Snow And Fire
written by Gail Christison
Rating: FRM
Spoilers: None specified.
Summary: Buffy finds out about an amulet hidden in the High Sierras which could protect Dawn. Buffy and
Giles take a road trip on Christmas eve :-) Snow, Christmas and other adventure abounds :-) And of course, romance.
Dedication: This one is for all the B/Gers who are snowed in.
Feedback Author: Gail Christison
Author's Website: Once More With Feeling
"Did you want to spend Christmas in toasty Sunnydale again?"
Giles snorted. "Christmas in my 'toasty' apartment is far preferable to spending Christmas Eve on the road, heading for God knows where, to find God knows what."
"God has nothing to do with it. Sowakathwali, that waitress at Willy's, is terrified of Glory and if she says there's an amulet up here that will help us defend Dawn
well, I want it, besides, we'll be home by tomorrow night, latest."
He sighed. "I understand that. And Sowa has been helpful before, for a Kowali demon. I understand that too. I simply didn't expect my holiday plans, piddling though they were, to be tossed aside for a long road trip of extremely questionable value. Come to that, how did your mother and Dawn take the news of your sudden departure?"
Buffy shifted uncomfortably in her seat. "Dawn has it all under control. I mean, she's got Mom all to herself
and Mom took it the way she took going away for Thanksgiving last year," she said dryly. "They'll be fine. They don't need me. They're perfectly capable of playing board games, watching weepy movies and stuffing themselves with chocolatey Christmas goodness with or without me."
Giles shot her a sudden, sideways look. "No, I suppose not. Is that all you had planned for Christmas?"
She continued to look out the window. "Pretty much. Mom's not strong enough to go anywhere or do anything much, so it was just going to be us
real quiet. Willow and Tara have big plans, and Xander and Anya have gone to San Fran to raise some heck
and probably do some serious sex," she added, just to see him look shocked, and was disappointed to see that he didn't even raise an eyebrow. "So what were you going to do?"
"Mm?" Giles murmured as he guided the BMW up a steep gradient behind a large truck. "Me? Well, I
I had plans. Yes, plans that I don't have any more because we're out here climbing mountains instead
"
Buffy tilted her head to one side. "You were going to spend Christmas alone again, weren't you?"
He cleared his throat. "Of course not
" he began haughtily, but deflated quickly and dropped his head a little, without taking his eyes off the road. "Sitting at home in my chair, with my own eggnog and a good book, pretending it's cold is still much preferable to gallivanting across the Californian countryside in search of some unverified talisman."
"Up it, is more like it," Buffy observed as the scenery continued to change and they continued to climb. Her thoughts, however, were lost in imagining what the last few Christmases might have been like for the big Watcher, painfully aware as she suddenly was, that the three of them had somehow managed to neglect him almost every year for their own plans, their own lives. She looked up at his gentle profile and wondered for the first time if he'd ever been lonely.
The last time she'd even thought about him at Christmas was the year Angel returned. And they still hadn't even managed to invite him for dinner
.
She closed her eyes. She'd dragged him into helping Angel instead. And he'd done it
without a word of dissent, as always, in spite of the horror to which the vampire had once subjected him.
Giles turned off the main highway smoothly and Buffy suddenly started to rub her arms. "You don't have the heater on," she observed.
"Should I have?" he drawled. "It is California, after all, and the temperature was seventy two when we left Sunnydale."
"Well, now we're in the Sierras and it's not seventy two anymore, Toto," she complained. "Heater
please?"
Giles put it on and leaned forward over the wheel to look up briefly. "I don't like the look of the weather," he muttered. "And I've yet to see a sign to tell us how far to this turning Sowi was talking about, now that we're off the highway."
Buffy looked up at the darkening sky with its greenish clouds hanging low and frowned. "Not good," she pronounced, as small patches of snow started to be seen on the roadside and in the fields they were passing.
"Not good," he agreed. "Do you want to try to get back to the highway, or continue on, whilst praying that the heavens don't open until we're safely into a warm hotel?"
Buffy bit her lip. They needed that amulet. They needed all the help they could get, but Giles looked worried. "What do you want to do?" she asked carefully.
He looked at his watch. "We can go on. It can't be much further and we've at least three hours of daylight left."
The snowflakes started less than ten minutes later, just as they finally found what Giles confirmed from his mileage indicator, had to be the turnoff, before resetting it.
At first Buffy proclaimed their prettiness, large, fluffy flurries that they were, but in time the wind picked up and the flurries were joined by friends and became something more ominous.
"Giles, I haven't seen a car for the last hour," she observed, breaking a long silence.
"I know," he said darkly. "Nor have I seen a sign. I was certain this was the right turning
"
Buffy looked at him with alarm. "We're lost?"
He shook his head. "I checked the map. But there really should be some sign of civilization by now."
Buffy checked all the windows, barely able to peer through the ever-increasing amounts of falling and swirling snow. "There isn't even a power pole or a light out there, let alone a town," she observed. "Giles it's getting dangerous. We're going to have to stop soon. And I didn't pack for snow."
"Nor I. I packed for the forecast," he growled. "We both did. And snow was supposed to be out of the question until close to New Year's."
"Where exactly are we?" she asked, peering through the windscreen and the overworked wipers. "Do you have any clue, or have we just entered the Twilight Zone?"
He would have snorted again, but he didn't have the heart. The mileage indicator on the dashboard was showing that they were approximately the right distance from the last turnoff to find the next one and the small town that was supposed to be at the junction, but there were no signposts, no indications of any turnings, and no sign of any kind of civilization.
