God, she must hate him. For her to do something like that to an animal, she must hate him with every bit of her. Dawn loved animals; she’d talked the year before how she wanted to volunteer at the local animal shelter. After all, plenty of pets ended up there after their owners turned up dead from inexplicable neck trauma.

 

Did she just walk up to the cat and bash its brains out? Or maybe lure it into a trap with a little tuna?

 

Or maybe she just answered an ad—“Free to good home.”

 

God.

 

For a moment he thought of the cat that used to live in the house—still did, maybe, hard to see cats if they didn’t want to be noticed—Miss Something? Kitty? The Fabulous Miss Kitty? Something like that. It had been Tara’s cat, although maybe Dawn named it. That name seemed too earthbound for Glinda’s tastes.

 

Spike went back to the sack and peered into it. No, Tara’s pet was black; this cat had been marmalade, once.

 

It was ridiculous to be so relieved.

 

Christ, he didn’t want to tell Buffy.

 

***

 

“He has a soul? That’s…great,” Xander forced himself to say. The words felt like sawdust in his mouth, dry and flavorless and insincere.

 

No, not insincere. Not completely. They were words he had to say to be close to Buffy again. Nothing was perfect, even with the people you loved most. You had to grit your teeth to keep from making a remark, or a whole stream of them, but in the long run it would be worth it. If he didn’t believe that, he wouldn’t be here with her now.

 

And she’d have to do the exact same thing. Because this couldn’t be halfway, it couldn’t be just him accepting her; she had some accepting to do, too. Things couldn’t go on the way they had been.

 

He’d been able to get along with Spike sometimes, hadn’t he? Playing pool, poker? Shot the bull a few times, commiserated about women being insane and completely unreasonable? That’s all they had to do now. Not be best friends. Just be polite. Civil.

 

Of course, it was a lot more difficult being civil to someone who’d slept with your fiancée and tried to—tried to—

 

Stop it. Stop it now.  It’s not my call, it’s hers.

 

There was an upside, right? There had to be. Spike was better than Angel, he supposed. At least he wasn’t as creepy.

 

Naw, he was really more on the thuggish side.

 

Upside, upside. Well, at least Xander wouldn’t be the only guy at their video nights, since Giles usually came up with a convenient excuse to miss them. And, uh…maybe the girls would be less inclined to discuss the merits of various brands of depilatories with another guy there. Sometimes Xander wondered if they forgot he was a guy, what with so many girls around. Another guy to beef up the Y chromosome factor couldn’t hurt.

 

And Buffy. The real upside was Buffy.

 

“Souls are good,” said Xander carefully.

 

Buffy nodded. “Definitely of the good,” she agreed.

 

Willow has a soul,” he added.

 

Buffy flinched. Predictably. “Souls aren’t a magic cure-all.”

 

“Would you let Spike back into your life if he didn’t have a soul?” Xander asked steadily.

 

“I did,” she said softly. “When Spike came back, I didn’t know he had one.”

 

“So you just forgave him?”

 

Buffy nodded.

 

“Then why can’t you forgive Willow?”

 

Buffy hesitated. How could she explain? It seemed so clear in her mind, but when she tried to explain her words failed her. “It—what she did—it was personal.”

 

“And what Spike did wasn’t personal?” Xander exclaimed before he thought.

 

Her eyes, meeting his, were stormy, and he reminded himself that that wasn’t a topic for discussion.

 

“Fine. Angel. When Angel tried to end the world, you forgave him.”

 

“That wasn’t Angel,” Buffy returned automatically.

 

“Then who was it? Mr. Bean?”

 

“That’s not—Angel was different. He was Angelus. He was a different person.”

 

“Just like Willow was a different person.”

 

“She was Willow,” insisted Buffy, getting up and moving around the living room in agitation.

 

“She was nuts—it had broken her mind. What, do you think they put people in Goldenbrook because they’re extra-sane?”

 

“She knew exactly what she was doing,” Buffy flashed, swinging around to face him. “She wasn’t out of her mind. She knew who she was, she knew who I was. And she knew who my sister was when she threatened to reduce her to green key-ness. She just didn’t care.”

 

Xander stared at her for a moment, silent as realization dawned. “That’s it,” he murmured in surprise. “That’s it, isn’t it? I thought she didn’t rate on your get-out-of-jail free card because only your boyfriends get that one, but it’s Dawn, isn’t it? It’s because she went after Dawn.”

 

Buffy met his eyes silently, hers glittering with tears.

 

“God, Buffy, if you knew—if you knew how many nights I have to get up and go into Willow’s room to wake her up from bad dreams. They’re all bad, all of her dreams are bad. She’ll be crying and begging you to forgive her, you and Dawn. Dawn’s like—Dawn’s the sister she never had, the little sister, just like you’re the, the other sister she never had,” Xander finished lamely. “She can’t stand what she tried to do to you two.”

 

Buffy wanted to shoot back that it didn’t matter, Willow had to live with it, they all had to, but she couldn’t. The words stuck in her throat. She hated Willow, and blamed her bitterly, and missed her so much she could barely stand it. Thoughts of Willow entered her mind at random times, and she shied away from them, couldn’t look at them, and then they returned to her when she thought she’d put Willow far from her mind. From her heart.

 

But as bitter as she was with Willow, Buffy missed her, sharply. Willow had been her touchstone ever since she moved to Sunnydale; she turned her back on Cordy and the social acceptance that would have come with her—the social status Buffy was used to—because she’d looked at the timid, awkward girl Willow had been and wanted to help her, to make her laugh.

 

God, Xander wanted it so much. She could see it in his eyes, desperate and hopeful. She couldn’t keep Willow away forever; she’d had a hard enough time for the past months. Eventually she’d get there, slip in past Buffy and one day Buffy would just walk in the house and Willow would be there, talking with Dawn, in Buffy’s own kitchen. Or she’d go over to see Giles and there Willow would be, rooting through his bookshelves. She hadn’t been to Xander’s for months because she was avoiding Willow. How long could she fight?

 

She wasn’t the only one who cared about Willow.

 

“Maybe,” Buffy mumbled finally. Xander bent swiftly to catch the soft word. “Maybe.”

 

***

 

It took him a while to get going. First, he had to bury the cat behind the crypt, then he still had to gather his stuff up to take over to Buffy’s. He was moving slowly, because he felt worse than ever. It couldn’t be magic. Dawn didn’t know magic. Couldn’t do magic.

