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Spirit and Imagination
by kcarolj65
Summary: Buffy and company arrive at the Hyperion, post- Chosen.
Rating: NC-17
Author Notes: Thanks to Judy and Sue, who encouraged me for months
to post.
Story Notes: Vaguely related to "Curiosity", my story set
during Chosen.
Disclaimer: Joss Whedon and ME own it all. I just play in their
sandbox from time to time.
The
sun was low enough that it was safe for him to be outdoors, so he waited in
the hotel courtyard until he heard the bus lumbering down the quiet street.
It had seen some hard driving; school buses weren't designed to outrun
earthquakes and sinkholes large enough to swallow a whole town. The
radiator hissed threateningly and the brakes squealed as the vehicle ground
to a halt. Giles opened the door and nodded a silent greeting to Angel; the
vampire stepped forward to offer his hand, then stopped short as if he had
slammed into a wall.
What
the -
Blood
power fear kill run fight Slayer Slayer Slayer
Holy
fuck! Angel stumbled backward, turning away from the bus, pressing a
hand to the ridges in his forehead. Inhuman adrenaline surged through him
and he snarled involuntarily. The demon leaped and flinched, straining to
break free, to run, to fight, to tear asunder...
He
groaned, fighting hard to push it back. Through his unreasoning panic and
bewilderment, he was downright ashamed of himself. He was a master vampire:
he controlled his demon, not the other way around!
But
then, he'd never felt anything like this before.
"I
wondered how you'd react." Giles' quiet voice held a hint of smugness.
Angel stared at him through a fading yellow haze; though every nerve pulsed
with energy, he held himself still in the twitchy immobility of the hunted,
a gazelle surrounded by a prowling pride. He could feel them, the young
hungry lionesses, tense predators staring down their prey - him - from
behind the dust-smirched windows of the bus.
Fortunately,
the first to disembark were Willow and Xander, familiar and relatively
unthreatening despite the almost visible power swirling around the
redheaded witch; grateful for the diversion, he grinned, but it faded at
the grief etched on their faces, particularly Xander's. Angel could neither
see nor smell any recent injury on either of them, though Xander sported an
eye patch that promised a painful back-story. The young man was too
absorbed in his thoughts to acknowledge him, much less muster any kind of
greeting, but Willow stepped to him and kissed his cheek warmly.
"We're here," she murmured unnecessarily.
"I'm
glad." She smiled tiredly at his reply and led Xander into the hotel.
Giles
was next to alight; he ignored Angel's awkwardly reoffered hand, instead
turning his attention to the young women who followed him from the bus,
assisting those who needed it. Angel shuffled his feet uncomfortably as
perhaps a score of them - dirty and disheveled, but terrifyingly attentive
- began to disembark, their eyes burning into his with instinctive
recognition and challenge.
Angel
turned a questioning gaze on Giles, met again that satisfied, disdainful
gleam and felt a wave of despondency. No, Giles would never forget, and a
small petty part of him would always enjoy Angel's guilt and discomfort.
The Watcher's voice was cool and inflectionless. "They're all Slayers.
Not Potentials anymore. Slayers."
Angel's
stomach dropped and he concentrated anxiously, to no avail. There were too
many of them for him to distinguish one particular Slayer.
"Buffy?" he choked the question.
Giles'
expression softened and he nodded toward the bus. The small blonde Slayer
was there, gently steering her sister down the steps. Her tired, lovely
face lit at the sight of him and he smiled broadly, relieved.
"No
need for that second front, huh?"
Her answer
was a headshake and a strong one-armed hug. He returned the embrace in
kind, closing their small circle by placing a gentle hand on Dawn's
shoulder and squeezing lightly. That elicited the ghost of a smile from the
younger girl, perhaps the most affectionate expression she ever had
bestowed upon him. It puzzled him even as it pleased, but he had more
pressing matters on his mind.
"Is
this everyone?" Maybe I was wrong. He knew he hadn't been, but
he scanned the now-empty bus anyway. Nothing.
If
she heard his unvoiced comment, she didn't respond to it. Her voice and
expression were brisk, businesslike, exactly as they had been a few nights
before in the Sunnydale cemetery, her emotions tightly leashed of
necessity. "Everyone who made it, except the ones we dropped off at
the hospital. Robin and a few of the girls needed some attention, and
Faith's handling the details. Well, actually, Andrew is, but Faith wanted
to stay with Robin."
