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Modus Vivendi
By wiseacress
Chapter 13
He woke up in exactly the same position, thirsty and sore. The loft was dark and silent, the curtains
black. Night. He'd slept all day.
He sat up slowly and reached for the lamp, but his hand met the glass of
water first. The pill bottles were
beside it, caps off. He fished out two
of each by touch, noticing that his hand didn't shake. The water was tepid and flat, and it tasted
like heaven. He drank half of it, then
took the pills and drank the rest.
As he was putting the glass back on the night stand, the bed shifted,
and he jumped slightly in surprise. He
looked over his shoulder, and though it was too dark to see he knew Spike was
lying there. Maybe awake, maybe asleep.
There was a brief moment while his heart fluttered and his brain tried
to cycle up, tried to remind him of how he ought to feel about this—but only a
moment. He lay down and stared up into
the darkness and waited for the ache to melt away.
It took a while, and he shifted uncomfortably a few times while he
waited, and finally a cool hand came out of the darkness and settled on his
head. He closed his eyes and let it
be. It was still for a bit, and then it
ran down the side of his face and turned his head, and there were cool lips
against his own. He kept his eyes
closed and let it happen.
"You all right?"
It was strange to hear Spike's voice so clearly, so close, in the
darkness, and it might have made him panicked or ashamed except for the fact
that he'd already burnt that bridge. A
quick shifting of ballast, and it was all right again, it was amusing again.
"Fine. I'm fine."
The cool hand moved down his neck and touched his shoulder lightly. "Tired?"
"Tired, yeah."
"Want something to eat?"
"Nah."
Silence, and Spike's hand came up and curled in the hair at the base of
his skull. It felt good, and he tipped
his head to let Spike's fingers reach him better. The pills were starting to work, and he was falling asleep.
Spike's mouth was on his again, and he let himself be kissed, let Spike's
tongue in and smiled when Spike gnawed lightly on his lip. Spike tasted a little bit like blood, a
little bit like smoke. Good tastes,
really. Spike's hand was on the back of
his neck, pressing gently into the muscle.
Good feeling.
It went on for a while, until Xander was honestly falling asleep,
kissing clumsily and smiling with amusement at it all. He raised his hand and found Spike's face,
stroked the cheek and then tapped it lightly.
Spike paused and pulled back.
"I'm out," Xander murmured, and lowered his head until his
forehead was against Spike's chest.
Spike's skin was cool and smooth, good to lean against. He lay absolutely still while Xander sorted
himself into a comfortable position; when Xander dropped an arm around his
waist, he started slightly.
With the taste of Spike's mouth in his own, Xander fell.
He woke up a couple of times in the night, and each time he had a cool
body beside him, a cool hand on his hip or shoulder or throat.
He had no dreams.
He drifted up to the surface and found himself staring at the ceiling,
the pipes again. There was a smell of
food, and his stomach turned over. He
wasn't sure whether he was really awake; he felt strangely loose and
insubstantial.
He didn't move, but after a minute or two Spike appeared over him,
frowning slightly. "Christ, you're
a sleeper when you put your mind to it."
"Division A," Xander said.
His mouth felt cottony, and his voice sounded odd. He cleared his throat.
"Head?" Spike put out
a hand, and Xander considered. Head,
yeah. Good idea.
He nodded and sat up, put his legs over the edge of the bed and took
Spike's hand. His head swam a little
when Spike pulled him to his feet, but his knees were definitely better. He could put weight on the left one without
much yammering. The right one—he tried
it, and it flared, and Spike's arm tightened around his waist.
"Look who's practically locomoting."
"Rejoining the bipeds, yeah."
They made it into the bathroom, and Spike unloaded Xander against a
urinal and left without a word. Xander
pissed, flushed, yawned. The toothbrush
and toothpaste were still lying on the towel over on the sinks. It was probably a bad idea, but he stumped
across anyway, and brushed his teeth.
When he was done Spike came back in, raised an eyebrow but didn't
comment, and hauled him out again. He
dropped him back on the bed and stepped back to look him over. Xander yawned and started to sink back into
the sheets.
"Hey, Division A. Sit
up." Something was being pressed
into his hand; he opened his eyes and found it was a spoon. There was a tub of soup on the night table,
and it smelled all right but his mouth tasted like toothpaste and he was
tired. Later, he'd eat later.
He waved the spoon vaguely to communicate this, and a firm hand took
hold of his good shoulder.
"Sit up, idiot. I didn't
bloody go and fetch this stuff for my health, did I?"
He sat up and levered his eyes open, and started on the soup. Spike watched for a couple of seconds, then
wandered away. It was Thai soup again,
the elixir of life. Xander's stomach
warmed to it after the first couple of spoonfuls, and he finished half the tub
before his stomach shut down and he had to stop. His eyes were closing on their own again. He put the spoon carefully back into the
tub, pushed it away on the night stand, and lay down.