 

Of course, she damn near brought her mother back.

 

Fuck.

 

Spike didn’t hurry as he walked across town. There was no reason to. He had all night to accuse Buffy’s sister, a girl he’d loved for years, of trying to kill him. No reason to rush to it. Maybe he could put it off a while, pretend he didn’t know. While she did god knows what next. Maybe a dog.

 

Maybe a baby.

 

Yeah, putting it off was a great plan.

 

***

 

Giles stayed out of the living room. He’d been in the kitchen, drinking a barely adequate pot of what Americans laughably called tea, when he’d heard them come in—Buffy and Spike, he’d thought.

 

But it was Xander with Buffy, and they’d been talking steadily the whole time. He didn’t want to disturb them; he thought it was better for them to reconcile, but he was wondering just how long he could stay away from the living room. His notebook was there—he’d been engrossed in recording his observations about Spike, and he really wanted to get back to it. But Buffy and Xander were still talking, and—ah! The kitchen tablet! About time it was used for something other grocery lists of Lean Cuisine and absurdly expensive bottled water. As if water from Fiji was inherently superior to that from the Sunnydale Water Treatment Plant. Absurd.

 

The difference between the unsouled, demonic Spike and his souled counterpart is not as dramatic as it was with Angel and his soulless persona, Angelus. Of course, for the past three years Spike has been restrained by the chip and unable to inflict the kind of devastation Angelus reveled in, but at the same time Spike, even with a soul, does not appear as weighed down by his crimes as Angel did. Until he revealed his soul, I was unable to discern a difference between his behavior now and when I left Sunnydale last fall; now he is a little quieter and more thoughtful, perhaps, yet still retains his essential—

 

“Where’s Dawn?”

 

Giles jumped; he hadn’t heard Spike come in the back door. “I believe she’s up in her room, studying,” he said, settling back. “How was the Nosredna Laup?”

 

“Big and ugly and not that tough,” Spike muttered, his gaze drifting up to the ceiling as if he could see through it to the girl upstairs.

 

“Ahh—I was wondering, since you didn’t accompany Buffy home.”

 

“Getting my stuff,” Spike mumbled, moving towards the door. “Told her I’d meet her here. Give her a chance to get cleaned up.”

 

“Well, Buffy’s, uh, busy at the moment, so this might be a good time for us to talk further,” Giles said hopefully—the last of it to Spike’s back as he disappeared through the kitchen door into the house.

 

Spike was vaguely aware of Buffy greeting him as he passed the living room on his way upstairs, a paper bag with his stuff carelessly shoved in it dangling from one hand. He dropped it outside Buffy’s bedroom without pausing before stopping in front of her sister’s door. He hesitated before knocking; what could he say? “Dawnie, I understand that you’re unhappy with me, but I’d appreciate if you stopped cursing me. Also, don’t kill cats. It’s not nice, and they’re worth good money to the right demons”?

 

Tentatively Spike rapped on the door. “Come in,” Dawn called. “Especially if you’ve got chocolate.”

 

Spike opened the door and slipped inside. “Hey, Bit,” he said softly. “Can we talk a minute?”

 

“Sure,” Dawn agreed. “Anything going on?” she asked gingerly. She looked at him, and it was not at all as she had earlier, when she smiled at him and he thought everything was going to be okay between them. Now her look was wary.

 

She knew he knew. She knew.

 

“Why?” he asked without preamble. She looked at him blankly.

 

“It’s no good for everyone. No good for you,” he told her carefully.

 

No response.

 

He tried again. “I don’t blame you,” he told her. “Just stop. I’m not angry, but you can’t do it any more. It doesn’t make anything better, don’t you see that?”

 

“I—I don’t know what you’re talking about, Spike,” she said.

 

“Buffy’s going to have to be told,” he said to Dawn. “I can’t keep secrets from her. You stop, we’ll tell her together, and things will be right as rain. Well okay, first she’ll blow her stack, but then she’ll calm down, and everything will be fine.”

 

Her sudden intake of breath would have been confirmation for him, if he’d needed it. “You can’t tell Buffy,” she gasped. “Don’t tell her!”

 

“I have to, Niblet,” he said gently.

 

“If you tell her she’ll never trust me again,” Dawn exclaimed in dismay.

 

“She’ll understand,” Spike insisted. “Just stop, and everything will be fine.”

 

Dawn shook her head desperately. “I stopped already,” she blurted out. “So you don’t have to tell her now!”

 

“And what about tonight?” Spike scoffed, crossing over to her. How could she lie to him like that? He knew already, why didn’t she just make things easy on both of them and admit it?

 

“Tonight was…I was just trying to make things better,” Dawn said pleadingly. “I stopped already, days ago!”

 

“How could what you did tonight possibly make anything better?” Spike demanded in shock. “You have to stop, now,” he insisted, grabbing her arms and shaking her, trying desperately to get through to her. She had to understand, the way she was going never ended well, for anyone.

 

“I have, I swear,” Dawn quavered, beginning to cry.

 

“Then we’ll deal with it, and it will be over,” Spike repeated, unaware of sounds behind him as Buffy appeared in the doorway.

 

“Here!” Dawn wailed, pulling away from Spike, tears streaking down her face. “You can have it, you can have it all!” She stumbled to her dresser and jerked out one of the drawers, shoving clothes aside and pulling out a folded towel. She threw it across the room towards him, and the treasures hidden inside it fell to the ground. “There! That’s all of it! I don’t want it any more! I was giving it back, I swear I was giving it back!”

 

Wordlessly Spike bent to inspect the discarded objects. The bag that held the bones was there, and pack of his fags, along with a few of his favorite rings and his paperback of Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas; a switchblade with a broken blade—he never could bear to discard weapons, even useless ones; a mostly-new tube of hair gel that had to be left over from spring; and other assorted worthless crap. Other than the bones, nothing very threatening.

 

Exactly the sort of thing a light-fingered sixteen-year-old would favor.

 

“Jesus,” he muttered, his mind reeling. Wasn’t her. Wasn’t her at all.

 

“You left,” Dawn blurted accusingly, crumpling on her bed in tears. “Why did you leave? How could you? Xander was saying things about you, I know they weren’t true! Why didn’t you stay? I could have helped,” she sobbed. Spike looked at her in horror, and backed away from the bed.