"To be honest, I don't know. Either I misread the map, or this road wasn't marked, and therefore threw my count completely out."
Buffy squinted out of her side window. "I'm going to have to go with 'not marked', at this point," she observed dryly. "Is it me, or is there a light on that hill?"
Giles slowed down even more and stole several looks out of her window. "Looks like a light. Watch for a gate or some such. They might be able to tell us where we are, at the very least, and if we're fortunate, we might even be offered shelter for the night if it's a terribly long way to the next town."
The gates were locked. Giles undid his safety belt, but Buffy stayed his arm. "Let me do it. If there's a way to open it, I'm your girl."
His face was a picture of frustration and stifled gallantry, but he nodded stiffly. "Just don't catch pneumonia
here, hold on," he added as she opened her car door, reached over the back and grabbed the leather jacket he'd thrown there when they last filled the car, hours earlier, in warmer climes.
"It'll get ruined," she said softly.
"Better the bloody jacket than you," he growled. "Wear it, and move quickly. This sudden, drastic change in temperature makes you a prime candidate for catching something nasty."
"I'm the slayer, Giles, remem?"
"The same Slayer who ended up in hospital last time she contracted a bad virus," he pointed out acerbically. "Move quickly and get back in the car as fast as you can."
She rolled her eyes and opened the door, the blast of frigid air more of a shock than either of them expected, warmed as they were by the car's heating system.
Giles watched as she lifted the chain on the gate and found a padlock of some size on it
and smiled when she easily snapped the solid links and pushed the gates open. They would have to offer compensation
Buffy clambered back into the car after closing the gates again behind them, still swaddled in Giles' jacket, and peppered with snow, dotted in her hair and still on her shoulders. More freezing air followed her.
"You're shivering," Giles said indignantly. "You were only gone for a couple of minutes."
Buffy looked sideways at him. "Turn the heater up," she growled through chattering teeth.
"It's up as far as it will go," he said apologetically and put the car in gear. "Let's get you to some real shelter."
The light was a security sensor light, being continuously triggered by a tree branch blown across it by the freshening wind.
"Well, it's a homestead. That's gotta be of the good," Buffy proposed, ignoring the complete lack of internal lighting, parked vehicles or life of any kind. "Maybe they're asleep?"
"At four o'clock in the afternoon?"
"Okay. Well, maybe they're old. Nap time?"
"Or perhaps the place is deserted," he shot back very dryly. "Or they had the good sense to go somewhere warm for Christmas."
"Either way we're screwed," she observed, deadpan.
Giles opened his door. "Let's try knocking first, shall we?"
They were halfway to the porch when Buffy realised Giles was still in his shirtsleeves and getting wetter by the second. Once they were undercover and out of the wind, she turned on him.
"You're soaked. Why didn't you put something on to keep dry and warm?"
"Because you're wearing it. I brought an extra sweater for the night, but wearing it would be rather pointless in this, don't you think?" he asked, brushing off snow and looking out at the storm.
Buffy had the good grace to look sheepish, then started to peel the leather jacket off, snow going everywhere.
"No," he commanded. "You must stay warm. Shall we just find out if our hosts are in residence, first?" He stepped up to the door and gave the knocker a good work out.
"Warm is a relative term," she muttered as they waited.
And waited.
Eventually they looked at each other then Giles pulled his map from his breast pocket and unfolded it. The porch sensor light was diffuse, but strong enough to make out the brightly coloured roads and the major centres. He pointed out the road they were supposed to be on, and the last turning before it that he had identified.
"No doubt about it," Buffy said, shivering again. "This should be the right road, lack of junction notwithstanding. If it is, there's another town about forty miles down the road, and the highway just as far in the other direction. If it's not, God knows where we'd end up
if we could see far enough to get there."
"I'm not taking you back out in this. It would be foolish in the extreme to leave shelter when we don't know how much worse the storm will get or where we're going. Stay here. I'm going to check the outbuildings to see if there's somewhere I can put the car. It would be nice if the engine block didn't freeze during the night and my sump and radiator refrained from cracking."
"I'm coming with'," she announced.
"Buffy"
She shook her head. "I'm coming."
There was a barn, a hayshed, a large double garage and a covered, but open, shelter for some expensive farm implements.
Buffy found horses in the barn, both looking restive and hungry, and a cat curled up on a folded saddle blanket, left on what looked like a feed bin. When it saw her and moved swiftly to the hayloft, she lifted the lid on the bin and scooped up a measure of oats, experimentally offering them to one of the horses, which barely allowed her to pour the grain into its feedbox, it was so ravenous. She did the same for the other one and made a mental note to ask Giles to split a bale of hay for them.
By the time she'd come up empty on the cat food front, she could hear Giles starting the car. He must have found a space in the garage. Judging by the horses' behaviour, he might have found an extremely empty garage. The cat was now also winding its way around her legs, wailing plaintively.
Something was definitely not right about the whole set up. Not only that, but they would have to check the whole place for other livestock before they could even think about resting
or food for themselves. Buffy wrinkled her nose. More interesting smells
The horses also hadn't been mucked out for more than a little while. It was lucky that they had those thingies on their water troughs that kept filling them when they got low, or they'd have been in a lot more trouble
Giles met her halfway to the hayshed. "What are you doing?" he demanded, shouting into the wind.
"Horses, hungry, hay," she shouted back.
"Horses?"
"And a cat."
"Bloody hell. Nobody would go away on a holiday and just leave their animals. Hungry, you say?"