The loft was dim, not dark.
Daytime. How many days had he
been here?
A weight settled on the side of the bed, and he turned toward it
instinctively. Spike was sitting on the
edge, an unlit cigarette ready in his fingers, peering into the soup tub.
"You finished?" he asked.
Xander leaned forward and pushed his forehead against Spike's leg. For a moment, nothing. Then cool fingers in his hair, and he let go
and fell a little more.
Sometime later, he woke up.
Still dim, not dark. Or maybe
dim again—maybe he'd slept the night through this time, and it was day
again. If he could sleep all the time
and never wake up, he would. It was the
only thing to do.
But here he was awake again, or partly awake. Enough to know that he needed pills again. And that Spike was in the bed. Sleeping beside him, with him, one bare arm
hooked around Xander's neck as if he were about to pull him close and tell him a secret. His face was composed,
absorbed. The little scar glowed pale
in his eyebrow.
Xander lay still and looked at him for a while, until his eyelids began
to fall again. Then he remembered he
needed pills.
He sat up slowly and Spike woke up.
For a moment he looked confused; then his eyes found Xander and stayed
there, watching him steadily.
"Sorry," Xander said.
"I just needed—" He
raised the Demerol bottle and turned away to look for the water. He wondered briefly whether he should double
up on the red-and-yellows, since he'd been missing the schedule lately, decided
on three as a compromise, and chased it all with the rest of the water.
Then he lay down again, in the same spot he'd woken up in.
Spike had propped his head on his hand and lay watching with an
unreadable expression on his face.
Xander paid no attention. There
was plenty of room still to fall, and his ears were roaring, he was exhausted.
"Not dreaming, are you?"
Xander pried one eye open and looked at Spike. The dreams seemed a lifetime ago.
"No," he said, and closed his eyes again.
"Hm." Which could mean
anything, and that was perfectly all right.
Some other time he'd sweat the details.
No dreams was good dreams.
"Hungry?"
"Nah."
A pause.
"Not still tired?"
Xander used every muscle in his head to open his eyes, and stared at
Spike. "Since you mention
it—" he said, and closed his eyes again.
"You're sleeping round the clock, you know."
"Division A," Xander said, and yawned into the mattress.
"Lazy, I call it."
"Blow me."
A pause, and then a cool palm came out of nowhere and lay flat against
his throat. He opened his eyes and
found Spike staring at him, half-smiling.
"Fuck off, Spike." It
was sleepy, bland, barbless.
Spike leaned forward and kissed him, and he took half a second to
rebalance himself, to find it amusing and meaningless, and then he was kissing
back. Why not.
It didn't take much doing; Spike's tongue was between his lips and all
he had to do was open and let go. Cool
mouth on his, familiar taste. When had
the taste become familiar? He kept his
eyes closed and his hand on the mattress, and let himself enjoy it. What the hell.
He expected it to stop after a minute or two, but it didn't. Spike shifted slightly and ran his hand down
Xander's chest, found his hipbone and settled on it like a handle. Then it moved lower and rested on Xander's
thigh. His fingers were cool on
Xander's skin; his thumb moved in a slight absent circle.
Somewhere in the back of Xander's head a voice was crying out in the
wilderness. Stop this, stop it, for
Christ's sake enough already, stop it—
He hesitated, and Spike stopped kissing him and pulled back. He didn't take his hand away, but his thumb
went still. They looked at each other.
Xander closed his eyes, raised his arm, and found the back of Spike's neck. He let his hand rest there. No need to do more.
There was a long moment of nothing, and then Spike leaned in and kissed
him again. It was harsher this time,
there was more bite in it, and Xander smiled.
It was good to be kissed, good to be touched. It was just that simple.
Spike's tongue pushed into his mouth, and his hand was on Xander's
thigh, pressing it aside. Xander
hesitated again, a split second, then let his legs fall open. He was hard, just instinctively from the
touch on his legs, and he wanted to push his hips up but he didn't. He lay still and let Spike kiss him like
fucking, and tried to find room to breathe.
Spike's mouth came down even harder on his, pushing his lips against his
teeth, biting at his tongue, then gone again.
Xander didn't move, just lay listening to his heartbeat ram against his
skull. Then Spike's hand ran down his
thigh and he jumped and pushed a little before he could stop himself. He was caught up in the boxers, the
sheets.
Spike's hand came up, slipped under the boxers and Xander gasped. Cool fingers ran over the hollow of his
pelvic joint. He pushed again, and
Spike's mouth came down and kissed him, bit at him, until Xander gave up and
kissed back, raised his head off the pillow to keep kissing when Spike pulled
away. Spike jerked his head, knocked
Xander's face away, then came back down and kissed him again, lightly at first
and then not lightly at all.