 

Buffy crossed to her and sank down on the bed beside her, wrapping Dawn in her arms. “It’s okay, it’s okay,” she whispered, ignoring the whatever the hell she’d burst in on for the moment. A flash of movement caught her eye and she looked up to see Spike slip from the room.

 

***

 

Buffy pushed the hair back from Dawn’s face. She didn’t realize until after she’d done it that it was one of their mother’s affectionate gestures. She was so used to it that she’d seldom even noticed her mother doing it until she was gone, and no one did it to her any more.

 

I've taught you all I can about being a slayer, and your mother taught you what you needed to know about life. He’d been right, hadn’t he?

 

But just because she knew what she needed didn’t mean she had all she needed. Buffy needed Giles. She needed her mother, too, but she couldn’t have her. Dawn couldn’t have her. She was gone, and she’d never return, not like Buffy. Somewhere deep inside, Buffy was glad. She knew that her mother was warm and safe and happy. Buffy had been in that place once, and she’d be there again. Someday.

 

But for now she had to be there for Dawn, because their mother couldn’t be.

 

“What was that about?” Buffy asked gently.

 

“He knows what I did,” Dawn mumbled.

 

“Knows about what?”

 

Dawn was silent for a moment. “Knows that…I was doing stuff to him,” she said finally.

 

“What kind of stuff were you doing?” Buffy asked carefully.

 

“Itooksomeofhisstuff,” Dawn mumbled. Buffy looked at her in surprise. “I was giving it back!”

 

“I thought you stopped doing that,” Buffy pointed out. Dawn bowed her head, and Buffy nudged her.

 

“I was upset,” Dawn admitted. Buffy looked at her. “He left. He shouldn’t have left,” she mumbled, tearing up a little again. Buffy rubbed her back and Dawn moved closer to her, finally putting her head on Buffy’s shoulder and crying without reservation.

 

“I know, sweetie,” whispered Buffy into Dawn’s hair. “I know.”

 

***

 

It wasn’t Bit. Wasn’t her. No, she was just pulling her cute adolescent crap, gacking his stuff and imagining she was putting the big hurt on him. Why? Not ‘cause he’d tried to violate her sister, no, she was too loyal to believe that, but because he’d left, and she’d been left too many times.

 

Goddamn Harris. Goddamn him to hell for telling Dawn about what he’d tried to do about Buffy. Like it was any of his fucking business. No, he’d just been delighted to tell a child what Spike tried to do to her sister. Probably would have shown her pictures if he could, didn’t care who got hurt as long as he could say something bad about Spike.

 

Yeah, it was true. He’d never lie about it, never try to get away from it. But it wasn’t Harris’ place to tell. Not his right to crush a little girl to make himself feel better.

 

They were insane. All of them, even Spike, this town made people insane. The evanescence from the Hellmouth, it curled its tendrils around people and snaked through them and they didn’t even notice. That crazy-ass mayor Buffy’d told him about, and that Slayer who went off her nut. Buffy, beating the shit out of him in a back alley, and him, forcing her to the floor of her bathroom and trying to pull her robe off. The Wiccan trying to end the world because it was a more dramatic statement than turning the mirrors to face the walls, and that dumbass Watcher leaving Buffy to fend for herself when she had no one to guide her. And them, the whole lot of them, stupid enough to try to bring Buffy back, chanting and spilling fawn’s blood….

 

Fawn’s blood.

 

Person had to be awful cold to kill a fawn. William’d never done it, of course; he’d fainted away like a girl on the one hunting trip his father had taken him on and refused to go again. Still didn’t care much for hurting animals. Not a lot of sport when people have automatic rifles with motion detectors and their prey had brains the size of one of your smaller legumes.

 

Spike had never been interested in the easy battles.

 

But he knew someone who’d done it when it would get her what she wanted. She’d told him one night at the Bronze, when he’d gone in hoping to see Buffy and instead merely found Willow alone at the bar, drowning her sorrows in the rare non-magical way. She’d been depressed. She told him magic had ruined her relationship with Tara, that she never should have touched it, but she couldn’t regret bringing Buffy back, no matter what it took to get her. And then she’d told him. Luring the fawn out. Cutting it. Letting its life drip out over her hands.

 

Spike knew for himself that the first kill was the hardest. They all got easier after that.

 

She’d told him she wasn’t the one doing it to him.

 

She’d lied.

 

Spike changed directions at the next intersection. Getting plastered could wait; it was time he and Red had another talk.

 

As he walked, Dawn’s tear-stained rose in Spike’s mind. She was so hurt, so upset. And he’d been such a git, treating her like that when she needed some understanding. And instead he’d shouted. Frightened her little girl feelings, broke her when she was already so broken it was a wonder she hadn’t sprung a leak.

 

Spike froze. That wasn’t right, was it? He hadn’t just shouted. He’d shaken her. Shaken her all up.

 

Hadn’t hurt a bit.

 

 




 

Bag of Bones



 

Fucking demon monkey-pawed him. He’d done his damned trials, and they were some of the stupidest things he’d ever done, even if they hurt like a motherfucker, and then that poncy rock-headed git with his Day-Glo eyes slapped a hand down on his chest and gave it to him all right. Gave him the soul he wanted, the soul he’d earned, but at the same time he’d slipped him Pandora’s box. Unchipped him, something he’d wanted for years, ever since they shoved that bit of tin in his head and stopped him from being the vampire he was made to be. Gave him what he wanted now, and at the same time gave him what he’d wanted for so long it had been all he thought about sometimes.

 

But not anymore. Not for a long time. Since before he’d gotten the soul, before Buffy even came back.

 

Trying to prove he’d always be evil, right? Bastard.

 

And somewhere inside, he wanted it. Beyond his soul, beyond his reason, it was hardwired into him. The very thought of sinking his teeth into someone’s throat made his mouth water in the most humiliating way, like he was Pavlov’s dog. He bet the slimy tosser was laughing his bony ass off about him right now back in his cave on the savannah—Yeah, fooled another one! The only thing dumber than a vampire is another vampire! God, Spike would like to take that rancid little demon’s neck and twist until his brains spurted out his ears, and then he’d pull out those disgusting little eyes and—

 

Eh. Much more with the eyes, and he’d start to sound like Dru.

 

It was done, and he wasn’t going back to Africa, even for some wonderful mayhem. He was in Sunnydale, and he wasn’t going anywhere. Needed to settle himself down, though. Nice spot of violence sounded good, didn’t it? Always hit the spot. Couldn’t indulge in it as much the last few years, of course.