"She's
all right, then? Good." He turned them toward the hotel. "Come in."
Together
they descended the stairs and sat on the circular sofa in the center of the
lobby. He took her hand in both of his, rubbing gently. Dawn sat beside and
slightly behind her, leaning her head on Buffy's shoulder as they watched
Fred tend to the exhausted girls. The slender scientist-cum-demon
fighter ushered them toward the stairs, murmuring soft promises of food and
baths and beds.
Angel
smiled at the sight. Fred's warm smile and gentle flutterings were in their
way exactly the kind of comfort and nurture the girls needed; despite their
formidable powers, the new Slayers were little more than children and they
responded immediately to Fred's mothering, following her like lambs. As the
girls climbed the stairs to the guestrooms, Wesley, Gunn and Giles
disappeared toward the kitchen, leaving the three of them alone in the
lobby.
They
sat quietly for a few minutes; then Buffy turned suddenly heavy,
moss-granite eyes on him. "Do you want me to tell you about it
now?"
He
swallowed hard and nodded. "Yes."
He
listened silently as she outlined her plan, Willow's spell, and the descent
into the Hellmouth, the thousands of Turok-han gathered there, ready to be
unleashed on an unsuspecting world. Horror and pride warred within him as
she related how she had been seriously wounded, and had despaired of
victory but had risen to her feet to continue fighting anyway, and then...
He
cringed inwardly, dreading what was coming and yet terribly eager to hear
it, in all its wonder and awfulness. Myriad feelings //envy dislike pride
admiration guilt love loss// careened through his consciousness like
elusive insects, each fluttering briefly through the scope of awareness
before giving way to the next as she told him of the brilliant golden light
piercing the gloom, streaming from the amulet on Spike's chest to destroy
the First Evil's army.
"He
said he could feel his soul, that it was really there." Buffy's voice
was little more than a whisper. "I took his hand, and I - I think I
felt it too, like it went - through me. It was - he was -''
She
paused, her eyes bright but her voice was soft and sad, like a lonely
flute. "Spike closed the Hellmouth, Angel. He's - gone."
"I
know." Too well, he knew. Searing pain such as he'd never felt before,
and a bark of sardonic laughter, then - nothing. A vast, aching emptiness
where that immense vitality had been.
Somewhere,
Angel was sure, Drusilla had been screaming for hours.
He
gathered Buffy close to him and she buried her face against his neck. She
shifted a bit, as if she found it difficult to fit her body comfortably
against his, and for the first time he felt awkward, too large for her; he
wondered if she felt it too. This had never been an issue with Cordelia -
taller, more curvaceous, built like a goddess... Junoesque, a
well-remembered voice teased through his mind, and he snorted. Dammit.
I've had Spike on the brain all day. Now I'm channeling William the Bloody
Poet.
Always
kind of liked the poems, though, he mused absently. In those early
days, just after his turning, after Darla fell asleep...
He'd
strained his ears to hear fledgling William softly reciting his verses to
Drusilla. For the most part, they were contrived, adolescent blatherings of
feelings dreamt of but not yet felt and experiences wished for but not yet
known, all staggering under the weight of too many large words, plodding
and overblown and often poorly rhymed. And yet, they had charmed him. They
were so earnest. So heartfelt. So - Spike.
He's
gone. Really gone.
All
at once, Angel felt every one of his many years. Too many years, too many
lives, too many losses, in all too rapid succession: Doyle, Darla, Buffy
herself, Connor (twice), Cordelia, and now Spike. He and his grandchilde
had been many things to one another, most of them unpleasant, but Spike's
absence - so sudden, so unexpected - was acute, like the severing of a
limb.
Voice
carefully low and steady, he assured Buffy of his help, and a place to stay
for as long as she and the other Slayers needed it. He mentioned nothing of
Wolfram & Hart. Time enough for that later, if at all. She said
nothing, just snuggled closer to him. It was still awkward, and Angel's
throat ached dully: her small, fairylike slenderness was better suited to
one with a swimmer's or dancer's body, lean and whip-strong, no matter how
fragile he might have looked.
"Here
we are," Wesley's cultured baritone softly broke the silence as he
placed before them a tray laden with sandwiches, mugs and a carafe.