Xander's breath was coming loud and short; when he opened his eyes he
saw Spike grinning down at him. Bright
eyes full of guile and sex, that little scar, and those teeth...maybe a little
sharper than usual. Xander took his arm
from around Spike's neck and pushed at Spike's canine with his thumb. Spike tolerated it for a moment, then pulled his head away.
"You ever open mail with those things?"
"Mailman, once."
Xander blinked, and Spike's smile turned wolfish, and he came back down
for another kiss. Xander closed his
eyes and let it happen. Spike's fingers
were in his back, under his shirt, pushing at the muscles. It felt good. His lips moved from Xander's mouth to his jaw, and the bite gave a surging little throb, and Xander
groaned. In a moment Spike's tongue was
on the bite, and Xander was stiff and aching, weeping into his shorts, wanting
to clutch Spike's head to his neck and force him to use his teeth.
"Oh, fuck—" He pressed
his palm into the mattress and clutched the sheet. Spike's mouth pressed harder to his neck, and his hand dropped
down Xander's back. "Jesus Christ,
Spike—"
And then Spike's hand was between, behind his legs, he was confused for
a second, there was a cool hand on his buttock and then cool fingers
between. A light touch, just a
suggestion.
"Oh, fuck. Oh,
no—" He jerked away and Spike
didn't raise his head or stop the working of his mouth, but his hand caught
Xander's hip and held him, then slipped inside his shorts and brushed his
cock. Just barely, just the back of his
fingers.
Xander spasmed and pushed, tried to find the fingers again but they were
running over the hollow of his thigh, and Spike's mouth was nursing at his
neck, and it was too much to track. He
moaned and brought his hand up, placed it deliberately on Spike's back and stared at it as if it could give him self-control.
Spike's fingers moved around again, followed the line of Xander’s spine
down between his legs, and pressed lightly.
Xander jerked away again, and Spike's other hand came out of the sheets
and touched his cock. Xander squeezed
his eyes shut and tried to lie still, tried not to make a sound. Spike's mouth was cool and wet, there was a
pulsing ache in Xander's throat, and the fingers were touching him, and the thing was, it felt good. Strange and bare and awful. Good.
Spike tipped his head slightly and closed his teeth around Xander's
windpipe, and at the same time the finger pushed a little harder and there was
a sweet tight infinitely shameful sensation, and it was inside him. His cock jerked and he gulped air. It sounded like a sob. Spike's teeth were blunt and hard around his
throat. Another sob.
Spike let go of his throat, pulled back, and looked at him. His eyes were glazed and lost-looking, too
bright. His voice, when he spoke, was
thick.
"What's wrong?"
Xander lay still, staring at him, unable to look away. He was shaking, he realized dimly. Spike frowned.
"You all right?"
"F-fine." His lips
felt numb. Spike moved the finger, and
Xander arched in surprise and revulsion and lust. Spike was smiling again.
He looked stoned.
"It's good, yeah?" He
pushed a little harder, entered a little deeper, and Xander clenched and
flinched and, God save him, pushed back.
It felt good. His cock ached. He couldn't look at Spike anymore, so he
closed his eyes.
Spike didn't say anything else; he just dropped his mouth back to
Xander's neck, and Xander opened his eyes and stared at his hand on Spike's
back. It didn't matter. None of it mattered, it was all a joke, it
was meaningless. He was being opened
and fucked, used and bled. He wanted
it. Didn't matter. He closed his eyes and pushed back onto
Spike's hand, and felt a fist close around his cock. Spike's erection brushed his leg and they were both jolted, and
then Spike was swinging a thigh over Xander's hips, positioning himself, and
Xander gasped and tipped his head back so Spike could bite.
He came with Spike's teeth in his neck, Spike's hand on his cock, Spike's
finger inside him. A slow brilliant sheet
of pain rising up from the bad knee, the one Spike was bracing himself against.
After, there was a long spell of semi-consciousness, lying on his back
staring at the pipes, while Spike fed from his neck. His heart felt relaxed and sturdy, capable of anything. Spike's hair was soft between his
fingers.
He couldn't remember what his address had been, the one in Echo
Park. He fell asleep trying to remember
it.
Somewhere in his sleep, he thought This has got to stop. He had a vision of his life as if from
above, and it was a series of concentric circles coiling finer and finer, more
and more dense until there was nothing but a small dark point in the center. Inert, silent. He was closing down.
This has got to stop, he thought again,
considering the circles. I am going
to go insane if this continues.
When he woke up there were voices in the loft—Spike and someone else,
someone who had just spoken but whose voice he hadn't caught yet, and the two
of them were arguing, and he thought, Liv. Back from Disneyland.
He'd have to ask her if the log ride was all it was cracked up to be.
