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COLLATERAL
DAMAGE
By D. M. Evans
Spoilers - zero. This is set BtVS S2
Between Lie to Me and What’s My Line
Rating - R for violence
Summary - Children are being murdered in
Sunnydale and Buffy thinks Angel knows who's behind it
Author's Note #1 - This was written for the
Buffy fica thon. http://www.livejournal.com/users/somefairytale/110634.html
Pairing - B/A, Requests: Would love to see
a pre-season 3 BtVS with Dawn involved.
Restrictions: No Angelus. Written for S.J.
Smith
Author’s Note#2 - This story contains dark
subjects and graphic crime scene descriptions.
Thanks to Leni for editing this thing. I
appreciate it!
CHAPTER ONE
Buffy shifted on the couch, her lips reluctantly leaving Angel’s. She felt
eyes on her and she hadn’t heard mom coming home early. She pretty much had
mom’s schedule down to a science. A pair of blue eyes peered around the
corner of the living room. “Dawn!”
A giggle echoed in the living room,
followed by what sounded like two herds of elephants thundering up the
stairs.
“Sorry.” Buffy reluctantly dragged herself off the couch. Angel simply shot
her that smirk that always made her knees go liquidy and she chased
upstairs after her sister. Buffy tried the door to Dawn’s room but it was
locked. She thumped on it. “Dawn, get out here.”
“Make me,” the eleven-year-old called through the cheap wood.
“You so don’t want me to do that,” Buffy warned. “Now open this door.”
The door flew open and Dawn scowled up at her, tugging on her nightgown,
making the horses on it jiggle. “Happy?”
“No! You’re supposed to be in bed already. It’s a school night,” Buffy
scolded. “You’re especially not supposed to be spying on me, now get to
bed.”
“Make me!” Dawn stabbed her hand into her hips.
Buffy’s lips curled. “I’ll tell Mom.”
“And I’ll tell her about Angel.” Dawn threw her hair over her shoulder,
giving Buffy a triumphant look.
“Fine, stay up. Mom will catch you,” Buffy said, not offering Dawn yet
another bribe to keep her quiet. She didn’t have to. Dawn pouted and went
into her room slamming the door. Buffy felt proud that she had won but only
for a moment until she realized she had outsmarted a kid, a hollow victory
at best. Still, Dawn wasn’t any kid. She was annoying enough for twelve
kids.
Buffy went downstairs and Angel was gone. She found him outside the kitchen
door. She shot him a contrite look. “Sorry about that.”
“No problem.” He pointed inside the house. “Your mom just showed up. I
should go.”
“I’ll head out on patrol in an hour or so. I’ll see you by the park.”
“I’ll be waiting.”
Those simple words gave her heart wings as she hustled into the living room
and pretended to be doing algebra as she waited on her mom to arrive. She
could still taste Angel on her lips.
Joyce looked haggard as she dragged into the house. She offered her
daughter a thin smile. “Still hard at work, Buffy?”
“I live for math,” Buffy said, regretting her mother’s slightly
disbelieving tone.
“I’m sure.”
“How was work?” Buffy didn’t know why she asked other than to see her mom
excited about something. She never really knew what Joyce was talking about
when she got started about art. Buffy kept meaning to go to the gallery but
just never got he chance and she wasn’t very good with art in general.
“We put up a show for an artist who works in mixed media. It’s some good
stuff,” Joyce said but Buffy could see her heart wasn’t in it.
“You look exhausted, Mom. Why don’t you go have a long soak and climb into
bed? Everything’s handled here,” Buffy assured her.
Joyce gave her a peck on the cheek. “Sounds great. So, how was Dawn?”
“Terrible as per usual.” Buffy’s flippant tone made her mother scowl.
“Buffy, you should give your sister a break. It was hard on her moving here
from L.A.,” Joyce said. “You make friends quicker than she does.”
“Because I’m not a brat,” Buffy said. “Besides, it was nowhere near as
traumatic for her as it was for me. She’s not even in middle school yet.
That’s where the real pecking order gets established.” Joyce shot her a
warning look and Buffy knew she was in danger of a lecture about how it was
her fault they had to move in the first place. She already had enough guilt
about that as it was. She held up her hands. “Okay, okay I’ll be nicer but
you tell her to stay out of my room and keep her hands off my stuff. She
ruined a perfectly good tube of lipstick.”
Joyce smiled. “Thank you and I will. I don’t want you staying up too late,
Buffy.”
“I won’t.”
Buffy waited for her mom to draw her bath before going to her room, just in
case Mom was listening for her footsteps on the stairs. She picked up some
weapons, touched up her make up just in case Angel saw her in a street
lamp’s light, then went out the window as per usual.
As promised, Angel was waiting for her in the park and after losing all her
freshly applied ‘pink ice’ lipstick to his nimble lips, she took a step
back. “Heard any demon gossip? Any big bads I should worry about?”
“Spike and Dru are still in town,” he replied as they started walking
through the park.
“Old news. I can handle short, pale and smarmy,” Buffy snorted.
“Don’t underestimate him, Buffy.” Angel brushed the nape of her neck.
“I know.” She rolled her eyes. “Giles told me about the two Slayers he’s
already killed. I have my eye on him.”
“As do I. I’d like to know why he’s still hanging out here, other than he
thinks it’s fun.” Angel’s brow furrowed. “But I haven’t heard about
anything new coming to town.”
“We know there is....there always is,” she said despairingly, reaching for
his hand. She didn’t mind that it was cool and calloused. She simply liked
touching him. She had held hands with lots of boys before but it was
different with Angel, like his skin was a drug and not being able to feel
it made her jones. She hadn’t felt like that with Pike or Ford or Tyler or
any of the other boys she had shared not entirely innocent fumblings with
back in Hemery High, waiting for the big night, the night she went all the
way at last. Now, she was just as glad she hadn’t. She hadn’t really loved
any of them, or she had in that hard, fast fickle way of teenagers but with
Angel it was entirely different. The emotions were slow, profound, welling
from someplace so deep inside her she had never delved into it before. She
didn’t wonder if Angel would be the one. She knew that eventually he would
be no matter how wrong it was because she was the Slayer and he a vampire.
It would work. She was betting her heart on it.
Suddenly he stopped, stiffening. She glanced around and saw nothing. They
were barely out of the park and into the housing development. He leaned
into the practicably non-existent night breeze sniffing as if to sort
something out from the smell of bright yellow wild poppies that were
everywhere at the moment.
“What’s wrong, Angel?”
“I smell blood.”
Buffy tried to ignore the subtle longing in his voice as she followed him.
Their hands were free now, ready to go for a weapon as needed. When they
neared a hedge row, Angel threw out his arm to stop her. She pushed past
him, irritated at his protectiveness then wished she had, for once, been
the delicate girlie-girl and not looked. A girl, Dawn’s age, was sprawled
along the bushes. Her daisy-embroidered jeans were in the bushes a few feet
away along with her panties. Bruises dotted her pale, thin legs. Her
striped shirt had been pushed up around her neck, which had been slashed,
blood pooling over her shoulders and into the grass but not as much as
Buffy would have expected from a wound that terrible as if the girl had
been killed elsewhere and dumped like so much trash. Her little hands
cupped over her privates as if to shield herself from more pain. The worst
part was someone had taken the time to smooth out her flaxen hair and tuck
a poppy behind her ear.
Buffy could barely swallow past her dry, tight throat. “I knew her, Angel.
She went to school with Dawnie. Her name was Ashley Boyd.” Buffy tore her
eyes away from the horrible scene. “She lived just over there. Oh, Angel,
she died looking at her house...so close to safety.”
He folded her into his arms, pressing her head against his shoulder. He didn’t
offer her words of comfort that never really managed to make anyone feel
better. He just held her until she regained her composure.
“What do I do, Angel?” She stabbed a finger at Ashley. It didn’t look like
a demon had killed her, not with her clothing torn away and a poppy left in
her hair. “Do you think a demon did this?”
He shook his head. “It doesn’t look like it. We’ll have to call the
police.”
Buffy made a face. “The Sunnydale police aren’t very swift. I can’t be
here, Angel. If I call the police, they’ll question me. It’ll be on the
news. Mom will kill me!”
He ran an hand up her arm. “Go to Giles’. I’ll call the police from a pay
phone and make sure no one disturbs her body. I’ll meet you there.”
Buffy nodded and ran. She hated deserting him. She hated leaving poor
Ashley in the bushes. She had seen things like this on the news back in
L.A. That was a place you expected pedophiles around every corner, not
someplace small, like Sunnydale. She knew that was ridiculous, that it
could happen anywhere. She didn’t know that this was what it was, even
though looked like it. Suddenly she found herself preferring vampires any
night of the week to something like this.
Giles was handing her a cup of tea when Angel arrived. Her Watcher didn’t
look thrilled about inviting the vampire in but for her sake he did so.
Angel sat next to her on the couch and Giles kept a very watchful eye on
them.
“The police came, I presume,” he said.
Angel nodded. “They’re there. I doubt they can even trace the anonymous tip
to the pay phone in the park. Hopefully no one saw us out there.”
“I should still be out there,” Buffy said, gulping at her tea, not caring
that it burned her tongue.
“There is nothing you can do for her, Buffy. This is a matter for the
police, not the Slayer,” Giles said. “You should just make an early night
of it and go home. You’ve had a terrible shock.”
“I’m the Slayer, Giles. Terrible shocks are part of the game,” she said,
her voice heavy with self-recrimination.
Angel took her hand. “Giles is right, Buffy. You can’t fight all the evil
in the world. Your job is to handle the demonic side of it. As horrible as
this is, it’s not demonic.”
Buffy shook her head. “Someone killed that little girl. That’s demonic.”
She slugged back more tea. “But I know what you’re both saying. I wouldn’t
even know what to do with a human bad guy. It’s not like I could slay him.”
Buffy stared at Giles and Angel searching their face for answers and found
none. “I need to think. Maybe a good night’s sleep...I feel like such a
coward even thinking about it.”
“You are many things, Buffy, a coward is not one of them,” Giles said.
“I’ll have Willow do her thing with the coroner’s office tomorrow just to
be certain that this poor child’s death is exactly what it seems like, if
it’ll put your mind at ease that this is not on your shoulders.”
“Thanks, Giles.” She set the cup on the table. “Walk me home, Angel.”