Similarly burdened, Giles and Gunn climbed the stairs toward the guest
rooms. Dawn sat up and chose a mug, then frowned and poked a finger into
it; with a touch of domestic pride, Wesley lifted the carafe and announced,
"I've added a healthy dose of Bailey's to this, so it's quite potent
but it should help the girls to sleep. I'm certain they need it. Now, my
dear, hold your mug steady and I'll pour - Dawn? Dawn?!"
Buffy
raised her head from Angel's shoulder. "Dawn, what is it?" Dawn's
face was white and her slender hand shook so that had she not looped her
finger through its handle, the forgotten mug would have fallen and smashed
on the floor. Her eyes were fixed on the small white object she had fished
from the mug and now squeezed between the thumb and forefinger of her other
hand. As Wesley gently took the cup from the girl and poured rich, fragrant
brown liquid into it, Buffy's eyes widened with comprehension and she threw
her arms around her sister.
"Oh,
God. Oh, Dawn." Tears poured down their faces. The younger
Summers was sobbing as if her heart would break. Wesley shot a puzzled,
stricken look at Angel, who was equally mystified but had the niggling
feeling he shouldn't be.
"Ma
- marshmallows -'' Dawn mewled like an abandoned kitten, staring miserably
at the crushed sweet in her fingers. Her slim shoulders trembled. "Oh,
Buffy, I was s-so mean -''
"Sh-shh,"
her sister soothed through her own tears. "It's all right. It's all
right. Shhh."
"I
ne-never forgave him." She turned tortured blue eyes on Buffy.
"Buffy, did he know that I -"
Buffy
held her sister's shoulders, locked their gazes and nodded emphatically.
"I told him, Dawn. Don't worry. He knew."
Dawn's
face crumpled again and she collapsed into Buffy's embrace, still weeping
but more quietly. Buffy glanced at Wesley and Angel and gave them a watery
smile. "Spike loved my mother's cocoa." She nodded at the filled
mug Wesley held, and her voice wavered as she finished, "With little
marshmallows." Fresh tears spilled down her cheeks and she bit her
lip, leaned her forehead against Dawn's and closed her eyes.
*Of
course: Joyce and Spike, in the kitchen.* Angel remembered coming upon them
that night, how terrified he'd been for Joyce. Unnecessarily terrified,
which he should have known despite Spike's pantomime of biting Joyce's
neck. Angelus might have killed her after she'd served him cocoa, but not
Spike.
All
unwitting, Wesley's attempt at comfort food had compounded the new loss
with the old, recalling Joyce's small but pivotal act of kindness that
sowed the seeds of Spike's genuine, reverent affection for her. Small
wonder the Summers girls had broken down.
"It's
okay, Wes," Angel said softly. He threw Wesley a look, Go ahead,
I've got this. I'll explain later. The former Watcher nodded obediently
and set down the carafe and mug, then patted Dawn's hair comfortingly. At
the girl's hiccupped thank-you, he blinked hard and pulled off his glasses
as he turned away.
As
the girls nibbled halfheartedly at the food, Angel awkwardly stroked
Buffy's back with a light hand, uncertain what to do next. These two young
women grieved a different Spike - from all accounts, a far better one than
the annoying fledgling that had plagued Angelus for nearly twenty years or
the bloodthirsty master vampire who usurped the Anointed One in Sunnydale.
It was difficult to reconcile the concept of Souled Spike with those
memories, and yet, knowing what Spike had done and having a fair idea why,
he felt obligated to say something kind, relate an anecdote that would
console Buffy and Dawn.
He
racked his brain, scanning and rejecting recollections as soon as they
occurred to him. His demon thoroughly enjoyed tripping down memory lane,
but his reminiscences offered little that would be of comfort, unless he
glossed over so much brutality and bloodshed as to make the events
unrecognizable. Dawn might believe revisionist history, but Buffy would
not. He rubbed his eyes, bleak futility settling over him. In human terms,
the only admirable activity pre-chipped, unsouled Spike ever undertook was
caring for Drusilla, lovingly and patiently, for more than a century.
But
at least he did that much. Can't say the same for anyone else, most of all
myself.
He
remembered clearly how it had come to pass. He and Darla, weary of his
childe's tiresome prattle of burning raindrops and bleeding fairy wings,
had encouraged her to make a playmate for herself and, at the same time,
relieve them of the burden of caring for her. Drusilla had agreed
delightedly and added, with besotted certainty:
*"And
he will be the wisest and bravest knight in all the land..."*
Just
then, a tearful, bespectacled William had stumbled blindly between them.