"Starving
in the feed me now before I bite your arm off sense, not the bones poking through sense," she added awkwardly.
"Come on, then, I'll help you pull down a bale or two and we'll make sure they're not the only the only hungry things around here."
The horses settled down to munch blissfully after Giles split the bale of lucerne hay, and they headed off into the blizzard to investigate the rest of the buildings.
They found a henhouse behind the hayshed and a kennel around the back of the house, on the back porch. Inside it was a tightly curled up ball of hair, which, when it uncurled and launched itself at them, turned out to be an unchained collie.
Buffy relaxed and shifted out of the defensive stance she'd taken up, when it threw itself at Giles in a licking frenzy.
"Something's really wrong here, Giles. Nobody would leave all these animals alone. Those poor chickens are going to freeze. And they were so hungry."
"Well they're not hungry any more," he pointed out, scratching the dog's scruff and talking to it softly. "I'll go back later and try to rig something to keep them from freezing. Even a couple of those lanterns which were hanging on the stable wall, hung above the perches, would throw off enough warmth to keep the birds from freezing on them."
Something occurred to him and he let go of the dog, walked up to the back door and tried it. It wasn't locked.
They crept inside warily, a small bathroom immediately to their left, laundry to their right, and what looked like the kitchen dead ahead.
A half-frozen, soaking wet Giles slid his hand up the wall until he found a light switch. It was dull, almost like twilight, because of the low, heavy cloud and the snow and it felt good to finally blink and focus in the bright light.
Buffy sighed. Everything was running normally. She could hear the refrigerator cycling and the clock was running on the microwave.
"We have power and light," she observed. "And with any luck, dinner."
"Yes," Giles agreed, "but right now I'm more concerned about where the owners might be. We'll search the entire house before we do anything else."
They met again in the master bedroom, each of them having taken a floor and gone over it with a fine toothed comb.
"Nada," Buffy announced. "You?"
Giles shook his head. "I saw a door to the attic. Do you want that, or the basement?"
"Basement," she said immediately. "The bad guys are always in the basement
and since bad guys are my specialty
"
"Just
be careful," Giles warned.
He opened the attic door gingerly, once he'd reached the landing. It was dark and dusty, and deserted, as attics were wont to be. He was about to turn and leave when he heard
something.
His heart rate picked up and he listened intently for it to be repeated: a soft moan.
Again.
With a deep breath, he moved further into the room, cursing silently when he tripped on the leg of an old coat rack, and wishing fervently that he'd brought a torch.
"I-is there anyone there?" he asked aloud and immediately felt an idiot, imagining snickering demons or vampires preparing to leap at him, until the groan was repeated. He followed it until he found a woman lying on the floor, surrounded by broken preserving jars, blessedly empty, a box on it's side next to her with just two unbroken ones left in it. He looked up, squinting. She'd been on a stool, now also tipped over, trying to get the box down from a cupboard.
"It's all right," he said softly, when she moaned again. She was terribly cold and her pulse was hard to find.
"Can you hear me?"
"Rob...s-s'at you?" she mumbled.
"Rob isn't here," he said gently. "Are you hurt very badly?"
"I-I fell."
"I know. You must tell me if you're injured."
"My h-head
" She half-frowned without opening her eyes. "My leg."
Giles did his best to check her legs, neither of which appeared to be broken, though one ankle didn't look too good, and her head was sporting a lump the size of a goose's egg on the back of it.
"H-How long?" she stammered, moving her head back and forth, but still not opening her eyes, her voice cracked and rasping.
"I don't know. When did you come up here?"
"When
" She appeared to struggle for clarity of thought for some time. "When I got home
I was
have I
missed Passions?"
He closed his eyes. As much as two days she'd been lying there, if she wasn't completely addled by the bump.
"Move your feet," he commanded and watched her fairly feeble but successful attempts to obey before scooping her up as gently as possible, though not without a long, low moan from her as he exited the attic.
He was halfway down the hallway when Buffy reappeared. "No bad guys?" she asked.
"No bad guys, apparently," he confirmed. " A mishap with a stool and some bottles. She was lucky not to be badly cut."
"I hate to tell you this, but I checked and the phones are out." The woman moaned again softly. "We should get her into bed right away. The Master is probably hers."
There was an electric blanket, which Buffy switched on immediately. Once Giles had laid the woman gently on the bed and removed her shoes, Buffy made her comfortable and made certain her clothes were loose.
When she was tucked in, and the bed starting to warm, she finally opened vivid blue eyes and looked at them.
"H-who?"
"Refuges from the storm," Giles said softly. "There's a blizzard outside. We've fed your animals and we'll stay and watch you tonight. I'm afraid the phone is out."
"Rhi
Rhiannon McAllister," she whispered scratchily.
Giles smiled reassuringly. "Rupert Giles, and my
this is Buffy Summers." He looked searchingly into the woman's eyes and could see no sign of trouble from the head wound.
"How do you feel?"
She almost chuckled, but it turned into a dry cough. "Like a steer ran over me. My back aches. My ankle hurts like hell and my head feels like a basketball, when it's not throbbing."
At that moment Buffy returned from nipping into the bathroom, with a glass of water, which Mrs McAllister drained swiftly.
Giles chuckled. "Well, fortunately it looks like you might have only strained your ankle, and your back is bruised, but apparently not seriously hurt. I'm not a doctor, but judging by your speech and your perfectly normal eyes and their rather normal reaction to the light, I would hazard to guess that your bump on the head isn't terribly serious either. The main concern is the length of time you were out."