She didn’t talk to him as they walked and for his part, Angel let her have
her silence, just giving her the comforting arm around the waist that she
wanted. She gave him one quick kiss good night under the tree below her
window then scampered up it and inside without looking back. She hadn’t
expected to be this freaked out. She had seen plenty of bodies before but
few so young. How was she going to tell Dawn in the morning? She felt like
a coward again, hoping it would be in the papers and Mom could handle that
part of it. She slipped under the covers thinking this was far from over.
CHAPTER TWO
“There was another murdered child last night,” Giles informed Buffy as she
walked in the library after class. Xander and Willow were on her heels.
Cordelia was thankfully at cheerleading practice. Buffy didn’t get why
Cordelia had taken to hanging out with them, arguing more with Xander all
the time.
Buffy paused, not over the announcement, but because she saw Angel in the
shadows of the library stacks. He must have come up through the basement
since it was still daylight out and she wondered why he was here. It wasn’t
to meet her, as much as she might like that. She never expected him before
dark, especially on a school day. “I know. Mom told me. Dawn came home from
school early today. All the kids had to meet with crisis counselors then
they were sent home.” Buffy sat at the table, casting an inquisitive look
at Angel but he offered no explanations.
“Two in three days.” Willow’s eyes screamed her horror.
Giles’ lips pursed. “Oh, do you need to return home immediately then,
Buffy? There is nothing here that can’t wait.”
“No. Mom has to work late at the gallery and she didn’t want me missing
school so Dawn’s at a friend’s house, Ginny Blake’s. Ginny’s older sister
is babysitting them both.” Buffy shrugged. “I don’t have to run home.”
“Did Dawnie know the girl who died last
night, too?” Willow’s voice echoed with worry, her face more pale than
usual.
Buffy nodded grimly. “She knew her. She didn’t like her but she knew her.
Will, I know it’s really terrible but did you manage to read the coroner’s
report on Ashley?”
“It was still pending. I can look again,” Willow said then sat down with
her computer.
“I gotta ask,” Xander said, stabbed a finger Angel’s direction. “Why is he
here? Aren’t you supposed to be sleeping in your native soil right about
now.”
Angel smiled in a decidedly unfriendly manner. “We don’t do that.”
“I asked Angel here,” Giles said, patting a large book with a cover in need
of repair. Its leather was cracked and flaking. “I just got this in and
it’s in a dialect of Chinese I’m not particularly fluent in.”
“You read Chinese?” Buffy asked and both men nodded. “Huh. Didn’t know
that.”
“I can name a few things he can’t do,” Xander muttered, wandering off into
the stacks, looking rather sulky.
Buffy noticed Xander didn’t move out of ear
shot. “How’d you learn Chinese, Angel? I figure Giles learned it at school.
I mean, he’s so old, he’s studied everything.” She expertly ignored Giles’
annoyed look.
“Spent some time in China,” Angel replied with an enigmatic look.
Buffy wanted to question him further but Willow made a sound between
triumphant and horror. “Find something, Will?”
She bobbed her head, her long red hair waving. “Trying not to look at the
pictures.” She went a tad green-grey as she scrolled down. “Here we go.
Okay, this is a little weird, they’re not sure about the cause of death.”
“How can that be? She had a cut throat. I saw it,” Buffy said, quivering at
the memory of Ashley lying in the bushes.
“There wasn’t much clotting at the incision so she was already dead when
that happened. There wasn’t enough blood at the scene to account for all
her missing blood. The death is consistent with hypovolemic shock.” Willow
met Buffy’s eye. “That’s when there’s not enough blood to keep the heart
and brain going. They think maybe Ashley’s throat was cut after she died
and she was hung and drained. Oh, gross.”
“There’s an image I didn’t need with darkness falling,” Xander said, coming
back to the table. He seemed more intent now on the business at hand,
instead of on antagonizing Angel.
“They can’t prove she was hung up to drain because the skin doesn’t really
bruise and leave marks once you’re dead,” Willow said.
“But that makes little sense,” Giles said. “If she was drained post-mortem,
she couldn’t have possibly died of hypovolemic shock.”
“Were there bite marks, Willow?” Buffy said, casting a glance at Angel
hearing him shifting around on his chair uncomfortably. He wouldn’t look at
her.
“No, but I don’t think it was vampires,’ Willow said. “I mean, she was
raped, too.” Pain aged Willow right in front of Buffy’s eyes. She wanted to
take the computer away and not let her friend be exposed to the horror any
more.
“Vampires can rape, Willow,” Angel said softly.
Willow wrapped her arms around herself then leaned in close to her monitor
screen. Buffy tensed at that announcement even though she had already known
it. Xander made a disgusted noise. “They found something strange with the
semen sample.”
“Those aren’t words that should be coming out of your mouth, Willow,”
Xander said, a faint blush on his cheeks.
Buffy and Willow ignored him. “What do you mean, Willow?”
“They found that the rapist had oligospermia and teratospermia.” Willow’s
brow creased and she opened a new window putting in the word
‘teratospermia,’ into a search engine. “He didn’t have a lot of sperm and
terato....oh, okay, that makes sense. What was there was all misshapen and
weird. The report said the sperm was dead, too, so either he raped her and
kept her alive for a while or he was doing something I don’t even want to
think about to put dead sperm in her.”
Buffy made a face, shuddering. “Okay, enough. That’s all I can take. Giles,
you still think this isn’t a demon? That it’s police business, not mine?”
He plucked off his glasses for a cleaning. “I think that is most likely the
case. As terrible as these deaths are, they don’t appear to be demonic in
nature.”
“So what you’re saying is in addition to all the demons, invisible girls,
hyena-possessions and vampires,” Xander hit that last loud and clear like a
church bell, glaring at Angel, “we have a good old-fashioned serial
killer?”
“Potentially. Florida and California both seem to attract them. Perhaps
it’s the never ending sunshine that sets them off,” Giles said, reseettling
his glasses on his nose.
“Were there any witnesses? Any leads at all?” Angel asked. “I...don’t
really watch the news.”
“None, I’m afraid. There’s nothing I could even tell you and Buffy to be on
the look out for on patrol.” Giles glanced out the window seeing the sun
would set soon. “Perhaps, given the circumstances you all should head home
soon.”
“Giles, you worry too much. We’ll be fine. I’d rather stay here and study
in Dawn-less silence. If I don’t pass my next history exam, I’ll be
grounded for life and then where would you be?” Buffy said. “You and Angel
go back to translating the big pile of mildew. I mean, really? Maybe you
should try spraying it with Lysol or something before a student wanders in
here and has a massive allergic reaction.”
Giles eyed her sourly. “I’ll take it under advisement.”
Buffy tried to pay attention to Willow’s tutoring but memorizing dates was
something that could put Buffy to sleep in a manner of minutes if she
wasn’t careful. Xander was doodling in his notebook more so than listening
to Willow. The red-head was so wrapped up in tutoring she didn’t notice her
tutees were drifting. Buffy was somehow disappointed that Angel actually
went back to translating. She doubted he or Giles would miss her if she
slipped out now. Feeling wounded took precedence over what happened when some
Spanish explorer stumbled over California, as if he could possibly miss it.
The sun was down before Willow realized her
study group wasn’t studying. Xander was doing the ‘my head’s too big for my
rubber neck’ chicken-bob thing, his eyes shut and Buffy was just openly
staring at Angel who was so involved with what he and Giles were doing he
didn’t even notice; how unfair was that?
“Okay, I give up.” Willow snapped her book shut and Xander’s eyes flew open
as he fell into the well-practiced, ‘I wasn’t asleep’ cover up. “But don’t
blame me if you two get a bunch of zero’s on your history test.”
“Sorry, Will, it’s just not griping me,” Buffy confessed.
“I was listening,” Xander lied and Willow rolled her eyes. “We’d better get
home. Even parents like ours might be wondering why we aren’t home for
dinner. I’ll walk you home, Willow.”
“Thanks. See you, guys,” Willow said, following Xander out.
“Yes, I suppose it is getting late,” Giles said, looking shocked another
large chunk of time had slipped through his fingers. “Buffy, are you needed
at home or can you go out on an early patrol?”
“Mom’s not due home until nine. Dawnie’s supposed to stay at Ginny’s until
Mom picks her up so I could get in a few hours before then,” Buffy said,
stretching as she got up. She shoveled her books into her backpack. They
were heavy enough to stun a vampire good.
“I’ll go with you,” Angel said.
“Thanks. See you tomorrow, Giles.”
Buffy breezed outside. The night was warmer than she was expecting. She
glanced back at Angel with a little smile other lips. “I’m surprised you’re
coming along.”
“Oh?”
“You and Giles looked all cozy. I hated to interrupt your date.” Her smile
went wicked.
“Well, he does have that cheeky little grin that’s hard to resist.” Angel
smirked at her and Buffy swatted him.
“Angel!”
He cocked his eyebrows up. “Hey, you’re the one who’s always telling me I
need to get a sense of humor.”
“So now you finally listen to me.”
Angel paused and captured her face in his
large hands. He drew her up to him, kissing her softly. “Still think I’m
dating Giles?”
“I might need more proof.”
A few minutes of proof later, Buffy led him further from school grounds.
The last thing she needed was a cop ticketing her for loitering at the
school. That was the sort of crime Sunnydale cops felt comfortable with.
“You seem quiet tonight,” he said, taking her book bag. “Thinking about
those little girls?”
“I can’t help it. I can understand demons. I can’t understand how one human
being can do this to another human being.” Buffy grimaced.
“They’re amazingly good at it, Buffy. I know that doesn’t make it any
easier.”
She shrugged, pressing against his arm as they walked. “I just don’t
understand why Sunnydale is still here, Angel. It’s been a Hellmouth for
like forever, right? How doesn’t it just self destruct? How do people live
here? Why don’t they just move away?”
“It’s not always that simple, Buffy.” Angel pulled her closer, not slowing
his pace. “This town just doesn’t survive. It thrives. It has malls, and
art galleries and theaters. I can’t explain it. You’d think people would
sense something is wrong. I think some of them do. But it’s not always easy
to find a new job, afford a new home.”
“I guess. So, you were in China,” Buffy said, desperate for a subject
change.
Angel nodded. “During the Boxer Rebellion.”
“Pretend for a minute I don’t know when that was or what it was,” she said,
ruefully.
Angel squeezed her hand. “Turn of this century and it was a big war.”
“Were you still...”She trailed off, looking pained.
“No, I wasn’t Angelus then but I had only just gotten back my soul not long
before that. I still...I wasn’t ready to give up being Angelus. I wanted
back with my family, Darla, Dru and Spike.”
