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Bonding
By LadyCat
Sequel to Taffy; part of The Shadowverse
Spike got them
a cat. A kitten, really, a ball of tortoise-shell fluff and paws, huge eyes
that track over everything without really seeing anything at all. Dawn was
enchanted, cooing and playing with it, promising Spike good behavior for a year
in thanks. Willow was distrustful, claiming she needed more time to get over
the trauma of Miss Kitty Fantastico running away.
Tara wished he’d
gotten a dog.
“Problem, luscious?”
Willow always bristled
at the names he used for her, but Tara never minded. Spike wasn’t mocking her
and, well, she was much larger than the stick-thin women that surrounded
them. It bothered her, no matter how many times she told herself that a size
six was not too fat, even though Willow was a size zero, so when Spike
started calling her 'svelt' and 'goddess' she listened to how the names were
always so—reverent. That was the word. Appreciative. It was a wholly male
response to the female form, but it flattered her all the same.
“Thought you’d
like a cat. What with havin’ the other one.”
He was leaning
against the wall, ink-brush eyebrows drawn close and considering. She caught
the vague sense of hurt, and was surprised. She hadn’t realized he wanted her
approval.
“I like cats,”
she told him tracing cobwebs in the air. “But dogs are more fun. You can take
them on walks, and play fetch—and roll over. You can’t make a cat roll over.
Um, unless the cat wants to, of course.” She babbled like a school-girl around
him, although thankfully stutter-free. She didn’t stutter around him, anymore,
ever. Not since the RV ride from hell, when he’d screamed from sun-blisters.
“Really? Thought
all you birds were cat fanciers. What with the similarities, an’ all.” His
mouth leered at her, but his eyes were amused and kind, encouraging her to share
the joke. It could have been a desire to keep his face palm-print-free—but
that excuse had worn off weeks ago. Even Willow had noticed how nice
Spike acted towards Tara; of course, she thought it was because she’d threatened
to take Dawn away if Spike messed up, and since Spike was a big poop-head that
couldn’t ever be nice to Willow, Tara was the substitute to stay in Willow’s
good graces. Tara hadn’t the heart to tell her that in a showdown between Willow
and Spike, Dawn would choose Spike every time.
“I like cats,”
she repeated. “I just like dogs more.”
“Well, then.”
Lighting his cigarette, Spike joined her leaning against the back-porch railing.
“Have to see if I can find one for you, then. What kind you prefer—poodle?
Terrier? Retrievers, they’re easy.”
“Is this legal,
Spike? Or—is the cat even healthy? Been to a vet?”
Spike gave her
an offended look. “Like I’d give somethin’ to the ’bit that was gonna take
sick an’ die? Or make her sick?”
“But it’s not legal,
is it?” She knew Spike wouldn’t let anything near Dawn that could hurt her,
but there was no harm in double-checking. Spike expected it, really. “Where’d
you get the kitten, Spike?”
“None of your nosy
business, miss Parker. Got her, fair’n square. Tell the vet you found her
in a box somewhere, if you want, happens often enough. Now, then, what kind
of dog am I win—er, getting?” He turned around so he was leaning back on his
elbows, face animated and almost boyish. “Can keep him down by the crypt, since
I doubt Red’s gonna tolerate a puppy messin’ up her pretty things. Bit too
energetic for her tastes. You’ll have to get the grub, though. An’ Dawn can
walk him during the day, after school? Since I, well, can’t. That whole ash-crispy
thing.”
It occurred to
her that Spike liked her. That he was trying to make things comfortable for
her down at his crypt: chairs and blankets for humans to use, light fixtures
he’d bullied Xander into helping him rig, and he’d actually tried to clean.
Unsuccessfully, but Tara appreciated the attempt. And it wasn’t just for Dawn,
because he gave her the same hopeful puppy eyes, when there was no one
else around to see—except Xander, oddly enough.
Something crystalized
as Spike babbled on about the Labrador retriever he was going to get for them.
Spike was playing house. Dawn was his to take care of, though whether it was
as father or brother was irrelevant. She, Tara, was being asked to play mother.
And she realized
she wasn’t going to say no.
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