Dimming of the Day
Author: enigmaticblue
Rating: PG-13
Disclaimer:
We all know that these things probably don’t offer much protection, but
I’ll go through the motions anyway. I don’t own these characters. If I
did, Spike and Buffy would be laying on a (moonlit) beach somewhere,
living happily ever after.
Summary: Set sometime after Tabula Rasa.
With Giles’ departure, and her growing attraction to Spike, Buffy can’t
resist the offer of answers to her questions, but will the answers be
what she expects?
“This old house is falling down around my
ears/I’m drowning in a river of my tears/When all my will is gone you
hold me sway/I need you at the dimming of the day./You pulled me like
the moon/Pulls on the tide./You know just where I keep my better
side…Come the night you’re only what I want./Come the night you could
be my confidant…I need you at the dimming of the day.” ~Richard Thompson
Part III: Loss
She was kneeling on the grass in a
cemetery, and Buffy knew whose tombstone was in front of her before she
read the words. She was herself, but different now.
She was the Buffy who hadn’t jumped, the Slayer who hadn’t been able to
save her sister.
She
reached out a hand to trace the letters one at a time. Buffy wondered
who had chosen the epitaph, because it read simply, “Dawn Summers.
Beloved daughter, sister, friend.” She would have found something else
to say, something more profound.
Or she would have, if she hadn’t been weighed down by a grief so heavy
she wasn’t sure she could stand.
“Come on, luv, I’ll walk you home.”
“I need to patrol.”
“I can do it. You should go home and get some sleep. It’s been days.”
“How would you know?”
“Do you really want to know the answer to that?”
“Probably not.”
She
felt his strong hand touch her shoulder hesitantly. The touch reminded
her of the night they’d sat on her porch, after he’d told her of his
past in the Bronze. “You can’t stay here forever, luv.”
“I
know.” After a moment, she allowed him to help her rise. Spike was
right; she couldn’t spend another night at the gravesite. “But I should
patrol.”
He sighed. “Take a night off, Buffy. You deserve it.”
It
was only because she was almost too tired to stand that she started for
home. Spike fell into step beside her, but she didn’t have the energy
to protest. In truth, she appreciated the company.
They walked in silence; words seemed superfluous. After all, words
wouldn’t bring her sister back.
Spike
walked her right up to the front door. “Why don’t you let me take
patrol for you tomorrow night, Slayer? Or for as long as you want.”
“Everybody’s treating me like I’m fragile,” Buffy said. “I’m still the
Slayer.”
“We
know you are, pet, but it’s natural to take some time to grieve.” He
ducked his head, staring at the toes of his boots. “Just—let me know,
yeah?”
“If you could patrol for a couple of days, that would be
nice.” The thought of being able to abdicate responsibility for a while
was too tempting to pass up.
He smiled at her, a hint of shyness in his expression. “Whatever you
need, luv.”
Buffy knew she could take his words at face value.
~~~~~
Somehow,
she managed to sleep that night, her exhaustion finally catching up to
her. Buffy had spent the last two weeks keeping busy, trying not to
think about the fact that Dawn was dead, gone forever. Trying to block
out all memories of watching her younger sister jump from the tower.
It should have been her, but Dawn had been too fast, too insistent.
Buffy had hesitated a moment too long.
In the end, it had been Dawn who had been the bravest of the Summers
girls.
She
slept late that first day, the silence of the house a heavy weight on
her chest. It was easier to roll over, pull the pillow over her head,
and go back to sleep. There had been no dreams that night, and it gave
her hope that sleep might provide a respite from grief after all.
Without
patrol, there was no reason to get out of bed. Her friends were largely
leaving her alone; they had no idea what to say to offer comfort. They
had all failed Dawn; Buffy wasn’t alone in that, even though her
profound grief had isolated her.
When her mom had died, Buffy had at least had Dawn. They had been in it
together. Now, she had no one.
On the second day, Willow came to see her, to try to cajole her out of
bed and into eating. “I can’t,” she replied.