 

But now, thanks to his green-eyed friend, the restrictions were gone.

 

***

 

Buffy’s head throbbed as she closed the door behind her, shutting Dawn in her room. Dawn was exhausted, and she’d changed into her pj’s, crawled into bed, and was asleep before Buffy even had the light out. The whole story had come tumbling out—Dawn, upset by Spike’s leaving and upset again by his return. Determined to punish him. How would she punish him? How could she? The same way she’d punished them all last year, of course. She had no other way. Breaking his heart, that was for Buffy. Trying to break him physically was for whoever was sick enough to send him … this, Buffy thought, shifting the bag of bones in her hands. It was the first she’d seen it. It seemed so simple, and so disturbed.

 

It seemed exactly like witchcraft.

 

“Buffy?”

 

Buffy turned as Giles addressed her. He pointed to the bag in her hand. “Is that it? The item that caused all this concern?”

 

Wordlessly she held it out to him. He took it, weighed it between his fingers, finally opened the sack and peered inside. “That is … interesting, isn’t it?” he murmured, pushing the contents around with one finger.

 

“Yeah. That’s what I usually say when people curse my boyfriends. That it’s interesting,” Buffy returned bitingly.

 

Giles winced a little, but he wasn’t really bothered. She’d always reacted poorly to people threatening her loved ones. Understandable, really.

 

He bent forward to get a closer look at the mangy collection of bones. There was something odd about them … something….

 

“Buffy, can you get me a magnifying glass?” Giles requested. After waiting a few moments he looked up expectantly and found he was alone in the living room. The front door stood open.

 

Buffy was gone.

 

***

 

“What do you mean, gone?” Xander asked, wishing he had a better cell phone. This one always seemed to cut out at the worst times.

 

“I mean she was here, and now she’s not,” Giles returned testily. “It’s one of the more common definitions of gone, I’d say.”

 

“Do you want me to look for her?” Xander asked. Giles wasn’t surprised—Xander had always been the first to offer help, for anything.

 

“I don’t think that’s necessary; she’s more than able to take care of herself. I want you to go to Willow, and stay with her.”

 

“Why?” asked Xander, puzzled.

 

“Because one of them will show up there—or both.”

 

“Who? I mean, why? No, who?”

 

“Buffy and Spike. Because eventually they’ll come to the same conclusion I have, and look for her.

 

“And Xander? Hurry.”

 

***

 

He was hurrying, but being careful. Blowing it wouldn’t help Willow at all. As Xander parked in front of his apartment his eyes searched the lot, looking for anyone who didn’t belong there.

 

And then Xander saw it, moving toward the stairs—the flash of mostly-dark blond hair with startling platinum at the ends. He saw himself, even, as he moved to block Spike from reaching the staircase, to put himself between Spike and Willow. It was such a strange sensation, to see himself move.

 

And then Spike lunged at him so quickly he saw nothing at all.

 

***

 

Willow surveyed the books she’d laid out before her. Xander was late—it wasn’t like him—and she had to keep herself occupied, so she was rearranging his bookshelves. “On the Road,” highly abused—possibly out of resentment, she thought, from Xander’s abortive summer on the open road; “Do Black Patent Leather Shoes Really Reflect Up?”; “Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance”—the spine wasn’t even wrinkled on that one. About a thousand comic books (graphic novels, Willow reminded herself), some “Star Trek” novels, and, inexplicably, Milan Kundera’s “The Unbearable Lightness of Being.” Willow had no idea where that one was from.

 

Maybe she’d get Xander some more books, good ones, for his birthday. Yeah, that was a good idea.

 

A repetitious sound filtered to the front of Willow’s mind and she registered that someone was knocking on the door. “Come in,” she called absently, her mind on the books she’d piled on the coffee table in front of her. She didn’t bother to look behind her as she heard the door open. Probably Giles, wanting to see—

 

“I would think that after living in Sunnydale for so many years you’d realize that inviting people in without seeing who’s there is rather a bad practice,” Spike said coolly, shutting the door behind him. “But some people never do learn from their mistakes.”

 

***

 

She’d searched half the city before she found him—at least that’s what it had felt like. And when she found him, Spike was just walking down the street, a grocery bag dangling from one hand. Looking as normal as can be, just an ordinary guy. In his case, an ordinary guy who drank blood and stayed out of the sun.

 

In his case, a guy who could now shake her sister until he left red marks on her arms.

 

He noticed her approach and smiled wolfishly. “Hello, beautiful,” he murmured, reaching out his free arm for a purely gratuitous squeeze. He seemed to want physical contact constantly. He had his hands over her all the time they were together, holding her hand, rubbing her back, stroking her hair. Twining their fingers together until she stopped thinking and could only look at their tangled hands like an idiot.

 

She was pretty sure she could live with it.

 

Not so much with some other things.

 

“You can hurt people now,” she observed neutrally.

 

“I noticed,” he agreed dryly.

 

“So you’re not going to go all … fangy, are you?”

 

“Do I look fangy to you?” he asked tolerantly.

 

She studied him for a moment, then shrugged. “Guess not,” she sighed, turning back to home, tugging him with her. She wanted to ask more, but she was exhausted, and the question hadn’t been necessary, really.

 

She knew she could trust him.

 

“Like I’d give up you just to bite people,” he scoffed, and she glanced up into his eyes.

 

“What if you didn’t have me?”

 

His gait began to slow, then resumed unabated. “Never happen, pet.”

 

“For argument’s sake.”

 

“Even if I didn’t have you, I’ve got the soul, and that’s a nasty little stopper.” He halted and pulled her close, tucking her head under his and rubbing his face against her hair, relishing her scent, her proximity. “When I fight for something, I keep it,” he murmured.

 

Against him, she smiled.

 

Finally she’d found herself a keeper.

 

***

 

The door to his apartment wasn’t standing open, and that was, Xander thought, probably a good thing.

 

He touched the swollen spot under his eye gingerly. Buffy had told him back in May that Spike’s chip still worked, that he could only hurt her. Looks like there’d been a new development since then.

 

Xander tried the door—locked—and then dug out his keys and tried again. “Willow?” he called, stepping into the apartment. He tensed slightly, worried about what he’d find. And there she was, curled up in an armchair … perfectly healthy … reading Legion of Superheroes? “Will? Are you okay?” he asked in surprise.