Buffy heard the remorse in his voice. “I didn’t know you felt that way.”
“Sometimes a vampire’s family group is important. Ours was and even though
I couldn’t kill innocents any more, I wasn’t ready to be on my own. It
was...scary.” His eyes met hers as he said that and Buffy felt guilty
because she didn’t know how to comfort him. She wasn’t sure she was
supposed to.
“Why China?”
“Darla always loved the Orient. I think that’s why they were there. Or
maybe Dru was lured there by the war. She always did like a good conflict.
Could be Spike just couldn’t wait to see a Slayer for real. Ever since I
tried to scare him into behaving with tales of the Slayers all he wanted to
do was meet one.” Angel wagged his head ruefully.
“Wait a minute, you used me as the bogey man?” Buffy sounded miffed.
Angel smiled. “Not you, not yet. But yes, there are surely vampires out
there telling their new vampire children to beware of the big bad bogey man
named Buffy.”
“That isn’t funny.” Buffy stopped. “Do you hear that?”
“Sounds like young girls.”
Buffy picked up her pace, pondering that one would think kids would know to
stay inside but realized that people her age and younger didn’t really
think much about death, at least not the kind that came from outside.
Suicide yes, being murdered in the street, no. She stopped and Angel nearly
plowed her down. Buffy had been totally unprepared to see Ginny and Dawn
walking down the street.
“Dawn!”
Dawn’s head snapped over, her eyes deer-in-the-headlights huge. “Buffy,
what are you doing here?”
“Me? What are you doing here? You two are supposed to be at Ginny’s!” Buffy
felt Angel holding her back gently which was probably a good thing because
she was ready to strangle her sister.
“My sister and her boyfriend were making out all over the house. It was
gross.” Ginny shuddered. “So we were going to your home.”
“Without telling anyone? Did you two somehow miss two girls from your class
were raped and murdered!” Buffy regretted the shrill tone to her voice but
she couldn’t help it. A cold pit had opened up inside her. What if she
hadn’t come across them? Dawn could be the next girl in the bushes dying,
reaching out to her home and the safety there in.
“Those girls were alone,” Dawn said, seeming suddenly dubious of her own
logic. “We aren’t.”
“Besides, it’s not that far,” Ginny said.
“I don’t care. What makes you think you two can escape from someone so
terrible he can cut a girl’s throat and leave her in the bushes?” Buffy
snapped and both eleven year olds just seemed to get more defiant, instead
of showing the proper fear.
“We can handle ourselves.” Ginny drew herself up to her tallest.
“Besides, you’re always out all night,” Dawn put in, with a sharp lift of
her chin.
Buffy’s mouth worked soundlessly as she tried to find words to express her
rage and fear. A rusty old Ford Escort swooped close to where they were on
the sidewalk and screeched to a halt. Amanda, Ginny’s older sister whom
Buffy had only met once leaned out the window. Buffy assumed it was her
boyfriend driving.
“Ginny! Where do you think you’re going? Mom is gonna kill us both. Get in
this car.” Amanda demanded.
“No. You two are gross and I don’t wanna see it,” Ginny said.
“You’re going in that car,” Buffy said, deciding she had enough. She pushed
Dawn into Angel’s grip and snatched Ginny’s arm. She dragged the girl to
the car and Amanda helped her stuff the kid into the back seat kicking and
screaming.
“Thanks,” Amanda said, looking as frazzled as Buffy felt.
“No problem.”
As they pulled away, Buffy stalked back over to Dawn.
“You’re such a freak,” Dawn shrilled.
Buffy grabbed her arm, pulled her free of Angel. She shook her. “So I’m a
freak. Big deal. At least now you aren’t walking the streets alone. We’re
going home right this minute, now march.”
Dawn stomped down the sidewalk ahead of them. “Great, now I have to see you
two kissing.”
“If you see anything, Dawn it’s because you want to. I don’t want you
spying on me every second,” Buffy said, then leaned over to Angel and
whispered. “Thanks for keeping out of this.”
He just shrugged and followed them along, looking more than a little
uncomfortable.
“I should just tell Mom on you,” Dawn whined.
“Go ahead. I’m getting tired of the threats. Better yet, I’ll tell her
myself,” Buffy said, hoping Dawn wouldn’t call her bluff. She so didn’t
want to have to explain to Mom she was dating an ‘older’ man.
Dawn looked over her shoulder, obviously fuming. Buffy could swear she felt
flames shooting off her sister. Dawn turned the corner and crashed right in
to someone. “Oh, sorry. I didn’t see...” Dawn swallowed her words then shrieked.
Buffy looked to the bushes for some threat she had somehow failed to see.
Angel was already moving past her towards Dawn and the girl she had ran
into. Buffy’s eyes widened, her fingers feeling dead with fear, seeing
muddy, blood-streaked hands on Dawn’s throat just before Angel knocked her
away. Dawn hit the ground hard but it was better than having her in the
hands of Ashley. Buffy felt mired in cement, her eyes captured by the gash
in the dead girl’s throat. It wasn’t as deep as the night she and Angel had
found the girl’s body. It seemed to be healing even. She looked innocent in
her little white dress, now stained with dirt, grass and blood oozing from
the wound. Buffy had seen vampires claw their way out of the earth but she
wasn’t prepared for a little girl vampire. She should be. She had seen the
Anointed One, heard rumors Spike had killed the child vampire but he had
been cleaned up, looking alive and normal. Ashley’s little face was ripped
with bumps and her fangs were too long for her mouth and she was still
focused on Dawn.
Buffy cocked back her arm, ready to throw her stake like a dagger. She knew
she could hit Ashley but she didn’t have to. Ashley didn’t recognize Angel
for the threat he was. With amazing calm, he simply reached out, his
fingers diving into the slit on her throat and he pulled. The gruesomeness
of him tearing off her head was some how softened a bit, in Buffy’s eyes,
by the girl turning to dust. Dawn screamed even louder. Buffy fell to her
knees at her sister’s side, capturing Dawn in her arms. “Shhh, Dawnie, it’s
all right. It’s over. It’s all right.” She repeated it again and again.
Dawn knew Buffy was the Slayer. She had overheard Xander and Willow talking
to Buffy about it. She had snuck away from Joyce during Parent-Teacher
night and had seen some vampires get dusted but this was the first time for
her up close. This time it was a friend. Dawn couldn’t talk. She just held
onto Buffy, weeping loudly. Buffy smoothed her hair, rocking her.
Buffy looked up when Angel touched her hair. His eyes were incredible sad
and at the same time a secret lurked in them. “I have to go,” he said. “I
have to check something out.”
“You know what’s going on, don’t you? There’s no normal serial killer.
Willow’s report...she said Ashley’s throat was cut after she was dead. A
vampire did that, to hide the bite marks. He knew that a cut like that
wouldn’t stop a vampire, wouldn’t get in the way of her rising.”
Angel nodded. “I think I know where I can find some answers.” He turned,
took a few steps then stopped. “Want me to walk you two back to your
house?”
“I want you to tell me what you know,” she said, flatly.
His gaze went furtive. “I don’t know anything for sure yet.”
Buffy gritted her teeth. “Then please, help me with Dawn first.”
When Buffy couldn’t get her hysterical sister to stand up, Angel scooped
the girl up. Dawn flung her arms around his neck, holding on tight. He
carried her all the way home and deposited her on her bed. He gave Buffy a
regretful kiss and an ‘I’m sorry’ but she wasn’t exactly sure for what and
then he was gone.
Dawn’s weeping had slowed to a sniffle. Buffy made her hot chocolate and
promised not to tell Mom that Dawn had been out on the streets with Ginny.
Dawn made Buffy sit with her until she fell asleep. By then Mom had come
home and Buffy eat a very late dinner with her. It was after ten before she
called Giles to tell him that the young girls were actually victims of a
vampire and that she would have to deal with Emily Newmark, the second
victim. She was rather surprised Giles was actually home instead of at the
library.
Buffy filled the tub with water almost too hot to stand. Ashley in her
grave dirt stained dress had been even more chilling than seeing Ashley
half-naked and tossed in the bushes. Buffy felt a serious need to get warm.
CHAPTER THREE
Saturday, she should be home with her history books so she didn’t fail her
exam on Monday. Instead she was on the way to the library to meet with
Giles, Willow and Xander. Cordelia had cheerleading practice which was just
as well. Buffy wasn’t in the mood for the Queen of Mean.
This morning Dawn had been very subdued over their frosted mini-wheats.
Joyce took her to the mall to help ease Dawn’s mind, thinking the loss of
two classmates was what had turned Dawn blue. She had no idea her youngest
had seen her friend turn up as a vampire covered in grave dirt only to end
up as dust. True to her word, Buffy hadn’t told their mom what Dawn had
done and luckily Amanda hadn’t seemed to tell her mom either so no one was
going to call and rat her out.
Buffy felt a little numb still. She had been hiding from that feeling for a
long time. She had hid all summer in L.A. with her dad after the Master’s
death, trying to feel something other than numb. She had killed vampires
there, too, thought once about seeing Pike for old times sake but couldn’t.
It felt like cheating on Angel, even though she and Angel weren’t exactly a
couple, so the numbness grew. She came back to Sunnydale and it got worse.
She pasted on a smile for her friends and family until the whole thing with
the Master’s bones happened. Even Cordy was calling her a bitch. She hadn’t
felt like one. She would have liked to. It would have been better than the
unrelenting numbness. Pounding the Master into dust helped. Exploring her
heart with Angel helped more.
She was no longer numb. Angel made her feel alive, feel love, feel pain,
feel like dying. All of that was better than the emptiness inside her. She
knew the dangers Angel represented, that he was still only a stop gap in
the loneliness. So long as she was the Slayer the hollowness would always
be part of her life, like a shadow. And it was getting harder to let the
sunlight in to drive the shadows back to the corners of her soul. Still,
three bits of sunlight waited to brighten her.
It was convenient to tell her
Mom she was going to the library to study with Xander and Willow under Mr.
Giles’ watchful eye. Buffy never failed to be amazed that in a country-wide
school environment of near fascism, metal detectors, passes to merely walk
down a hall and needing escorts to go to the principal’s office, that
Principal Synder had no form of discipline when it came to after hours and
weekend. Anyone could stroll on or off campus. It surprised her, given
Synder’s otherwise Nazi tendencies, almost as if he was under orders to
leave the school vulnerable to attack. Buffy wanted to believe she was
being paranoid about Synder. Sunnydale had that effect on her.