"I-I was out for a long time?"
"If you knocked yourself out before Passions last screened, you've been unconscious for a day and a half," he pointed out gently.
"Oh dear. It's my own fault. My husband is away and I haven't slept properly since he left, barely at all, actually. It must have been a combination of the whack on the head and sheer exhaustion. I do remember stirring a few times when the dog barked. P-please, Mister Giles
help yourself to some supper." She turned her head gingerly toward the window and the four-inch gap in the curtains. "It is a bad storm. Your Buffy should turn down the spare bed for you and the one in my daughter's room
maybe put on the electric blankets
" She groaned again and closed her eyes. "I think maybe I should rest now. Either that or I'll need a bucket."
"Rest," Giles told her softly. "And don't worry about anything. We'll watch the animals and we'll be close by if you need us. We're not going to leave you until the phone comes back on so that we can call for help, or the storm breaks, whichever happens first."
She smiled painfully, but didn't open her eyes. "Thankyou," she whispered. "For all of us. Y-you should let Rusty in out of the cold."
"Rusty?"
"The dog. He sleeps in the house when the weather is bad. He's t-trained. Don't worry
he'll stay with me," she said sleepily.
Giles motioned Buffy out of the room.
Rusty was indeed pleased to be allowed into the house, addressing both Giles and Buffy with the same enthusiasm before scampering off to find his owner.
"Hungry?"
Buffy looked up at Giles. "Are you kidding? Starving wouldn't come close to describing it."
"Then let's investigate the sleeping arrangements, and find something to fill the empty spaces."
The spare bed turned out to be a very large double bed, perfect for Giles' long frame, but the McAllister daughter's bed was a tiny white and gold painted single brass bed, in a very pretty child's room.
Buffy snorted. "Trade?"
Giles chuckled, but shook his head as Buffy reluctantly turned the covers down. He watched her as she worked. Her hair was damp and the coat was far too big for her, but her face was flushed and her natural beauty undiminished. He sighed silently, wondering if she was ever going to be allowed a real Christmas
if she was ever again going to know a real life.
She turned to find the green eyes watching her and stopped, stayed somehow by the look in them, the expression on his face.
"Giles?"
"What?" He shook himself out of his thoughts. "Oh. It's nothing. I'm just sorry you're going to miss Christmas, once again."
Buffy shrugged. "Yeah, well, last year wasn't horrible, even if I did spend most of it missing Riley and listening to my dad fighting with his girlfriend
who's not, these days, by the way. I think I preferred her to the secretary, though. At least Irina was anything but cliché."
Giles let his gaze linger a few moments longer, silently fighting strong feelings about the depth to which her father's recent indifference had hurt her. A surge of something else quickly followed it, and made him clear his throat suddenly.
"Yes...um
well, I'm going back to the car to get our bags so that we can get out of these wet clothes. Will you check on Mrs McAllister? If she's still awake, we should try and force some more fluids, and perhaps find some clear soup for her.
Buffy immediately slid out of the coat and handed it to him, tilting her head aggressively when he started to shake his head.
"Yes, Giles. At least it's dry in here. You can't go out there in just your shirtsleeves again. I don't want you in bed with pneumonia, either."
He took it reluctantly and slid the wet leather over his shirt. It was warmed by her body and smelled of her perfume, mixed with the less than salutary aroma of damp hide.
Only half surprised, he ignored his body's unexpected reaction to the borrowed intimacy and composed his face into it's usual calm lines.
"See to Mrs McAllister. I won't be long," he managed, and made his escape.
On the porch, he hesitated. It was even darker than when they'd arrived. It was an eerie kind of dark, not night, because it was too early, and no longer day either. The sun had been all but obliterated and the light that did struggle through had been refracted through so much dark cloud and moisture that it was as soft as gauze and as difficult to see through.
The snow was still coming down heavily, blown now by a fairly strong wind, and visibility beyond a few feet had become an issue. Still, the garage was in a straight line with the right hand corner of the house. If he kept a straight course for a chain or so, he would find it easily, and the reverse with the return.
He had no trouble finding the garage, though he took a lot of buffeting from the wind, and the incredible cold from both the snow and the wind chill factor had already numbed his uncovered fingertips and cheeks.
Some time later, Buffy slipped out of Rhiannon McAllister's room and frowned when she realised Giles wasn't back yet. The older woman had managed another glass of water, this time with a little juice mixed in, and approved of the pitcher and glass Buffy left by the bedside, before slipping back into a relatively peaceful doze.
From the back porch, Buffy could see nothing, not even a light in the garage, only a driving wall of white. She waited another twenty minutes or so, her instincts growing more and more panicked by the minute, until she decided she had to something.
She knew where the garage was and set off, to be almost knocked over when she stepped off the porch, before gathering herself and using her slayer strength to launch herself into the wind.
He wasn't there. The bags were gone, though the BMW was still there. There was a trail of snow from the trunk of the BMW towards the exit, most of which was now obscured by the billow of snow blown in when Buffy opened the garage door.
Her heart began to pound. That meant Giles was out in the snow somewhere. How the hell was she going to find him? How
? She was too terrified and too angry to cry. Not Giles! No way was fate going to take Giles away from her now
Then, as though a soft cool breeze had suddenly sprung up on a stiflingly hot day, the memory of the sound of his voice came to her. Whispering, calming, reassuring
the chant from her mediation exercises
She ran out of the garage and stopped, unclenching her fists, closing her eyes and deliberately relaxing every fibre of her being, despite the freezing cold. Slowly her mind reached out, finding no demon or vampire nearby, but pushing beyond that, trying to do something she'd never done before.