The mad vampiress had halted her steps and turned to look after him,
wondering, mesmerized. Angelus and Darla had continued on their way for a
few moments before realizing she had stopped; upon returning to her and
learning the reason for her hesitation, he had laughed derisively at her
choice. The look Drusilla had given him then - sly, cunning, completely
lucid - had sent an uneasy chill through his unbeating heart, but he'd
laughed it off. After all, he was Angelus. Let her have her
washed-out fop! What could a mere fledgling, especially one made from such
stuff as that, do to him?
What,
indeed? Drusilla had had some measure of revenge over the next eighteen
years as Angelus discovered, then was forced to continuously redefine, the
limits of frustration and annoyance, thanks to his wild, exasperating, intense
grandchilde. Fledgling Spike had imprinted on him rather than
Drusilla and had sought his approval, turned shining hopeful eyes to him
after killing, fangs dripping gore. More often than not, Spike's
recklessness had earned him rebuke rather than praise, and Angelus' methods
of punishment had stolen the worship from his glance and replaced it with
hurt, shamefaced desire and fawning apology at first; then hatred, fear,
and a hint of contempt had grown and eventually blotted out every
expression of softer feeling. The pre-slumber poetry recitations had
ceased. Spike came to respect Angelus' supremacy, but rarely passed on an
opportunity to goad him, skirting the edge of open defiance though never
crossing over. Their twisted relationship became a tug-of-war, a battle of
wills that neither would concede.
He
could have destroyled Spike at any time, and how often he had wanted to!
Spike's penchant for drawing attention to himself endangered all of them;
dusting him was Angelus' right. Yet he never had, nor had he ever truly
examined why. At the time, he'd told himself it was because of Drusilla. No
one else had Spike's limitless patience with her, his extraordinary
devotion to her, certainly not Angelus: He wouldn't have abandoned her, but
he couldn't deal with her nearly as well as Spike. So, Spike and his
foolhardy escapades had been endured. It was reason enough. Seemed
plausible, anyway.
Half-truths
are so much easier than whole.
He
sighed and rubbed his eyes again, then froze as a far more recent memory
stirred.
Something
else Drusilla had said. Something that had registered strongly at the time,
through his shame and self-loathing. He had been so tempted, so close to
succumbing as Drusilla, his worst crime, his beautiful broken creation in a
crimson dress, swayed bewitchingly like a snake in the shadows...
"Mmm,
Daddy," Drusilla crooned. "Standing in the doorway. Fed us all
those lovely lawyers who tasted of riches and misery. I see your soul, all
whips and nettles, crying bloody tears. So sad, so alone, like birds in
cages." Her voice dropped to a low murmur, soft and seductive.
"Come in, and shut the door. It's not polite to let in a draft, when
it's so cold outside. Come back to us, Angelus, where it's dark and warm.
Come back and we'll be a family again, kisses and laughter and thorns, all
of us together..."
*Body
trembling as he fought to maintain control, he squeezed his eyes shut
against the sight of her as she spoke - because she was RIGHT,
he wanted it, wanted them,
LONGED
for them, to be with them. His blood kin, his loves, bound to him with ties
beyond all human understanding because they were the SAME
beneath their skins, sharing a oneness that humans could never know, closer
even than mother and child for only half the child was its mother whereas
what made vampire childer was the same that made their sires. They could
see it in each other's eyes and know it, feel it knitted into every fiber
of their beings, and know they were never alone.*
He
missed them so, all of them, and missed being with them - the rush and
crunch of the hunt, and the quiet times afterward, tumbling beneath silk
sheets, the achingly sweet contact of soft flesh on hard, the rare lovely
spectacle of soft on soft, and the even rarer exquisite friction of hard on
hard. And the complete liberation, the freedom from conscience, with the
night their domain and the world their oyster to crack open and suck dry.
He
took a step toward her, toward that wonderful screaming abyss, for in that
moment he believed, truly, that redemption was a hopeless impossible dream
for such as he, and whatever he did wouldn't matter. Would not, in the
final analysis, make one iota of difference. The good fight was too hard a
fight and it was futile anyway, and he wanted so badly to return to them,
his family, his icy golden queen and his dark wicked plum and his beautiful
blue-eyed boy...
His
eyes, stinging with helpless tears, hardened suddenly. "All of us?
What, is Spike with you?"
Drusilla's
cunning smile dissolved into a pout that quivered; Angel leapt forward and
caught her wrists in a crushing grip, snarling into her face, "Is he?"