 

She looked up and nodded, blushing a little. The comic was more engrossing than she expected. “Better than you, I guess,” she said, pointing at his blue-shaded cheek.

 

“I’m okay,” he told her. “Spike was here?” Willow nodded. “Did he do anything to you? Hit you, bite you, any … kind of thing?”

 

Willow shook her head. She seemed unusually calm for someone who’d just had an encounter with an obviously unchipped vampire, he thought. “We talked for a while, then he left. Was he the one who…?” she gestured towards his face. Actually, she gestured towards her face, but he knew what she meant.

 

“Yeah.”

 

“Wow. I’m pretty impressed you’re all calm, then,” she noted. “Usually you’re kind of, uh, unhinged when it comes to Spike.”

 

“Well, considering that half an hour ago I thought he was going to kill me and then kill you, yeah, I feel pretty calm. I’m pretty sure it’s because massive amounts of endorphins are pumping through my bloodstream, making me unnaturally calm.”

 

“Actually, endorphins—”

 

Xander, out of long experience, headed off her spiel. “Yeah, I’m sure they’re fascinating. But more to the point, Spike? What the hell?”

 

Willow winced. She didn’t want to discuss it, but she didn’t have a choice. Xander was going to find out—they all were—and it was only right that she be the one to tell him.

 

After all he’d done for her, she owed him that. She owed him much more, she knew. “First you tell me what happened out there,” she sighed.

 

“I saw him outside—Giles had told me to come here and watch out for you. He came at me so fast I thought for sure I was dead. I thought I was ground chuck. Or ground Xander,” he amended with a shadow of a smile.

 

“So he hit you?”

 

Xander nodded, unconsciously rubbing his cheek again. If Spike could hit him, he could bite him, and if he could bite him … Xander didn’t see any way that could end with him not being dead. Yet here he was, mostly fine. And across from him, Willow was holding a comic and seemed to be reading it, so apparently it was miracles all around that night.

 

“Yeah, he hit me. And when he came at me I thought I was dead, and that you were dead, and when I woke up I realized I wasn’t dead, and found this on my chest, and was thinking that you probably weren’t dead either,” he concluded, holding up a slip of paper. Willow took it from him and looked at it.

 

“It’s a receipt from the Liquor Barn over on Van Ness,” she pointed out in surprise. Not really a guarantee of safety, to her mind. Although it was a guarantee of low prices, at least according to the receipt.

 

“Turn it over.”

 

Willow did, and read in a peculiarly formal handwriting across the back, “Sorry about all the times I tried to kill you.”

 

She started to laugh. He looked at her for a moment, then started to glare. A little. “You know, it’s not really funny,” he said dryly.

 

After a moment her laughter faded. Yes, it was funny, all of it, just not in an … okay, funny way. “He said that to me, too,” she said, face becoming somber. “I mean, different words, but the same basic meaning.”

 

“Why was he here, Willow? ‘Cause from what Giles said, I’m thinking it was more than just the Joy of Hitting Xander. Although that’s usually been good enough for people in the past.”

Yeah. Yeah, he had a reason.”

 

He looked at her expectantly. Innocently. Willow felt her heart contract.

 

“You might want to sit down,” she whispered.

 

***

 

Buffy turned over restlessly in bed, disturbing the covers and making it impossible for Spike to either get to sleep or cuddle her.

 

She really didn’t take surprises well.

 

“She tried to kill you,” Buffy muttered. Spike wasn’t sure if she was talking to herself or to him.

 

“Nothing’s getting settled tonight,” Spike reminded her quietly. “Get to sleep, it’ll be morning before you know it.”

 

“How can I sleep?” Buffy demanded. “I try to settle down, and then I think of it, and think of her, and then I just get this ball in my stomach.”

 

Obligingly Spike moved his hand to her tummy and rubbed soothingly. “You can sleep,” he sighed, his voice lingering in the air. Hypnotic bastard, she thought, trying to charm her into falling asleep.

 

“Are you going to leave your hair like that forever?” Buffy asked crankily, raking her fingers through his overgrown curls.

 

Spike shrugged. “I don’t much care about it,” he said honestly. “What do you want me to do?”

 

“We’ll cut it and bleach it tomorrow,” she said. “After.”

 

Spike turned against her and nuzzled her cheek. “We’ll trade,” he whispered. “You bleach mine, I bleach yours….”

 

“I’m a natural blonde!” exclaimed Buffy.

 

Spike snorted against her and she wiggled in righteous but tiring indignation, and finally felt the tension begin to leave her limbs. His hands skated down her sides and she didn’t think anymore.

 

As she melted against him, boneless, he inhaled her scent and marveled at the difference just a few months could make. And to think she’d loved him—she told him, and he believed her—before she ever knew about the soul. It was where he’d wanted to be for so long. That demon—that stupid pillock back in Africa—he was the idiot if he thought Spike would give this up for anything.

 

Spike tightened his hold on Buffy, knowing it wouldn’t hurt her. If he could he’d disappear inside her skin. As it was, he was in heaven.

 

It was good to be home.

 

***

 

Buffy was still in the bed beside him, lost in sleep, when Spike rose. He slid out of the bed so gently the mattress barely moved, and she didn’t stir as he pulled on his clothes and made his way down the stairs.

 

In the kitchen he found Giles sitting down, chin resting on his steepled hands, staring at the bag of bones laying in the center of the table.

 

He was waiting.

 

 




 

Bag of Bones



 

A/N: Thanks to my betas Chris, who saw this through from the beginning, and sunbrae, who leapt in to help when I needed it.

 

 

 

“You know, don’t you? Know there was no curse?” Spike asked, so softly his words barely pierced the air.

 

Giles nodded.

 

“How?”

 

Without a word Giles pulled the pouch of bones on the table closer to him and unfolded it for the second time that evening. He withdrew one of the bones, holding it up for Spike to see. “I’m pretty sure that someone cursing you wouldn’t be so delicate as to obtain the bones from a display skeleton,” he noted, turning the bone so that Spike could see the tiny holes that had been drilled at the end.

 

“What—”

 

“This was from a skeleton model,” said Giles. “Nicely articulated at one time, I’d guess.”

 

Spike absorbed Giles’ news in silence. He’d never gotten around to asking Willow where she’d gotten the bones—he’d been more concerned with finding out why she was doing it. Getting her to stop.

