to affection was
too difficult right now.
“So…” Fred said, startling the blonde out of her musings. “The vampire…”
Buffy wet her lips. “Yeah,” she replied. “He’s a vampire.”
There was a slow nod as though Fred were carefully weighing the
information. “And…you’re the Slayer.”
“This is very true.”
“And…he’s not slayed.”
The
thought of dusting Spike had her stomach curling in pain all over
again. “No, he’s not,” Buffy said firmly, her tone icy. “And he won’t
be.”
“He’s Spike. The one who gave you money?”
She raised a hand to her throat, her fingertips caressing the bite
mark. “Yeah,” she agreed. “He’s the one who gave me money.”
Fred wet her lips. “Okay…are you going to elaborate or are we gonna
just go over the facts until one of us falls asleep?”
“I
don’t know what you want me to say,” Buffy replied, shuffling
uncomfortably. “Spike’s a vampire. He…our relationship is complicated.
And—”
“You said you were waiting for him.”
“I was.”
Fred
frowned. “And you let him go? I thought…I don’t know, you hadn’t
mentioned anything, but I got the impression that you were kinda
looking for him.” She swallowed hard and wiggled, as though realizing
she’d betrayed more than she’d intended. “Not that I’d know, or
anything. But the way you talked about him when you mentioned the money
he left you…it wasn’t much, but I…I thought you…I thought you wanted
him back.”
The reaction was instinctive. “I do.”
“And he went away?”
Buffy’s eyes narrowed. “I know you heard what was said,” she replied
skeptically. “We weren’t exactly quiet, and he wasn’t—”
“He’s angry.”
Justifiably so, she thought with an inward sigh, but the words
she said were, “It’s complicated.”
“He thought you were waiting for him, too.”
“Again with the ‘I was.’” Buffy shook her head, folding forward in
despair. “I don’t know. I don’t know. We were enemies not too
long ago.”
Fred nodded sympathetically. “’Cause he’s a vampire?”
The
answer seemed more than obvious. “Well…” Buffy’s brows furrowed. “Yeah.
But more than…when we first met, he basically—no, not basically—he told
me outright he was gonna kill me.” A pause. “He didn’t, obviously.”
The brunette inclined her head. “Obviously.”
“But…it
got…” Angel’s face floated to the forefront of her thoughts; Buffy
shivered and quickly shoved him down again. She didn’t want to think
about him anymore than she already had, and though she suspected
divulging her whole sordid history with Angel would give perspective to
the complicated mess in which she’d entangled herself with Spike, she
didn’t want advice. Even with as unconditionally understanding as Fred
was proving to be, Buffy was too gun-shy and jaded from experience to
wade intentionally into deeper waters. She didn’t want to be told where
she’d gone wrong and where there was to go from here.
Namely because the option terrified her.
No
matter their past, no matter what had brought them where they were,
Buffy’s wounded heart knew it could fall easily again. And she wasn’t
ready. She wasn’t ready for anything permanent. Anything which would
truly have her falling in love again. And she knew—she knew—if
she allowed Spike to care for her, she would end up losing herself all
over again.
This
time, there was no cushion. Nothing to keep her heart safe. While she
knew Spike would never do anything intentionally to hurt her, the harsh
reality of his true nature would eventually unmake her. Angel had been
harnessed with a soul; there was nothing harnessing Spike.
Perhaps
before he’d actually come back, she’d thought she could overlook it.
Before he told her this thing they had would be forever.
Because they were mates.
They were claimed.
She
was so selfish. She’d wanted him, and now she had him…only her tattered
heart didn’t know what to do. Which course to take. She kept backing
herself into corners only to cry foul whenever her skewed motives were
challenged. But how could she hope to explain what she wanted when she
didn’t know herself?
“Can I make a teeny observation?”
Buffy
glanced up. Fred’s timid expression had her both tightening with
tension and bubbling with laughter. There was nothing to lose, she
supposed, thus gave her friend the go ahead with a nod.
“That Spike guy…if…I don’t know what any of the words he said meant,
but it seems to be…something involving the both of you?”
Buffy swallowed hard and nodded. “Yeah. It is.”