*Drusilla
shook her head and babbled, with growing hysteria: "My little Spike
has swallowed the sun and the nasty gnomes are shrieking. He shines from
inside like a glowworm, but he tastes of ashes, all black and sooty,
stinging and choking." Eyes rolling, hands fluttering with fear and
agitation, she cried, "The sky, the sky does not want him and he falls
to lightning in a million shiny pieces, and I can't - I can't See him
anymore!*"
He
hadn't known what to make of her words at the time; all he knew was that
Drusilla had tried to bring Spike back into the fold, and had failed. The
younger vampire had not obeyed. Had done the unthinkable and Defied His
Sire, whom he'd loved and served for more than a century, for the sake of
his new love who was also his nemesis. As that incredible fact registered,
he'd found the strength he needed to thrust Drusilla away from him and
reclaim his chosen path. He had sent her back to Darla with dire warnings
to leave Los Angeles, and had returned to his friends, squirming under the
obligation he felt for his absent grandchilde. Later he'd contemplated what
Drusilla had said, but since he couldn't make heads or tails of it, had dismissed
it as random nonsense, and nearly forgotten it. He knew its meaning now.
The
sun. Gnomes. Shining and glowing and ashes.
Ashes.
Not
dust.
Ashes.
"Jaysus,
Mary and Joseph." The mild expletive, and the hint of Irish accent,
spoke to the depth of his astonishment. He shook his head disbelievingly.
"She knew."
"Who
did?"
"Knew
what?"
Buffy
and Dawn spoke almost simultaneously, turning curious tear-streaked faces
to him. He blinked at them; he'd all but forgotten they were there.
"Drusilla,"
he blurted, and Buffy's eyes narrowed dangerously. He winced, both at the
expression and what it revealed, and hastened to explain. "She knew
what Spike would do, how he'd -'' he bit off the word and stood, hands on
hips, shaking his head again at his own obtuseness and feeling as if he
owed an apology to the absent vampiress. "I thought she was just
rambling, you know, talking crazy. She does that a lot. But she must have
seen it in one of her visions."
"Visions?
Like Cordelia?"
Dawn's
innocent question clutched at Angel's heart with rending claws, but he
forced a gentle smile, arching a brow in consideration. "Maybe.
Drusilla's not very lucid most of the time, so it's hard to separate her
true visions from her delusions. Cordy is,'' was, he corrected silently,
"much more coherent."
"What
did Drusilla say?" Buffy asked, quietly but with an edge to her voice.
He smiled inwardly, with sadness. Buffy, you betray yourself in a
hundred ways.
"That
Spike had swallowed the sun and was glowing, and the nasty gnomes were
shrieking. I assume by that she meant the First's vampire army." He
withheld the reference to ashes; neither Buffy nor Dawn would thank him for
the reminder of Spike's immolation. Hell, he still shuddered at the
thought of that beautiful sculpted body, the angular face with its
impossibly soft mouth, decimated beyond hope of recovery, mingled with the
filth of a dead town.
Buffy
and Dawn waited mutely, clearly expecting more. He reached out and took one
of each girl's hands in his, watching his thumbs rub the soft skin of their
knuckles, then turned a warm gaze on them. "I think she knew even
before that, though, that he'd do something - '' the word lodged in his
throat for a moment " - amazing. I think she knew it from the moment
she saw him."
Then
he told them what Drusilla had said, long ago under the London gaslights,
and he watched nearly identical, soft smiles slowly illuminate their faces,
undimmed by the new tears that trickled down their cheeks. He knew the
smiles were for him as well as Spike, that he would give them this. Buffy
smoothed a lock of hair behind her sister's ear, then leaned forward and
kissed Angel chastely, a benison of gratitude. Then she pulled away and
shook her head with a gentle snort.
"That
crazy vampire..." she murmured.
"Who,
Spike?" he joked, deliberately obtuse. "Could've told you that
years ago. Wait, I think I did."
She
rolled her eyes but smiled. "No. Drusilla." She glanced at their
clasped hands, then returned her gaze to his face. "You didn't believe
her."
"Not
at the time, no." He shook his head, a smile tugging at his lips.
"I guess I should have."
*
This
was not his usual method of dealing with grief. His was to seclude himself
and have a long, depressing brood, work out all the ways the unpleasant
situation was his fault, and emerge when he'd successfully swallowed yet
another heaping helping of unworthiness to make his quest for redemption
seem that much more difficult.
