
Posted originally on the Archive_of_Our_Own at https://archiveofourown.org/
works/810653.
  Rating:
      Explicit
  Archive Warning:
      Graphic_Depictions_Of_Violence, Major_Character_Death, Rape/Non-Con,
      Underage
  Category:
      M/M
  Fandom:
      Buffy_the_Vampire_Slayer
  Relationship:
      Xander_Harris/Oz_Osbourne, Xander_Harris/Spike
  Character:
      Xander_Harris, Spike_(BtVS), Oz_Osbourne
  Additional Tags:
      AU
  Stats:
      Published: 2013-05-20 Words: 7174
****** Vertigo ******
by beetle
Summary
     Set post-Becoming parts I and II. Xander, Oz, and Spike are the only
     survivors of the fight. My late contribution to the Color, Sound,
     Random Object Spander ficathon:
     Author receiving the fic: tabaqui
     Preferred rating and genre (ie NC-17, H/C, schmoop, angst, etc): any
     rating,
     any genre
     Your Colour: verdigris green
     Your Sound: train whistle
     Your Random Object: one of those paper chinese finger traps
     Two things you'd like included: hair being brushed/combed by someone
     else,
     candles
     Two things you don't want included: NO CHIP *don't care how, just
     want it
     not there, not working, whatever*, no 'whelp/fangless/blondie/droopy'
Notes
     Notes/Spoilers/Warnings: Super AU, set just after Becoming Pt. I and
     II, character deaths.
Night Train

In the darkness, the sound of the train whistle is alarming, makes the boy
shudder and shake himself out of a thin sleep. Stops the dreams by pitching him
into a reality that has been encompassed by nightmares.

The lulling, rocking motion of the boxcar should soothe; like a child, being
cradled in it’s mother’s arms, safe and loved. 

But the boy is neither--knows he’s neither, and is trapped by the knowing in a
sort of cage.

He hasn’t eaten since LA and Spike just hasn’t felt like making him eat. Can’t
be arsed to do much of anything since the big dust-up.

In the warm, purple-black atmosphere of their boxcar, Spike and the boy huddle
in opposite corners, no trashcan-fires to give them away to the watchful night.
The boy shivers constantly and the clacking of his teeth grates on Spike’s
preternatural hearing like crazy castanets. Long after the boy’s fallen asleep
again, his teeth chatter on with cold and fright, possibly with madness.
Spike’s not sure anymore, doesn’t particularly care.

“Willow,” the boy murmurs, moans, whimpers like a child. Sometimes a strangled
sob that sounds like “Jesse” is wrenched from tight, pursed lips.

Spike would sleep, but obviously there’s no rest in sleep.

He should be grateful he’s still numb, he supposes. The big hole in him that
was once filled with Sire has swallowed Spike whole, sapped his energy, his
bloodlust--everything but the instinct to survive. 

When his blood knells the arrival of false dawn, he stands on legs that have
remembered how to do so without his brain’s interference. The boxcar rocks from
side to side, gee and haw. Rocks him and rolls him to the boy, who’s twitching
and mumbling something.

Chasing dream rabbits. . . .

The phrase pops into his head from the past, from nowhere; disappears back into
the numbness with no echo to show it’d ever been. Spike takes a short breath
and frowns. The boy’s getting ripe. Neither of them have bathed since
Sunnyhole.

“We smell like a midden at midday. Especially you, yeah?”

The boy grunts in his sleep. It’s a desperately unhappy sound and still the
least unhappy sound either of them have made, to date. 

It’s a good enough answer, for Spike.

“Come on, up-n-at-em, Sonny-Jim.” Kicks the kid’s foot - not hard - with one of
his dusty Docs. “Rise and shine, time to debark.”

“Please,” is the reply sent on a breathy exhale. The boy’s eyes flutter, but do
not open. His breathing doesn’t change, nor does his heart rate; it hasn’t
slowed much since LA, pumping rabbit-fast even in sleep. 

The boy’s heart is still scared in a way his flat, lifeless eyes aren’t. 

Will his heart just up and explode? Spike wonders. Not good for anything’s
heart to be beating that fast, is it?

Bugger. If he dies, he dies. Dunno how he’s still alive, he’s so bloody
useless. . . .

“Hear that, y’crazy, little sod? You’re bloody useless,” Spike whispers,
frowning at the sleeping human he’d been stupid enough to take as a - pet? A
mascot? There’s a laugh. 

Spike shakes his head, clearing it of extraneous thought. Doesn’t need thought
mucking around in his head like a rat, getting in the way of the tiger of his
instinct. 

False dawn isn’t so false anymore. Time they were on the hoof, again.

He gathers the sleeping boy up in a fireman’s carry. Boy hadn’t weighed much,
before; Spike can’t tell how much weight he’s lost since they’ve been on the
move. The body in his arms is far from warm, despite the balmy night.

“Ready, boy?” A last effort to wake the kid.

“No, no, no.” The sleepy response is muffled in the leather of the duster. It’s
all the kid ever says, besides the names of mates who are dead, now. Dead if
they’re lucky. 

Should snap his neck and have done; the Slayer’s boy is broken beyond repair.
It’d be a mercy to end him. . . .