“Buffy, we’re worried about you,” Willow said softly. “You need to get
up, do something. Dawn wouldn’t want this.”
“I’ll
try.” It was the only promise she could make, and she resented the
implication that she was failing Dawn. Didn’t Willow understand that
she’d already failed, that there was nothing she could do to make up
for it?
On the third day, Buffy rose because Spike would be
expecting her for patrol, and her friends wouldn’t leave her alone for
much longer. When Dawn had been taken, and she’d retreated inside
herself, Willow had come and dragged her back out again. This was no
different, except that there was no escape, not even inside her head.
They didn’t understand, and so they would keep pushing until she was
back to normal. Or at least the pretense of normal.
“We don’t have to do this,” Spike said as they set out from the house.
“If you need more time—”
“They’re going to start asking questions soon,” Buffy replied softly.
“I don’t have a choice.”
“There’s
always a choice,” he shot back. “Tell them to sod off if they try to
interfere. They’re not the ones who—” Spike stopped himself before he
completed the sentence.
“They’re not the ones who lost their mom and their sister?”
“Yeah, that.”
“Don’t worry about me,” Buffy said. “I’m used to going on when the
going gets tough. The Slayer is always alone, right?”
“You’re not alone, Buffy,” Spike insisted.
“Maybe,” she said dubiously.
Patrolling
with Spike was the only time she felt relatively normal, the only time
her grief seemed to ebb. He didn’t try to make conversation, or press
her to talk about her feelings, or tell her that everything was going
to be okay. The most he ever did was to tell her to do whatever the
hell made her feel better.
Buffy appreciated that.
“You
need to think about what you’re going to do with your life,” Giles told
her about halfway through the summer. “I know it’s difficult, but—”
“What
am I supposed to do, Giles?” Buffy asked. “We both know that I’m not
going to survive many more apocalypses. There’s no point in going to
school.”
“Buffy—”
“Dawn should be the one going to school this fall,” she whispered. “If
I hadn’t failed her—”
“You did the best you could, Buffy,” he insisted. “Once the portal was
opened, there wasn’t any other choice.”
Buffy looked him straight in the eyes. “Yes, there was. I should have
been the one to jump.”
He looked away, his expression grim. “The world needs the Slayer.”
“I
don’t know if I care about the world anymore,” Buffy said bluntly,
walking away from him and going up to her room, slamming the door
behind her. She still hadn’t forgiven Giles for telling her that she
might have to kill Dawn.
If he hadn’t made the suggestion, maybe
she wouldn’t have hesitated before jumping. Maybe Dawn would still be
alive. It might be wrong to blame him, but she couldn’t quite help it.
The
others had also told her that she needed to move on and make plans for
the future, although they used different words. Willow told her that
Dawn had been incredibly brave; Xander made lame jokes about anything
and everything in an attempt to get her to laugh. Tara was gently
understanding, much as she’d been after Joyce’s death, and Anya was
awkward and uncharacteristically silent.
She wanted to be
grateful that they were trying; Buffy knew they were doing the best
they knew how. It didn’t help her feel better, though, so it was easier
to avoid their company.
Buffy didn’t think that the fog of her
grief would ever lift, and there were nights when she wondered what
would happen if she just stopped fighting. If Spike hadn’t been there,
she probably would have, but Buffy didn’t want him to see her quitting.
She wondered if he knew, or if he suspected.
When he showed up at her door, a few nights after Giles had confronted
her about her apathy, Buffy had her answer.
“Let’s
go, Slayer. We’ll skip patrol tonight.” He sounded determined, and
Buffy knew he had something planned. The worry radiated off him.
“I’m fine, Spike.” The last thing she needed was for him to start
treating her as though she was fragile.
“No, you’re not,” he said bluntly. “You’re angry, an’ you’re grievin’,
but that’s not the point. Let’s go.”
“Where are we going?” she asked, not much caring.
His grip was gentle, but firm, when he grasped her arm. “A place I know
of.”
