The
Writing on the Wall
Author: Holly (holly.hangingavarice@gmail.com)
Rating: NC-17 (For language, violent imagery, disturbing content, and
sexual situations)
Timeline: Post-The Gift, AU.
Summary: There was no body to bury. There was no funeral. There was
nothing but the three rules and the knowledge that a thousand years of
torment was nothing compared to a world without her in it. Spike
embarks on a journey through the Gates of Hell to rescue the one he
loves, but in order to save her, he must risk losing himself.
Disclaimer: The characters herein are the property of Joss Whedon and
Mutant Enemy. They are being used out of respect and affection, and not
for the sake of profit. No copyright infringement is intended.
A/N: I really want to say something witty here, but I am too
damn tired. Um. Thanks, betas. I love you, my readers. Vote at The
Spuffy Awards where two of my fics are up for pretties, my God, how
self-involved can I be?
Speaking of self-involved, I just got notification that Wicked was nominated at the Spark
and Burn Awards. THANK YOU SO MUCH TO WHOEVER NOMINATED ME! YOU ARE
AWESOME!
Yeah. I gotta do this before I drop.
Chapter Twenty-five
”What happens now?”
Spike tore his eyes away from the walls almost sheepishly. He’d been
unable to do little more than stare since she’d led him inside. It was
bloody amazing—he’d come to expect so much, had seen so many things,
but he hadn’t been prepared for the writings to turn into names. It
wasn’t extraordinary given the catalogue of experiences he’d had over
the years…perhaps because it made everything she’d told him real, even
if he knew it had been nothing else.
“What do you mean, pet?”
She sat on the makeshift bed, studying him with a warmth that made his
toes curl and his body think of things it shouldn’t. “Is it weird?” she
asked.
He smirked. “Let a bloke answer the first question before runnin’ off
to the next.”
“The walls, I mean.” Buffy licked her lips, her eyes wandering over her
carvings. “They didn’t always look like this, did they?”
“No, love.”
“I can’t keep track of what’s real and what’s not. But I think I
remember—”
“When I got here, it was unreadable,” he assured her. “I think your
remembering turned it back.”
She nodded. “I just don’t understand why…”
A thick pause settled between them as she searched for words. When the
silence became uncomfortable, he prompted, “Why your marks would
change?”
“Right,” she said. “This isn’t normal, is it?”
“Normal’s relative, love,” Spike replied. He didn’t know what
difference it made, didn’t know whether or not he was talking out of
his arse, but it felt so wonderful just talking with her that he didn’t
care enough to evaluate what was said. Not at the moment, at the very
least. “Your world, your rules, that’s how I figure it. You told me the
words stopped making sense to you, right?”
Buffy nodded again, though she didn’t look any more enlightened than
before.
“I figure they just…became what you perceived.”
“I can do that?”
“Your world,” he reminded her. “Not sure how this works, but I reckon
you control what you see to a degree.”
Her nose wrinkled. “I think I want a refund.”
A small ripple of mirth spread through his body; he managed to kill his
grin. He hadn’t thought she’d be up for quips just yet, but Christ
it was good to hear. “Just a theory,” he said again.
“It’s a good theory.”
“There were a lot of talks before I left,” Spike said, gesturing,
“about this. About where you were and what to expect. I bloody resented
it at the time, but it probably saved my life. All the hoops I had to
jump…”
Buffy nodded faintly, wrapping her arms around her legs. “Three hundred
years is a long time to look for someone,” she remarked. Her eyes met
his. “What happened, Spike?”
“It doesn’t matter.”
“That’s not fair. I told you my story of woe.”
“Right, love, you did. Wasn’t a quid pro quo.”
“It had to be bad if you’re not telling me.”
Spike’s brows perked. “How do you figure? Maybe I had a right good old
time and I feel like shit knowing I was livin’ the good life while you
suffered.”
She rolled her eyes. “You’re a terrible liar.”
“Oi! I’m a right good liar. You just didn’t give me time to come up
with a convincin’ story.” He shuffled self-consciously. “I’m evil.
Hell’s evil. Figure I’m right at home.”
Buffy didn’t look convinced. In fact, the look on her face was so
thoroughly familiar he nearly felt weak in the knees. It would take a
while before the realization that she was actually with him sank in; in
the meantime, he enjoyed all her reminders. Every glance, every snarky
comment…each and every indicator of the woman she’d been was something
to be treasured.
“Who said you were evil?” she asked skeptically.