But Spike’s never been big on mercy, per say. 

With one yearning thought for his beloved DeSoto, Spike jumps out of the
rocking boxcar, into the fading night. He hits the ground running, the boy
still asleep and undamaged in his arms.


Repossession

Just outside of Flagstaff, Arizona, the boy finally gets it into his head to
run.

He’s smart enough to wait till after dawn, but it doesn’t do him any good, in
the end. Spike catches up with him--with them at a rest-stop, twenty miles east
of Oxnard.

Spike approaches the van quickly. It’s owner’s scent is not only familiar, but
Spike could probably track it all the way across the world. Barring that, he
could track the scent of the van itself, a unique fug of pot-smoke/junk food/
wet dog. 

Not to mention the memorably hideous paint job, a shade Spike’s--William’s--
mother might have called verdigris green.

He nearly rips the van door off it’s hinges when the breathy moans and growls
coming from inside reach a rage-making crescendo.

“Hullo, chums!” Spike’s in gameface, his vision sharpened exponentially. His
boy is covered in welts, sweat, a little blood and a lot of soon-to-be-dead
Were. Powerful scents wash over Spike in waves: blood, semen, despair, tears,
fast food and -

Wolf. Gone off, somehow. Wrong, and too strong for half-past the
Full. Darker than Spike remembers this particular wolf being . . . but still
just another diseased, weakening bit of Hellmouth, strayed too far from the
source of its power.

“Spike--” the boy says, his face a pale circle glimpsed over the wolf’s paler
shoulder. For the first time since Sunnyhell, all the fear within him shines
out of his eyes and is directed at Spike. The rabbit’s-heart thuds and thrashes
in his chest so loudly, it seems to make the entire world shake. 

Spike laughs at the cartoonish look of fright on his face. “Shoulda stayed in
Sunnyhell, Wolfling, and away from what’s mine.” 

“Spike.” The wolf growls low in his throat, black leeching into his pale irises
like ink. He looks pissed-off and fantastically unimpressed, more fool him.
“Get. Out.”

“Still the talkative sort, I see.” Spike puts one booted foot up on the van’s
running board and suddenly, the wolfmoves, his small body rippling with rage
and power and speed that, unfortunately for him, are no match for Spike’s.

In seconds, the wolf is twitching in the dirt at Spike’s feet, the hair and
claws melting away as the life in his dark, feral eyes fades.

There’s a moment of silence, punctuated only by the staccato beat of the boy’s
heart. Spike nudges the corpse with his foot, frowning.

Disappointing, really. Bit of a shame the wolf survived that last, desperate
battle, only to get himself scragged on some anonymous bit of highway. Life’s a
bitch, like that.

“Oz . . . oh . . . oh. . . .” the boy is sobbing, shaking, bare knees tucked up
almost under his chin. His eyes are huge and glued to the wolf’s cooling
corpse. 

“Your fault that had to happen, innit?” Spike asks, stepping into the van
proper. When the boy’s horrified eyes shift to him, Spike grins and crouches
down till they're at eye-level.

“You ran, boy. Not supposed to run from me.”

“Vampire!” An accusation that's days too late. It figures it'd take this long
for the penny behind those pretty, vacant eyes to drop.

“Yes, pet. A vampire--and your master,” Spike agrees cheerily, though bloodlust
is pounding through him; it’s almost like having a pulse again. Speaking of
which, the boy’s pulse and rabbit-heart are racing faster than ever: music to
Spike's ears.

“How?”

“What? How’d I find you, love? The same way wolf-boy did.” Spike darts forward
and kisses the tip of the boy’s nose before he has time to flinch away. “Scent
. . . and don’t you smell interesting, just now?” Interesting, indeed, all
pheromones, desire, and wrongdarkstrong wolf-scent. But there’s something just
underneath it all, some musky, exotic scent. 

This under-scent is utterly primal--hints of magics from a time when everyone
lived in the forest and all magic was dark, and wild. and feral.

Suddenly the frightened brown eyes flash a baleful and eldritch color that has
nothing of sable or verdigris in it. Spike’s not even sure he sees it before
the boy is launching himself forward with an agonized howl. They tumble to the
grungy floor of the van snarling and growling, half-falling out of the
vehicle. 

“Fucker -!” Spike pins the boy and dodges his snapping jaws, and his eerie,
merciless laughter. Subduing him is a slightly tougher job than killing the
wolf had been, but still relatively easy. He closes his hand on the corded,
straining neck and wrings until the demon-green glow is fading from the boy’s
eyes. 

“You don’t fight me; you don’t wait till I’m sleeping then sneak off like a
bloody weasel, you understand? You don’t. Run. From. Me.” Spike squeezes
harder, and the boy mewls and claws at the hand on his throat, desperate for
air. His limbs flail around uselessly, knocking clothes, and odds and ends
outside--even managing to hit lover-wolf’s tumbled corpse once or twice.

The pale-purple lips shape a plea, an apology.

“Not good enough, love. Not to fix this. Gotta make sure you don’t try anything
like this again.” Spike releases him, watches him gasp and squirm, then leans
down till his lips brush the boy’s earlobe. “Every vamp, Were and demon in this
world is gonna know whose claim you wear, love. Runnin’ won’t do you no good
after tonight.”

