SUNDAY
MORNING COMING DOWN 13
by
crazydiamondsue
Xander pulled into
the driveway and killed the engine, glancing up to look in the rearview mirror
at
“So,” he said,
turning to Dawn, “school starts tomorrow, huh?”
Dawn shrugged, her
eyes on her lap. “I guess.”
“C’mon,” Xander
said, reaching over and squeezing her hand. “Ninth grade! Freshman!” A look of
realization crossed his face as
Dawn stared at him,
wide-eyed. “She’s a vampire?”
“No,” Xander said
solemnly, shaking his head, “She’s got this scary-ass snaggletooth…”
Dawn giggled,
elbowing him in the side, and then reached for the door handle.
Xander sat back
with a slight smile. First Sunday giggle. Go Xan-man.
He watched
It had nearly
killed him to watch Dawn mess with those damn flowers again while
It felt fake. It
felt wrong. But nothing had changed. Buffy was still dead, Dawn was still hurt.
They all were. Yet somehow his hurt and anger were shifting direction from the
fates, or Glory, or their own failure, to
He watched as
She hasn’t done
anything but offer to make it right. Xander turned away from the sight of
“Xander?”
He looked up to see
He looked back for
a moment, seeing her shy smile, her eyes looking back at him openly, honestly.
“Yeah,” he said quietly as he shoved his keys in his pocket, opening the car
door. “Yeah, I do.”
***
Xander stood in the
living room, looking out the window as he heard
“
“Dawn was hungry,”
Xander said, smiling. “Really hungry. Old school Dawn hungry. She and
“Xander? Is
everything okay?” she pushed the plate of fruit toward him and he shook his
head.
“Listen,
“When
Xander laughed a
little, nodding.
She turned her head
toward Xander and their eyes met and something stuttered there between them,
something unsaid but silently acknowledged and then they both pushed it away.
“
Tara was quiet
then, and Xander looked at her, feeling like he’d seen something too personal,
and he knew that they were both blushing, but he couldn’t help it, he felt like
he’d walked in on them, naked, and not in a good, ‘Come play with us, Xander,’
naughty thoughts kind of way.
Xander swallowed, his mouth dry. “She found
what?”
“Where Buffy
c-could have gone. The portal. Dimensions. Hell,” she said softly. “She knew
then that if she…we could find the right spell, follow the right steps, we
could do it. Bring her back. Raise the dead.”
“Yeah, okay,
and that’s the part where my brain kind of shuts off. Raising the dead,
Tara. We’re talking about forces here that we’ve never dealt with before, and
there are reasons we haven’t.” He shook his head, his hands gripping the edge
of the counter. “This is everything we were ever told was wrong…”
“It is
wrong,”
She tilted her
head, looking at him. “
“Would you do it, if
you could?” he asked, feeling kind of low for pointing out her own limited
power and for putting her on the spot like that.
Xander felt like
kicking himself as he heard
“It’s okay,” he
said, putting his hand up and giving her a lopsided grin. “Just, I don’t know.
Spike said something the other day that got me to thinking. We were, ah,
talking about Buffy, kind of hard to believe, I know, and he said, ‘we’ll leave
her to heaven,’ and you know, I know he doesn’t know anything ‘cause Willow’s
been all about the down low, but he said it with such…conviction…”
“Leave her
to heaven and to those thorns that in her bosom lodge, to prick and sting her,”
Xander shook
his head. “Am I the only one who fell asleep in that movie?” He smiled
at
He looked up at
“Xander,”
“Yeah, you said
that,” Xander interrupted and then winced as her eyes widened, filled with hurt
at his tone.
“Well, duh,” Dawn
said from the doorway, walking toward them to drop a grease spotted bag on the
counter. She grinned up at Xander. “What’d you do, eat the last of the ice
cream and now you’re trembling before the wrath of
“I, uh, I’m gonna
go see what
“What’s up with
that?” Dawn asked, reaching for a slice of pear.
Xander shook his
head, not looking at her. “Don't know. Guess she missed Will.” He flashed her a
shaky grin. “You know how those two get when they’re not within hand holding
distance.” He shoved his hands in his back pockets, turning away. “I better go.
Gotta check in with Spike about patrol tonight.”
He gave her one
last smile and then headed for the door, barely acknowledging
“What’s up with
that?”
Dawn shrugged, taking
another bite of the pear, her eyes thoughtful as she watched Xander all but run
from the house.