“Well…wouldn’t
it be better to figure it out together?” the brunette suggested shyly,
casting her eyes downward also immediately. “If you try and do it
separately, you might come to different conclusions and just open up
the door to more trouble.” She paused. “He’s…ummm…vulgar, but there was
a lot of hurt in his voice.”
The vulgarity to which she referred likely referenced Spike’s numerous
descriptions of his night with Buffy as fucking;
something which smarted but remained true to what had occurred. She
hadn’t allowed for anything other than fucking at first. “The vulgarity
came from the anger,” she said softly. “I hurt him. I didn’t want to
hurt him.”
“So—”
“It’s complicated.”
“And it will continue to be complicated until you uncomplicate it.”
Buffy glared. “You will not fool me with your logic.”
“Well…you
care about him. I care about you. By right of contrast, I guess…” Fred
sighed. “I don’t wanna step on your toes, but I want…you
seemed…different with him. He…can vampires…feel? ‘Cause I wouldn’t’ve
known he was a vampire if you hadn’t said anything. He seemed to…feel
a lot.”
A shiver settled over Buffy’s shoulders. “He does.”
“And about you.”
“He does.”
And Buffy cared about Spike. A lot.
Too much.
Too fast. Too soon. Her heart couldn’t take it. But there was nothing
she could do about it. There was nowhere to hide.
And worst of all, Fred was right. Fred was absolutely right.
Space would bring peace. She and Spike needed to talk. She needed to
understand what was happening. She needed him.
“Fred,” Buffy whispered softly. “When Spike comes back…don’t let me
send him away, okay?”
“You—”
“Just
don’t. He makes me go crazy with confusion. But the second I get away
from him, I want him back.” She trembled and glanced up, worrying a lip
between her teeth. “I left him and I’ve missed him. And then tonight…I
just know I’m not ready for what he wants.”
“What he wants?”
A pause. “I’m not ready for…but maybe we can…just until…”
Her
voice trailed off, taking words with it. The slate in her mind blanked.
There was no way to finish a thought when she hadn’t yet decided how to
proceed. How to go about the next day. And the day after. And the day
after.
She needed Spike and she needed space. It was a classic Catch-22, and
she didn’t even know what that meant.
Perhaps she could be with Spike if he allowed her time to heal. If he
was with her without confusing her with sex.
She
didn’t want to be without him in the interim; she just wanted time. So
when she was ready to love him—truly—there would be no reservations.
She only hoped, when she tried to tell him, he would understand.
That she wouldn’t make things worse.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Though
she anticipated his arrival like nothing else, Buffy was strangely
unsurprised when Spike failed to show up the following day. She’d felt
his decision to stay away the second he had reached it—nothing
revolutionary, more a sudden understanding. A sense of knowledge she
couldn’t explain but accepted as truth all the same.
She understood. After what had happened, she’d want to be away from
herself as well.
Still, she couldn’t deny it hurt.
“I
spoke with Mr. Binns,” Fred said over lunch. “This morning…when I
stepped out to get the paper, I saw him. The apartment’s yours if you
want it. I told him…he’s taking some furniture, but he’s willing to
sell some to you.”
Buffy’s brows hit her hairline. “His furniture?”
“His
wife’s going to a home and he’s moving into a much smaller apartment.
He says he can leave you with the bed, one of his sofas, and the
kitchen table.” Fred shrugged and nibbled on the crust of her sandwich.
“Not a dresser or a television, though. Or anything else. And he wants
five hundred dollars.”
“Five hundred dollars?”
Fred
nodded. “For the bed and sofa…and the table. Which, really, all things
considered, not too much. I mean, yeah, secondhand, and you’ll have
that old-person smell to get out, but for LA prices, it’s not too
shabby. How much of Spike’s money do you have left?”
Buffy
inhaled sharply, ignoring the twinge his name shot to her heart.
“Enough,” she said. “He left me with…a lot. More than…well, a lot.”
“Where’d he get it, do you think?”