“Help . . . ohgodohhelpOzhelp. . . .” the boy whisper-chants as Spike nuzzles
and scents. He’s had teasers of this primal juju running through the boy's
blood and soul. Been tempted to sample for days on end, to taste every last
secret. But he hasn't. He’d felt it best to wait for - something . . . he
honestly can’t imagine what.

The waiting is over, now.

“Oz can’t help you, pet.” Spike shifts so the boy can see the body of his
little friend once more, dead-white in the meager moonlight. “He had to go
'bye-bye.”

Oh, the boy’s eyes are murderous and lovely. The profanity that tumbles from
his still-swollen lips dilutes Spike’s bloodlust with surprise and amusement. 

He’s laughing as he drags the boy back to the detritus strewn beanbag and pins
his hands.

“No-no-no!” And it’s like being in the boxcar, all over again, each of them
wrapped in their own nightmares, trapped, scared, and lost to the darkness. . .
.

Alone.

But not for long. Not if Spike has anything to say about it.

It just so happens he does.

“Yes. Because I say and because you’re mine. If you can come to terms with that
you’ll live longer. And I could make that life so good for you, pet . . . or I
could make it Hell.” Spike lunges for the boy’s neck, zeroing in on the strong,
fast pulse. Though his first instinct is to bite, he sucks and licks gently,
lowering his body to rest on top of the boy’s, stifling his struggles. 

Spike is hard, has been since he spotted the van, and the pheromone-want scent
is thicker than ever. But he's only responsible for half of it.

“Don’t give me reason to doubt you, and I’ll treat you like treasure, love.
Pull a stunt like this again and you’ll wish you hadn’t.” The boy smells so
bloody gorgeous. Like sex, and pain, and blood--like Spike's, despite the wolf
having got there first.

Spike growls into gameface again and the world acquires a sharp red tint. He
fumbles with his belt and fly, shifts the boy’s legs up and apart. Then he’s
pushing his way into tight, slick, clutching heat, tearing delicate flesh and
breaking soft skin. There'sblood, easing his way into the boy's body. Blood
wetting his fangs and nourishing him, too.

Yes, bloody, sodding yes.

Oh, pet, if you don’t make me have to kill you, I just might keep you. . . .

“Please. . . .” the boy’s sobbing, hitching breath is hot in Spike’s ear, His
hands alternately flutter at and claw desperately into Spike’s duster, pushing
away and clutching close. The boy’s every twitch and shudder rocks Spike to his
core; the blood that fills his mouth is salty, sweet, spicy--alive. It rushes
into Spike’s mouth, his veins, his extremities, makes him harder, warmer,
stronger.

After the boy’s come and passed out, Spike is still drinking, thrusting,
drawing out the claiming, the having. 

It’s an act to be savored, not rushed, in his opinion. Especially now.

The boy is out until just before moonset. Then with no change in breathing,
he’s awake and opens dark, wary eyes that immediately seek out Spike’s. Spike
brushes his finger down one hollow, slightly stubbly cheek.

“You understand, now?”

The boy nods mutely.

“And anyone or anything that gets between us is gonna wind up like the wolf.
You follow me, pet?”

The boy shudders deeply, hiding his face in the crook of Spike’s neck.

“I take it that’s a yes.” Spike pulls the boy close, letting that rabbit’s
heartbeat lull and soothe. He feels . . . as if his world may turn out right,
after all. Dru will always be an aching hole in his being, but this boy. . . .

This boy.

Neither of them look at the wolf’s body, still laying where it fell, as they
slip silently out into the predawn air. They walk a mile further west, where
Spike’d left the DeSoto, Jr--it'd cost him just a spot of killing to get his
hands on another, and he's yet to paint over the windows--then head east,
again. 

They find a motel a few more miles down the road, just as the last of the night
bleeds out of the sky. Spike checks them in, leering at the young woman behind
the counter. Her eyes flick to the boy--who’s bruised, subdued, and studying
his shoes--then back to Spike.

“Kid, you need the cops or somethin'?”

“What he needs is a shower and a few hours rest with his loving man, isn’t that
right, sweetness?” Spike pulls the boy into his arms for a hug and a peck
before snatching the key to their room from the nosy bint. “But ta, muchly, for
the concern, Missus.”

“Whatever, champ.” Her pale, accusing eyes follow them out of the main office.

In the privacy of their room, Spike shrugs off his duster and sits on the bed,
taking a long look at his boy. Grimy, dusty, slightly flushed . . . covered in
as many marks of ownership as Spike could put on him. 

Lovely.

“Over here, pet. At my feet.”

The boy makes his way over to the bed and practically collapses at Spike’s feet
with a wince.

“Good boy. . . .” Spike murmurs, combing his fingers through the boy’s hair.
“Gonna let this grow out, to your shoulders. I fancy having something to run my
fingers through . . . maybe tug on.” 

The boy shivers under Spike’s ministrations, scooching backwards a few inches,
till his back hits the bed and Spike’s legs bracket him possessively.

“Spike,” the boy sighs, rubbing his face against Spike’s knee.