***
Xander opened the
door to his apartment, finding it cool, dark and quiet. For someone who had
loved to keep the blinds open, sunlight streaming into the rooms after the dark
and dankness of the basement, he’d adjusted to the return to dimness quickly.
Spike was curled
into the couch, his face pressed into the back cushions, Xander’s jacket from
the night before still draped over his bare feet.
Last night had been
bad. Patrol had begun as usual, quick sweep outside the Bronze, dispatching a
couple of oblivious fledges, their limited powers of concentration too focused
on listening for, “I am so fucking wasted!” to hear the whistle of descending
stakes behind them.
They’d hit four
cemeteries, Xander walking ahead of Spike and turning around, walking backwards
occasionally, so that he could see the look in the vampire’s eyes when he said
something particularly snarky.
Then they’d come
across a pair of what Spike called Tethra demons, who’d been taking out their
frustration at not finding anything living to kill, by hacking with axes
stained black with blood at a marble angel.
Xander could
understand their frustration. What he didn’t understand was what drew demons to
the cemeteries in the first place. Vampires – no choice there, they popped up
where they were planted. Ditto zombies. But you’d think demons, be they green
and spiny or red and horny, would realize that the only people likely to wander
through a cemetery on a Saturday night were people looking to find demons. And
not as some demon outreach, “Meals on Sneakers” program.
Spike had grinned,
his face morphing even as his lips spread open, the human faced smile of glee
somehow more frightening than the fangs and forehead that replaced it. And then
he had howled, launching himself toward the marauding pair who had
looked up with goggling looks of shocked horror on their faces. Then they
had grinned with evil delight as they gave answering growls and ripped their
axes free of stone wings, meeting the downward stroke of Spike’s blade with a
clang that had shaken Xander to the soles of his feet.
He and Spike had
tried fighting back to back, but that just caused the vampire to keep turning
around, checking Xander’s position and counting his appendages, before whirling
back to narrowly duck axes and claws. And then he whirled when he should have
ducked and claws had lashed and axes bitten…
Xander closed his
eyes, remembering the feeling of his own hands ripping the axe from Spike’s leg
and watching as the blade buried itself between the neck and shoulder of one
demon even as he heard preternaturally strong hands rip the head from the
other. He hadn’t bothered to point out the futility of Spike’s threat to “shit
down its neck.”
They’d limped home,
eyeing each other silently as they realized they were going to get themselves
killed, trying to protect each other. Both of them trying desperately to hold
on to something they hadn’t defined or acknowledged.
Xander opened his
eyes and reached down, trailing his hand over a pale arm that was marred by
scratches that had faded to pink from vivid red and blood dripping.
Spike stirred under
his grasp, turning slightly. A slow smile spread over his face and he leaned
into the light touch. Blue eyes opened, sleep dazed and innocent, as he looked
up at Xander. “Oh. It’s you,” he said, closing his eyes and snuggling back into
the couch cushions.
“Ha ha,” Xander
answered, his fingers running over Spike’s skin one last time before he pulled
his hand away, turning toward to the bedroom.
“Mmm,” Spike said,
scooting over a scant inch on the couch. Xander smiled down at him and then
kicked off his shoes, sliding in behind Spike. He slipped one hand beneath
blond hair that curled slightly beneath his fingers. His other hand fell
naturally to the vampire’s side, rubbing absently at the soft t-shirt that
covered Spike’s ribs.
The past few weeks
had seen several moments like this. Xander knew that they both needed this kind
of closeness, this kind of touch. Even though it usually wigged him out beyond
the enjoying of it – waiting for Spike to remember that vampires didn’t cuddle
and shove him away. Or examining his own need for it, because he couldn’t
remember needing to touch Anya this much, other than to arouse or to comfort.
Yet they’d end up
curled together, either on the couch or in bed, and Xander would relax into it
for a few minutes and then he’d realize it was Spike’s hand pulling his head
down to rest against a hard shoulder. Or that the chest beneath his own hand
didn’t rise or fall and that it wasn’t soft with curves of flesh but taut with
muscle. And then he’d really start to think about it and wonder if Spike
thought of him as “the girl”, or if Spike was pretending that he was someone
else and that every time Spike’s eyes closed he was just surrendering to the
fantasy. Or worse, that this was some kind of conditioned behavior ingrained in
Spike after Dru, and all of this was just comfort, because he saw Xander that
way, like something…broken.