“This isn’t a date, is it?” she asked suspiciously, not knowing whether
she wanted it to be or not.
Spike
snorted. “Please, Slayer. I think I learned my lesson last time. What
you need is somethin’ to take your mind off matters, an’ I’ve got just
the thing.”
Buffy frowned, her curiosity piqued. She couldn’t
remember the last time she’d felt excitement at the prospect of a
mystery. “What kind of thing? Spike—”
“Do you trust me?”
“Yes.” She said it without hesitation, and knew it was true.
His face softened, and his blue eyes lit up. “Alright, then. It’s a
surprise.”
“Okay.”
Spike
drove. Buffy noticed that he’d cleaned his car, and her suspicions as
to whether or not this was supposed to be a date were rekindled. She
decided that it was one of those things she didn’t care about. Since
Spike was the only person she could stand to be around right now, she
was hardly going to revoke his invitation.
Although, when she
realized they had parked outside the demon bar along the highway, Buffy
seriously considered it. “What the hell are we doing here?”
He gave her an oddly satisfied smile. “We’re here so you can take out
your anger on a few unsuspecting demons.”
“I patrol every night, Spike,” Buffy snapped. “I don’t think I need a
fight to feel better.”
“This
isn’t you goin’ out an’ doing your duty, Buffy,” he replied, his tone
low and sincere. “This is about takin’ the fight to them.” The look he
gave her was intense, riveting her, forcing her to actually hear
what he was saying. “Demons took your sister, Slayer. It wasn’t your
fault; it was theirs. This is about payback.”
Spike’s
argument seemed to light a fire nearly extinguished by grief, and his
words made a certain kind of sense. Maybe killing a bunch of demons
wouldn’t bring her sister back—but it might make her feel a little
better.
He smiled as he realized that his arguments had hit home. “Here.” He
handed her a stake and a long dagger.
“What are you bringing?”
“I’ve got an ax,” he replied, reaching into the back seat. “You ready?”
She
followed him into the bar, but only because Spike knew the layout and
she didn’t. If they were going to take out as many as possible, they
would have to do it right. At least, that was the reason that Spike
gave her. Buffy had a feeling that he wanted to protect her, but if his
plan would result in more dead demons, she’d follow his lead.
He
barged through the front doors of the bar with a flourish that made
Buffy envious. She thought it might be the coat, because nothing else
would explain it.
When she stepped up next to him, silence soon fell over the bar and its
patrons.
“Listen
up,” Spike called. “I think you lot know the Slayer. We’re here to
clean house, so if you don’t want to fight, now’s the time to leave.”
There
was a long silence when no one inside the bar moved, then a large,
slime-covered demon stepped out of the crowd. “We’re not frightened of
the Slayer and her pet vampire,” it replied in a muffled hiss.
Buffy
saw a few demons begin to inch their way to the door, not wanting to
draw attention to their retreat, but not wanting to stay either. She
decided to let them go; she and Spike had enough to keep them busy.
She looked over at Spike. “Hear that? He’s not afraid of me.”
Spike smirked, his expression positively evil. “Guess we’ll just have
to teach him a lesson about what the Slayer’s capable of.”
They
both leapt into action, Buffy feeling secure in the knowledge that
Spike was by her side, her muscles singing with the exertion. She
ducked a blow aimed at her head and gutted another demon with one slice
of her knife, whirling low to the ground to hamstring a second that was
about to hit Spike from behind.
Spike vaulted over her head to
get to a demon who was about to deliver a blow to the back of her neck.
His momentum took them both to the ground where he snapped its neck.
Buffy
lost herself in the battle, moving on instinct alone, meting out death
to all who got in her way. She knew nothing other than the feel of the
wooden stake in her hand, the taste of ash on her lips, and the sounds
of fists and feet hitting flesh.
They’d nearly emptied out the
bar when she heard Spike’s harsh shout behind her and turned, not quite
in time to avoid the heavy fist that slammed into her temple. When she
regained consciousness, she was in the passenger seat of Spike’s car.