“Such a good lad, you can be.” Spike smiles fondly, letting his fingers brush
softly down the boy’s nape and neck, to the t-shirt he wants to rip off--

“Bugger,” Spike hisses. “Close the drapes, love. Not in the mood to catch a
tan, today.”

The boy stands up shakily, carefully, gracelessly lurching to first the window
parallel to the bed and the window next to the door. Between the wolf and
himself, Spike supposes the boy’s had a rough night of it, indeed, yet it
obviously isn’t occurring to him to disobey orders.

After the curtains are tightly drawn, the boy looks to Spike for further
instruction.

So very trainable. . . .

“Come on, then.” Spike pats his leg expectantly. The boy settles in his lap,
immediately baring his throat. Spike holds him close and licks at the punctures
until they open, again, letting out a sluggish trickle of blood that tingles on
Spike’s tongue. 

Soon, the boy’s breathing has picked up and he’s squirming around on Spike’s
lap. Those tiny whimpers are pleas to be touched, to be reassured. 

Spike obliges. 

“You can come, now, pet,” he whispers against the punctures, when the boy’s
fought it valiantly for nearly five minutes.

And the boy does, instantly, shivering soundlessly, his head flung back, eyes
closed tight. Even dirty, bedraggled and reeking of wolf-scent, he’s gorgeous.
More importantly, he's Spike's. It’s an exercise in control not to let himself
go, too.

The boy’s shivers turn into shakes, his gasps into weeping. His scent is both
bitter and sated. 

Spike merely holds him, lets the boy sort himself out, before reinforcing his
earlier point. “Xander.”

He can feel the boy’s surprise at hearing his name. The pretty dark eyes are
shuttered by thick lashes but Spike can read them, just the same.

“Last night is forgotten. It never happened, understand? You’re to put it out
of your mind.”

A frantic nod and relieved sigh.

“And whose are you, pet?”

“Yours,” is whispered in Spike’s ear, almost inaudibly. 

“Yes, mine. . . . “ Spike whispers in turn, pulling away to look into the boy’s
haunted, confused eyes. “Now go have a wash, love. If I pick up even a hint of
canine on you or in you, I’ll scrub you bloody. Get.”

The boy ducks his head and stands up. He risks a glance back at Spike, who
quirks up an eyebrow before smacking the boy’s arse just soundly enough to make
him wince again.

“Get, I said. Go on, now.” A hint of steel in his voice is enough to make the
boy hop. "You're not to wear those togs again, I'll get you new!" Spike calls
after him. In seconds, the bathroom door shuts and the shower starts to run. 

Spike means to join the boy, wash the wolf-scent off of himself, as well, but
he lays down for a few minutes, is asleep in a few minutes.

When Spike wakes briefly just after noon, the boy is curled up against his
side, naked, and snoring softly. His poor heart is still beating to burst the
confines of his breast. He smells of nothing but cheap motel soap and himself.


A Night Out

“For the last time, mate, she’s dead.”

“No.”

“Yes. Eat your slop, ‘fore it gets - colder.”

“No.”

Spike reaches out and smacks the boy’s cheek, light and lightening quick. By
the time the bored counter-girl looks their way, there’s no evidence Spike’s
even moved, but for the reddening palm-print on the boy’s face.

“You’ll eat when I say to. ‘S all there is to it, love.” Spike takes a drag off
his cigarette and watches the boy across the diner table. Empty, unafraid eyes
regard Spike just as steadily.

“No.”

“Callin’ my bluff, then?” 

The boy’s blinks, his eyes immediately losing focus, his jaw dropping
slightly. 

This is his way of dismissing Spike and the world.

At least he’s not drooling . . . this time, Spike thinks and is reminded not-so
fleetingly of his Dru, refusing to eat, playing some game for which only she
knew the rules. Toying with victims, leaving them to cry and stink up the lair
with fear, sweat and mortality . . . until Spike got sick of the stench and the
despair, and put them out of everyone’s misery. . . . 

Good times, good times.

“Buffy?” The boy smiles slyly, as if he’s found his way around some
particularly perplexing puzzle of logic. His long, drawn face is covered in
stubble and scratches. When he sleeps, Spike has to tie his hands or he’ll claw
himself bloody.

“Told you, mate, the Slayer’s dead.” Spike grins, blows smoke in the boy’s face
and, as usual, the boy merely blinks, as if he doesn’t know he should be
coughing and snarking. As if he, of all people, can’t comprehend how very dead
the Slayer is. Spike takes pity on him. “She didn’t deserve a quick death . . .
but she got one, anyway. So did all the others.”

“Oh.” The wide brown eyes are confused, but not quite the lovely, acquiescent
gaze that means Spike can get the boy to do anything. Even eat.

“Oz?” 

Spike rolls his eyes but doesn’t sigh.

“The wolf’s dead, too. The Slayer’s dead. The redheaded chit is dead. That tea-
swilling Watcher-ponce is dead and that bastard, Angelus -” For a second,
Spike’s in game-face, then he’s shrugging it off. Bloody Angelus. "He's fucking
dead, too."