“Well, you, for starters,” he replied before huffing out his chest with
indignation. “And I am bloody evil. Don’t you forget it.”
“I really said you were evil?”
“Too many times to count, sweetheart.”
“Well…” Now it was her turn to shuffle. If he didn’t find it so
adorable, he might have worked to come up with more shining examples of
his inherent monstrosity. As it was, it was nice hearing her defend him
for a change…even from herself. “I was dumb,” she concluded.
“Dumb?”
“You looked for me for three hundred years. That’s not evil.”
Spike frowned. “I love you,” he replied. There was nothing more to it.
“There’s also that,” she agreed. “You love me.”
“Hate to burst your bubble, darling, but evil can love just as well as
anything else.”
“Well, then…it doesn’t matter.” She nodded promptly as though she’d
discovered the unarguable argument. “It doesn’t matter that you’re
evil. Your kind of evil is…you’re not on par with Hell, Spike. And stop
disagreeing with me. It’s wigging me out.”
He couldn’t help but grin. “How’s that?”
“It feels like we’re on opposite sides. Me arguing for your
nonevilness.”
“That’s because we are,” he acknowledged. “God knows I spent months
trying to convince you I wasn’t what I was…you and myself. But a bloke
learns a lot over three centuries.”
Buffy licked her lips and fell silent. He took it as permission to
continue.
“It began as infatuation, see,” he said softly. “Had a dream about you.
About us. It’s bloody confusing as fuck because I feel like I’ve loved
you since the second I saw you, but even then it was infatuation. The
second I realized it is when I started to really fall. All through our
last year together…the realer you became to me. And I did change, love.
I changed for you…for me. You made me want to be better than I was. A
better man. A man you could love.” Spike broke away, his jaw
tightening. If he wasn’t careful he would reveal more than he intended.
“But that doesn’t matter, does it? I can change who I am, not what.
There’s always gonna be this. I can’t rip evil outta me. It’s
there, all the time. It makes me who I am.”
An uncomfortable quiet settled between them. Her eyes had fallen from
his at some point, and he didn’t really care to examine the
connotations. There were some things all the sacrifices in the world
couldn’t change. His nature, and her aversion to it, was among them.
“Nature isn’t your fault,” she whispered.
Spike blinked. “How’s that?”
Buffy exhaled and glanced up, her eyes shining. “Did I punish you for
something you couldn’t change?” she asked. “I did, didn’t I? God, what
the hell gave me the right…I can’t control what I am. Being the Slayer
was never my idea. I was just…chosen. Like you were chosen.”
“It’s not that simple,” Spike interjected.
“Yes, it really is.” She shook her head. “I know there are things I
don’t remember. About you. And me. And everyone. But I do know
this…whatever you were or are…whatever I said you were, you came to
find me. And you won’t tell me what happened to you, so I’m going to
assume it was bad.”
Spike sighed, flooded with different waves of many-flavored emotions.
All at once he was overwhelmed, defensive, skeptical, and more in love
than he’d ever been. “It was bad,” he said shortly. “But I chose it. I
knew what I was getting myself into.”
Buffy’s brow furrowed. “And I didn’t?”
“You didn’t know what would happen. I did.”
“I had to know it was a possibility, didn’t I?” He shook his head,
which only furthered her conviction. “I jumped into a ripple of
dimensions, Spike. Glory’s…her worlds were all hell-worlds. I had to
know. I had to.”
“Rot. You jumped so Dawn wouldn’t, because you were so bloody sure
she’d snuff it if she did. You did it to save her, Buffy. You jumped to
save her.” Spike broke away before his temper got the better of him.
The last thing she needed was to be scolded on her motives; motives he
knew good and well had always been to jump, die, and rest for eternity.
No one had ever discussed the possibility of being sucked into a hell
dimension; in the last hours, all talk had centered on hell being
unleashed on Earth and the necessary measures to prevent it. Dawn’s
death was the only viable option…or it had been, until Buffy changed
the rules.
Buffy exhaled softly, her shoulders dropping in defeat. “I don’t
understand anything,” she said. “I don’t know why you would sacrifice
so much for me—”
“I can only say I love you so many times.”
“Most people don’t love like this.”
Spike shrugged. “I’m not most people, love. Not bloody people
at all.”
“Is that why we weren’t together?”
He offered a wry smile. “Thought we covered this. I didn’t have the
right parts.”
Her eyes dropped unceremoniously to his crotch before darting away
again, a warm blush tickling her cheeks. Spike tried and failed to
smother a grin. Seemed the Slayer had remembered her naughty streak.