 

But there was nothing to stop. It had been nothing but a hoax, and he’d fallen for it ass over hat. Even that pathetic cat in his crypt tonight, she’d found it dead on the side of the road and decided to make use of it. Didn’t hate him, she said. Wouldn’t hurt him.

 

Well, she’d be over tomorrow to talk things out with Buffy. They had enough to talk about, he figured—‘round about everything. He’d leave them alone, but he wouldn’t be far. Buffy might need a shoulder to cry on, or maybe someone to stop her from beating Willow to death. He’d be there for either role. There was bound to be some screaming or crying or carrying on; hell if he knew which one.

 

He didn’t think Buffy was going to take it well; it was a wonder he didn’t feel more like breaking some heads himself after listening to all Red had to say, but mostly he just felt tired, and wanted to go upstairs and find peace in his love’s arms.

 

“Nicely articulated,” echoed Spike finally. “So even that was nothing.”

 

“So it appears.”

 

“Makes me wonder.”

 

“Wonder what?”

 

“Where those pains came from. They were real, I couldn’t imagine something like that.”

 

“I don’t think you imagined them, Spike,” Giles returned. “They were too specific. I really should have recognized them; I’ve experienced them myself.”

 

Spike looked at Giles in surprise. “You have?”

 

“Why, of course. Are you telling me that you never in your life—in your life before you were turned—that you never experienced guilt?”

 

Spike stared at him. No, no, that wasn’t it, that was too simple. He couldn’t do anything to repair what he’d done in his century-plus, and there was no way he’d allow himself to wallow in guilt like the Magnificent Poof—this wasn’t him, not him at all, he was resilient, he—

 

“Spike?”

 

“That’s impossible,” said Spike flatly.

 

“Why impossible?” Giles asked calmly.

 

He really hadn’t expected the news to sit well with Spike.

 

“If you’re telling me that all that pain, and the—the other stuff, is just because of guilt, you’ve been drinking more than just tea, mate,” Spike shot back.

 

Giles arched one brow. “Why is it difficult to imagine that the guilt you bear has the power to cause you pain?”

 

“Guilt’s nothing—it’s just a feeling—”

 

“And feelings have never caused you pain?” Giles questioned coolly.

 

Spike swallowed the words that were forming. No. No, he wasn’t like that, not the kind to wallow in pointless grief. There was nothing he could do to bring back the people he’d killed; they were gone, and no amount of photogenic, deeply felt lolling about would bring them back.

 

For the first time the full implication of having a soul settled upon him, and he suppressed a shudder. To him, the soul had been a safeguard to protect Buffy. An apology for what he’d nearly done. Not this.

 

“This is not right. Not reasonable. I shouldn’t feel guilty,” Spike insisted. “I’m different now, aren’t I?”

 

Giles looked at him. “Are you asking me, or telling me?”

 

Spike met his eyes without answering, and Giles was startled by the vulnerability they held.

 

“Spike, where did you go after leaving here this evening?” Giles asked. He already knew the answer. Xander had called, shaken, before Buffy and Spike arrived home.

 

“Got some smokes,” Spike muttered.

 

Giles rolled his eyes. “Yes, besides that.”

 

“Went to talk to Will,” Spike admitted reluctantly.

 

“You knew it was she who’d been tormenting you?”

 

Spike smirked at Giles’ typically dramatic description. “Yeah, I knew.”

 

“Did you kill her? You can hurt people again, I believe,” Giles pointed out, also courtesy of Xander.

 

“No, I didn’t kill her,” Spike snapped.

 

“And Xander? You killed him, surely? You two have never gotten on.”

 

Spike gritted his teeth. “No, the Stay-Puft Marshmallow Man survives to fetch doughnuts another day.”

 

“Then you quite obviously are a different man, Spike, than the one who sold out all of us to Adam. Because if his chip didn’t function, he would have killed us in a heartbeat. He didn’t even need a reason. But you,” Giles pointed out, “were given one, and chose not to. I don’t think you have to wonder if you’re different, Spike. You have your answer.”

 

Spike absorbed Giles’ words in silence.

 

They remained unmoving, lost in their own thoughts, until Dawn sleepily ambled into the kitchen. The three of them looked at each other, and no one said anything. Finally Dawn mumbled, “I woke up. I want a glass of milk.”

 

Giles found the look on Spike’s face somewhat comical, although he couldn’t have said why, precisely. But the vampire was looking at Dawn with intense concentration, like she couldn’t just be there for milk, and he could divine her true intentions with a good heavy stare.

 

Well, his work for the night was done, Giles thought. Tomorrow—today, really—would be draining, and he wanted to get to bed. “I’m turning in,” he told the two of them without preamble. “Goodnight.”

 

They blinked at Giles’ sudden exit, and then stood looking at each other.

 

“Sit down,” Spike told her. “I’ll get your milk.”

 

She sat, and watched him pull out a carton of milk, peer at it, and stick it back in the refrigerator in exchange for another. “I usually drink the other one,” she said.

 

He shook his head. “That one’s nonfat; you need that like you need a hole in your head,” he said. “You and your sister, we’ve got to fatten you up. You two don’t weigh enough to wrestle a sprite. At least not one of the larger ones.”

 

“Buffy wrestles sprites all the time,” Dawn argued. Spike looked at her. “Doesn’t she?”

 

He shrugged. “Still wouldn’t hurt to get some meat on her bones.”

 

Dawn looked down at her hands. She didn’t want to ask him, but she had to. He knew what she’d done, even if he didn’t realize she was bringing back the stuff she’d taken from his place. But how could she explain it? It felt strange even to her. “Are you mad at me?” she asked tentatively.

 

He looked at her in surprise as he replaced the milk carton back in the fridge. “Mad? Why would I be mad?’

 

Dawn peeped a look at his face and then hastily looked down again. “I mean about taking your stuff and … mostly just taking your stuff,” she admitted.

 

Spike sighed. “Dawn, I don’t give a damn about any of that stuff,” he told her bluntly. She looked at him hopefully. “I’m just glad you—” I’m just glad you don’t hate me, and weren’t trying to kill me— “I’m just glad you’re okay.”

 

Dawn flashed him a shy smile, like the one she’d given him when he’d gone up to Buffy’s room earlier, searching for weapons. Before he found the duster, before he found the cat. Before a lot of things.