It’s annoying, sometimes, that the kid has to ask and be told over and over
that all his mates are dead; has to be cajoled into taking the smallest bites
of food. 

But Spike is patient. That’s the only way to handle someone this badly broken;
with patience or maybe with death. 

Why the boy’s still breathing is a mystery to them both, no doubt.

It does wrench him when those brown eyes, so keenly reminiscent of Dru during
one of her spells, fill with tears. It’s as if the boy’s mates have up and died
on him, all over again. Changes the bitter-copper scent of his misery-laden
blood to something richer, something nearly irresistible. Spike shifts in the
uncomfortable booth seat, already half-hard. He stubs out his cigarette on the
cheap plastic table, then slides over to the broken boy’s side and takes his
hand.

“Your mates’re dead; you’re not. For now.” Spike looks the boy over critically,
listens to that rabbit’s-heart race, as if it’s running from the devil. He
pulls the cold, shaking hand into his lap. When the boy automatically strokes,
Spike and smiles, leaning over to nuzzle his throat. “Eat up, lovey, and we’ll
head back to the room, yeah?”

The boy raises his other hand, stares at it like he’s never seen it before,
before bringing it to his own face. He touches his cheek, ignoring scabs, dried
tears and grime, then his hand drifts down to his neck and hovers over two neat
punctures.

“Ah-ah,” Spike tsks, just before the gnawed, shaking fingers can reopen the
wounds. The boy turns his big, doe-eyes to Spike and for that moment, he looks
sharp, like his old self. 

Like he’s about to ask how the hell he’s sitting in a diner just outside of
Gary, after midnight, with two holes in his neck. Stroking off a vampire.

Spike stills the boy’s hand then puts it on the table next to his silverware.
“Eat your food, love, and don’t ask questions you don’t want the answers to.” 

In the boy’s dark eyes the last, brief light of reason gutters out, like a
match in a dark and airless room. He picks up his spoon and dips it into his
chili.

Spike smokes, alternating between watching his pet and watching the night bloom
just outside the diner windows.

And that, it would seem, is that.


’Letting

It starts--the silence, the weeping, the blood swirling down the rusty motel
drain--with a Chinese finger puzzle.

Dru had been battier than a bucketful of orange peels and she’d loved the silly
things, even collected them for awhile. Until that unfortunate incident in
Prague had forced them to leave her treasured collection behind.

So, it stood to reason that his boy--also battier than bucketful of orange
peels--would love them, as well. Spike meant to tease him out of his vapid,
eager-to-please insanity with a bit of charm and whimsy. 

Watching the boy stare dejectedly at the brightly-colored piece of cylindrical
paper for nights on end, Spike knows he’s bollocksed that up quite nicely. 

How was I to know it’d remind him of giving one just like it to his little
redheaded girlfriend? Is it my fault his frolics down Memory Lane are more like
slogging through quicksand? Suffering Christ.

“Come on, pet . . . put that away and I’ll take you to a movie, yeah?” Spike
finally says, pulling the morose boy out of bed and into his arms. He knows
better than to remove the damn puzzle himself, the boy would weep silently--
heart-wrenchingly, even to something without the taint of a soul--till he got
it back. 

But Spike has to do something to halt the quiet dissolution that’s swallowing
his boy’s brain in not-so-small gulps.

“We’ll see something with muppets or aliens in it--you like muppets and aliens,
right? And I’ll get you the cheesiest nachos your arteries can handle.” Spike
kisses the slightly chapped lips. “We’ll make a night of it, cheer you up,
right proper.”

The boy is staring at his right hand, where it rests on Spike’s shoulder. He
wiggles his index finger, which is encased in the damn puzzle. “No,” he says
softly, sadly, wearily.

And we’re back to that. . . .

“Thought we straightened that out awhile back, pet. I say ‘jump’, you say ‘how
high.’ I say ‘movie,’ you say 'what time,’ remember? Now get your kit on and
I’ll bring the DeSoto ‘round.” 

The boy looks up into Spike’s eyes, blinking dozily. Lord knows, Spike likes
‘em dotty, but the boy is spending more time in his own head than Drusilla ever
did and it scares him. He’s gotten used to the squirrely, daft little nutter
who mumbles to himself and laughs at things only he can see. . . . 

He even misses the soft, lonely sound of the boy singing himself to sleep every
morning. 

Yes. Spike has grown accustomed to these things. They are part of his world and
he will not suffer them to be taken away. If it means the boy’ll go back to the
way he was--a squirrely, daft little nutter, but basically happy--Spike will be
a bastard. He’ll be the biggest bastard ever, and not for the first time.

So fast the boy probably doesn’t even register the movement, Spike snatches off
the finger puzzle and crumples it into a ball.

“Don't! Please--!” the boy begs hoarsely, his eyes filling with tears as they
lock on Spike’s hand. Spike crams the ruined puzzle in his pocket and tips his
pet’s face up until their eyes meet. "Please, Spike?"

“Please what, love? Tell me what you need and I’ll get it for you. Anything, I
swear.”

“The puzzle--”

“Except that.”