“Hi, guys,” she said with more enthusiasm than she felt as she walked into
the library. Her friends looked glum, even Giles, which made her nervous.
“How are you doing, Buffy?” Willow’s eyes were wide with sympathy. “Giles
told us about last night.”
Buffy flopped in a seat. “I’m fine. It gave me a wiggins though. I mean
Ashley’s slept over with Dawn I can’t tell you how many times. It was
majorly creepy seeing her as a vampire.”
“Trust me, I know.” Xander tilted back on his chair. “When I saw Jesse with
that bumpy face...”
Willow reached over and patted his hand. “Buffy, we found something else.”
Buffy gritted her teeth. “I’m afraid to know.”
“Two more kids were murdered in Shoreville,” Giles said.
“That’s just a few miles from here,” Buffy said.
Giles nodded. “I went to the graveyard there early this morning. Both
graves looked like they might have been disturbed but it’s hard to tell
with fresh plots.”
“Why would anyone want to make a bunch of kid vampires?” Buffy felt like
she had a bad taste in her mouth. She couldn’t keep the welling of disgust
down.
“Maybe you can ask Angel. Giles said he took off on you last night,” Xander
said.
Buffy didn’t like his tone. She knew he was trying to look out for her but
he was also jealous and that colored everything he said. “He didn’t take
off, Xander. He took Dawn home and went to check on things for me because I
couldn’t just leave her.”
“Guess we’ll have to wait until night to find out if he knows anything,”
Xander said, turning down the heat of his tone.
“Not necessarily,” Angel said, coming through the swinging doors, startling
Xander so badly he and his titling chair nearly tumbled over backwards.
“Angel.” Buffy looked surprised, knowing she shouldn’t be. She knew how he
could come up through the basement. She just wasn’t expecting him because
part of her was with Xander. Angel had cut out on her last night. She had
needed him to comfort her and he just left her.
Angel skirted patches of sunlight and took refuge in the shadows of the
stacks behind Giles’ chair. The Watcher turned so his back wasn’t to the
vampire.
“You found something,” Giles said.
Angel’s countenance went darker. Buffy knew she wasn’t going to like this.
“I think so.”
“I could tell last night you knew who did this.” Buffy’s voice was soft,
sad, almost a whisper.
“Is this another of your wacky kids like Drusilla?” Xander’s eyes hardened.
“If it were, I would have known in time to save the second girl.” Angel’s
voice didn’t raise above his normal tone but the threat was there in every
word.
“Please, just tell me who it is.” Buffy dragged a hand through her hair.
“It’s not another Master, is it?”
“Not exactly. He’s old though, one of the Master’s children. He’s just a
little older than Darla but not by much. Darla hated him.”
“What’s his name?” Giles headed for his stash of Watcher’s diaries to
double-check whatever Angel was about to reveal.
“Ilya Borzilova. He’s Russian and he was a monster long before he was ever
made a vampire.” Angel settled back against the shelving. “He came to the
States with the Master, was with him when Darla was made.” Angel paused and
Buffy could see pain in his eyes, wondering what was causing it. She could
see the conflict in him, watching him intently as she listened to Giles
paging through his books to find the name Borzilova. “Darla was a
prostitute, a very wealthy one. She was one hell of a business woman,
holding land and money in a time were that just wasn’t done by women.”
Buffy hated the almost reverent tone in Angel’s voice, jealous of the
respect he was giving Darla’s achievements. He should be hating her for
trying to turn him back to evil, for making Buffy think he was out to kill
her family. “So what’s this got to do with Borzilova?” She broke in, not
wanting to hear more about Darla.
Angel gave her an irritated look. “It has to do with why he might be in
Sunnydale. Borzilova has had it in for me, Darla and Dru for over three
centuries...well, for Darla. Add me and Dru in later. I’m not sure he knows
Darla is gone.”
“Why does he hate you?” Willow asked.
“Darla’s...career came with a lot of hazards. Venereal diseases for one.
She was dying of something when the Master turned her,” Angel said. “Babies
were another hazard. I don’t know how many she had. Once in a fit of...I
don’t know, remorse maybe, Darla told me about some of them. She was only eleven
when she had her first child.”
“Eleven!” Willow’s fingers flew over her mouth.
Angel nodded distractedly. “A set of twins went to live with one of her
rich clients in the place of the stillborn twins his wife had. It was a
very good placement for those children.”
“What does this have to do with anything?” Xander asked. “You’re as bad as
Giles.”
“I’m getting to it.” Angel glowered. “Ilya disliked Darla from the time she
was made. The Master doted on her.”
“She became the favorite and he was
jealous,” Buffy said.
“Exactly.”
“I don’t like where this is going,” Willow said.
“You shouldn’t.” Angel shoved his hands into his pockets. “Ilya found out
from the Master who Darla’s daughter was. He raped and killed the girl.”
“Darla still had feelings for her child...I can see why she’d hate him,”
Buffy said.
Angel took a few steps back as the sun, now slightly higher in the sky, was
tossing rays into his shadows. “Buffy, it’s easy to forget your family when
you’re a vampire, easy to kill them yourself. It’s a training step for a
lot of fledgling vampires. It was for me.” Angel’s shoulders slumped.
“Darla might not have had feelings left for this daughter, if she ever had
them in the first place. Ilya took something from her and that’s what
mattered.”
“Glad you’re here to explain creepy vamp motives,” Xander grumbled.
“But his victims are kids...I don’t...” Willow looked at her hands. “How
does anyone have...you know...how can you do that to a kid?”
“Back then, Willow, it was common for girls to be married by the time they
were thirteen,” Angel said. “Not that I’m excusing anything Borzilova did.
Having sex with children didn’t have the same meaning back then but rape
did. Of course, they were just as likely to blame the girl....at any rate,
Borzilova savaged any child he got his hands on before killing them. He was
doing this before he was a vampire. It’s what brought him to the Master’s
attention.”
“So that’s what it takes. And he brings the kids back as vampires why? Just
more normal vampire hijinks?” Xander asked.
“Xander!” Buffy hissed, wishing her friend had an off button for his
hostility dispenser. “Angel’s never converted a kid, right?” Her eyes
fastened onto him, begging for him to back her up.
Angel carefully met no one’s gaze as he replied, “No, I
haven’t.”
Buffy felt winter roiling into her heart,
knowing he was lying. A quick glance at her
friends told her they seemed to be buying
it, except for maybe Giles. He had that look he got in his eyes when he
knew she was telling him a whopper. She kept her suspicions to herself. She
would never let herself say that she knew Angel just as guilty of the
horrible crime as Borzilova. If she said it, it would make it true and she
didn’t know how she could love him if it were true. She reminded herself that
Angel wasn’t responsible for anything he had done without his soul. She had
to think on that. It eased the pain.
“I don’t know why he converts his victims
other than to get into people’s homes where he can get his hands on an easy
meal, their money and property,” Angel said.
“That makes perfect sense,” Giles said, not
looking up from his books. “The child goes missing and when she comes home
again the parents welcome her in and she kills them. Only he’s getting
careless in his old age or he no longer cares otherwise, he would have
hidden his victims better here in Sunnydale.”
“Or he wants me to know he’s here,” Angel
said.
“So he’s taunting you...all these kids died
just to draw you out.” Buffy hated that her temper lashed him because it
wasn’t his fault.
Angel bore it without flinching. “I’m
afraid so. The children could be collateral damage in this war with he’s
waging against me and Dru.”
“So what does he have against you?” Xander
asked. “I can see why your ex hated him.”
“Darla and Dru caught hold of Borzilova
once and paid him back for things he had done to them by burning off his
testicles with holy water,” Angel said, bluntly.
Xander shuddered, crossing his legs
involuntarily. Even Giles looked up from his books.
“Ouch, okay vendetta explained.” Buffy made
a face. “So um...how’s he raping the girls now if Darla and Dru burnt off
his nasties?”
Angel smiled thinly. “Vampires have
remarkable healing powers, Buffy, given time parts can even regrow,
especially with a little magical help. He’s whole.”
“So, the question is, now what? He’s just a
normal vamp right?” Buffy asked. “I killed the Master, I can kill him.” She
didn’t have to ask if Angel would help her. Now that the Master was gone,
Angel was like a changed man, braver, more confident. She wondered about
it. When she first met Angel, he hadn’t wanted to get involved but now
things were different. She didn’t want to be so vain as to think it was
because of her that he changed but she knew deep down that had to be the
reason for Angel’s about-face on the whole getting down and dirty policy.
“He’s smart. Ilya won’t be easy to kill.
You can’t exploit his weaknesses without putting children at risk,” Angel
said.
“What about Drusilla?” Willow asked.
“Couldn’t we use her as bait somehow?”
Buffy saw pain flicker across Angel’s face.
She knew he had some kind of feelings for Drusilla, knew he ached over what
he had done to make her the way she was. She wondered if he could kill her
since he had let her go at least once Buffy knew about.
“Dru is weak, weaker than I’ve ever seen
her. Rumor about town is she’s dying,” Angel said, a hint of regret in his
voice. “It could be Borzilova knows this and that’s why he’s here. And if
it were just Dru, you might have a chance at making her bait, but where she
is, there’s Spike.”
“And we know he’s killed two Slayers,”
Giles said, handing the book to Angel. “Has Borzilova?”
“Not that I know of.” Angel looked down at
the reproduced portrait in the book. “That’s him.”
Buffy took a peek at the picture and made a
face. “Yeah him a million years ago,” she said, seeing the seventeenth
century hairstyle, beard and clothing.
“It’s the best I can do,” Giles said,
taking the book back from Angel and giving it to Willow so she and Xander
could get a look.
“It’s a place to start,” Angel said.
“Buffy, I’ll see what I can find out about where he’s living. Your best
plan of attack would be to catch him in the day when he can’t run.”
“School kinda gets in the way of that,” she
said, knowing he made sense but she hated it. She didn’t want to drop out
of school to hunt vampires by day. She wanted a normal life as best she
could.
“Hopefully I can get a lead on him then you
can worry about when to attack,” Angel conceded.
“Buffy, Emily’s family is Catholic. They
won’t be burying her until Monday,” Giles said. “We can’t risk waiting
until then to deal with her. She might rise before then.”
Buffy shuddered. “Guess that means I’m
staking out the funeral home tonight.”