Buffy had done a lot of things lately that she'd never done before. More and more she turned into herself, focusing, reaching, trying to find what she was looking for.
Moments later, to the observer it would have looked like Buffy had been shot out of a barrel, the way she launched herself into the storm, surely, swiftly, cutting through in a forty five degree angle to the house.
By the time she found him, he was almost covered in snow, only the red, upended over night bag sticking out of the drift, catching her eye. In seconds she was on her already frozen knees digging, pulling, feeling for a pulse. He was still alive.
She let go of the breath she didn't realize she'd been holding and gasped, then choked as the freezing air cut into her throat like razors.
He was a terrible colour, and so cold. It took all of her ingenuity to get him back to the house. Because of her Slayer strength, weight was not an issue
but his sheer size was incredibly awkward for her.
Once inside a frantic dash to McAllister's room found her drowsing but not asleep. Buffy seized the chance to ask where blankets and first aid equipment could be found.
When Giles was stripped to his underwear, towelled off and wrapped up like a mummy in woollen blankets, Buffy started to bathe his face with a warm cloth. It was struggling to regain its colour, but soon two tiny pink licks appeared in his deathly white cheeks.
She hated that he was on the floor, but there was no easy way to get him up the stairs, and a man his size was not going to fit on the two-seater settee in the living room. What she hated more was not knowing if she was accomplishing anything; if she was doing the best for him that she could. She knew almost nothing about first aid, let alone helping someone who'd almost frozen to death.
The only thing she remembered was how much her hands hurt when her parents had taken her to Aspen to see snow, for her seventh birthday. She'd been excitedly making a snowman without putting gloves on until she was called for lunch and realised her fingers were completely numb. The hot water on her frozen hands had been more agonizing than the cold itself.
At that point she suddenly realized her hands were now trembling and pulled the cloth away.
"Giles?" she whispered. "Giles, please
if you can hear me, wake up. You wanted to give me Christmas
come back. You're all I want for Christmas
you hear me? Don't leave me! I
"
She stopped as if hit in the stomach and swallowed. She had been going to say 'I need you,' but the word that had almost left her lips wasn't 'need.' She swallowed again and cupped his face with her hand.
"You can't leave me, Giles," she whispered.
His eyelashes fluttered at the warm touch and she felt his jaw shift slightly.
"B-Buffy?" he rasped.
"I'm here," she managed, barely able to swallow the silent sob of joy.
"I must have
missed
the house."
She nodded stupidly, since he hadn't opened his eyes yet. "Missed it completely, probably because of the wind. You would have been bearing hard into it, and didn't know your own strength. I found you. You're going to be okay."
"Bags
?"
Buffy rolled her eyes. "I got them. Nothing like Slayer strength, bags slung over my back, dragging your carcass through the snow like a pack mule. There shoulda been pictures," she teased.
His brow creased into a divot. "I-I'm sorry," he said softly.
Buffy's hand moved so that her fingers were pushing damp hair off his forehead and stroking it.
"Why?" she asked gently and smiled. "I was done being mad at you by the time I found you. And it's not your fault there's a blizzard."
"P-put you at risk," he managed, and tried to open his eyes.
When they finally did flicker open and stopped squinting against the light, Buffy found herself staring into the green depths. Somewhere in the back of her mind, a part of her brain wondered where his glasses were.
"Where am?"
"On the floor in the lobby."
He turned his head very slowly, trying not to think about the continuing gentle caresses of Buffy's fingertips, saw the pile of sopping clothes on the floor and the dripping jacket on the doorknob.
"G-good lord, am I
?"
Buffy shook her head. "I left the cute little Christmas boxers on," she told him, her eyes dancing. "But it's good the amount of colour in your face now."
He rolled his eyes. "Anya gave them too me. You still shouldn't have had to
"
"Giles," Buffy interrupted impatiently, "I'm a grown woman and I've seen my fair share
" The sudden memory of Riley's departure stopped her short for a moment, before she reclaimed her train of thought and went on. "You're in great shape, and besides, I was kind of in the middle of a major panic attack about your survival at the time, so stop being sorry." Her face cleared and a look of mischief came into her eyes. "Truth is, with those shoulders and that chest hair you're actually the sexiest guy I've ever seen in his underwear," she told him, only half teasing.
He managed a feeble snort and tried to sit up, gasping at the pain in his extremities as he did so.
Buffy's tucking was tight and she had to loosen the top blanket before helping him to a sitting position, which inevitably revealed his chest again, just as he closed his eyes against the bout of light headedness that followed.
A part of him considered whether that was more from shifting position suddenly, or from his body's reaction to the fact that his bare back was now resting against her soft body.
"If you're strong enough to move now, we should get you to bed before you do catch your death," Buffy said in a strange, almost forced, tone.
Giles nodded and suffered silently as half frozen limbs struggled to work. They both almost fell even before he was fully upright, but she steadied them and patiently helped him through to the stairs.
When she looked up at the steepness and the number of them, Buffy bit her lip. "This is going to hurt. How are the legs holding up?"
When he didn't answer, she looked up at his face and realised that he was in a great deal of pain already. She lowered him immediately to sit on the bottom step.
He drew the blanket on his shoulders tightly around him, trying not to shiver.
"You need more time before we hit the stairs, but it's too cold to stay here," she muttered. "Why couldn't the guest room be downstairs?"