The tears finally fall and even Spike’s fingers aren’t fast enough to catch
them all. “Willow--”

Something sharp and painful coils around Spike’s heart. “Except her. Can’t
resurrect the dead, can I?” Though I know a bloke who knows a bloke who knows a
Grethnak demon who can. “Anyway, you’re mine, pet. Don’t need anyone but me,
isn’t that right?”

The boy sniffs and nods, and that, as always, is that. Though Spike thinks it
best to scrap the movies and put them both to bed. 

As ever, his boy is pliant and warm in his arms; it really doesn’t take more
than that to make Spike happy, but he doubts shagging will solve this latest
problem.

The next evening, the boy is worse, silent and blank, slow to respond to
comments or touches. The night after that, he doesn’t respond to Spike at all,
just curls into a ball on their bed and stares into space.

On the third evening, Spike goes out for the express purpose of getting blind,
staggering drunk. He knows it isn’t the best idea to leave the boy alone in his
state but. . . . 

Just but.

By the time midnight rolls around, Spike’s anxious to get back to the motel.
The hooch isn’t working its magic fast enough and a cold, greasy feeling is
ice-dancing down his spine too intensely to be ignored. 

He pulls into the motel parking lot and before he steps foot out of the DeSoto,
they reach him: the scent of blood and the thready beat of a heart that’s no
longer rabbit-fast or rabbit-scared.


Death . . . and Life

“Bloody hell, does everyone around here taste like fast food and cheap
pilsner?”

Spike unlocks the room door, grousing to himself. Not even Jim Beam’d wash the
pungent taste of motel-skank out of his mouth. 

Fine enough, going down, but it leaves a greasy residue that gunks up the fangs
and clings to the back of the throat. Not to mention the unpleasant heartburn,
and--

“Please stop, please don’t, I didn't mean to. . . ” drifts out of the absolute
darkness of the room.

Spike slips into gameface and the darkness is no longer dark, even when he’s
locked the door behind him. He slowly approaches the bed, leaving a trail of
shed clothing. The boy doesn’t wake when Spike lays down next to him, touches
him with wondering reverence.

His childe.

“Wake up, lovely. It’s just a nightmare. It’s just dying.” Spike pulls the
cold, trembling body into his arms, buries his face in hair that still smells
of soap, sweat, and humanity. He rocks their bodies together, crooning the
same, comforting brand of nonsense he’d crooned for over a century when Dru was
too deep in the madness to find her own way back to him.

Only when’s he’s very drunk or very high--bit of both, right now--is he willing
to to admit to himself that he thrives on the crooning, the comforting, the
taking-care-of.

It makes him feel . . . whole.

“My sweet boy, my love, it's only a dream, only a nightmare. I’m here, and I’ll
never leave you. . . .”

The boy is sobbing one moment and silent the next. Breathing one moment,
breathless, the next.

Asleep, one moment, awake the next.

“Spike?”

“Was beginning to think you’d never Rise.” Spike’s voice quavers, but it’s only
the booze and the anticipation. 

The boy holds up one pale, pale hand, inhaling reflexively when Spike catches
his it and pulls it close, kissing the perfect, now unmarred wrist. “I should
be dead.”

Spike snorts. “You are dead, love.”

They’re both silent for several minutes. Spike can feel the bond between them
thrumming; powerful, deep, and so very fragile in it’s newness, but pulsing as
if it’s alive. Now, Spike is intoxicated in a completely different way. Hard
and soft, needy and desiring . . . ravenous and completely unaware he’s
purring.

“How come you turned me?”

“Remember what I said about asking questions, pet.” Spike is wrapped around his
Childe, yet wrapped up in the lingering scent of humanity, too. It’s a heady
feeling.

“I want to know.” His Childe’s voice is calm, melodic . . . so
quietly resonant. Quite unlike his consort’s rabbit-timid whispers and near
hysterical exclamations.

That makes it a surprisingly hard voice to ignore.

“Why’d I turn you?” Spike mouths jaw and neck, unconsciously searching for the
trip-hammering pulse that had stilled not three nights ago. The silence seems
deafening

The boy nods once. Spike holds him tighter, closer, lips pressed to his nape.

“Angelus gave you to me, so I figured it was time to claim what was mine before
the excrement hit the rotating blades, yet again. And after what your Slayer
did to Dru, she owed me. Huh. Whoever says you can’t collect from the dead
obviously hasn’t tried very hard.” 

“So, turning me was vengeance?”

“Not entirely, love” Spike murmurs, pushing his erection against the boy’s
arse. The breathless moan occasioned by the grinding is music to Spike’s ears.
“Not entirely.”

“I should’ve died with my friends . . . I should have died three nights ago.
Why am I still here?”

Spike sighs. “In the cosmic sense? Dunno. Why am I still here? Just am. In the
why-you sense?” Another snort. “Couldn’t be arsed to find and turn the
cheerleader, I suppose . . . or maybe it’s because you’re pretty and insane.
Always was my Achilles Heel.”

“We all have our flaws,” the boy says softly. Then: “Sire.”

“Fuck.” Now Spike knows why Angelus sired so many childer. That dark, beautiful
voice calling him Sire, goes straight to his cock with no stopovers.

Spike shreds the boy’s sweatpants, is on him and in him in seconds, the clench
and press of strong, tight muscles wringing a surprised moan from him.