He opened his eyes and squinted; the loft was dark except for the lamp
by the television. It was too bright to
look at yet, and he was too thirsty to think.
There was a glass of water on the night stand and he sat up and reached
for it.
It occurred to him that he was in Spike's bed. He didn't want Liv to see him in Spike's bed. Too late.
Amusing, it was amusing. It was
all a hell of a joke, and the punch line was the holes in his neck. That ought to be a conversation piece. He hooked the water and turned squinting
toward the light.
Something was wrong—now that he was looking he could see it wasn't
Liv. It wasn't a woman. It was a man, someone big and broad, and for
an instant he saw Bony Nose standing there in the shadows, staring at him with
an expression of pity and disgust. His
heart jerked, and he almost dropped the glass.
But it wasn't Bony Nose.
It was Angel.
"Oh, fu—" Xander said, and then his throat clicked dryly and
he couldn't say anything else.
Angel didn't say anything. His
eyes went from Xander's face to his neck, and stayed there for a beat. He looked—not surprised, but stunned.
Xander looked down and away, turning his head to hide the bite marks. He still had the glass in his hand, so he
drank some water and put it carefully back on the night stand. Probably he should say something, but he
couldn't think of anything to say. Where
the hell was Spike?
Something moved on the couch, and that answered the question. Spike was sitting down, facing the
television, his back to Xander. He
didn't turn around or speak. The
silence got very long. At last, Angel
shifted and started toward the bed.
"Can you walk?" he asked, holding out a hand. It was always so hard to read the guy's
face—was that kindness, or disgust? Xander's
eyes slid away, back to Spike. He
couldn't help it.
"Xander." Angel was
standing by the bed, then sitting gingerly on the edge of it. It was kindness, almost certainly. And disgust. "Xander, come on.
Let's go."
Spike still hadn't moved, and Xander’s brain wasn’t firing
properly. He looked back at Angel, and honestly didn't know what to do. Everything was moving too fast.
"He didn't do this," he said, and Angel's eyes went to his
neck again. Xander flushed. "I mean, he didn't—not the knees, it wasn't
him."
"Told you," Spike said flatly, without moving, and just
hearing his voice helped kick-start Xander's brain. Angel gave a quick irritated glance over his shoulder at the
words, and that was so bizarrely normal, so perfectly what Angel should be,
that it made everything else click into place.
Suddenly it was all right again, it was all amusing. Xander sighed, a low shaky sigh.
"Where have you been all my life?" he asked when Angel turned back
to him. Angel frowned.
"Xander, come on. You need
a hospital—"
"Been, done. You should see
the cross-stitch. It's like a Pennsylvania
quilting bee down there."
Angel stared at him for a moment, his eyes dark and solemn. Xander ran a hand through his hair and rubbed
his jaw—he was getting stubble again.
"I don't know what this is—" Angel started to say, and Xander looked
away and picked up the water glass again.
"Yeah, get in line."
He was thirsty beyond belief, and sore.
He drank some water and looked for the pills.
"I don't know what's going on, what's happened to you—"
"The usual. But more so." He reached for the Demerol bottle, almost overbalanced,
and caught himself against the table.
Angel hesitated, then picked up the bottle, checked the label, and handed
it to him. "Thanks."
"You can bring them with you.
We're leaving." Angel's
hand was under his good arm, cold and hard, and he had apparently ceased to
live in a democracy, because he was already being lifted up out of the
bed. It hurt, and he had to scramble to
arrange himself properly. Angel paused
and studied him, then shifted hands so that Xander's good arm was around his
neck and he was holding Xander's waist.
He did it easily, without effort, as if Xander weighed nothing at all.
There was movement by the couch and they both looked over. Spike was standing up, staring at them. He was in the Big Bad getup, but he didn't
look bad. He had a dark purple bruise
down the right side of his face, and his lip was split.
"Shit," Xander said.
"You fall down an elevator shaft or something?"
"I didn't fucking do that to him," Spike said. He didn't look at Xander; his eyes were
fixed on Angel, and his tone was harsh.
"I told you that. Go be all
Dark Knight somewhere else, why don't you."
For an instant, Angel's grip on Xander's wrist tightened painfully; then
he remembered himself, and it loosened.
He didn't say anything, just started walking for the door.
"Hey." There was a
quick step following them. "Hey,
poof. Nobody called you, nobody wants
you. He's fine where he is." Spike's voice was loud and sharp and a little
desperate. He caught Angel's shoulder
and yanked, and Angel stopped walking and turned around. Xander came with him, dangling.
"Spike." For a minute
it looked like that was all Angel could bring himself to say, and it hung in
the air like a threat. Vicious. Spike stared at him with his chin pushed
out. The split in his lip was fresh,
still bleeding.
"Fuck off, Angel. Go stop
postal fraud."