“What happened?”
“You got hit. He’s dead.”
“Thanks.”
“How’s your head?”
“It hurts, but I’ll live.”
“You want to go home?”
“Not really,” Buffy replied.
He nodded. “Right, then.”
She
put her throbbing head back against the seat and let him drive, idly
wondering what it would be like to leave Sunnydale behind her. She’d
tried it before; Buffy had tried not to be the Slayer after she’d sent
Angel to hell. She knew that wasn’t possible, but the idea was still
tempting.
Maybe she didn’t want to leave being the Slayer
behind, but she wouldn’t mind leaving her grief and her failure, if it
were possible.
She already knew that it wasn’t.
“Here we are.”
Spike
had pulled up outside a roadside diner Buffy didn’t recognize. She had
no idea where they were, but she that didn’t matter. When she asked, it
was more out of habit than a real desire to know. “Where’s here?”
“About halfway to Los Angeles,” he replied. “Up to you whether or not
we turn around after we eat.”
Buffy gave him a look. “Are you suggesting we run away together?”
He raised an eyebrow. “Hey, I’m just the driver, pet.”
She
shook her head. “No, you’re not.” Looking through the paint-smeared
windshield to the diner, she realized that she was hungry for the first
time in days. “Is this place any good?”
“Let’s find out,” he suggested.
They
sat across from one another at one of the scarred, gray Formica tables
away from the window, to avoid having to explain Spike’s lack of
reflection. Buffy wondered how she looked; after their fight in the
bar, she couldn’t be pretty, but their waitress hadn’t batted an
eyelash. The older woman had simply brought their menus and told them
to wave her over when they were ready.
“I don’t have any cash on me,” Buffy admitted softly.
“Not to worry, Summers. I’ve got it covered. Least I can do after…”
Spike trailed off, and Buffy saw the grief in his eyes—really
saw it for the first time, and knew it went as deep as hers.
“You miss her,” she observed.
He
nodded shortly. “I promised I’d keep her safe for you, an’ I didn’t.
Every time I close my eyes, I see some way I could have changed things,
been smarter, or faster, or stronger.”
“I know.” She did; she
knew what he saw every night because she saw the same thing played out
in her own head. “What’s your favorite?”
“Where I rip Doc limb
from limb, instead of just runnin’ him through,” Spike admitted. “I
should have known the bastard would be harder to kill.” He hesitated
for just a moment before asking, “What about you?”
“Where I’m
the one who jumps instead of Dawn.” It was a confession she couldn’t
have made to anyone else because no one else would have understood, not
the way Spike did.
He swallowed. “Yeah. I figured that.”
“I wasn’t fast enough,” Buffy admitted. “I stood there, and I knew that
one of us was going to die, and I hesitated.”
“It’s natural.”
“Maybe.” She could give herself that much grace, at least. “But Dawn
didn’t, and I’m the Slayer.”
“You’re also human.” His voice was so gentle, and his eyes—Buffy could
get lost in his eyes.
“Tonight was good,” she admitted.
“Yeah?”
“It
was what I needed.” She looked at her ragged nails thoughtfully. It had
been a while since taking care of her appearance had been important.
“We could have lost.”
“There’s nothing like facing death to make
you feel alive.” The steadiness of Spike’s words spoke of personal
knowledge, and Buffy suddenly understood that he had a death wish, just
like the Slayers he’d hunted and killed. He risked it all to feel
alive, just as she had tonight, and somehow he had understood. A
vampire understood what it meant to be the Slayer better than her
Watcher, better than her friends.
It struck her then, the
incongruity of the situation. She was sitting in a diner, miles from
home, with a vampire who had once made it his life’s mission to kill
girls like her, and he was commiserating with her over her sister’s
death.
He was grieving, just as she was, and if Spike could grieve, didn’t
that have to mean that he could love?
And if he could love—
She
shied away from that thought, but she relaxed a bit more. It was
bizarre, but for the first time since Dawn had died, she didn’t feel
quite so alone.