Then she remembered the bathroom near the back door. A quick sortie revealed that it was fully equipped, though judging by the work boots in the corner and the industrial strength soap and old, faded towels, it was meant for the more stinky clean ups after working outside all day. The tub was extra long, and deep, probably meaning that Rob McAllister was as big as Giles, or bigger. She hadn't, however, seen any pictures, even of kids or animals, in the house.
By the time the faucets were running strongly she was already rushing back to Giles.
When they reached it, Buffy perched Giles on the corner of the tub, shut off the hot faucet and tested the water, topping up a little with cold before shutting it off too.
"Perfect," she announced, then frowned when she realized how much he was shivering and how pale he was again. Without thinking about it she put her arms around him and hugged tightly, rubbing his back as she did so.
"Buffy," Giles said a few moments later, despite the delight of her warmth and her touch.
She paused, realised what she was doing, and pulled away. "I'm sorry," she said awkwardly. "We should get you into the tub."
Giles, well aware of a new problem that Buffy hadn't yet noticed, shook his head. He was amazed that she could provoke such a reaction at a time like this, despite the pain, discomfort and miserable cold.
"I'll do it myself. You can leave me now."
"No way," Buffy growled. "There's no step into the tub and you're barely mobile. I know how much of your weight I was supporting to get you in here."
"Buffy
please
I'll manage," he said desperately.
Which of course prompted Buffy to think about why, his modesty being the first thing she thought of, which in turn tracked her eyes right to his shorts, which in turn took her breath away.
Thinking quickly, she turned to the rack of bottles hanging from the shower faucet. There was shampoo, conditioner, degreaser and thankfully, bubble bath. She upended the bottle and agitated the water using her added strength until it was a mass of bubbles.
"Okay, modesty taken care of. I told you, I'm not a kid any more, Giles," she said without looking at him, realised what she was doing and very deliberately turned to face him.
Her own face was burning, not only from embarrassment but also from the intensity of her own reaction to his arousal. It shocked her. It was Giles.
Giles, whom she'd almost lost. Giles, who, when she was touching his face earlier, made her feel warm and protective and, she finally admitted
loving.
"Stand up and face the bath," she commanded before she could say something dumb, and helped haul him up before he could, either.
"Buffy, I'm perfectly capable
" he began but stopped when he almost lost his legs from under him the moment they were asked to take his full weight. Holding him also galvanized Buffy. He was shivering intensely.
In seconds she had unceremoniously pants-ed him and let the damp boxers drop to the floor.
"Bath," she commanded. "They had to come off one way or the other
now, or afterward, and then they'd be all soaking wet."
"Buffy, this is wrong. I'm not turning, or taking a bath with you in the room," he said in a strangled voice. "Please leave."
"I'm turning around now," she told him, refraining from voicing her appreciation of the surprisingly nice butt. "But if you fall I'll personally redecorate the rest of you to go with your new bruises
do you understand me?"
Giles said something rude under his breath and leaned on the bath while climbing into it like a ninety year old geriatric, accompanied by a great deal of grunting and groaning.
When she heard the sound of the water as he sat down, and the sigh that followed it, Buffy turned.
"Modesty preserved," she announced, looking at his head and shoulders poking out of the overabundance of foam and bubbles.
"Modesty already shot all to bloody hell," he growled.
For a brief moment Buffy thought he was teasing, but realised very quickly that he was genuinely distressed about the whole situation, including, apparently, no small pain in his extremities from the temperature differential now that he was immersed in the hot water.
"Giles
are you
do you want out? I can"
"No
no," he grimaced. "It will stop shortly. All of the moving around the house helped restore a significant amount of circulation. I'm just th-thawing out now. Thank God the shivering has stopped."
She moved closer to the side of the bath and knelt down to his level. "Thank God you're still here," she told him, finding her heart doing strange little flip-flops as the sea green eyes stared into hers. "I
Giles, I can't imagine living without you. I would never have been able to tell you, if you'd died out there. I-I need you."
He blinked then, and the spell, whatever it was, was broken. "Well, you don't have to worry. I'm going to be fine," he said gruffly. "How is our patient?"
"Mrs McAllister? She's fine. She's been drinking water and juice, and dozing, kinda. I'll try the phone again, soon."
"Good." He slid further down into the blessedly hot bath. "Um
I have pyjamas
in the overnight bag," he pointed out.
"Did you bring your spare glasses?"
He frowned. "No. Damn. Never mind. Not important."
"Are you sure you're okay if I go and get your clothes?"
He nodded.
Buffy took one look at the blue silk pyjamas and rolled her eyes. He hadn't even bought a robe, probably out of the expectation that they would have separate, heated rooms at some hotel. On impulse she checked the sitting room and smiled at country efficiency.
The room was filled with the aroma of pine from the gaily-decorated Christmas tree that was standing in one corner, and there were decorations and trimmings all around the room. Best of all a hopper stood, filled to overflowing with firewood and kindling, next to a stone hearth. In ten minutes she had a blazing fire going and was back checking Mrs McAllister again.
That lady was in a deep but relaxed sleep and Rusty had curled up in a blissfully contented ball alongside the bed, opening just one eye to look over his brushy tail at her before closing it again.
An exploratory look at the back of her bathroom door produced a man-sized, long-sleeved, navy blue terry robe. Again Buffy wondered where Mister McAllister was, and if he was trying to get home.
When she got back to the bathroom it was to find Giles dozing in the tub. His face was ruddy and glowing and the one hand on the side of the bath was a healthy, flushed pink.