"Enough, Spike." Angel
started to turn back to the door, and Spike's arm snapped up and caught his
shoulder. "Let go."
"Fuck you. Did you even ask
him what he wants?" Still too
loud, too raw. Cracking. He hadn't looked at Xander at all.
"I don't have to ask."
Angel tried to turn again, but Spike didn't move his hand. Angel looked at it. "If I have to put him down, Spike, I
will break your hand."
Spike gave a little bark of laughter and jerked at Angel's shoulder, but
he let go. "Right," he
said. "Well, that brings back
memories."
Angel shook his head.
"No," he said.
"Not this time."
Spike opened his mouth, then closed it.
Something went quickly over his face, raw and painful like a spasm, and
then he closed it off and just looked bitter.
He raised his hand and wiped his lip.
"Whatever you say, mate," he said, examining the blood on the back
of his hand.
"We're leaving," Angel said, turning away again. "I'm taking him to the hotel, and then
I'm coming back here and you're going to tell me what's going on."
"Am I," Spike said flatly, from behind them.
"You are," Angel said.
He hitched Xander a little higher and they were walking for the door
again. It was standing open—Angel must
have left it that way when he'd come in.
For some reason it gave Xander a chill to see the door open like that.
"Wait—" he said, and Angel didn't stop walking, but he turned his
head, and his face was angry and preoccupied and maybe a bit sad.
"What?"
Xander shook his head. It wasn't
amusing anymore, it wasn't right, but he couldn't think what to say and he
couldn't explain why it was wrong to leave like this, without even looking
Spike in the face. He still had the
Demerol in his bad hand, and he stared down at it as if it were an answer.
"You're going to be okay," Angel said.
Xander looked up to say something smart, but Angel's face was suddenly
taut and alert, and he was staring at the open door. A moment later Xander heard footsteps, and his heart jammed in
his throat.
"Who—" Angel started to say, and then Liv walked around the doorframe,
her bag in one hand, frowning.
Angel stopped. So did Liv. For a long moment there was no movement, no
sound, and they simply stared at each other.
Liv's mouth was open slightly, as if she had been about to say something
when she walked in. Her eyes went over
Angel, over Xander, then found Spike.
They widened slightly, then went hard.
Angel said, "Who are you?"
Spike said, "Fuck."
She dropped her bag and put her hands to the small of her back, and
suddenly there was a gun in her hand, a flat dull silver pistol Xander hadn't
seen before. Then he couldn't see
anymore, because Angel had turned his body so he was between Xander and the
gun.
He didn't expect her to shoot, not really, so the first crack seemed
surreal, like something he was just frightened enough to imagine. Angel wrenched left, and something cool and
wet sprayed Xander's face. Spike was
shouting something—Liv's name. Another
crack, and Angel jerked again, crushing Xander tight around the waist for an
instant, so tight he gasped and pushed to get free. But Angel was curled around him, holding onto him, and for a
moment they seemed to be crouching, the floor seemed very close, and there was
blood on it. Angel's arm loosened, and Xander
pulled in a breath and they were standing up again, and everyone was
shouting.
Then suddenly it was quiet, and the only sound was his own breath,
ragged and fast. He looked sideways and
saw Angel's face locked tight, a muscle ticking in the cheek. He was staring at the floor, his eyes
unseeing and concentrated. After a
moment he raised his free hand, the one that wasn't holding Xander's waist, and
touched his own chest, just beneath the collarbone. His fingers came away slick and red.
"Jesus Christ—" Xander
stared at the blood. Angel's fingers were
shaking slightly, and he was staring too, and then he looked up as if Xander's
voice had only just reached him.
"Are you all right?"
Xander gaped at him, then nodded.
Angel was still holding out his bloodied fingers; they both looked back
at them, and then Angel dropped his hand and wiped it on his trousers.
Xander looked away, and found himself looking straight at Spike. He hadn't moved; he was standing in the
middle of the floor where they'd left him, staring at Angel. His face was hateful and bleak, and when his
eyes passed over Xander they didn't seem to see him at all.
The silence was getting long.
Angel touched the wound in his chest again, then flicked blood from his
fingers to the floor. He was standing a
little awkwardly, and his hold on Xander's waist felt less secure. Well, he'd been shot. You had to cut him some slack.
Xander raised his head and looked over Angel's shoulder toward the
doorway, where Liv still stood. She was
still holding the gun, but it was pointed at the ceiling, and her face was
white. She was blinking, staring hard
at Spike, clearly trying to catch his eye.
Xander followed her gaze, and at last Spike looked up and seemed to come
back to himself.
"Spike—" Liv's voice
was ridiculously quiet, or maybe it just seemed that way after the
gunshots. Spike gave her a tight smile.
"Hi, pet. Don't think
you've met the poof."
Her face registered nothing but confusion, and Spike sighed. "Angel," he said. "Helps the helpless."
