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.
Nightmares haunted every second of sleep. His mind enacted every gut-wrenching scenario a twisted imagination could provide. And each came in the wrapping of a golden fantasy.
He saw Buffy smiling at him. Buffy stripping for him. Buffy lying
spread-eagled on his bed, her pussy slick with aching anticipation of
his touch. He saw her beckon him forward. Saw her take his hand in hers
and guide his fingers to her slippery folds. She moaned and bucked
against his hand, played to easy orgasm and drenched his skin with her
achingly feminine juices. She looked at him with open, trusting eyes.
She looked at him in ways that made him question his existence.
Spike had always known evil things could appreciate beauty; he'd just
never found purity beautiful.
And Buffy was pure. Buffy was nothing but pure.
And she wasn't his. As dream faded into nightmare, as Angel strode into
the room, there was nothing more singular than that knowledge. Buffy
didn't belong to him. She belonged to Angel. To the memory of a soul.
"Thanks for keeping her warm for me," Angel quipped, winking. "Couldn't
have done it without you."
That wasn't the kicker, though. The kicker was watching Buffy's face
break into blinding illumination. The kicker was watching her scoot
over. The kicker was watching her throw her head back in pleasure as
Angel's hand found her pussy.
Thankfully, that was where the nightmare ended. That was when he
twisted awake, finding again that he was alone in his motel bed. That
Buffy's scent lived only on the clothing she'd touched earlier when
she'd kissed his lips off. That she wasn't here to taunt him with the
incredible wrong turn his feelings for her had taken.
She'd decided to go with the curse. She'd helped him back to the
library after talking down the incredibly brassed-off slayer. She'd
tended to his bruised head with an icepack, and told her friends she
wanted to curse Angel again. Any hint of the girl who had sobbed in his
arms was nowhere to be seen. Buffy acted with decisiveness. She wanted
Angel back, and she'd said so while standing at Spike's side.
Her argument? It would buy them time. Time to stop Acathla. Time to
figure out how to put the apocalypse on pause.
It was just a happy coincidence that the curse would bring her
boyfriend back. A two-for-one deal.
Spike moaned and threw his naked legs over the side of the bed, shaking
his head hard. He was such a daft git. So bloody hopeless. Get a girl
to smile at him, shed a few tears, and he was no more useful than Angel
on Viagra. He wanted Buffy, and Buffy wanted someone else.
Story of his life.
The sun would soon fade below the horizon, and then it would be time to
move. Spike was exhausted but wide awake, tense and ready for whatever
the night brought on. He hadn't been able to sleep—if it wasn't the
nightmares, it was worry that she might need him.
And that, friends, is the punchline.
Buffy had robbed him of his ability to sleep through the daytime, which
did little more than solidify how thoroughly buggered he was. He was a
demon; he was supposed to enjoy reaping havoc while the sky was dark
and sleep when the sun was up. He was supposed to be out there planning
an apocalypse of his own. He was supposed to not give a bleeding fuck
if Buffy wanted to shag Angel until she rotted, or how many souls she
stuffed up the git's righteous arse. He was supposed to be different.
He was supposed to be so many things. Right now, the thing he focused
on was the fact that he was a nocturnal creature, and he was turning
arse over tit to change his habits for a girl who was probably dreaming
of getting fucked sideways by another vamp.
A girl who would never dream of him.
Spike padded miserably to the bathroom sink, glaring into the mirror
that refused to glare back. When had life become so sodding
complicated? His plan had been simple enough. Go to the school. Talk to
the Slayer. Get her to concoct a brilliant plan that involved Dru
begging him to take her back as well as Angelus's dusty downfall. But
that hadn't happened.
Buggering ghosts. The ghosts had turned his head and given his cock
another pussy to crave. Crave beyond a fleeting fantasy—crave as he'd
craved no woman before her. Before Buffy. And if that wasn't
humiliating enough, his heart, oh so predictably, had followed suit.
He was always falling for women who were infatuated with Angelus.
Perhaps he truly was a masochist.
"My Spike flies so far away from the other children."
His eyes widened in shock, his feet twisting until he found himself
staring at his maker. The motel door was wide open, and there she
stood. Dru. Distant. Haunting. She held herself like a true aristocrat.
Her hands were hidden behind her back, her hair pulled away from her
face. She was dressed all in black.
Of course she was. The white gowns had vanished once her power was
restored. The white had fooled him, played to his softer side. Made him
believe that the sickly girl he saw—the one who pretended to love him
to get what she wanted—could ever carry over in the rebirth of what no
angry mob could destroy.