“The soul thing, right?” she asked, looking anywhere but him.
“Right.”
“And that was the only reason?”
Spike barked a laugh. Of all the conversations to have…
“You don’t remember,” he said, “and you’re confusing what you see here
with reality. I’m not a sodding prince, Buffy. Not your white knight,
no matter how much I want to be. I’ve done terrible things. Things
I’d…and that’s not the kind of person you could be with.”
“This doesn’t sound like you.” She frowned. “I don’t remember a lot,
but I remember enough to know this doesn’t sound like you.”
Spike shrugged lazily. “Told you, three hundred years of isolation can
do wonders to a bloke’s perception.”
“So you don’t want me to love you anymore.”
Choking back his surprised laugh was almost impossible, but he knew
from the look on her face he had to treat her question seriously. How
she could doubt the answer was beyond him; however, he understood what
was crystal bloody clear to him was the next man’s enigma. He wasn’t
sure if that wasn’t also a lesson earned with time. Too many of his
memories were little more than blurs, and the things he did remember
offered few answers.
“More than anything, sweetheart,” Spike replied softly. “That’s what I
want. But it’s not that bloody simple, is it? I was gettin’ there
toward the end…knowin’ you’d never love me, knowing what I was and what
you…but nothing can stop me from wanting it, just as nothing can change
what I am or what I’ve done. I don’t deserve you.”
“I don’t believe that.”
The conviction in her voice was enough to break a man, especially one
who had lived with hope and desire as long as he had. “Yeah,” he
retorted, “you do. And if you don’t remember now, you will tomorrow or
the day after. Whatever you’re feeling now won’t last.”
Buffy looked away and sighed. Tension held her every muscle hostage.
“Tell me what happened.”
“When?”
“You know when.”
Spike’s shoulders tightened. She was banking on him to cave, and why
shouldn’t she? He’d already told her things he’d resolved to keep to
himself. Things he swore would never leave his lips. Well, bollocks.
She wasn’t getting sod all from him concerning the three centuries of
starvation and solitude. He couldn’t bloody well take her sympathy,
couldn’t stand it if the hero-worship in her eyes deepened or turned
her gratitude into an offer he couldn’t refuse.
“Drop it, Buffy.”
“No.”
“I’ve bloody told you, it’s not important.”
“And I say that’s hooey.”
His lips twitched. “Hooey?”
She nodded. “That’s what I said.”
“Buffy…”
“Tell me what happened.”
Let no one ever tell her she wasn’t stubborn. “It doesn’t matter,”
Spike replied flatly. “All you need to know is I was prepared to
sacrifice everything.”
She nodded, slightly subdued. “And you did.”
“No. Not everything. Not hardly, sweetheart.” He smiled in spite of
himself. “I kept you with me.”
“Me?”
“Every day. You were with me every day.”
Buffy smiled at that, her eyes falling to her lap. “I was?”
“Better bloody believe it, love.” Spike took a step forward. “Wouldn’t
have made it without you.”
“Really?”
He nodded. “And that is all you’re getting from me.”
The silence that settled between them was neither comfortable nor
tense. Buffy sat, Spike stood, and they didn’t look at each other. It
could have lasted hours, but it did not. There was still so much to
discuss, things that would not wait for the sake of ease.
“I did what you asked,” Buffy whispered.
He blinked and met her eyes. “What’s that, love?”
“I remember now, and I don’t hate you.”
An awkward pause settled between them before comprehension dawned, and
then he didn’t know what to do. She hadn’t addressed the intimacies
they’d shared at all, not as he’d feared she would. The dreaded pop in
the nose had remained absent, as had the accusatory glares and scathing
remarks…all of which he now recognized as ridiculous and paranoid.
After all she’d experienced, after everything she’d suffered, the
touches he’d given her would be nowhere near the forefront of her
concerns.
Still, knowing that didn’t knock back the need to explain his actions.
Buffy understood now, sure, but she might not always. He needed to be
prepared for that day.
“I didn’t—”
She held up a hand, anticipating him. “I know.”
“It wasn’t supposed to be—”
“I know.” This time he didn’t press the issue, placated by her smile.
“That’s why I wanted to tell you,” Buffy explained. “Whatever you
thought I’d think…I don’t. I don’t hate you for touching…for giving me
something that wasn’t…you took me out of myself.”
“Bloody self-serving. I’ve wanted to touch you for—”
“You seem intent on digging your own grave. Or is it dust-pile?”