He’d get so tense
then that he wasn’t leaning into Spike anymore, but more just propped against
him, stiff and anxious and grinning unnaturally and saying, “This is nice,”
loudly and often. Spike would mutter a curse then and bury his lips against
Xander’s throat, chest or thigh, wherever he’d thought it would most distract.
And that was okay, because that kind of touching just made everything quiet
again.
But when it was
like this, when one or both of them were still mostly lost to sleep, it was
easy. He’d slept here, like this, after they’d come in last night. Spike had
stumbled to the couch and torn off his boots before falling back with a groan.
Xander had cleaned the scratches on Spike’s arm, ripped the tear in his jeans
open wider, swallowing hard when he’d seen the place on the pale leg where a
demon axe had glanced off of bone and started to bandage it, but Spike had
waved him off, mumbling, “Be healed by morning.” Xander had moved to put away
the first aid kit and head to his empty bed, but Spike had whispered, “Stay.”
And so he’d woken
up this morning, fully dressed, clothes stiff and crackling with demon blood,
and Spike’s head on his chest, cool lips pressed against his throat. Xander had
looked down at the body in his arms, stronger than his, and in his opinion, a
whole lot prettier, and just held on.
And it wasn’t as if
they never talked. Or snarked, fought, teased or just listened. While they
patrolled, while Xander experimented with new things to do to hamburger, after
they had sex. Spike pushed for answers on Xander’s feelings about the fractured
state of the Scoobies, made him talk about Anya, about Giles, about what he thought
Anya might be doing with Giles. Xander would refuse to respond, and
Spike would just answer for him, answers so close to the bone that Xander would
just end up letting it all spill out and then shutting down when he heard all
of his own fear and anger and confusion just…out there and Spike would shrug
and say, “Still here, aren’t you? Means something, that.”
Spike would answer
anything just about anything Xander asked. What the chip felt like when it
fired, if patrolling really appeased his blood lust, where he’d learned to do
those things with his tongue. The only questions he wouldn’t answer were about
his past; the turning, Drusilla and Angelus and if the things the Watchers
Diaries had written about them were true. Spike would just curl his tongue over
his teeth and say, “Tell you when the now gets boring, pet.”
But they never
talked about what this was, so it just was. Spike had only gone back to his
crypt once since what Xander had come to think of as “the night of the naked
fight,” and he guessed that meant they were living together, although
there was nothing that domestic to it. Spike didn’t push him to out them to the
Scoobies and treated him pretty much the same as he always had around
them, although he had called Xander “mate” once, causing Dawn’s eyebrows to
shoot up and Spike to say, “What?” before continuing with his tale of patrol,
or as he liked to call it, “How I saved Harris’ ass last night.”
And even though
they never put words to it or acknowledged anything, whatever this was came the
closest to anything Xander had ever had of something real. More two-sided than
the tussles with Cordy and Faith and somehow less confusing and guilt ridden
than two years with Anya. The very fact that neither of them had to call it
anything just made it seem more…honest.
Xander burrowed his
face closer to the back of Spike’s neck, closing his eyes. Yeah, honest.
It wasn’t like
Spike didn’t lie to him, but the lies he told weren’t meant for Xander to
believe. Just more of the old posturing, and they both knew it. Spike lied to
him to cover his own reasons for being there. Xander lied to them both about
why he was afraid that someday Spike wouldn’t be.
“Xander,” Spike mumbled,
“calm down or start something. Your heart’s pounding me through the bloody
sofa.”
Xander took a deep
breath and held it, and then realized that just made his heart beat faster, so
he exhaled, watching his breath stir the soft hairs at the base of Spike’s
neck.
Spike reached back,
groping at Xander through his jeans with a hand that moved with the ease of
familiarity.
“Uh-uh,” Xander
said, reaching for Spike’s hand then resting their joined fingers against his
thigh. “Don’t want you when you’re half-dead.”
“Out of luck then,
mate,” Spike sighed, growing still against Xander and not complaining about the
mental wrestling and restless fidgeting that was disturbing his sleep, since it
came with body heat and warm breath that bathed his cheek.
“Go to sleep,”
Xander said, resting his chin on Spike’s shoulder. “Gotta be all healed up and
dangerous, ready to save my ass again tonight.”
Spike grunted, his
eyes still closed as he nipped at Xander’s shoulder. “Some danger I am…don’t
even scare you anymore.”
Xander tightened
his arm around Spike and concentrated on just breathing and believing that that
was true.