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Cave
Author:
Enigma
Fandom:
Buffy/AtS
Rating: R
Summary: They are inevitable, irrevocable, utterly beyond hope. BA smut.
Author’s Note: This is an angsty little Valentine’s ficlet
inspired partially by Angel: Old Friends and partially by the season
eight comic previews. I own none of it.
Cave
The
little cabin is glossed over with ice, weighed down by so much snow she
wonders that the roof has yet to cave in. It sags a little lower every
year, the boards just the slightest bit blacker in the dreary snow-day sunlight.
Every year, she notices just a little bit more, and cares just a little bit
less.
“You
came,” he says as he opens the door, not needing to hear her knock. The
scuttle of snow sliding from the roof nearly drowns out the sound of his
voice. An icicle falls, jiggled loose by the unfamiliar movement. It hits
her shoulder hard enough to send a little stab of pain all the way to her
skin, and she sniffs a bitter half-laugh at the irony of the image.
“Right
on schedule.” In the years before, she would have had a witty comeback at
the ready, enough zing for several rounds of banter. But that takes energy,
a luxury she doesn’t currently have. So she sticks to facts, statements,
the truth. It isn’t her problem if nobody bothers to ask.
“They
won’t miss you?” His voice is filled with the guilty concern of a cheating
lover, hungry eyes masked by uncertainty. And they are being unfaithful,
but there is so much more at stake. Loyalties worth more than their lives;
perhaps, indirectly, the wellbeing of every living thing on the planet.
“They
won’t miss me.” She is certain. The others know her well by now. Know to
expect the blank stare which creeps over her face when she isn’t engaged
directly, the lack of vigor in her work. They know that she can’t be
trusted with any mission that matters, or any secret with the potential to
destroy her. They know that she will inevitably disappear for the week
around her birthday, though no one has ever found out where she goes.
“You
shouldn’t be here.” It’s their tradition, his telling her to leave. It
helps assuage the guilt, knowing that he’s tried. But they are inexorable,
forever tangled up in each other’s destruction.
“Let
me in, Angel.” They both wonder if she’s talking about more than the cabin,
and think that it’s a distinct possibility. He steps aside, and more snow
cascades down to form a little heap on the stoop as she closes the door
behind them. The roof groans.
It’s
no warmer inside, but four walls and a ceiling add to the air of secrecy.
He has no furniture but a table and a chair, the fireplace filled with the
same black ashes that have laid there for years. The rest of the cabin is
cold and bare, a torment he has invented for himself. She’s never asked
where he sleeps or how he manages to survive. She doesn’t want to know
anymore.
“I
don’t have any firewood,” he says forlornly. He never has any firewood.
“I’m sorry.”
“I’ll
live.” Sometimes, when she says this, she wonders if it’s true. And whether
she wants it to be. She’s stopped telling him that she can’t feel the cold,
that temperature doesn’t matter. She’s stopped expecting him to say the
right words to make it okay again, because nothing can do that now.
“Buffy…”
He trails off, because they’ve reached the point where they run out of
words.
Wordlessly
she steps forward and runs her hands down the arms he’s crossed over his
chest. He shudders under her touch but does not resist, a familiar look of
defeat drifting over him. They both know why she’s come. Why she comes
every year on her birthday. There is no sense in prolonging the inevitable.
With
another step she closes the gap between them and presses cold lips to his.
He utters a low, desperate moan into her mouth, his hands going to her
waist. She’s wearing the long jacket that ties in front, the same one as
always. It’s a little more stained this year, a little more tattered. It
doesn’t matter as his fingers find the knot and tug, as the jacket falls to
the floor with a quiet thud.
His
shirt is black silk, and so threadbare she can practically see through it.
The buttons slip apart in her fingers, though her hands are so numb she
can’t feel them. She wonders what it must be like for him, having blood so
cold it’s nearly frozen. She thinks she might already know. He pulls her
sweater up over her head, and her arms rise to help him almost of their own
accord. She’s not wearing anything under it, but he hardly pauses to notice
before running calloused palms over her breasts.
There’s
a storm coming; she can hear it rumbling just off the horizon outside. She
bites her lip as she tugs at his belt buckle, little goosebumps standing up
over every inch of her exposed skin. He tugs her jeans and underwear to the
floor in one rough motion, his belt buckle snapping open at the same
moment. She lets it drop, and his pants practically fall from his gaunt
frame.
Her
lips find his again as he backs her up against the table, her hand slipping
down to brush the length of him. She doesn’t bother to ask anymore, and he
no longer hesitates as he lays her out before him, trapping her between the
cold hardness of the table and his body. They are inevitable, irrevocable,
utterly beyond hope. Nothing will ever be right again, not right enough to
matter.
The
wind picks up outside, gusting around the cabin so loud she can’t tell
which voice it is howling as she opens her legs to take him in. The table
groans as they move, the decayed wood of the floorboards underneath
cracking. They break it a little more, every year. Above, the roof creaks
under the weight of still more snow.
She
presses her lips together as she comes, as he goes still beneath her. It
occurs to her suddenly that she has lost track of her birthdays, of the
years. It does not matter. It was the same last year; it will be the same
again. She thinks that she ought to feel better, or at least a little bit
warm. But there is only the storm.
The
weight of the snow and time bears down. Soon, it will be too much. The
deluge will come.
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