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Day and
Night
By Ralkana
Disclaimer – I don’t own them; Joss and Mutant Enemy and
all the various other Powers That Be do. If I owned them, I’m pretty
sure they'd be much, much happier.
Comments and feedback to Ralkana47@yahoo.com would be greatly
appreciated. Thanks!
Author's Note – A thousand words on the subjects of
sunlight and separation.
Timeline – Mid third season, I guess.
Spoilers – Nothing in particular.
š š š š š š
Day
Rolling my aching shoulders,
I climb into my window and toss my bag on the bed. A glance at the alarm
clock, and I can’t
stop the groan that follows. So tired. If I go to bed now, I can still get a
couple of hours of sleep. I turn to close the window and draw the curtains,
but the faintest glow of day on the horizon stops me, and I stare at the
weak light.
Damn. I cut it close, much
closer than I wanted to. Falling asleep in Angel’s arms on the couch in the mansion
after a really hard night felt so right. We both knew it wasn’t a smart thing to do, but we needed
the closeness, the comfort after the roughness of battle.
The sky lightens gradually,
and I watch it numbly, thinking of what it means. All over Sunnydale,
people are waking up, cursing the light that creeps through their curtains
or their blinds, grumbling over the start of a new day. I shake my head,
irrationally irritated. Don’t
they know how lucky they are? To be able to get up, face the day, go to
work or to school or shopping, and not find themselves trapped in the
shadows, pacing away the day like a caged animal.
The sun’s a wedge, a weapon, one I can’t fight. I can – we can – rail and wail and flail against it,
but that would change nothing. The light will always be there, a divider,
an unignorable reminder that Angel and I lead separate lives, lives that
won’t ever, can’t ever mesh. The light drives my love, my soulmate, out
of my arms and back into the darkness.
“Buffy? Are you
just getting up?”
Mom’s questioning
tone of voice becomes accusatory as she comes in and notices my bag on the
neatly made bed. “Or
just getting in?”
Rubbing my hands up and down
my goosebumpy arms, I don’t
answer her. The sky is beginning to grow blindingly bright as the sun peeks
its way into the world. Mom walks farther into the room and slides an arm
around my shoulders. The touch is unusual and unexpected, but I don’t shrug her off or say anything. We
watch the sky in silence for several moments.
“It’s beautiful, isn’t it?” she murmurs, and I can hear awe in
her voice. “The
sunrise?”
She doesn’t get it. She’ll never get it. I feel like cursing
as my eyes fill with tears. With an angry jerk, I pull the curtains closed,
plunging the room into darkness. I turn away from Mom, fighting not to
start sobbing, clenching my fists. I will not cry. I will not cry. She
places a hand on my shoulder, but I stiffen. It’s not her touch I want. She
sighs and leaves the room, saying something stupid about breakfast. She
closes the door behind her, missing my tiny words, which slip out, left
hanging in the room’s
oppressive darkness.
“Beautiful? The
sun? I hate it.”
š š š š š š
Night
Sunset is coming. I can
smell it. It’s
been another hot day, a beautiful day, according to the people
hurrying by outside, I’m
sure. I shake my head, wondering what I’m doing here. What vampire in his
right mind would settle in sunny Southern California, in a town called Sunnydale,
no less?
But I know why I’m here. My reason for being here, my
reason for being is probably moving towards me through the growing
twilight, moving quickly and with a purpose, just like the people who rush
past my door.
I think of her, and I can’t help the smile that lifts the
corners of my lips. In my mind, she is laughing, surrounded by friends, her
hair a golden halo in the sun. Of course, this is her, my angel,
seen from afar, for the only way I can see her in sunlight is if I am in
shadow. The shadows hold me and drive her from my side.
It’s a sobering thought, one that would
normally banish all traces of optimism and leave behind a dark mood. But
now, when she’s
on her way to me and the sun’s slowly vanishing beneath the horizon, I feel awake,
all of my senses alert and ready. I feel alive, and I laugh, for
that word hasn’t
described me for over two centuries.
I pace the entryway, drawing
close to the door and then away, over and over again. I can’t help it, this straining. I hate
being cooped up here –
well, if one can be cooped up in a mansion – and I just want out. Preferably with
her, but even alone would be good.
I can feel her now. She’s right outside. The front door
opens, and I am right in front of it. The sun’s last fading rays hit me, but they
leave nothing more than a tingly, vaguely uncomfortable warmth. She looks
surprised to see me right there, but then she’s in my arms, oh God, she’s kissing me, and everything fades
and melts away.
She rests her head on my
chest, and I hold her close, rubbing my hands down her tiny back. Her body
is so warm and soft, and it feels so good against mine. We should stop,
pull apart; it’s
dangerous for us to be so close, and we both know it, but we can’t help it. We need this.
“Angel,” she says, her standard greeting, and
I smile and reply in turn.
“Buffy.”
“I missed you.”
“I missed you
too.”
“I needed to see
you. I couldn’t
wait for the sunset,”
she murmurs. “Giles
saw that I was edgy and he let me go early. I think if he hadn’t, I’d have had to kick his butt in
training and come anyway.”
I laugh as I lead her
further into the mansion. Nothing will happen. I won’t let it and she won’t let it. But we need each other. And
night is the only time we have.
God, I love the night.
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