“Why? Why?” The boy is still asking, even as his demon growls and groans it’s
need, pushes back against Spike. Neither of them know the question anymore, if
they ever had, but Spike’s answer is as it has been and always will be:

“Because you’re mine, boy . . . because I could and because you’re mine.”


Patience and Promises

“Spike, I’m hungry.”

Spike doesn’t look up from the scrambled and muted footie match he’s trying to
follow. “Feeling lively tonight, are we?” 

“Feeling . . . weak and confused. Tired. Where are we, again?”

"Cleveland." Spike looks over at his naked, pale, and gantry thin boy, stranded
in the rumpled nest of their bed. The light thrown by the stubby candles placed
around the room has rendered the boy alive, warm. Human. 

He’s clutching Spike’s duster to himself, shivering, peering at Spike through
dark, shaggy lashes and even darker, shaggier hair.

“Everything is still so sharp and loud. It hurts. Too bright.” That soft voice
needles the place where Spike’s soul used to be. The boy’s been fragile since
he was turned, but lately . . . lately, it’s gotten worse. Living on a dormant,
but no less potent Hellmouth doesn't seem to be helping at all.

Spike wonders if this malady, this . . . unsoundness is a hallmark of the
Aurelius line; a demonic infirmity passed down by tainted blood, skipping every
other generation.

“If I get rid of the candles, love, you won’t be able to see very well. You
know your vision gets a bit dodgy in the dark,” Spike murmurs. These days,
anything louder than the merest murmur makes his boy cringe and cover his ears.

“Please, Spike. . . .” the boy pinches the bridge of his nose as if warding off
a migraine--something he shouldn't be doing, since he has no operating vascular
system. Spike gets up and turns off the telly, blows out each and every candle
in their motel room, then pads over to their bed. 

“Better, pet?” 

“A little. We don’t need candles, anyway. You shine in the darkness, like spun
glass and liquid light.”

If the boy starts spouting prophecy and talking to the stars, Spike may just
have to believe in reincarnation.

“Good, that’s . . . good, I suppose. You know, you haven’t been feeding like
you should. . . .” Or at all. Ever. “Think you’re well enough to eat tonight,
if I get you someone?”

A ghost of a smile curves the ashen lips. The weaker he gets, the more sanguine
he gets. He'd probably bestow that gentle, sweetly mad smile on the Slayer--
Spike's heard rumors there are hundreds, maybe even thousands, now--that'll
eventually get him no matter how vigilant Spike is. “Probably not, but I’ll
try, if you want me to.”

Spike nods once, pushes his duster aside. The boy doesn’t try to stop him, only
worships him with those adoring, fever-bright eyes.

“Like moooooonlight,” he laughs delightedly. “Like quicksilver. Even when
you’re perfectly still you move and pulse, like the heart of the sun, and--
Sire?” The boy tilts his head as if listening to the echo of the word. “Sire,
can I have a redhead? Please?”

Spike caresses his boy’s cold face just to hear him purr. “You know, love, you
might be perfectly capable of hunting for redheads yourself, if you
actually ate one of them, instead of playing with them.”

His boy holds out cold, dead arms expectantly and Spike kneels on the bed,
pulling him close. Their combined scents permeate the sheets - old metal, fresh
earth and something like cloves or nutmeg. 

The boy’s lips are cool and dry on Spike’s throat. “My Spike . . . my Sire.”
Happy, tuneless singing on the wings of cold, dead breath. 

“Hush, love. Go on, now.” Spike puts his hand on the back of his boy’s head,
sucking in a hissing, unnecessary breath when fangs like burning ice-picks sink
into his throat. He strokes the soft, thick hair as still-warm human blood
rushes through his veins and into his Childe’s greedy mouth. 

“Gonna make you well, pet, make you strong . . . then we’ll leave this squalid
hole, and I’ll show you the world,” Spike promises, with every intention of
keeping that promise, if his boy is ever hale enough to do either of those
things.

This declaration is met, as always, with an acquiescent hum against Spike’s
throat. The boy cares nothing for the world, or the myriad delights it offers.
He undoes Spike’s jeans and strokes with chilly, precise fingers that've had
years of practice at almost nothing else. Spike lays them both down.

The boy is shaking, gasping, weeping as his fangs pull out of Spike’s throat in
a sharp riptide of pain. His mouth is stained dark red, his eyes filled with
tears. “So bright, all I can see is you. So bright. . . !”

Spike doesn’t stop thrusting into that cruel, strangely firm grasp, and his boy
doesn’t stop stroking. Panic attacks and sudden, near religious manias are
nothing they haven’t shagged through before. 

“They all left me, but you stayed. You stayed.”

“That’s right, love. I keep what’s mine.” Spike kisses his boy’s face, neck and
throat; his own throat aches for blood like copper and sugar. It’s simplicity
to break the soft, fragile skin where no pulse has beat for years; it’s heaven
when cool, rich blood fills his mouth, the taste exploding on his tongue, wine-
light, but magic-heavy.