Drusilla had walked right into his motel. His neutral ground. The place
he stayed that belonged neither to Angelus nor the Slayer. And she'd
done so without triggering any of his senses. He hadn't even smelled
her.
Odd as it was, Spike was hardly surprised. If Dru didn't want to be
felt, she had ways to avoid it.
"What the hell are you doing here?" he growled, his unthinking feet
carrying him to her. "An' haven't you ever heard of knocking?"
"I just came to see if the stars were lying to me."
"Bloody hell, Dru, we already had this argument. I'm lost, remember?"
He waved his hand a little. "I wanna play in sunshine? I've tasted
honey an' I want more? Any of this ringing any bells?"
"Only dirty boys play in the sunlight, my sweet."
He rolled his eyes. "No need to tell me that. Why don't you bugger the
fuck off an' head back to your cozy li'l apocalypse, yeah? You an'
Grandpap made it perfectly clear that you wanted me nowhere near the
precious ceremony. An' near as I can recall, I din't invite you to keep
tabs."
"Mummy looks after all her babies," Drusilla replied coyly, taking a
step forward. "You were always my favorite baby, Spike."
"But nothin' more than that. Trust me, got that message loud an' clear."
"Daddy worries you'll ruin everything."
Daddy ought to be more worried about the amateur witch that was brewing
up a cup of soul, or at least looking at the recipe. But Spike didn't
say that. He wouldn't betray Buffy. The last time any from her lot had
tried to reensoul the wanker, a teacher lost her life. Not that Spike
particularly cared if one or all of the little Scoobies had their
innards ripped out; he just knew what it would do to Buffy if she lost
someone else. If conjuring a curse meant sacrificing a friend.
He wouldn't betray Buffy. Not now.
Look what she's turned you into.
Not even thoughts like that could persuade him.
"If Daddy figured me for anything of a threat, he'd be here
himself to deliver the message," Spike retorted dryly, arching a brow.
"You're jus' here to keep me in the ranks. Make sure when the mojo
starts later that I'm still standin' on your side."
Drusilla's lower lip poked out in a way that, once upon a time, would
have had him weak in the knees. Not now. Seeing her now only incited
irritation. "My puppy feels mistreated?"
He rolled his eyes. "Yeah. For starters, not a sodding puppy."
"Such a sad day it is for you, William."
"You have no bloody idea."
"You're going to help the nightingale, aren't you?" She took a step
forward, her eyes now blazing with accusation. "You think she sings her
song for you. She doesn't, you know. She likes the way you feed and
coddle her, and she will give you a treat in the end. But her song
isn't yours."
Spike flinched inwardly, but he refused to let Dru see how deep the
words cut. It wasn't anything she hadn't said before. Point of fact,
the very first night she'd fed him the same speech. About how Buffy
didn't want him and all that rot. And while repetition didn't make the
hurt vanish, it did steal some of the punch.
"Still, she had the decency to tell me that before I got involved," he
countered. "Go home, Dru. You're wasting your time with me."
"I don't think so, my darling." She bit her lip coquettishly and her
eyes sparkled with mischief. "Acathla awakes tonight. And you're not
going to ruin the surprise party."
It was only then her arms dropped and the sword came into view. A
sword. An honest-to-god sword. Spike barely had time to blink
at it before the blade cut across his neck. Paralyzed shock hardened
his body; he gasped his maker's name and reached for the wound out of
instinct, baring his gut in a moment of blind weakness.
"Dru—"
She barely blinked at him before swinging again. Then the wall was
pressed to his back, the sword gone all but the handle that protruded
from his belly.
"My Spike wants the sunshine," she said, moving away with haunting
grace. When he had the strength to glance up, she was at the window,
her fingers coiled around the cord that dangled beside the cheap
drapery. "Sunshine, my Spike shall have."
"Dru," he coughed, blood splattering on his lip. The sun had set, of
course, and wouldn't be back for hours. But it would be eventually. And
as tomorrow's day progressed, the sun would crawl deeper into the room.
Until his flesh sizzled and his insides imploded. Until there was
nothing left of him but dust.
The room spun.
Blood. He needed blood.
"Good night, sweet prince," Dru singsonged from the distance. "May
flights of angels sing thee to thy rest."
Had he been more coherent, Spike would have asked her when she'd ever
had the faculties to memorize Shakespeare.
As it was, those words were the last he heard before the world blanked
out.
TBC