"We did good," she said softly to herself, loathe to disturb him and still trying to decipher the tumult of feelings and emotions that beset her the moment she saw his face again. Then, for one moment, she allowed herself to examine her impulses honestly.
A moment later she'd turned red as a beet, and a moment after that, lost colour all together. "No," she whispered. She'd promised herself. No more guys. No more pain. She looked at Giles again.
He wasn't just a guy. Nor would he hurt her
not deliberately. Not ever. Her eyes grew luminous and tender. Nor had he ever been old, or gross. He wasn't even stuffy any more. He was
Giles. And he was doing terrible things to her body and her mind. She wasn't supposed to want her Watcher
wasn't supposed to yearn to simply touch him
or to feel his arms around her. It was weird, crazy
and yet....
She stared at the smooth jaw with its hint of a five o'clock shadow, the long lashes on his cheeks and the small crow's feet at the corner of his eye.
So very right
and, she was finally beginning to understand, not new. Not since he'd saved her from Amy Madison's mother, had she been able to conceive of a life without him in it. Not since Angelus had almost killed him, had she been as terrified of losing him. And not since Travers' criminal meddling in their relationship, had she been so unsure of herself
of him.
He stirred slightly, his head slipping sideways a little, bubbles sticking to his right cheek.
Instinctively, she reached out and brushed them away.
Giles woke almost immediately and found himself staring into the blue-grey ones he'd just been dreaming about.
Instead of snatching her fingers back, Buffy allowed the backs of them to silently trail down his cheek, aware of the surprise, and pleasure, in his eyes. She continued, tracing his mouth with a barely steady fingertip, until Giles took her hand in a wet one of his and brought her fingers to his lips, kissing them very softly and almost turning her bones to water.
Buffy reclaimed her hand, her heart beating furiously, and scrambled to her feet. "I-I have to check the f-fire," she stammered and backed out of the bathroom.
She was stoking and loading up the impressive pyre she'd made when she sensed someone had come in to the room. She put the poker down and turned around. He was wearing the pyjamas and robe and moving almost normally.
Buffy waited for him, looking up slowly as he stopped just feet away. Her terrified eyes found his, expecting judgement and distaste and embarrassment, and found only concern and puzzlement.
"Was it me?" he asked very softly. "If I did anything
if what happened before
?"
Buffy's eyes widened. "God, no," she responded and saw the doubt in his eyes. She swallowed. Truth time. "You're just unlucky that you're a guy and that it showed."
At his puzzled, bemused frown she explained. "Did it occur to you that I might have felt exactly the same thing you did, except only you men telegraph your
um
interest so darn um
publicly?" she asked tenderly and almost giggled at the look of revelation on his face. "I was just scared."
"Of me?" he asked, stunned.
Buffy shook her head and met his gaze fully and openly. "Of me," she admitted, drinking him in, knowing that it might be the last time they were this close, that she might have made it impossible for their previously easy intimacy
the pure intimacy of friendship, to continue.
Giles stepped a little closer. "Of yourself?" he prompted. "I thought I must have
"
Buffy shook her head quickly, her fast drying hair falling in neglected tangles and rumples around her shoulders.
"Y-you didn't do anything," she whispered, her eyes still lost in his, "except
" she hesitated, knowing that she was beyond the point of no return, and momentarily terrified of what she was about to do. "
Except make me love you even more," she finished in a voice that left no doubt about her meaning or her feelings.
He drew a sharp, frightened breath of his own. It was happening so quickly
everything had happened so quickly
and the circumstances had been so traumatic. The old, cynical Giles was ready to say as much, but the Rupert Giles who had allowed Olivia back into his lonely, Buffy-less life, who had taken the risk of exposing himself to ridicule and worse, by singing at the Espresso pump, out of sheer frustration with the woman in front of him, wasn't ready to destroy the tiny, precious connection that had formed between them, yet.
Instead he searched her face, her eyes, trying to see the truth. And was shaken to the core to see in her face what he'd never once seen there when she looked at Riley. His gaze softened, his heart swelling. She was as vulnerable and as exposed as she had never allowed herself to be with the other men in her life, since Angel.
Buffy trusted him not to hurt her
trusted him that much.
"I've never stopped loving you," he said very, very gently, knowing only the truth would serve. "And I've wanted you since I saw you walk onto that dance floor at the Prom."
Buffy's eyes grew very bright. "I
I never knew. I wish
I'm sorry I didn't know. I must h-have seemed such a bitch l-last year
n-not to mention incredibly slutty. I"
But he was in front of her, his thumb brushing her tender lips, his gentle voice whispering "shh," and turning her legs to jello again.
"You were growing up, growing wiser," he said softly. "I hated it, but I understood. Do you remember what I told you about my own youth?"
She nodded and her eyes grew bright with emotion. He did understand
"I wanted to do everything
be like everyone else who goes to college. I've wanted to be normal for so long
and I thought
I thought it was finally happening."
He nodded. "But you knew, as I did, that it could never truly be, and that made you all the more angry, all the more rebellious
and ultimately separated you from the rest of us."
"And you from your family," she added sadly.
He let his fingers slide across her cheek so that his palm cradled it. "But we both grew up," he whispered and the moment grew charged, so charged that neither could move, nor look away from the other.
For a few moments at least, it seemed neither could breathe, either, and then Giles' gaze softened and sparkled and he began to bend his head very slowly.