“I
don’t know and I don’t wanna know. I just…he got it for me.” Of this,
she had no doubt. Just as the sun would rise and the moon would glow,
she knew Spike had procured the cash for her sake. He’d done it so she
wouldn’t be left to herself when she walked out the door and ostensibly
out of his life. He’d done it so she’d have something on which to rely.
“And
your landlord’s okay with this?” Buffy asked softly, her heart racing.
The notion of renting her own apartment was so far beyond her, and yet
somehow it didn’t seem strange to be sitting here, discussing it as
though it was an actual possibility.
Namely because she knew it was.
She knew she was going to take it. She was going to be a grownup and
sign a lease and everything.
And the decision came so easily, Buffy knew she was going to be in Los
Angeles for a while. A long while.
Time
needed a chance to heal her heart. She was still broken from what had
occurred in Sunnydale. Not only with Angel—if Angel factored in at all.
A part of her felt so detached from it she wondered why he kept
surfacing at all. And yet he did—the perpetual bad penny, Angel was the
perfect mood-killer. If ever a party needed a pooper, one need look no
further.
Perhaps Angel kept surfacing because he, alive or
not, was the thing standing between her and Spike. Not out of love; out
of warning.
Buffy had already seen the worst love between slayers and vampires
could do. She wasn’t eager to try again.
Not
that warning herself did any good. The rest of her was thoroughly
sickened with a need to see Spike. A need to throw herself in his arms
and beg forgiveness for being so flighty and uncertain. She didn’t want
him to leave her—the thought was crushing. She didn’t want him to leave
her, but she wasn’t ready to be what he wanted her to be. What he
needed her to be.
She wasn’t ready to be the girlfriend. The mate. The lover.
Right now—just right now—she needed to be friends. And if he understood
that…God, she hoped he understood that.
“He’s
fine with it,” Fred agreed, her voice dragging Buffy from her cynical
musings. “Really fine with it…as long as you can afford to give him two
months’ rent in advance.”
“I can.”
There was a skeptical pause. “I…I haven’t even told you what the rent
is.”
“Believe me, I can afford it.”
“Spike’s money?”
Buffy swallowed hard, ignored the twinge once more, and nodded.
“Spike’s money.”
“Wow…he gave you a lot, didn’t he?”
That would be the understatement of the year.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
It
wasn’t like she had anything to pack. In fact, the most strenuous part
of moving into Mr. Binns’s apartment came with signing the lease. It
required two forms of photo identification and her birth-certificate;
three things Buffy had left in her mother’s possession. Her
intermediate license, while had never been revoked, was rather
invalidated as she hadn’t passed the driving test or…any test. But it
still had her picture beside her name in a secure, governmental
fashion.
And it was still in Sunnydale. Along with her student
ID, her social-security card, and her birth-certificate. And everything
else identifying her as Buffy Summers.
Fortunately for her,
Fred’s landlord was the sort who could be bought off. It cost a pretty
penny, but thanks to the William the Bloody Foundation, she had money
to spare.
Not a ton, but some.
So she had an apartment.
An apartment she could hold for two months at least. An apartment, a
bed, a couch, and a table. She’d need food and clothing and utilities.
The sort of luxuries she’d taken for granted while under her mother’s
roof.
Fred assured her a job at the library. A job meant
money, which was good. Money meant budgets, which were bad, as Buffy
was something of a shopaholic. Plus she and math were unmixy forces.
This being-an-adult thing was really going to suck.
But the suffocating pressure of living in the real world was worth the
freedom of being her own provider.
And then there was Spike. Spike, who while angry with her, would never
leave her alone.
At the first knock to her front door, a sense of underlying peace
filled her.
Buffy
inhaled sharply, her pounding heart betraying her nerves. Her bare feet
padded across the worn carpet floor. She was at once startlingly aware
of what little she owned. The rooms were practically empty. She had
nothing with which to offer guests.
But Spike wasn’t a guest. He was…she didn’t know what he was, other
than hers.
And here. Spike was here. He’d come back.
A
small smile graced her lips when her eyes crashed with the sea of
tumultuous blue. The soft eagerness on his face took her breath away.
She leaned against the doorway.
“Come in, Spike.”
TBC
Send
feedback