She blinked. "Oh
shit," she said. "I
thought—"
"'s all right," Spike said.
"He likes being shot. Next
best thing to being nailed up on a cross."
Angel made a low aggrieved sound in his chest, and the hairs on the back
of Xander's neck rose.
"Spike," Angel said, still staring at the floor. "What is going on?"
"Poof, Liv. Liv, poof. The poof was just leaving. Put him back where you found him, Peaches,
and go leak plasma somewhere else."
Angel shifted his grip on Xander and straightened slightly. There was a faint tapping sound coming from
somewhere; after a moment, Xander realized it was blood dripping from Angel's
elbow to the floor. A dark pool was
forming by his feet.
"Who is Liv?" Angel asked, looking at Spike.
Spike smiled. "'bout five
ten, brown hair, just shot you. Nice girl,
really."
Angel was silent for a moment; then he turned his head to Xander. "I'm going to have to put you
down," he said, and his tone was quiet and apologetic.
"Sure," Xander said.
"No problem." Cool
blood was soaking through the arm of his shirt.
Angel walked back to the bed and lowered Xander onto it, then turned and
started toward Spike. Liv tensed and
Angel looked at her.
"Liv," he said, and his tone was flat, as though he weren't really
speaking to her at all, but just testing the word aloud. "You know who I am?"
She looked at Spike, who said nothing.
"Yes," she said after a moment. The gun was still pointed at the ceiling.
"You can't kill me with that," Angel said, nodding at it. She stared at him and said nothing. "But you can piss me off," he said.
She kept silent, and he turned back to Spike. "What's going on here?" he asked.
Spike stared at him coldly, then thumbed his split lip again. "Nothing," he said. "I've got a groupie, don't I? And I paid his bloody hospital bills, small
thanks I've had for that. Got himself
pulped and I scraped him up and gave him a place to stay, and God knows—"
Angel covered the few feet between them in a second and grabbed Spike by
the throat. Liv made a sound that
wasn't quite a word, and pointed the gun, and Angel jerked Spike off his feet
and collared him against his own body.
"If you shoot, you'll hit him first," Angel said. Liv stared at him, the gun still
pointed. "Put it down. On the floor." She still didn't move; her eyes were
flickering from his face to Spike's, and they were wide and angry and
frightened. Spike tried to ram his
elbow into Angel's belly, and Angel caught it without looking and twisted. Spike gave a furious gurgling scream, and
Liv's hands tightened on the gun.
"Put it down," Angel said again. "It won't kill me anyway."
She was still looking to Spike for guidance, but he wasn't in the guidance
business; he was too busy thrashing, trying to get his elbow out of Angel's
grip. He'd gone to game face at some
point, Xander couldn't tell when.
Everything was happening too fast. He needed slow motion, he needed replay.
"Put the gun down," Angel said.
Liv looked at him, and her face was furious and desperate, and then the
gun tipped in her hands, so the barrel was pointing at the floor.
"Good," Angel said.
"Now put it right down."
She dropped her arms, but didn't put the gun down. "Let him go," she said. Her voice was flat. Angel looked irritated.
"I told you—"
She raised her arm, and the gun was pointed at Xander now. "Let him go," she said.
There was a moment of silence, while Angel simply looked at her, and she
began to walk across the floor to the bed.
It wasn't very much space to cover, all of a sudden. The gun was pointed at Xander all the way,
and when she got close enough the gun nudged the side of his head, warm and
strangely familiar.
"Let him go," she said again.
Xander licked his lips and stared at nothing.
There was a rustle of fabric, and he looked up to see Angel stepping
back and Spike yanking himself free, holding his arm as if it hurt. It was strange to see him in game face; hard
to read his expression. He still had
the bruise and the cut lip, and that was interesting. In a transmission-from-outer-space kind of way.
There was still a gentle pressure against Xander's head, and his cheek
itched, but he didn't want to move.
"Clever girl," Spike said.
His tone was oddly flat, as if he were merely saying something
expected. Xander looked up again; Angel
was staring at him with that look that could mean anything, and Spike was
leaning against the couch, rubbing his arm.
"You really want to earn your keep, you can put a few more rounds
in the bastard."
Liv swallowed, and Xander heard her throat click. The gun was shaking slightly against his
head, kissing his scalp. That seemed
like a bad thing.
"You work for him," Angel said.
Liv cleared her throat and said, "Yeah."
"Why?"
She shrugged; the gun brushed Xander's head.
"Because I bloody pay her," Spike said. "On your merry way, now."
"I can't leave Xander here, Spike."
Spike gave a raw barking laugh and spoke to the floor. "You want to go with soulpatch,
Harris?"