“Would you tell me something?” Buffy asked.
“Whatever you want,” he promised rashly.
“What were you really like when you were human?”
The
surprise on his face told her that Spike hadn’t expected that question,
and he chuckled ruefully. “Walked right into that one, didn’t I?”
“I take it you weren’t really a bad ass then?”
He hesitated, then said, “This doesn’t go anywhere, right?”
Buffy met his eyes and nodded. “This is just between you and me.”
Somehow, she thought, it always had been.
~~~~~
Buffy
laid her head down on the cloth-covered table and gave into her tears.
She could still feel the heavy grief that losing Dawn had brought, even
though she knew that her sister was safe with Janice, or safe at home.
Her sister had been a burden, until she’d known what losing her would
mean.
“Here,” Casamir said gently, handing her a handkerchief.
Buffy wiped her face, blowing her nose noisily into the soft cloth.
“I’m sorry.”
“Sometimes what might have happened is more frightening that what has
happened.”
“You
can say that again,” Buffy muttered. “I thought that being brought back
was the worst thing that could happen to me, but—” She broke off. Maybe
she’d needed to come back, and maybe she’d needed to die.
But that didn’t tell her what she should do with her future.
~~~~~
Spike awoke to Red’s raised voice. “Spike is in your bed?”
“He
stayed with me last night, and he was tired,” Dawn shot back. “Besides,
the sun was up, so it wasn’t like he could go back to his crypt.”
“You could have let him sleep on the couch,” Willow replied.
“He
wouldn’t have needed to stay if you or Buffy had actually come home.”
Spike could just picture Dawn’s face as she said that, the stubborn
tilt of her chin and accompanying hair toss.
“I got held up.” Spike could hear the defensiveness in her tone. “Amy
and I—”
“Amy?” Dawn asked. “You de-ratted her?”
“Yeah, and it was a good thing,” Willow insisted. “I’ve been trying to
get her back for a long time.”
“And then you went out all night?”
“I needed to blow off some steam.”
“Fine. When are you going to look for Buffy?” Dawn asked. “Spike can’t
do it until after dark.”
“I’m
sure she’s fine, Dawnie,” Willow said, trying to placate the teen. “I
have to go by the Magic Box to get supplies for a locator spell anyway.
I’ll let everyone else know that we need to look for her, and we’ll
find her in no time.”
“I guess I’ll stay here just in case she comes home then.”
Spike
heard the front door close and sighed. It sounded as though Red had
decided he had no business being around Dawn or anyone else who
qualified as civilized company. Dawn thundered up the stairs, and her
bedroom door eased open slowly. “Spike?”
“I’m awake, Bit.” He sat up slowly. “Guess Red didn’t take too kindly
to me bein’ here.”
“She’s being stupid,” Dawn announced. “It’s like she doesn’t even care
that Buffy’s missing.”
“She’s
too caught up in her own world to see past the end of her nose.” He
folded his hands behind his head. “I’ll go look for Buffy as soon as
the sun goes down. Maybe you ought to call the good witch to stay with
you tonight. Don’t know what we’ll run into.”
Dawn sat down on the bed. “Yeah, okay. You will find her,
right?”
“Of course I will,” he promised recklessly. Spike knew he had to find
her; there was no other option.
“I should let you sleep,” she said.
Spike shrugged. “I’m awake now. You want to watch a movie?”
She tucked her hair behind her ear. “Yeah.”
At least he could get through to one of the Summers girls.
~~~~~
It
was the last question, and probably the most important one, because it
had to do with her future, rather than some nonexistent past.
Casamir stopped her hand. “Are you ready for this answer?”
Buffy met his eyes. “Do you know something I don’t?”
“The future is open, but only if you’re willing to change course.”
She nodded slowly. “I’m ready.”
He pulled back, and Buffy dropped the last slip of paper on the coals,
breathing in the now-familiar aromatic smoke.
The hardest question she’d ever asked glowed red in the dim light.
“What if I date Spike?”