“I’ll meet you there,” Angel said, heading
for the door and Buffy knew it was a quick trip to the basement then into
the sewers for him.
“This is so wrong,” Willow whispered.
“Vampires are always wrong, Wills,” Xander
said.
Buffy resisted the urge to pop him one in
the mouth. She looked at Giles, finding comfort in his warm blue eyes. He
was worried. That should have scared her. Instead, it made her feel good
there was an adult male who actually was caring about her, looking out for
her when her own father had decided it was just something he didn’t want to
do any more. Yeah, she spent time with Dad a few weeks out of the year but
even that felt strained, like he resented her and Dawn being around. She
wished Giles would say something to make her feel better. Instead he just
started outlining a plan of attack for tonight. She kept her disappointment
to herself and tried to put her mind on the task at hand. At least it was
better than thinking about Angel killing children and making little
vampires out of them. That was going to give her nightmares, she just knew
it.
CHAPTER FOUR
“Giles, is this necessary?” Buffy moaned.
“No, Buffy, I put off going to the traveling art exhibit at the Museum of
Natural History in Los Angels with Jenny to spend a sweltering evening
roaming Sunnydale just because it’s not necessary.” Giles glared at her as
he cleaned his glasses.
She rolled her eyes. “No need to get snarky.”
“There was no need the first twelve times you asked,” he said.
“It’s just that I feel bad you had to miss a date with Jenny for a training
session.” Buffy honestly felt badly about that. As much as she didn’t want
to think about adult smoochies, she liked that Giles had someone to care
about. Being lonely was a terrible thing.
“Buffy, you still have this inability to sense vampires. That needs work.
It would certainly benefit you to be able to do it.”
“So I could find this Ilya guy faster,” she said with a hint of
self-flagellation.
“I didn’t say that,” Giles said, gently. Buffy knew he was thinking it
though or else the training session could wait. “It would benefit you in
general.”
“I can sense, Angel.” Angel was one of the reasons she was disappointed
Giles was with her. It meant no Angel-alone time. Of course, she didn’t
exactly know where Angel was and that bothered her. He seemed somehow
embarrassed to know Ilya the Ill, like he was somehow responsible for the
vampire, only she had no idea why. Maybe there was something Angel held
back or maybe he was just being Angel. Buffy knew how he liked to take
responsibility even for things that weren’t his fault. She just figured she
didn’t really understand men. She certainly didn’t understand why Angle did
half of what he did. She didn’t know why Xander was so jealous even though
she have never given him any indication she considered him as anything
other than a friend, barring that one sexy dance when she had come back to
the dale. She didn’t know what was wrong with Giles that he was dodging
dates with a woman he was obviously attracted to. He should be in L.A.
having fun, not here with her in the park, trying not to step on used
condoms in the dark.
“It’s a start,” Giles conceded, smoothing out an imaginary wrinkle in his
shirt. Giles was in his casual wear, at least as he seemed to interpret
casual; beige Dockers and a short-sleeved shirt sans jacket, vest or tie.
That shirt revealed what all his usual layers of tweed hid. There was a
human body under them. Even the slightest hint of sexuality in Giles made
Buffy shudder. It was like trying to think about her parents together. Buffy
held up her hand, stopping him.
“Sense one?” he asked, hopefully.
“Hear that?” she said, knowing she was so
disappointing him. She felt a slight tingle. “Actually, yeah I think maybe
I do sense one.”
“Angel.” That wasn’t a question and it hurt a little that Giles thought she
couldn’t extend her abilities past sensing him. It hurt worse that he was
right.
Buffy took off through the park but not so fast Giles couldn’t keep up. She
didn’t want him to be alone. He might not be a twelve year old girl but
that didn’t mean he was safe from Ilya or any of the other uglies that
might be out for a moon light stroll. She stopped behind a hedge row,
hearing people talking clearly now. Giles tensed beside her, his breathing
sounding a little ragged. She knew he could hear them too. Dru’s wispy
voice managed to carry as clear as a bell.
“But Daddy, I shouldn’t let him see me.”
“Where’s Spike, Dru? He needs to know about Ilya.”
Buffy could see Angel through the twists of the branches of the hedge row.
There was a look of concern on his face. It made her furious. He should be
staking Dru, not warning her.
“Spike doesn’t know I’ve gone. He thinks I can’t hunt for myself, all weak
and pale like a baby.” Dru leaned against him.
Buffy wanted to charge out there when Angel’s big hands, the hands she
loved feeling on her hair, stroked Dru’s dark mane. He seemed so gentle and
the flood of jealousy and confusion threatened to overwhelm Buffy. Giles’
put a hand on her shoulder as if he sense her pain.
“Spike needs to know, Dru,” Angel reiterated as if talking to a child.
“Is Angel trying to put them all together?” Buffy whispered to Giles whose
face went harsher than she was used to seeing.
Dru pulled away from Angel and sat on the swings. She started swinging,
looking like an overgrown living China doll in her pale blue gown. Buffy
wondered about how formally Dru always dressed. She had noticed back when
Merrick was still her Watcher that a lot of vampires’ fashion sense never
progressed beyond the day of their death. Dru was different. She was formal
but not Victorian. Of course, Buffy had no idea where Dru could find
Victorian clothes even if she still wanted them. Truth was, Buffy was used
to dealing with young, newly made vampires. If she had to admit it, the
older ones, the ones who were wily enough to survive, frightened her.
She shoved that thought out and another unwanted one flooded in. Dru looked
so exceptionally feminine. She made it seem effortless, the same way Cordy
did. Buffy remembered being like that once, before the whole Chosen bit.
She missed it a little and she had to wonder, did Angel really not care
that she showed up for dates all grass streaked and tousled? Did he
secretly want her to look more like Cordelia, like Drusilla and just lied
to her to protect her feelings? Did Dru still turn him on? Buffy knew Dru
had been his lover. He had alluded to it and Buffy hadn’t needed him to do
so. She could tell.
“I should fly away, Daddy, like the doves.” Dru swung higher. “Ilya makes
my skin feel like ants are crawling all over it.”
“You can’t go, Dru,” Angel said. “We need this to end here. Ilya will be
looking for you. If you go, he’ll follow. It’ll be harder to find him.”
“Daddy’s worried about all the little ones Ilya will eat up,” Dru accused.
“Yes, I am, Dru. But if you and Spike help track him down no one else has
to die,” Angel said.
“Spike won’t help you.”
“But you might. Remember what Ilya did to you, Dru. That terrible thing
that made you and Darla castrated him.”
Buffy shivered at the oily texture of Angel’s voice. It’s effect on Dru was
immediate. The vampire leapt off the swing at the highest point of the arc.
Buffy didn’t know how Dru landed so gracefully in high heels. Dru caught
the swing and hurled it at Angel. The chains snapped and he swatted the
seat away.
“Bad Daddy!” Dru’s nail sliced across his face and Buffy noticed Angel
didn’t defend himself. He just causally wiped away the blood. “No one is
allowed to talk about that.”
“Sorry, Dru but I need your help. You needed...focusing.”
“Bad, bad, Daddy.”
Buffy watched the insane vampire stalk off. She should go after Dru, finish
her off. Buffy knew she could take the creature. Buffy saw how weak Dru
was. Of course, that might take away Ilya’s motive for being in Sunnydale
and she shared Angel’s fear that the pedophilic vampire might move off to
who knew where, killing more children.
She thought for a moment about going to talk to Angel but at the moment she
couldn’t fight the unreasonable swell of emotions. She didn’t like being
reminded that Angel had an attachment to his childe. She didn’t know why it
bothered her so much, why she felt threatened when she knew the only thing
that Angel felt for Dru was remorse and guilt. Knowing that didn’t stop her
feet and Buffy let them carry her away. She was barely aware of Giles
behind her.
“Buffy, I think we should-”
She whirled, coming to an instant stop. “I don’t want to talk about what we
just saw, Giles.”
“Buffy, you have little choice. Angel is putting Drusilla out as bait. If
Spike doesn’t come to her aid, Angel most likely will spare her to kill the
Russian vampire. Ilya is clearly the greater of the evils,” Giles said, his
eyes showing concern for his young charge.
“So, do I throw in and help the vampire pack turn on their own?” Buffy snarled,
starting back off. She forced Giles to almost trot along to keep up.
“I’m not saying that, Buffy but surely you and Angel working together would
do better than either of you apart,” Giles said as they turned onto the
streets of Sunnydale’s business section. The Bronze wasn’t too far away.
The coffee shop was closer.
“Did you miss the part where he’s inviting Spike to play? Remember Spike?
He of the two dead Slayers fame. We know he wants me dead. What makes you
think he won’t try for me while I’m busy with Ilya?” Buffy shot a hot look
over her shoulder and Giles quieted. She didn’t think it would be that
easy. Angel would protect her from both Spike and Ilya but she realized
Giles was truly afraid for her should Spike catch hold of her. He hadn’t looked
that worried since the Master and the prophecy and all that. Suddenly Spike
seemed almost like a greater evil than Ilya.
“It is a concern, Buffy.”
“Well, what I’m more concerned about, is stopping Ilya before he kills
another kid.” Buffy sighed. “So I guess I will be talking to Angel about
this, but I can’t help thinking if he wanted me in on his plan he would
have told me.”
“Would he? Angel seems quite adept at shielding you from things he’d rather
not have you know,” Giles said and it stung.
Buffy shrugged. “At least I don’t have to worry about Dawnie. Mom caught
her trying to shoplift some lip gloss today at the mall and she’s so
grounded. No leaving the house, no Fall Ball next weekend.”
“Fall Ball?” Giles wore the puzzled look he usually did when he didn’t get
a pop culture reference.
“Think of it as a homecoming dance for the elementary school. Okay, mostly
they get together in the gym with too many parents watching and they
pretend to dance and play games. Dawn and Ginny were supposed to go. I
didn’t want my sister out there if this sick perv isn’t stopped by then,
but how could I tell Mom that a pedophile vampire is stalking the night?”
Buffy had given that a lot of thought. She had nightmares about staking
Ashley and in place of that poor child’s face she kept seeing Dawn’s.
A scream tore the night air, diverting her from further thought. Slayer and
Watcher raced toward the sound, leading them to the alley behind the coffee
shop. The angry girl band was still playing inside. Buffy could hear the
lyrics. She knew them. They were local. Dawn liked them. The screamer was
gone by the time they got to the alley but Buffy saw what the screams were
about. Another young girl, throat sliced, panties in a heap near her head,
lay in the filth behind the store.