 

Just a few hours ago, really.

 

“I don’t understand why you’d want bones anyway,” Dawn said a little playfully, fiddling with the bag that Giles had left in the center of the table. She’d wondered what he was doing with them—Spike’s scary stuff tended to be more along the lines of handcuffs and things she didn’t want details about, not bones.

 

Spike smiled at her. “The bones were a gift, Platelet.”

 

“Pretty weird gift.”

 

Spike was silent for a moment. He wasn’t sure where the line was with Buffy—what he was allowed to say, and what remained her purview alone. What his restrictions were, what liberties he was permitted.

 

But this involved him. It involved Buffy, too—exactly how much, she’d find out for herself tomorrow. But they were a team now. It was a judgment call, right? And she trusted him.

 

He thought of her trying to tell Dawn about it tomorrow, when she’d be dealing with everything herself. Dealing with her own feelings, dealing with someone she’d loved for years and felt betrayed by, but couldn’t stop caring about.

 

If he couldn’t make things easier for her, what good was he? What good were they to each other?

 

“All right,” he said finally. “But I want you to stay calm, no shouting or carrying on. Your sister’s up there sleeping, she’s got a big day tomorrow.”

 

“What’s tomorrow?”

 

“Tomorrow Willow’s coming over, and she and Buffy are going to talk,” Spike told her carefully, waiting for her reaction. He wasn’t really sure how Dawn would felt about Willow, seeing as how Willow had been keen on killing her not so long ago.

 

“Finally!” Dawn exclaimed.

 

Spike was taken aback. “There something you want to tell me?”

 

Dawn blushed. “I’m … she … she’s tried to come over a bunch of time,” she finally said. “Sometimes Buffy chased her off. Sometimes Xander came and got her. But one time Buffy wasn’t here, and Xander must not have known she’d left the house. I looked out the window and she was just standing there. It was really gray and muggy out, and finally it started to rain, and she didn’t even move. I didn’t—I didn’t know how I felt about her any more. She tried to kill me, and she tried to kill Buffy,” Dawn said, her voice starting to waver.

 

“Dawn—” began Spike, but Dawn waved her hand and began to speak again.

 

“But then I thought of all those times she’d braided my hair, helped me with my homework, and made me cookies when I felt bad … and I remembered Tara,” Dawn added, beginning to cry. “She loved her. I mean, Willow loved Tara. And Tara loved Willow, too, but I mean … I miss her,” she whispered. “She’s not coming back. She’s gone. I understand how that could make Willow do things.” Dawn looked at her hands. “It wasn’t her fault. She loves us. She’s been punished enough.”

 

“So what happened?” Spike prodded gently.

 

“I went out and stood next to her, and after a while she just sat down on the wet grass and started to cry.”

 

“You comforted her?” Spike asked, touching her hand.

 

Dawn nodded, brushing her tears away with the sleeve of her pajamas. “I’ve seen her a couple of times. During the day, when Xander was at work. She needs a friend.”

 

How did she become so mature? Spike marveled. It wasn’t like any of them had ever set much of an example for her. “It’s good she had you,” Spike told her softly.

 

“What about tomorrow?” asked Dawn worriedly. “Will she have Buffy, too?”

 

He didn’t know what to say. There were no guarantees. Buffy was so volatile, and lashed out when she was hurt or worried. But underneath it all, he knew she loved Willow. It was buried beneath anger and fear, but it was there.

 

“We’ll see,” Spike murmured. “We’ll see.”

 

***

 

“Where were you?” Buffy mumbled as Spike slipped into bed beside her, her sleep disturbed by his absence.

 

“Downstairs, talking with the Bit,” Spike responded, spooning up behind her and hooking his chin over her shoulder.

 

She rubbed her cheek against his. His cuddly ways were so nice, but she hadn’t been ready to accept them before. Now she wasn’t going to let them go to waste.

 

“Talking ’bout what?” Buffy asked, sleep beginning to slur her speech.

 

Spike hesitated a moment. “About what I told you earlier. About what’s going to happen tomorrow.

 

She froze, her body tense against his. “You told her?”

 

“Yeah,” Spike replied, a little apprehensive.

 

“You mean I don’t have to? I think I love you,” Buffy sighed.

 

Spike released a completely pointless breath he didn’t know he’d been holding, and squeezed her tighter. “You already loved me.”

 

“Then I love you extra.”

 

“I think I may hold you to that,” he purred in her ear, and she giggled.

 

He was very glad he’d locked the door behind him.

 

***

 

Xander wanted to be out there in the living room with Willow and Buffy. He should be there, the three of them, it had always been the three of them in it together. Never just two.

 

But Giles had put his hand on Xander’s shoulder and led him to the kitchen, and Xander couldn’t find the words to argue with him. Now he sat on the other side of the table, an untouched soda in front of him, because he felt sure he’d throw up if he took a sip.

 

Giles just sat across from him and drank tea as if it was a perfectly normal day.

 

Voice drifted out from the front room and Xander automatically began to rise. “Sit, Xander,” Giles told him, not moving his gaze from the notes he was taking. He could wait on them, but he too was nervous and work was soothing. If he hadn’t had it, he would have gone mad long ago.

 

“Do you think everything’s going okay?” Xander asked nervously.

 

“I’m sure if not, we’d have heard some screaming or possibly glass breaking,” replied Giles calmly.

 

“Yeah … yeah,” muttered Xander. He needed to do something, and felt like talking. Actually, he felt like doing jumping jacks, or possibly lunges, but it didn’t seem appropriate. It would be so much nicer if he could go back to hitting Spike when he was upset, but that avenue seemed to be closed to him. “I’m seeing Anya next weekend,” he said suddenly.

 

Giles looked at him with interest.

 

“I mean, it’s not a date or anything, but I called her this morning and offered to put up some window boxes in her apartment, and she said okay. She likes flowers,” he said. “I mean, she might have said yes because it was six in the morning and she wasn’t really awake and it was the sleep talking, but it was a yes.”

 

Giles gave him a genuine smile. “I’m glad to hear that, Xander.”

 

Abruptly Xander swung around, as if he heard something worrisome coming from the living room. Giles could hear nothing and reached out to touch Xander’s hand, soothing him. After a moment Xander relaxed and Giles drew his hand back.

 

“Why did you call at six in the morning?”