No,
drinking himself into oblivion was not his accustomed way of going about
this. But it had once been Spike's. Under the circumstances, it felt right.
He'd
been drinking rather slowly, and the alcohol had had time to take effect.
Reaching again for the half-empty bottle at his elbow, he nearly knocked it
over as a too-familiar scent pierced his alcohol-fogged brain. Horror and
hope twisted his gut, and he turned toward the doorway of his office as the
redolence of leather and books, fine whiskey and something else - something
not quite right - came closer. It couldn't be -
"Angel."
Giles.
The vampire nearly groaned in mixed relief and disappointment. With the
identification of the man came the recognition of the aroma's odd component
- tweed. Definitely not Spike. Still, Giles' scent was similar
enough to surprise Angel that he'd never noticed it before. Of course,
during most of his past dealings with Giles, he'd been in Spike-denial
mode, willfully suppressing every memory of him, and thus the resemblance
had escaped conscious acknowledgement. Now, with his departed grandchilde
uppermost in his mind, the familiar combined smells of learning and
violence, refinement and ruthlessness, brought all the details flooding
back with renewed color and clarity. And with them, the pain. Again.
Angel
pasted a smile on his face and tipsily waved Giles toward a chair.
"Come in, Giles," he said with uncharacteristic warmth. "Sit
down, have a drink." Giles accepted silently and seated himself as
Angel located a second glass and filled both. With a nod of thanks, Giles
took an experimental sip, then a deeper pull, exhaling appreciatively after
he swallowed.
"Is
this a wake?" Giles asked gently, his blue eyes filled with a cool
pity that irritated the vampire. Like he could possibly understand. He
can't. With an effort he suppressed the rush of emotion; the anger and
grief so inextricably intertwined that if he indulged in the one, the other
was sure to manifest in ways he could not allow, not in front of the
Watcher. He'd had enough of losing control today.
His
lips stretched in a broad, insincere grin and he spread his arms wide, his
glass tilting precariously. "Well, someone's got to do something in
memory of the little gobshite." Noting his liquor was in danger of
being spilled, he brought the glass quickly to his mouth and bolted the
contents.
The
corners of Giles' mouth drooped disapprovingly. "Oh, come now. He was
hardly my favorite person, but he gave his life - er, unlife - to save the
world. At the very least, he deserves our respect, and some sort of
recognition." He sighed, leaned his head into his hand, and rubbed his
temples with thumb and forefinger. "I'm sure Buffy will want to do
something for him."
"Oh,
I'll bet she will," Angel drawled, smirking unpleasantly as he
refilled his glass. He leaned back in his chair as Giles raised narrowed
eyes and fixed Angel with a look he recognized, one that said Pillock
as clearly as the Watcher's voice had years ago, spitting the word at him
from his chair of torture in the mansion. His smirk deepened as he wondered
idly where his chainsaw was. Not that I'd use it. On Giles, anyway.
"Much
as it pains me to say this, he was right," Giles said softly, with a
hint of steel. At Angel's surprised look, he continued, "About you and
him. Vampires with souls. After he regained his -'' Giles paused to smirk
as Angel's eyes flickered " - he said he wasn't much different than
he'd been without it. He felt remorse for what he'd done, certainly, enough
that it nearly drove him mad, but otherwise was basically the same person.
He was, too." He smiled, amusement and sadness shadowed with an intriguing
hint of guilt. "I found him just as annoying as ever."
As
Giles' meaning penetrated, something inside Angel started to burn, slowly
at first but escalating rapidly. Maybe I'll have to rethink the possible
uses for that chainsaw. As evenly as he could manage, he said,
"What are you saying, Giles?"
The
Watcher thumped his empty glass on Angel's desk and leaned forward, chin
daringly outthrust. "You've worked hard to convince everyone of the
distinction between your souled and unsouled personas. Buffy accepted it as
truth, because of her feelings for you. But Spike was right. You're not too
far from Angelus right now, and I'll venture a guess that you never are.
You just hide it well most of the time, when you haven't drowned your
inhibitions in good whiskey."