“I should have stopped him before...” Buffy
trailed off.
Giles put a hand on her shoulder. “You can’t protect them all, Buffy. You
will find him and this will end.”
She wanted to believe him. The band had stopped playing and she heard
people coming out of the store. The screamer must have gone inside to call
911. In the crowd pushing out of the coffee house Buffy saw something that
made her blood crystalize. A pack of young girls stood there, looking
guilty at getting caught out breaking curfew, looking scared knowing one of
their number was missing. Dawn and Ginny stared at Buffy before breaking
into a run. Their friends followed in their wake.
“Go, Buffy. Get them home safely. I’ll stay here with this poor child,”
Giles said. “And I will call your mother, tell her that I saw Dawn here, if
you don’t want to be the one to tell her.”
“Thanks, Giles,” Buffy said, already in motion. She was ready to kill her
sister. In the end she settled with rounding up as many of the barely
pubescent brats as she could and taking them home.
CHAPTER FIVE
Buffy felt guiltier than maybe she should be. She deserved a life, didn’t
she? She didn’t think taking a few hours off of patrol was being that
selfish. They had gotten their grades back from the history test and she
had done far better than she thought she had so why not take a little time
for herself? She had to kill Emily as she sat up in her coffin last night.
Buffy deserved a break from having to think about that. Right now the
police were searching for the child’s ‘stolen’ body. What much Emily’s poor
parents be feeling, first their daughter slain then her body ‘taken’? Buffy
knew, of course, that Ilya and any number of other baddies could be out
there at this very moment doing evil but if she let herself think about it
she might go nuts.
Of course her mother thought she was studying at Willow’s. On the other
hand, Willow’s mom wouldn’t guess that her daughter was sneaking out on a
school night to go clubbing. Buffy looked around the Bronze, almost stunned
at how many kids there were inside the place on a Wednesday night. Didn’t
anyone care where their kids were? How was she supposed to keep any of them
safe when no one paid any attention to curfews?
Buffy glanced at her watch. Maybe she should be going out on patrol. Willow
was wrapped up in watching Dingos playing on stage. Buffy was always
shocked that the Bronze could book a band any night of the week. Of course,
the Dingos had some room for improvement and probably didn’t rate a weekend
slot yet. It didn’t seem to bother Willow. Xander had cut out on them under
the guise of heading for the men’s room. Buffy would have wondered if he
had fallen in or needed to eat a bran muffin or something as long as he had
been gone. Then again, on the tightly packed dance floor, it was next to
impossible to miss having girls brush up against him, so Buffy decided she
didn’t want to know about what Xander was doing in the bathroom.
“What’s wrong, Buffy?” Willow looked at her with sad puppy eyes.
Buffy stabbed at the ice in her vanilla coke with her straw. “Nothing. Just
thinking, I shouldn’t be here having fun. I have work to do.” Buffy was
content that at least it wasn’t a lie. She was worried about that. She
worried more about the fact that she missed Angel. She had been avoiding
him ever since she saw him in the park with Drusilla. She had gone out of
her way to make sure their paths remained uncrossed. She lied to Giles
about Angel being next to impossible to find when he asked about if she had
hooked up with Angel to do the planning thing. She had even hidden in the
tub - telling herself she needed that extra long soak - when she had sensed
Angel outside her window. She knew she was being childish. She hated
herself for it. She just couldn’t help it.
“All work and no play makes for a cranky Buffy,” Willow said. “Besides you
should be celebrating that B you got in history.”
Buffy lifted her coke, wiggling it. “See me celebrate.” She thumped the
glass down and sighed. “I can’t get Chrissy’s face out of my mind, seeing
her in that alleyway. It could have been Dawn, Willow. They were all
together in that coffee house. My sister came this close to dying and she
can’t even see it.”
“I’m sure she knows that now, Buffy,” Willow said.
“You haven’t been in my house in the last two days. She and Mom are about
ready to kill each other. She’s all mad because she’s going to miss the
Fall Ball. She wants me to talk Mom into letting her go and I won’t because
what if I don’t dust Ilya by then? It’s only two days away. It took me a lot
longer than that to defeat the Master. I still haven’t finished off Spike
but at least he’s not out there raping and killing girls...that I know of.”
“Angel would have told you if Spike was like that, Buffy,” Willow said, not
sounding convinced.
“I wish I could believe that, Willow. But they’re vampires. They don’t have
souls, not like Angel. They probably wouldn’t think twice about it. Spike
was more than happy to use those kids turned into demons at Halloween.” She
shoved her drink toward the center of the table. “I should probably go. I’m
bringing things down.”
“Buffy.”
Instead of Willow admonishing her that she wasn’t being a downer, her name
was uttered softly by a far more masculine voice. Buffy turned, looking
over her shoulder, thinking back a few nights. She hadn’t sensed Angel
approaching this time. Giles was right. She needed work. She mustered up a
smile, trying to pretend everything was all right. “Hey, Angel.”
“We need to talk,” he said, as business like as the first time she kicked
him to the ground in that alleyway.
She gestured at Willow. “It would be rude if I just cut out on my friends.”
His brow lowered but Xander’s reappearance cut off anything the vampire
might have to say. They gave each other a brief hostile look like pack members
circling each other. Xander quickly proved to be the omega and covered by
turning to Willow, “Hey Will, I love this song. Wanna dance?”
“Oh sure.” She gave Buffy a nervous look, obviously sensing the tension.
“Buffy was about to go out on patrol anyhow.”
Buffy scowled at Willow’s lack of solidarity. She could have at least
pretended Buffy wasn’t actually a free agent. “Unfortunately true. You kids
have fun.”
Buffy didn’t wait for Angel as she stomped out of the Bronze. She knew he
was following and that he’d have to be blind, deaf and dumb not to sense
her mood.
“Why have you been avoiding me, Buffy?” His strong fingers caught hold of
her shoulder.
She squirmed away. “I’m not.”
“Buffy, I’m not a fool. You’ve been avoiding me ever since I told you about
Ilya.” He dragged her to a halt as they left the back alley behind the
Bronze and stepped out into the light of the street. “I had nothing to do
with him coming here.”
“No, but you could have told me you were trying to work with Spike and
Dru.”
His face fell. “I thought you might be in the park. I’ve been trying ever
since to tell you about my plan but you have been...unavailable.”
She dug her fingers into her hips, tossing her head back. “Did you think to
tell me before hand?”
“Because I knew it was a long shot. Spike is never going to let me use
Drusilla as bait but if I could get her so worried that Ilya might hurt her
again that she might take the fight to him with Spike protecting her. Spike
would do just about anything for her, even work with us.”
“You still should have told me,” Buffy huffed.
“You know now. You would have known three days ago if you’d been speaking
to me.” His gaze knifed her. “I don’t get why you’re so angry about this.”
“You had the perfect opportunity to kill Drusilla that night and you didn’t
take it.”
“Neither did you,” he countered as their path took them into a near by
cemetery. “And you aren’t mad at me because I didn’t kill Drusilla.”
“How would you know?” Buffy lifted her chin defiantly. It wasn’t why she
was mad but she could hardly admit she had been jealous.
“Because I’ve been around long enough to know jealousy when I see it,” he
replied.
Buffy held his gaze for a few long movement then sighed, looking away.
“We’re both sad, you know that? You get jealous over Xander because he gets
to be with me when the sun’s out, even though I keep telling you that is
not the best light to view me in. And I’m jealous of someone from your
past. I know Dru’s the past. I know there’s plenty more in your past, too.
I mean you’re how old?”
“Dru is most definitely my past, Buffy but we still have a connection.” He
caught hold of her, to insure he had her full attention. “She is my childe
and I am responsible for her. It would be far easier to stake her or let
you do it but...”
“She’s family?” Buffy’s eyebrows raised.
“Yes, actually she is. It’s not an easy thing to turn on your vampiric
family. Some vampires don’t care about that sort of thing. They don’t even
bother to stick around long enough to see their children rise. Ilya is like
that. Others bond. My family bonded. Darla, Spike, Dru, we were close like
you are with Willow and Xander.”
“Sort of a blood sucking Brady Bunch,” Buffy said and his lips puckered at
the pop culture reference. She wondered if he got the second reference to “The Lost Boys.”
“I suppose.” He leaned down and kissed her. “And I’m sorry Drusilla makes
you so uncomfortable, Buffy. I don’t love her. I never really did, not in
any romantic sense. She was a tool, a doll to play with. What I did to
her...it was far worse than the crime I’m being punished for. But she isn’t
a threat to you...well, she is in the usual vampire is a threat to the
Slayer sense of things.”
“That I can handle,” Buffy assured him, catching hold of his neck to pull
him in for another kiss. She stopped, cocking her head to the side. “Do you
hear voices?”
“Sounds like a group of kids.”
“In a graveyard?” Buffy rolled her eyes. “This is so not a make-out place.”
“Oh, you’d be surprised,” Angel said, heading off toward the voices.
Buffy groaned when they came across a pack of Goth wannabe’s drinking and
making out in the cemetery. She counted eight of them. She knew most of
them from school including Amy, who wasn’t really Goth and Ham, who was an
okay kid from Buffy’s science class who just didn’t seem to get if he
didn’t dress like this, maybe people wouldn’t pick on him so much. She was
about to go talk to Amy, to shoo them out of the graveyard when a voice
sounded behind her.
“Look tasty, don’t they?”
Buffy whirled. Spike was leaning on a half-sunken headstone, poking at the
cross on top just to hear his skin sizzle. He wore his finest as far as she
could tell; the deep red shirt, the only splash of color relieving the
black. His black nails and eyeshadow made him fit right in with Amy’s
crowd. “Oh, you are so the last thing I need.”
“Don’t worry, Slayer. I didn’t come to fight with you and Peaches.” Spike
lit up so casually Buffy thought maybe he considered her no threat at all.
“Peaches?” Buffy asked, seeing the irritation pinching Angel’s face.
“What do you want then, Spike?” Angel stepped just in front of her, enough
to both protect and annoy her.
“Not nice, Angel, putting my Dru out there as bait.” Spike blew smoke
rings. “She told me what this wanker did to her last time. What? You wanted
to give him another bite at the apple?”
“I want him gone. Dru is the fastest way of
drawing him out. She probably told you what she did to Ilya,” Angel said.
Spike snorted, smoke curling out of his nostrils. “Makes your nadgers want
to crawl back up inside you, just thinking about it.”