Xander opened his mouth, but his tongue was dry and his throat wouldn't
work. The pressure against his head was
maddening; he couldn't think. He made a
sound like a squeak, and stopped. Spike
looked up, annoyed. Annoyed game
face. Xander stared at him, still
trying to make his mouth work. Spike
glanced at the gun as if he’d just now seen it, and his lips tightened. Then he was human again, blue-eyed and fangless,
glaring at Liv.
"Get that bloody thing away from his head."
Liv shifted. "But—"
"What did I just say?"
The pressure was gone, and she stepped away. Xander hesitated, then raised his hand and scratched his
cheek. There was a roaring in his ears,
and his body felt light. When he
dropped his hand back to the bed, the sheet felt rich and cool beneath his fingers.
"Right," Spike said.
"I asked him, he doesn't want to go, so bugger off."
"He didn't answer."
"I am going to fill you full of lead myself in a minute, you thick-necked
prancing bastard. You can take your
bloody—"
"If he says he wants to go, will you let him?"
There was silence. Xander closed
his eyes and drew his fingers through the sheet. Cool and soft. His head
was airborne.
"Yeah, all right."
Spike's voice was still harsh, but quiet now, for no reason that Xander
could see. "He wants to go, he's
all yours."
Another moment of silence, and Xander studied his hand against the
sheet. His skin was dark from sun,
scattered with small shiny scars like candle wax. Work scars, mostly, and he couldn't remember where he'd got any
of them. His pinky nail was black at the
root, though, and that one he remembered; another guy had dropped a toolbox on
it. It had hurt like hell at the time.
"Xander."
Angel's voice, and he didn't look up.
His head itched in the spot where the gun had pressed. The barrel had been warm, because she'd
fired it just a few minutes before.
Again, an interesting transmission from planet Earth.
"Xander, do you want to come with me?"
Suddenly he missed Willow so badly it hurt. He cleared his throat.
"Yeah."
Silence, and he didn't look up, but after a moment Angel's feet started
across the floor toward the bed.
"That's nice," Spike said.
"Well, let us know where to send the bill, then." His voice was sharp and loud again, and
Xander looked up. Spike was still
leaning against the couch, nursing his arm, staring at Xander with bright angry
eyes.
Xander wanted to say something; It isn't like that, or I don't
mean— but there was no way to finish the sentence, or to explain what he
did mean. Whatever that was. He was leaving, that was all.
"You'll want to be careful with him, poof," Spike said in a
low vicious voice, studying his elbow.
"He's the kiss-me-first type. Likes a little hand-holding."
For a moment the words meant nothing; then Xander felt his face break in
utter astonishment, too shocked even to blush.
Angel didn't react at all; it was as if he hadn't heard. Liv hadn't moved, and Xander couldn't see
her face. He didn't want to. He dropped his gaze back to his feet, just
as Angel got to the bed.
"You seem nervous," he said, and Xander looked up. Angel was looking at Liv, who was staring
back at him with white lips.
"I'm fine," she said.
Her eyes went from his face to the blood stains on the front of his
coat, and back.
"How long have you worked for Spike?" he asked, beginning to
lean down toward Xander. His tone was
conversational.
She did the obligatory glance at Spike, then said, "A while."
"A few months," Angel said.
His hand was on Xander's arm, but not under it yet. "Not more than that; I would have
known."
She shrugged.
"Not very long," Angel said.
He looked down at Xander, but didn't really seem to be seeing him.
"Liv—" Spike said, in a warning tone.
At the same moment, Angel took his hand off Xander's shoulder, turned smoothly
and took the gun from Liv. He didn't
seem to move particularly fast; he just did it. He held her wrist in one hand and dropped the gun on the bed with
the other; when she swung her free arm at his head, he caught that too. Then he was holding both of her wrists, and
they were standing staring at each other in silence.
"Not long enough, I guess," Angel said.
Liv's face went red, and she tried to kick him in the groin. He sidestepped, yanked her off her feet, and
buried his knee in her belly. She hit
the floor with a woofing sound, and he put his foot on the base of her skull.
"Back off," he said to Spike, who was already halfway across
the room toward them.
"Fuck you," Spike said.
His face was splintered, bestial.
While Xander watched, his upper lip peeled back and showed fangs in his human
mouth.
"Back off, Spike," Angel repeated, and pressed with his foot. Liv yelped and coughed, and Spike's eyes
sank to her. He sneered, but stopped
where he was.
"I'm taking her," Angel said.
"The fuck you are," Spike said, and started forward
again. Angel pressed again, but Spike
didn't even glance at Liv. He made it close
enough to throw a punch, and Angel caught his arm and took hold of his throat.
"I'm taking her," he said.
"I don't know what's going on here, but I'm going to have a talk
with her and I'm going to have a talk with you. I'm taking both of them to the hotel, and then I'm coming back
here. And you are going to
explain."
Spike gurgled something. Angel
shook him.