Spike smirked. “Just don’t want you gettin’ the wrong idea of me, love.
Everything we’ve had has been honest. I need it to be honest.”
“I don’t have the wrong idea of you.”
“Well, you don’t have your idea. All you know of me is—”
“Don’t do that.”
“What?”
“Don’t project things you think I should be feeling or thoughts I
should be thinking on me. You’ve been doing it all night, and I…” Her
nose wrinkled. “You’re acting like Angel.”
Now there was an insult. “Oi! Take that back!”
At least she had the decency to wiggle. “Well, you are. I know I don’t
remember everything, Spike, but I don’t have amnesia. It’s coming back.
It will all
come back…at this rate, probably a lot quicker than either of us
expected. And Angel always did this. He assumed what I should or
shouldn’t do or think. I remember that and it drove me crazy.”
“I don’t think there’s anything you should think. I just bloody
know you, Slayer.” He shrugged. “Not sayin’ anything you haven’t told
me before, or anything you wouldn’t have told me had…had…”
Her eyes narrowed. “Had…what? Had I not been sucked into Hell for a
bajillion years? Well, that world doesn’t exist. I can’t speak for what
didn’t happen, and you said it yourself, three hundred years can do a
lot to change your perception. Imagine the impact of that times three.”
She held up a hand. “Even if I wasn’t all here the entire time. Your
name is on the wall, Spike. I wanted to remember you.”
Spike stared at her for a minute, then sighed heavily and lowered his
eyes. She was right, of course. He wasn’t being fair…and he wasn’t
quite being himself, but Christ, could she blame him? It would be so
bloody easy to get swept up in the day’s romanticism. To believe the
look in her eyes would be there forever, to believe the feeling she’d
put into her hugs was genuine and wouldn’t fade. He’d been walking a
fine line since he arrived, and when she looked at him the way she
looked at him now, he nearly forgot the moment was fleeting, and the
next might not be so generous.
And he couldn’t forget that, but he also couldn’t assume things based
on judgment that was now a thousand years old. Time had changed him—why
was he intent on thinking it would be any different for Buffy?
“I want this to be real,” he whispered. “I can’t take it if it’s not,
Buffy. Being with you, here or anywhere, and getting what you’ve given
me…if that’s taken away from me, I couldn’t bloody bear it.”
Her eyes softened. “I want this to be real, too.”
“An’ you know it might not be.”
“But I’m not excluding the possibility that it is. And even if it’s not
real, I’m not…however things were won’t be the way they are. I
can’t go back to that girl. She’s gone.” Buffy looked away. “She died
in the jump.”
“Not completely.”
“Maybe not. But enough.” A small quiet held between them before her
eyes found his again. “Are you going to stand there all night?”
Spike blinked. “Huh?”
She patted the vacant space beside her.
“You want…I didn’t know if…after you remembered…”
“I just want to be held tonight.”
He smiled, every nerve in his body singing. “I can do that.”
The walk across the room likely didn’t take as long as it seemed; it
all felt like a dream. Everything since that morning at the river…he
couldn’t quite shake the feeling he was going to snap out of a long,
wishful reverie. But when he knelt beside her, she didn’t fade; when he
wrapped his arms around her, she didn’t disappear; when her head found
his chest, he didn’t jerk awake. Nor did she start when his fingers
stroked her arm, or when his lips found her brow. Her heart beat
against his silent chest, and every second was his.
“I don’t want it to be gratitude,” Spike whispered into her hair.
She was still for a second, then, “I know. I don’t want it to be
gratitude, either. But I do…I do have…I have feelings.”
His heart jerked but he didn’t reply.
“But I’m smart enough to know it might not be real,” she continued.
“You came to rescue me. You brought me back to myself. You’ve
sacrificed so much, so yes, I am grateful. I am so grateful I’m…and I
don’t want it to be gratitude. What I’m feeling. I don’t want it to be
gratitude.” A breath. Buffy shifted and turned her gorgeous hazel eyes
to him, and everything stilled. “I want these feelings to be real.”
She was so beautiful.
“I do. I really do. It’s so good to feel something. I want this to be
real.”
God, there had never been sweeter sentiment. He was so exhausted on
hope and fear he feared he might burst into tears, but he did not.
Instead, he shivered and shook his head. “Mmm, Buffy…” Spike pressed
his lips to her brow again, unable to help himself. “You have any idea
what you just did?”
She shook her head.
“You gave me a crumb.”
TBC