“So what did you come here for then, Spike, if you don’t want to fight?”
Buffy didn’t trust the idea of a truce with Spike but for Angel’s sake
she’d play along.
“Feisty, this one is, better than that first Slayer I met...course,
couldn’t understand a word that bint was saying.” Spike took a long drag.
“Don’t worry, love. I’m not here for your precious Nancy boy. Dru and I
have plans for him, we do and it don’t involve him getting dusted.”
Buffy hated the slipperiness of Spike’s tone. She didn’t want to think of
him and Dru planning anything for Angel. Before she could say anything
though, Spike’s expression turned to one of bemusement.
“Of course, things sometimes don’t go as planned, like that.” He pointed at
the same time as someone screamed.
Buffy whipped back around and saw a vampire in the midst of Amy’s friends.
He looked very much like the portrait in Giles’ book, only he was clean
shaven now. Buffy didn’t wait for Ilya to get his hands on one of the
girls. They might be slightly older than the ones he had been raping and
turning but from the looks of things, this perv didn’t mind them just old
enough to drive.
“Buffy, be careful,” Angel hissed, as he broke off from her to come at Ilya
from a slightly different angle.
Buffy hurtled a headstone and tossed a spin kick into the vampire. He was
like hitting stone. She was shocked at how small he was, not much bigger
than her. She was expecting some hulking giant, a fairy tale monster that
loamed over the little girls before ripping them apart. He was short, built
like a wrestler, and she found out fast he hit like a sledgehammer.
She hit ground as Angel and Spike simultaneously took on Ilya. Her breath
slammed out of her. She heard Spike blustering about how no one goes after
his Drusilla. She was shocked to see Spike go flying. He hit a crypt hard
enough to crack the stone. He slid down the granite and puddled on the
ground. Angel shoved Ilya back, bearing him to the ground. As he was trying
to get the stake out of his coat pocket, Ilya tore up the bronze flower
vase from the ground and clocked Angel with it.
Buffy forced herself up, wondering if she had broken ribs. It didn’t
matter. She had to get to Angel before Ilya could finish him, but the vampire
was far more interested in snaring one of Amy’s friends and running. Buffy
didn’t know the girl who had been paralyzed by fear and hadn’t run when the
rest of the kids scattered. Now, in the vampire’s hands, she was very much
animated, kicking and shrieking.
“Let her go,” Buffy said, taking out two stakes, one for either hand.
Ilya grinned at her. “You must be the Slayer. How nice of you to come. I
guess my little party will have to wait.”
Buffy couldn’t dodge the girl as Ilya threw her like a sack of flour. Both
girls toppled to the ground and Buffy’s head smashed into stone. Through
the stars in her eyes, she saw Ilya dart off. He slipped into one of the
crypts. “Angel, the tunnels, he can get there from that crypt.”
Angel was back on his feet. “You get the kids home. I’ll go after him.”
Buffy didn’t have a chance to argue as much as she wanted to. Her head felt
like someone was trying to crack it and make scrambled eggs. She noticed
Spike had gone, too. She had no idea if he had just beat feet or if he was
down in the tunnels with Angel and Ilya. She wanted desperately to go after
Angel.
“You’re bleeding,” the girl who had narrowly escaped being Ilya’s next
victim said, touching Buffy’s head.
Buffy put a hand to her scalp, feeling the gash and the warm blood. “So I
am.”
“Do you need to go to the hospital?”
“Nah. Do you?” Buffy helped the girl up. She saw Amy and two others still
in the fringes of the graveyard, unwilling to just abandon their friend and
yet too afraid to help.
“I don’t think so.”
“Come on, I’ll get you home,” she said, knowing she had a duty to the
innocent. Angel could handle himself. She’d get her classmates home then
she’d try to find Angel. Giles’ scolding rang in her head the whole while
as she walked them home. She hadn’t sensed any of the vampires. She had to
be the worst Slayer ever.
CHAPTER SIX
“This is ridiculous,” Cordelia moaned, checking her
lipstick for the thirtieth time in her gold compact.
Buffy wondered if it really was honest to
god gold. Knowing Cordy, yes it was. “Look Cordy, if you think I wanted to
be doing ‘service learning’ chaperoning the elementary school’s Fall Ball
you’re nuts. Mom had to get a last minute babysitter for Dawnie. We didn’t
even tell Dawn this is where I’ll be since she’s still fuming about being
grounded and missing the ball.”
“I just don’t see the point of service
learning. Isn’t service the reason we have servants in the first place?”
Cordelia applied another layer of gloss to her full lips.
Buffy figured those lips could provided
light should they need to go outside.
“Yes and how many of us can afford
servants, Miss Fendi?” Xander’s sarcasm was practically visible.
Cordelia gave him the hair eyeball. “Do you
actually know what Fendi is or were you spanking your monkey to your
Mommy’s Cosmo’s again?”
Willow clamped a hand over Xander’s mouth.
“Kids present! Buffy, it’s not so bad. I mean wouldn’t this be like a candy
store to a vampire who likes kids?”
“The thought has crossed my mind,” Buffy
replied and it had, a bit belatedly but it had. When she first been
assigned this service project in Sociology, she had been furious that she
would miss out on a night of looking for Ilya then it dawned on her that
Ilya would find the Fall Ball a smorgasbord. She was so glad that Dawn was
under Mom-Enforced house arrest. Of course, it wasn’t really Mom-Enforced.
It was a last minute arrangement with Dawnie stuck with Amanda and Ginny at
Ginny’s home. It had been uncomfortable when Joyce realized how much she
relied on her daughter to help out with Dawn and worse, she really didn’t
have friends her own age in Sunnydale that she could ask to babysit. Buffy
felt guilty to no end about that. “Think of it this way, Cordelia, we could
have got stuck with the other service learning project, helping at the
nursing home.”
Cordy shuddered. “I’d have taken the F. Oh
hey, Harmony, wait up!” Cordelia darted after her friend.
“Yeah, I’m just as glad I didn’t pull
granny duty,” Xander said and Willow elbowed him. “Hey! Just saying. I
would have missed out on seeing my two girls looking so fine.” He draped an
arm around Buffy and Willow.
Buffy smiled. Her pale lavender dress might
be poorly designed for fighting but she looked good in it. Willow had
accepted her help in fashion and was sporting a green micro dress that the
red head was more than a little uncomfortable with its hemline. Xander had
cleaned up pretty well, looking good in his blue suit. It was a shame he
had such a blind spot when it came to Willow. Of course, Willow was looking
at other men finally, much to Buffy’s relief. She hated seeing her friend
all hung up on Xander and miserable. She was thinking she was going to have
to slap Xander to wake him up.
“Hey, you two, none of that,” Willow said,
sliding out from under Xander’s arm, heading for a young couple kissing.
That sort of thing was strictly forbidden at the dance, for that matter so
were all slow songs. It was less a dance than a corral for kids with games
in the auditorium, dance music in the gym and punch and cookies along the
walls. Her scolding done, Willow bopped back over to her friends. “So,
Buffy, do you think Ilya will show up?”
“I’m afraid so.” Buffy knew that it was an
ugly possibility. Ilya had eluded Angel in the tunnels. “But Angel should
be here soon.”
“Ooo, a gaggle of pre-pubes and Angel, it’s
my best night ever,” Xander said, sarcastically.
“Xander, would you like a high heel in the
butt?” Buffy shot him a warning look.
“I think I’m going to snag cookies,” Xander
said and hurried off.
Willow gave Buffy a quick smile then
sobered. “Are you and Angel okay?” Willow brushed nervously at her hair
which Buffy had spent a good deal of time curling and fluffing. She
playfully slapped Willow’s hand. “Things seem tense between you.”
“A little, I guess. It’s just me being
stupid over Dru. I know she’s not what Angel wants but I can’t help feeling
jealous.”
“Buffy, you know Angel only has eyes for
you. As old as he is, there’s lots of baggage.”
“I know, but I’m better off not thinking
about it. You pointed out once there had to be dozens, if not hundreds of
other women. I can’t be jealous of them all.” Buffy slumped. “But the rest
of them are long dead and Dru is here where I have to deal with her.”
“No, you don’t.” Willow clamped her hands
on Buffy’s shoulders.
“How do you figure?”
“You could just her once Angel’s done using
her as bait.” Willow’s eyes were utterly sober and unapologetic.
“Willow, so blood thirsty,” Buffy said,
almost surprised. “But you’re right, I guess.”
Willow smiled suddenly and pointed toward
the door. Angel stood there, looking a bit bemused.
Buffy bounced over to him. “Hey.” She took
a long look at his face. It was too smooth to have lines she could read
like she did with Giles. Still, she could see worry in his eyes. “What’s
wrong?”
“I saw Spike heading out of town with Dru.”
Her face fell. “Oh. So much for bait. Are
you sure?”
“Saw a De Soto with black painted windows.
That’s a sure sign of a vampire driving. I know Spike has a De Soto, heard
about it at Willie’s. Spike’s taking Dru where Ilya can’t get her,” Angel
replied.
Buffy blew at a strand of hair hanging in
her face. “Even though he still wants something from you?”
“He probably isn’t going far. If Dru wasn’t
so ill, Spike wouldn’t miss this fight for the world,” Angel assured her.
“So now what?” Buffy felt suddenly
disheartened. She had been hoping that Dru would be the target. She had
entertained Spike and Dru as dust as a result of the fight with Ilya, the
good kind of collateral damage.
“I’m loathed to suggest it but...”
“This dance is one big playground for
Ilya,” Buffy finished for him and he nodded. “Yeah, it crossed my mind,
too.”
“How many kids are here?”Angel asked.
“More than fifty.” Her lips thinned. “No
way of watching them all as much as we chaperones try.”
“I don’t like this.” Angel’s eyes swept
over the gym. “We should coordinate with Willow, Xander and Cordelia.
Between us, we should be able to watch the entrances.”
“You go round up Willow and Xander off the
dance floor and I’ll see if I can find Cordelia,” Buffy said.
She found Cordelia and Harmony outside the
gym, decidedly doing nothing that resembled chaperoning. They had gotten
some chairs, probably from the auditorium, and were conducting their
service learning by sitting in the hallway calling out fashion tips to the
kids going to and fro from the gym, auditorium and rest rooms. Buffy
stabbed a fist into her hips. “Cordy, I could use your help inside.”
Cordelia scowled. “Why?”
