Part 4
Rating PG-13 Minor angst and sexual references“Tara, if you didn’t really want to do it, why did you say yes?”
“It-it’s not that I don’t want to,” Tara hesitated. The witches were walking home together hand in hand. After Faith’s near fistfight, matters had settled down and after a couple more rounds of drinks, the gathering had quietly split up. Anya and Giles had gone home with many embraces and promises to catch up real soon, perhaps at the housewarming. Buffy, Faith and Dawn were walking Xander home prior to performing a quick sweep of the cemetery and surrounds before bedtime. Faith had given the distinct impression that she wouldn’t mind encountering a vampire or two in order to work out her frustrations. Then, just as Tara and Willow were leaving, the duty manager had called the blonde witch over for a brief word. One of their bands for the coming Wednesday had cancelled, and he wondered if Tara would mind filling in. After a moment’s hesitation, the blonde witch had agreed.
“Willow, I love playing. If someone’s listening and responding, that’s great. But I made it clear I was going to play on my terms: solo and acoustic. No b-backing band. No Dingoes, ex or current.” Willow made a wry face at the mention of Oz’s old band. “Just me. If the crowd don’t like it, I don’t care.”
“Well, if they feel that way, it’s their loss. Personally, you could sing the phone book to me and I’d be entranced,” Willow giggled and gave Tara’s waist an extra squeeze.
“I get that,” Tara hugged back.
“You know that I’m completely besotted with you?” Willow continued, leaning against her blonde lover a little too heavily, so that Tara almost tripped and fell.
“Ow, careful, Willow!” Tara warned.
“You besot me,” Willow murmured, leaning against Tara a little more carefully. Now perfectly balanced, Tara pressed herself against the redhead and inhaled deeply, breathing in her scent, her hair, her skin. “You know what that means?”
“Love,” Tara said simply, brushing Willow’s hair with her lips, then the redhead’s fair freckled cheek. She was about to pounce and kiss Willow’s lips when her target abruptly and teasingly pulled away.
“More than love!” the redhead exclaimed. “Besotted means you completely infatuate me.” Tara nodded. “And more than that: it also means that you turn me into a sot.” The redhead grinned.
Tara frowned. “I think at this point, Giles might say something like; ‘I say, steady on now, young Willow.’”
“And of course,” Will persisted, “a sot is an habitual drinker.” She caught Tara’s eye and winked.
Tara smiled broadly. “But I’m not Giles, so I’ll just say: Willow darling, there are some drinking habits that I will do nothing to discourage. Quite,” and she took Willow in her arms and kissed her warm lips there and then, “the contrary.”
“Mmm,” was Willow’s eloquent reply.
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“I’m sorry, you seem to have mistaken me for someone who gives a bugger,” Spike, in the shadows of the Bronze, replied to the man who had accosted him.
“It’s almost a reflex, isn’t it?” was the man’s reply. He was squat, burly and middle-aged, with a silver crew-cut so short that it was difficult to tell where the bald patch ended and the hairline began. “As men our instinct is to be suspicious of each other. The last thing on our minds is the possibility that men might be able to help each other out. Just part of that competitive masculine nature, right?”
The guy was right. Spike’s instinct was to tell him to go and stuff himself. But there was something about the glint in the man’s pale blue eyes that stopped the vampire. Or was this some sort of a pick-up? Spike waited, beer half-raised to his lips, his expression wavering between neutral and politely bored.
“My name’s Joe Withers,” the speaker continued, “and before me I see a man drinking on his own. That can mean one of two things: either he’s shy and has no friends, or he’s having problems with a woman. Somehow I don’t see you as the shy friendless type.”
“Offering me the wisdom of your advanced years then?” Spike retorted. “You ought to know that I’m a bit older than I look.”
Withers smiled. When he did so his eyes narrowed to slits so tiny they almost disappeared into his face. “Not wisdom or advice, son, no. Only you can work out what you want. But I might be able to offer you help. See, a man on his own, he’s easy meat for a woman. She got tricks to twist him around her little finger. But what if he’s not alone? What if he’s got the help of some like-minded guys behind him.”
“Is this a wind-up?” Spike demanded. “Are you about to invite me around to sample your hot-tub?”
“Nothing like that,” Withers said smoothly. “The group of guys I hang out with, we’re absolutely straight in word, thought and deed. All we offer is support and help. Without judgment. If you’re a guy and your lady is causing you trouble, the offer is there. All you have to do is swallow that macho pride and ask. What have you got to lose? Self-respect? Let me guess that you’ve laid that on the line already. For her.”
Spike, although something about Withers disturbed him, had to admit that he was intrigued. He leaned forward and gave the human his full attention. Joseph Withers smiled once more, and his eyes repeated their vanishing act. “Have you ever heard of the Sunnydale Wolverines?” Spike hadn’t, so Joseph briefly outlined what the local men’s support group was and in general terms described what they stood for. When he had finished, Spike chewed the information over for a while.
“Do you have any contacts with the local police?” Spike finally asked.
Withers nodded. “Sure we do. A few of our members are serving police officers. They have marital problems the same as anyone else. Maybe more so. We help them, and from time to time they help us. But never with anything illegal, you understand.”
“That goes without saying,” Spike replied.
“You have something in mind?” Withers asked.
“Maybe.”
“But nothing illegal,” Withers repeated.
“I got that,” the blonde vampire replied. “Quite the contrary, actually.” They both grinned.
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“Darling?” Tara said abruptly in the stillness of their bedroom. She was lying with her head on Willow’s breast, her long blonde hair spilling over her lover’s fair torso.
“Hmm?” was Willow’s sleepy reply. Tara had known from the thudding of the redhead’s heart that she wasn’t quite asleep.
“Have you been getting any vibes lately?”
“Only the good kind,” Willow purred, tracing the outline of Tara’s shoulder blades with her fingertips. What a beautiful shape they are, she thought.
“No Apocalypse, no Big Bad rising?” Tara probed.
“No,” Willow admitted. “Have you?”
Tara shook her head slightly. “Nothing specific.” There had been no further visits from Vampire Tara since the night the witches had laid her to rest at Tara’s old grave. “Just a vague something.”
“Schlepping toward Bethlehem?” Willow queried.
Tara gave a faint silvery laugh in the darkness. Miss Kitty, from her position at the foot of the bed, lifted her head and twitched her ears, but made no sound by way of an answer. She lowered her head back onto the blanket and went to sleep. “Something like that,” Tara said at last. “I just wonder if Riley’s death is a warning of something bigger about to happen.”
“I can feel a research session coming on,” Willow warned.
“Yeah, but I don’t know how well it will go when my only search term is ‘vague unease.’”
“We’ll manage Tara, of course we will.” Willow reached out in the darkness, took one of Tara’s hands in hers and pressed it too her lips.
“Of course,” the blonde witch agreed.
“And you know what else?” Willow added. “Suddenly, I’m not sleepy any more.” She reached out for Tara, who raised her head, smiling. Her soft eyes were indigo in the darkness.
(To be continued)