 

Xander smiled faintly. “I was kind of nervous about today. I thought I was doing pretty good not to call her at four, actually.” He turned towards the living room again. “Are you sure we shouldn’t go out there?”

 

“They’ll be fine, Xander,” Giles said firmly. He had to believe that.

 

For Buffy, and for all of them.

 

***

 

They sat on the couch, two feet apart. Buffy stared at the wall opposite her; Willow alternated between staring at Buffy’s face and keeping her eyes on the floor.

 

“Why did you do it?” Buffy finally asked. Willow froze, like she hadn’t really expected Buffy to say anything. Why else is she here? Buffy thought crankily. “Well? Were you trying to scare him off?”

 

“Oh Buffy, no—”

 

“Punish him, for … for … what? I didn’t think you hated him.”

 

“I don’t, Buffy, I swear I don’t!”

 

“Then why? Was it me? Were you trying to punish me? Because you knew it would hurt me if he was in pain.”

 

Willow’s eyes widened guiltily, and Buffy thought, that’s it. “So it was me?”

 

“Not like—not like that—” Willow stuttered.

 

“Then like what?” Buffy demanded in frustration. Calm down, she reminded herself, calm down; Spike had told her that it wasn’t what she thought. He said, it hadn’t turned out so bad, had it? He was alive, and they were together.

 

“I know it doesn’t look like it, but I was trying to help,” Willow said worriedly.

 

“So sending my boyfriend a bag of bones and a twig doll and a dead cat was supposed to help how?” Buffy demanded, incensed. God, Willow … Willow. She was so far from the girl Buffy had befriended years before it was hard to think of her as the same person. Willow just seemed so different. A completely different person.

 

“I’m so sorry,” Willow said, her eyes welling up. “It wasn’t witchcraft, I swear!”

 

“I know, he told me,” Buffy said bitterly. “I guess you don’t need to cast spells to hurt people.”

 

Willow flinched. “I never wanted to hurt you,” she insisted. “I wanted to make it up to you.”

 

Next to her, Buffy froze. “Make it up to me?” she asked carefully. “You mean, you wanted to make up for trying to kill my sister?”

 

“And you,” Willow added hurriedly.

 

“And me, by making my boyfriend think someone was cursing him?”

 

Willow met Buffy’s eyes then, and the tears were gone from them. They were as clear as they ever had been when looking through a moldy old text, or searching for back doors into well-protected websites. “He wasn’t your boyfriend then.”

 

“You mean when you started stalking him?”

 

Willow drew a breath, steadying herself against Buffy’s anger. “He was back, and he hardly left his crypt, and he never went near you, and you didn’t even know he was around.”

 

“Why did you give him the bones?” Buffy asked with deceptive calmness. She didn’t even want to know how Willow’s mind worked.

 

“Because you love him,” Willow answered simply. Buffy looked at her uncomprehendingly. “I saw the look on your face when we saw him with Anya at the Magic Box last spring—before—” Tara—“and I could see how much it hurt you to see him touch her. And I knew. I didn’t say anything because you didn’t seem to want to talk about it, but I could see how you felt.”

 

“So you sent him the bones because you knew I loved him?” Buffy asked numbly.

 

“He wasn’t your boyfriend,” Willow repeated.

 

“Then what—”

 

“But you wanted him to be,” Willow said. “So I helped.”

 

“Helped,” echoed Buffy.

 

Willow smiled hopefully. “I left the bones for him. I knew he’d go to you with them eventually, and I knew you’d help him when he did. And I was careful. Did you notice how careful I was? I didn’t leave anything that could be traced back to me.”

 

God, Buffy thought, she’s insane.

 

“And so, when you were helping him, nature would take its course and … you’re together now, right?”

 

Buffy looked at her warily and nodded.

 

“Why didn’t you quit after the doll? You knew I was helping him then. I thought it was you. You told me it wasn’t.”

 

“I wanted to make sure,” Willow said with a shy smile.

 

“And now you’re sure?” It wasn’t really a question. What did it matter what the answer was?

 

“I wanted you to be happy,” Willow said simply.

 

So you just moved us around like chess pieces until things were to your liking.Willow—how could you think that this was all right?” Buffy asked in frustration.

 

Willow’s face fell a little. “There was no magic, I swear—”

 

“I’m not talking about magic!” Buffy said furiously. “Your problem isn’t magic, it’s never been magic! You can’t stop manipulating people, that’s your problem! That’s why you couldn’t leave magic alone, because it helped make people do what you wanted, and now that you’re staying away from magic you’re jerking us around in other ways!”

 

Willow looked shocked. “Buffy, no—I swear, I never meant to—”

 

“You do it all the time, you always have! You know it! Remember when I first came to town, and you were always encouraging me with Angel?”

 

“That’s because you liked him—I could tell, and you—”

 

“Yeah, I liked him. And he wasn’t Xander, and that was the big thing to you. And how about how you tried to do that de-lusting spell without telling Xander? Or your will-be-done spell? Or messing with my memory, mine and Tara’s, because you didn’t want me to remember being in heaven?” Buffy demanded, choking back tears.

 

Beside her, Willow was fighting back tears of her own.

 

“I just want to make things better,” Willow said, her voice becoming ragged. “To fix things. I l-love you, I love you so much, you and Dawnie both. I’d never hurt her, I couldn’t love her more. And TaraTara—she loved Dawn so much. My god, Tara,” Willow broke off, sobbing, desperately covering her face with her hands.

 

Buffy watched her friend sob helplessly, and against her will she saw the timid teenager she’d first met, so vulnerable, so easily hurt. Who’d first worked magic so Buffy wouldn’t have to kill someone she loved, who’d given up the best universities in the world in order to stay with Buffy at a lousy local school. Who’d clutched Buffy’s hand at her mother’s funeral, and cared for Dawn after her own.

 

Spike watched from the doorway, forcing himself not to intervene. For the first several minutes of their conversation Buffy had held herself aloof, shoulders rigid, eyes remote.

 

Now her shoulders began to relax as the anger that had built up in her over the last few months dissipated, and she gradually leaned closer to Willow. Finally she drew the redhead into her arms, crying with her. Remembering Willow’s loss. Remembering why they had been friends for so many years.

 

Spike heard a slight sound next to him and looked down to see the Bit had slipped in beside him, too anxious to wait patiently to hear the outcome. He felt her little hand slip into his and squeeze.

 

He squeezed back, and held on tight.

 

The End