“Angel would like it, too,” she added,
hating to do it. Cordelia’s eyes took on that eager and predatory look just
as Buffy was counting on.
“Buffy, maybe you ought to teach your
little sister how to put on make up. She looks like a tramp,” Harmony said
as Cordelia got up.
“What are you talking about? My sister
isn’t here,” Buffy said.
“Sure she is. She’s in the auditorium with
her little friends.” Harmony primped her bottle-blonde hair, getting up to
follow Cordy.
Buffy turned on heel and stalked into the
gym. She grabbed Angel’s hand and yanked him away from Willow and Xander.
“Change of plans. Harmony just said Dawn is here.”
“Oh, she wouldn’t,” Willow said.
“Of course, she would. I told Mom letting
her and Ginny be together was a bad idea. Amanda is not a good babysitter.
I know they were ticked off they couldn’t come to the dance. How much you
want to bet the minute Amanda’s boyfriend showed up, Dawn and Ginny were
out the door,” Buffy stormed, heading for the auditorium.
“But surely she has to know the dangers,”
Willow protested.
“She’s a child, Willow. They don’t think of
danger,” Angel said.
“If she’s here, Buffy, I’ll take her home,”
Xander offered. “I’m not the first string when it comes to fighting and if
someone even notices I cut out on the service learning, what’s another
failing grade to me?”
“Thanks, Xander. There she is.” Buffy
pointed to the auditorium’s stage where Dawn was playing Twister with
several of her classmates. Buffy never understood how that could be an
acceptable game when slow dancing wasn’t. She snatched Dawn off the stage
before the girl even knew she was there.
“Hey!” Dawn slung her long hair back then
lost all color when she saw it was Buffy. “What are you doing here?”
“I’m the chaperone. Better question is,
what are you doing here? Mom is going to kill you, if I don’t do it first,”
Buffy snapped.
“You’re not going to tell her.” Dawn said,
jerking her head at Angel for emphasis.
“If I don’t tell her, Willow or Xander
will. You’re coming home now, young lady, so march,” Buffy said.
“What’s the big deal? Are you always such a
downer?” Ginny asked, jumping off stage.
“Yes, and you’re coming along, too,” Buffy
said.
“You heard her. I’m taking you girls home,”
Xander said, putting a hand on Dawn’s shoulder.
“Why? It’s not like we’re doing anything
bad,” Dawn said. “It’s not like we’re outside the building smoking like
some of the other kids are.”
“Yeah, there’s a nice guy out there sharing
his smokes with a bunch of girls,” Ginny said. “He’s kinda cute?”
Buffy made a face. “Angel, would Ilya
qualify as cute?”
“Why are you asking me?” The vampire gave
her a look.
“Okay, change of plans. You two stay here
until I’m sure it’s safe to go to Xander’s car. Willow and Xander will stay
with you just to make sure you do,” Buffy said.
Angel followed her out. Cordelia and
Harmony had left their post in the hall and kids were streaming in and out
of the front door more or less unchaperoned. Buffy went outside not needing
Angel’s sensitive nose to hone in on the smoking. The kids stared at her
with horrified looks at getting busted.
“Who gave you the cigarettes?” she demanded
to know.
“Some guy,” one of the replied.
“Where did he go?” Angel asked and the kids
quelled.
“Inside. He wanted to check out the dance.”
Buffy raced back in and nearly plowed into
Xander who was hobbling up the hall. “Xander, what are you doing?”
“Dawn kicked me in the shins and took off.
Willow chased her and Ginny into the gym,” he replied.
Buffy made an exasperated sound and jogged
into the gym. She spotted Ilya talking to some girls near the D.J’s
speakers. “We have to clear this room.”
“Suggestion?” Angel said.
Buffy went to the table with the punch and
cookies and grabbed a napkin. She used it to cover her hand as she pulled
the fire alarm, which spewed blue powder onto the napkin. Most kids knew
how to get around the powder they used to figure out who was prank pulling
the alarms during school days. As the kids started bolting out, she and
Angel fought up stream against them. The other chaperones were trying to
help the kids out. Buffy saw Dawn near the gym’s exit to the practice
fields, where Harmony was helping to herd the kids out but her sister would
have to get passed Ilya to get to the door. Luckily, Ilya was more
interested in Angel and her advancing on him than he was in the kids around
him.
“See, Buffy, I told you your sister was
here!” Harmony hollered as Dawn made for the door.
Buffy froze, horrified. She was going to
kill Harmony when this was all said and done. Ilya’s rugged face lit up and
he lunged for Dawn. She shrieked as he pulled her to him. Ilya twisted with
her, giving Buffy a good view of how he had her sister pinned to him.
“Angel...,” Buffy whispered.
“We’ll save her,” he said tightly, putting
space between him and her, trying to give her room to fight.
“So the Slayer has a sister,” Ilya purred
then ran his fat, pink tongue up Dawn’s face. She squalled, struggling in
his arms. “She’s a tasty thing.”
“Hurt her and you die slowly,” Buffy said,
knowing she couldn’t be less imposing than she was in her heels and
lavender dress. She had to keep reminding herself, this was just an
ordinary vampire, not a Master. She killed vampires every day and twice on
Saturdays. She could handle Ilya. He
has my sister.
Ilya laughed, confirming that fear. “And
you think you can stop me? I’ve never understood why the Powers That Be
puts such power into cum dumpsters. It’s an insult to the power.”
Buffy’s lips skinned back. “Did you just
call me a cum dumpster?”
“Don’t let him get to you, Buffy?” Angel
said, trying to find a way to edge around behind Ilya but there wasn’t
anything to hide behind now that the gym had emptied out.
“Ah, another land heard from. What a pity I
had to see the crawling pansy Angelus has become.” Ilya gave Dawn’s budding
breast a squeeze and she whimpered. “What would that bitch of yours say?”
“Darla’s dead. I killed her,” Angel said,
watching Buffy slip off her high heels.
Ilya grinned broadly. “Too bad I missed
that. Did you enjoy it?”
“Not really.”
Buffy hefted her shoe. “Dawn, duck!” Her
sister did and Buffy winged the high heel. The heel embedded in Ilya’s
neck. He stumbled back, tearing at it. Dawn didn’t need anyone to tell her
to make a run for it. She bolted for the door. One of Ilya’s hands tangled
in her hair. Dawn yelped as she left that hunk of hair behind.
Angel was on Ilya as the vampire tore the
high heel out of his neck. Buffy screamed Angel’s name as Ilya buried the
heel in Angel’s cheek. Angel staggered for a moment and that was all Ilya
needed to toss him into the D.J.’s set up. Metal cracked and the torn
wiring hissed as Angel crashed through it.
Buffy, regretting not having the ability to
bring much in the way of weaponry to a school dance, scythed the other heel
at Ilya. He caught it and tore the shoe out of her hand. Buffy twisted and
tried a high spin kick. Ilya moved faster than she thought a stocky little
man could. He caught her ankle.
He grinned again, looking up her skirt.
“Nice view. I think I’ll have a taste before I kill you.” He hurtled Buffy
into the cinder block walls of the gym.
She heard Angel growling that strange
vampire growl they all made in a fight. He tackled Ilya as she tried to
make the stars stop dancing in her vision. She got up as the two vampires wrestled,
nearly clocking herself on the peg board that hung on the wall for the
sheer purpose of torturing grace school non-athletes. She reached up and
pulled down two of the pegs from the board. She tossed one at Angel.
“Catch.”
Angel snagged it out of the air, nearly
getting intercepted by Ilya. Their hands were moving so fast Buffy could
barely see the trade of blows. Angel was doing his bit to keep Ilya
distracted or kill him whichever came first. Buffy went for the Russian’s
back at the same time Angel stabbed him with the peg from the front. Buffy
grunted as her hand stung. It was so much harder to do it through the spine
and ribs but the peg went in just as Angel shattered breastbone from the
other side. Ilya’s scream was cut off as he powdered away. Buffy’s hand
found Angel’s, their fingers touching amidst Ilya’s dust.
She wanted to toss herself into his arms
but there were kids to worry about. The vampire might be dead but if she
let any of them wander off there’d be hell to pay. She reached up and
gingerly touched the ragged bleeding hole in Angel’s cheek, cut there by
her shoe. “This looks bad.”
He captured her fingers, gently pulling
them away. “It’ll heal.” He turned away from her, self-consciously. “You
need to go take care of your sister...and the firemen. I hear the trucks
coming.”
She nodded regretfully. “I know. You’d
better go.”
She hated to see him go but she didn’t want
to have to explain a non-chaperone being at the school. Instead, she went
out to find Dawn and make sure she was okay, or as okay as she could be
given the circumstances.
EPILOGUE
“A coffee house?” Buffy looked at Angel in
surprise as he led her to the near Sunnydale U campus building.
“The Bronze is always so noisy. We
practically have to scream to hear each other.” He stroked her hair as they
went inside. “Here we can have a nice conversation.”
“And the Irish band that’ll be playing
later has nothing to do with it?” She raised an eyebrow.
He smirked. “That’s just icing on the
cake.”
Buffy laughed and let him buy her a cup of
cappuccino big enough to swim in while she went and bogarted a couch along
the back wall. It was soft and enveloping like a big bear hug and was even
better when Angel joined her. They’d be able to hear the band perfectly
once they took the coffee house ‘stage.’ She snuggled up against him,
giving Angel a kiss. She might not be ale to do all the kissing she’d like
with him at this point, being out in public, but just pressing up against
him, having coffee was nice too. She sighed contentedly.
“You look happy.” His big hand rubbed her
shoulders.
“I am. Ilya’s gone. The kids are safe...or
as safe as they can be in Sunnydale. Dawnie’s finally understanding how
dangerous my life is and how she isn’t making it any easier by breaking curfew
and running off when she’s been grounded.”
“That’s a good thing.”
“Even seeing Spike driving back into town
isn’t going to bring me down,” she assured him.
“That’s good. You deserve an easy night.”
He rested his chin on the top of her head.
“No arguments.”
Buffy nestled up against him, as one of the
band members started tuning an instrument that sounded something like cats
being tortured. She canted her eyes up at Angel.
“Uilleam pipes. Don’t worry, they won’t
sound so bad with the rest of the band playing.” He smiled.
“I sure hope not.” Buffy took a drink of
her caramel cappuccino enjoying the rush. Even if the band was bad, she
wouldn’t care. She was here with the man she loved. The latest monster had
been destroyed and for one night, she could pretend all was right with the
world.
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