“They left me and I was lost in the dark . . . but there’s no darkness when
you’re with me. Don't leave me.” The sharp, stuttery movement of his boy’s hand
has calmed into a rhythm Spike’s body automatically matches. The human blood
that has temporarily warmed him should make the boy’s hand feel clammy-cool
instead of icy. But as ever, his boy is all ice-hard and snow-soft. The
contrast in their temperatures only makes Spike thrust harder and faster.

(He does occasionally miss the warmth, of course. Misses the taste of despair
and satiation in his human’s warm blood.

Misses the flutter of that rabbit’s-heart, trying to escape its cage and outrun
the devil.

But moments like this one have gone a long way toward easing those pangs.)

“A pretty redhead. . . she’ll be so pure and sweet on my lips, like fresh snow
and cotton candy.” The boy rolls them over and straddles Spike’s legs without
breaking rhythm. “She’ll melt on my tongue and be a part of me forever.”

His boy is in gameface and grinning. He darts down and icy-hot fangs close
painfully on Spike’s earlobe and he comes with one last thrust and roar. For a
moment, the room is a negative of itself, silvery objects lit with ebony light.
His boy’s eyes glow an eerie white in a face like shadows.

Then there’s only a soft, cold darkness, like frozen smoke, catching him up and
keeping him for an indefinite span. 

Returning to himself is an arduous process, with a soundtrack like some honky-
tonk from Hell.

Tammy Wynette. . . I would sire the only vampire who’d be caught undead singing
Tammy Wynette. . . . 

The boy is half draped over him, his body feather-light and cold enough to make
a vampire shiver. One delicate finger traces patterns in the drying spatters on
Spike’s stomach and chest.

"I'm well and truly love's bitch," Spike says without bitterness, and a queer
sense of freedom.

"Give him two arms to cling to," the boy agrees absently, licking his fingers
with relish, and a lack of self-consciousness or guile that will always short-
circuit Spike's think-y bits.

He shifts the dead weight of their bodies ever so slightly. The singing stops
and is immediately replaced by tiny, playful growls and cuddling. His childe
does a more-than-passable imitation of a contented feline.

“Get her for me, Spike?" The light in his eyes could never be mistaken for
anything other than the madness it is, but sometimes . . . Spike almost
believes there's something sane, deep down, that returns his feelings without
needing that shine and luster bestowed by irredeemable madness to seduce and
spur it on. Love's bitch, indeed. "Please? I promise I'll eat her right up.
Honest Injun.” 

Piss poor excuse for a Sire, I am . . . catering to his every, ridiculous whim.
But if it means he’ll eat, it’s redheads he’ll get, even if I have to slaughter
half of Cleveland to find a real one.

“Alright,” Spike promises, tangling his fingers in long, dark hair. One sharp
yank and he’s looking into the dreamy, loony eyes he loves. “But you can’t toy
with your food, this time, you have to eat it right away. That last girl nearly
made it to the cops before I caught up to her.” It’s a pathetic attempt to
scold, but as Angelus’d learned with Dru, threats and beatings don’t work when
the vamp-in-question is completely bug-fuck. 

Only patience works and Spike reckons he’s got plenty of that. 

“Redheads are fast. . . .” the boy sleepily singsongs as he brings his fingers
to Spike’s mouth to be kissed. He giggles when Spike nuzzles his palm. “But
Spike is faster.”

The hint of wicked ruthlessness in that innocent, soft voice does Spike’s dead
heart a world of good.

“Bloody right I am, pet . . . now lie down for a bit and I’ll be back with your
redhead.” Spike eases out of his boy's arms. Out of a sea of tender kisses and
murmurs, and out of bed. He arranges the coverlet and duster over his Childe
again. This action earns him an utterly trusting, utterly mad, utterly
beautiful smile.

“You take such good care of me, Sire . . . you’ll always keep the darkness
away, right? You won’t ever leave me?”

“Never.” Spike leans down once more, whisper-kissing the promise onto lips that
are blood-salty, magic-bitter, and nectar-sweet. “Get some rest and I’ll be
back in a trice, yeah?”

“Yeah. Okay, Spike.” More kisses, that make it hard for Spike to do his duty.
But he does. Pulls on his shirt and jeans.

“Promise me you’ll try to eat, love. Vamp cannot live by Sire’s blood alone.”
He tucks himself away does up his fly. The boy's already staring up at the
ceiling, grinning like he's watching the telly--or how he would grin if
watching the telly didn't confuse him, and make his eyes hurt. “Try and
get better. For me, Xander?” 

The boy blinks at him, suddenly very solemn, his head tilted at a strange
listening angle. Though Spike doubts he's the one being listened to. At least
until the boy nods once, gravely. "I promise," he says.

And of course he means to try--he couldn’t lie his way out of a paper sack. 

But bloodlust, love of the hunt, of the kill . . . however deeply those run in
the average vampire, in Spike’s boy, sincerity, honesty, and . . . decency run
far deeper.

Spike’s never regretted turning his boy. Not once. And he figures it’s only a
matter of time before those qualities are corrupted, and warped out of true.
When they are, when his boy can drink down a redhead like a can of Coke, he’ll
be a force to be reckoned with.

Patience. Works a treat, if you have the patience for it. 

Spike reckons he has plenty.
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