"If you aren't here when I come back I'll make you very, very sorry. Understood?"
Spike gave him two fingers, and Angel punched him in the face. Liv made a frantic getting-up gesture, and
Angel frowned and flattened her with his foot.
Spike's head was rolling on his neck.
Angel studied him a moment, then lowered him to the ground.
"Stand up." At first
Spike's knees didn't seem to hold; then he stood shakily, blood running down
his chin into his shirt. He wiped it,
stared at his hand, then looked up at Angel.
"Fuck," he said weakly.
"Just like old times, eh?"
Angel looked at him in silence, then turned away and picked up the gun
from the bed. He slipped it into his
pocket.
"Xander," he said, putting out his other hand. Xander paused, then put his good hand in it,
and was heaved to his feet. He tried
not to look at the blood on Spike's shirt, the expression on Spike's face.
"Don't interfere, Spike," Angel said, and started to stoop to
pick up Liv. Spike held still a moment;
then his face twisted and he took a step forward.
Angel came up swinging, and jacked Spike straight in the chin with a
snap like a hammer on slate. The impact
jerked through his body and into Xander, rattling his teeth. Spike landed five feet off in a messy heap.
They stood there a moment, watching to see whether he would move. He didn't.
Liv gave a low dismal moan and Angel bent down and hauled her to her
feet.
"Come on," he said.
"We're getting out of here."
They took the Nova. Angel's Plymouth
was nowhere in sight, and Liv refused to produce keys to the Jag. The Nova's keys were in the ignition, and
Xander reflected that, hey, if they drove it out at least he'd have it
back. And that was probably all the
silver lining he was going to get.
"How'd you get here?" he asked, as Angel was lowering him into
the passenger seat.
"Carpool?"
"Sewer," Angel said, nodding his head at the corner of the garage. Xander looked; there was an open drain by
the DeSoto.
"Beats the bus, I guess."
"Do you have any rope?"
"Do I—" He looked
back; Angel was still holding Liv by the neck, and as he said the words, she
started to struggle. He shifted his
grip with an annoyed expression.
"Uh, no. No rope." Angel turned away to look around the garage,
and something occurred to Xander. "But duct tape. A
couple of rolls, in the trunk."
"Duct tape works," Angel said, and walked around to pop the trunk. When he leaned through the driver's side
door, Xander could hear Liv breathing hard.
Her forehead smacked the back seat window as Angel leaned, and she
jerked and winced.
"Ow."
"Don't shoot me next time," Angel said calmly, and popped the trunk.
Xander sat still and waited while Angel went around behind the car and
taped Liv. She said something short and
sharp, and Angel didn't respond except with a loud yank of tape. Xander flinched slightly at the sound, and
studied the Nova's dash. Dusty, and the
interior smelled like work clothes. He
really should clean it out.
The back passenger door opened, and Angel dropped Liv in, her hands
taped behind her back. She bounced
sideways and tried to kick the door into his legs, and he stepped out of the
way, then scooped her legs up and tossed them in after her. She rolled off the seat and into the
footwell.
"Don't shoot me next time," he repeated, and slammed the door
on her.
Xander stared at the dust on the dash and listened to Liv's fast sharp
breathing. His stomach rolled. He expected her to say something, but she
didn't, and after a minute Angel got into the driver's seat and started the
engine.
"Seat belt," he said, and Xander just stared at him. Angel put the car in reverse and looked at
him. "Do you need help with it?"
"Oh. No." He pulled the seat belt across his chest and
clicked it closed. The sound of the
lock was like the completion of some delicate mechanism, and now he felt fully
surreal. He could look into the back
seat and see Bony Nose or Buffy, it wouldn't matter. He could wake up at any moment.
That would be fine.
"How does this open?" Angel asked, backing up and pointing the
car at the door. "Liv?"
She didn't say anything, and after a moment Xander said, "It just does. It's an electronic eye."
Angel gave him an odd look, but pressed the gas, and they rolled forward. The door started to open. It was dark outside.
As they were creeping out, Xander turned and looked around at the garage. The Jag parked neatly by the door to the
stairs, the DeSoto sagging on its blocks, the shadowed piles of old tires and canvas
tarps and dusty oily garage crap. His
eyes went back to the door to the stairs; he half expected it to open, half expected
to see Spike appear and come after them.
They started up the ramp, and Liv moaned. From somewhere in the piles of trash and dirty work shirts on the
floor of the car, she said, "Please—you don't understand."
"Don't understand what?" Angel said, without looking around.
She was silent, and then she said, "You have to let me go."
They were out under the door now, and Angel pulled into the street,
looked both ways, and turned left. When
he put his foot down the engine bitched, but got to work. He glanced down behind the seat.
"Don't shoot me next time, and I'll think about it."
Continued in Chapter 14
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