Angel's
hands fisted to still their sudden trembling, a yellow haze drifting across
his vision. "If you're right, it's probably best not to provoke
me," he growled, shoving back his chair to stand and loom
threateningly, if somewhat unsteadily, over the Watcher. Giles stared up at
him with a distinctly unimpressed expression, going so far as to retrieve
his empty glass and hold it out to Angel for a refill, a suppressed smile
twitching at his lips. Frustrated, Angel glared at him for a long moment, then
made a harsh, furious sound and grabbed the bottle, sloshing full measures
for both of them before slumping into his seat. He took a gulp and pointed
an accusing finger.
"Do
you have any idea what it was like, living with him for nearly twenty
years? The constant yammering. Going on the run every time he got carried
away and brought an angry mob down on us. He ruined more plans and schemes
than you can imagine, just because he got bored with them."
Giles
chuckled and nodded. "He never could follow a plan through to its
conclusion. If he had, he might have beaten Buffy. But he never could. He
must have had the vampire equivalent of Attention-Deficit Disorder."
He chuckled again; the sound grated painfully on Angel's raw nerves.
"And
the grandiose gestures! The harebrained stunts he'd pull! He drove Darla
and me right around the bend a hundred times if he did it once!"
Grandiose
gestures, harebrained stunts. The Buffybot. Chaining Drusilla and Buffy
in his crypt, offering to dust Drusilla to prove his love. Allowing Glory
to torture him for hours rather than giving up Dawn. Giles
commiserated, "Yes, I can well believe that."
"All
fists and fangs, he was. Never saw any vampire who enjoyed it more
than he did. Especially the supernatural strength. He was always
challenging himself, taking on the strongest opponents he could find
-" Angel's voice trailed off as Spike's mockery echoed in his mind: When
was the last time you really unleashed it? Don't you ever get tired of
fights you know you're gonna win? "Soon as I told him about
Slayers, he was obsessed with them. Wanted to run out and fight her right
away. Lucky for him he didn't find one for twenty years."
"I'd
have thought that sort of enthusiasm would have impressed you."
Angel
glared at him darkly. "Hardly."
"And
Darla?"
"Oh,
she couldn't stand him." A corner of his mouth curled. "Probably
because he saw right through her and wasn't afraid to tell her about it.
Me, too. Took the truth and hit you over the head with it like a
sledgehammer."
"Yes."
Giles' tone held less amusement this time. He had been on the receiving end
of that piercing insight, that brutal honesty, too many times to enjoy the
reminder. She treats you...like a retired librarian.
Angel
shot him a knowing look, not without sympathy. "The only person he
didn't cut to shreds was Drusilla. With Drusilla, he was - '' His voice
softened suddenly. "He was so good with her. Gentle. She was hardly
the easiest of charges, but he never lost his patience with her. If you
could have seen him, the way he cared for her - it was amazing."
"I
saw something of it." At Angel's surprise, Giles smiled meaningfully,
then the vampire's brow cleared.
"Dawn."
So that's what all that was about.
"Yes.
After the battle with Glory, Spike devoted himself to Dawn. He'd promised
Buffy he would look after her. When Dawn fell ill with flu, Spike never
left her side. Frankly, I think he was quite frightened for her -
understandable, I suppose, in one who grew up in an era when such illnesses
often proved fatal." One particular memory of that incident came back
to him, of Spike clutching a heating pad for hours on end, warming his
hands to avoid giving Dawn a chill while he tended her. He cleared his
throat loudly. "He cared for her tirelessly, without complaint, for days.
At the time I didn't stop to consider how extraordinary that was, a
soulless vampire caring so lovingly for a human child. I suppose I was too
wrapped up in my own grief, and in trying to decide what to do next, to
really give it much thought." He smiled self-deprecatingly. "Or
maybe I simply took it for granted, because it was Spike, and therefore not
terribly surprising."
It
was just too much for Angel, on top of everything else. "And now he's
done this - incredible thing. Saved the world." He shook his head.
"Spike, saving the world."
"Yes."
Giles smiled gently. "He was - incredibly brave."
The
wisest, and bravest. Angel's eyes stung sharply and hurriedly he
reached for the bottle, needing a distraction. Only a few inches of liquor
remained.
He got
to his feet and refilled their glasses, raised his. Giles rose and lifted
his glass in similar fashion.
"To
heroes," Angel whispered, suddenly unable to find his voice.
"To
heroes," Giles echoed, clinking his glass against Angel's. They downed
the liquor as one, and, after a moment's hesitation, Giles extended his
hand to Angel. He took it and forced himself to meet Giles' sympathetic
gaze, then Giles turned on his heel and left Angel in the half-lit office,
with only his memories for company.
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