Buffy decided she was having a heart attack, but didn't care, every nerve ending in her body screaming as his face stopped only millimetres from her mouth. Without hesitation she slid her arms around his neck and groaned as his mouth covered hers, felt him tremble as they merged, the kiss deepening and crying out to something deep within each of them.
It went on almost forever, until they simply had to surface for air, but only far enough to fall into each other's embrace, holding each other like two souls finding each other after years of searching.
"Don't ever leave me," Buffy whispered against his hair. "I love you so much
I've always loved you." She felt his arms tighten and closed her eyes. "I don't ever want to live without you."
"Never," he told her. "How could I when I have never loved anyone or anything the way I love you?"
Buffy drew away. "Then why
?"
He frowned, holding her in the loose circle of his arms. "Why what?"
She coloured brightly. "I wasn't supposed to tell. Girl talk. Willow told me you almost went away."
Giles looked staggered for a moment. "Willow wasn't supposed to tell either," he said darkly.
"Girl talk is sacrosanct," Buffy told him, "and besides, she made me swear that I wouldn't be mad, that I wouldn't say anything to you, even before she told me."
"And were you
mad?"
"Furious. I wanted to come and beat you senseless. Except, I kind of understood it a little better than Willow did. She kept saying she needed lots of hairy eyeball
I wish I knew what that meant
and that you were more family than her parents ever were. I know Xander feels the same way
but they don't really get it. They don't really get either of us. They never have. They don't understand our kind of 'alone,' or why we sometimes do stupid things. They just
don't understand
"
Giles looked at her in surprise and nodded. "But I knew, and I
I couldn't do anything. It was so damned difficult
being your friend, and yet
and yet being separated by convention, by propriety. Sometimes it was just damned ridiculous. I was the only one who knew what you were going through, and yet I simply had to stand and watch, far too often. It almost killed me at times, seeing you with
others
waiting for them to reach out in ways I knew they never would, or could. It wasn't even as though I
I just wanted to
help. I-I loved you, but I didn't want you then, the way I do
" He trailed off, self-conscious again.
Buffy's lip trembled. "I'm sorry," she whispered again, almost inaudibly. "Giles?"
"Yes, love?"
"I want you to kiss me again."
He grinned. "I think something can be arranged," he murmured and drew her very close, finding and covering her mouth with his again, the kiss this time long, sweet and tender.
When they separated, Buffy's cheeks were glowing almost as much as her eyes.
"I love you," she told him again, and smiled with such joy that Giles was taken aback by it.
He'd never seen her look that way for anyone before
Hurt, grieving, alone, pining, even wanting, especially with Riley
but never, ever like this.
"I've waited such a long time to hear you say that," he whispered and drew her close.
She reached up and touched his face, then smiled again. "Whiskers," she observed. "I thought there were whiskers."
He chuckled.
"Can I tell you something?" she asked, unexpectedly serious again.
He nodded.
"I haven't said that to anyone since Angel." It was a confidence, and Giles knew immediately that it was costing her to reveal it to him. "I-I thought you should know."
He took her face in his hands and smiled. "Thank you," he said, and brushed her lips with his. "I'm very glad you told me."
"About the whiskers?" she teased.
"Yes, about the whiskers," he growled and kissed her harder, only to have her kiss him back with even more enthusiasm.
When they broke apart both were breathing heavily.
"Food," Buffy gasped. "I should get us food, and soup for Mrs McAllister."
Giles, just as short of breath and equally as
flustered
let go of her. "Yes. Food." He looked around the room for the first time, mostly because of the slight pall of smoke in the air. "Y-you do that and I'll see to the fire."
Rhiannon McAllister stirred as soon as Buffy entered the room with food and water for the dog, which leaped up and fell upon it with all the gusto of the ravenous.
"Soup?" Buffy asked softly.
The other woman nodded, seemingly far more lucid now. "I must be all right. I'm starving." She looked at her water pitcher, which was almost empty. "I'm afraid I've been awfully thirsty too. Could
could I ask you to help me? I need to go to the bathroom," she asked awkwardly.
With Buffy's strength it was hardly an issue, despite what was obviously a twisted knee, and the bad strain to the woman's swollen right ankle. Far too late to strap it
When she was settled again, Buffy filled her in on the condition of all the animals and asked if there was anything else they should do.
Rhiannon shook her head slowly. "No. Nothing. Not this year. I-I was hoping
" She trailed off and bit her lip.
"Your husband?" Buffy asked gently.
"Things have been tough for a while. He got a job that takes him on the road a lot. I thought he might come home for Christmas. He said he would try to be home yesterday
but the storm
"
Buffy looked away. She knew too much about men and jobs that took them away from their families.
"You and Mister Giles should help yourselves to the food in the refrigerator. I can't thank you enough for your help. At least we won't starve," she said wryly as the wind rattled the windows with a howling gust.
Buffy smiled. "Thanks. We'll keeping checking the phone. You should rest. I'm sorry I can't get you something better for the pain."
The older woman cocked an eye at the bottle beside the pitcher. "You'd think from their advertising campaign that I'd be dancing around the room by now," she observed dryly and they both chuckled.
Just then Rusty returned from where Buffy had fed him in the bathroom to touch his nose to his mistress's hand before curling up next to the bed, on the thick carpet, again.
Buffy smiled and promised soup shortly, missing Giles already.
He was waiting for her at the bottom of the stairs.
"Miss me?" she asked, stopping two from the bottom, making her almost head to head with him.
He took her in his arms and kissed her thoroughly. "Does that answer your question?"
"Perfectly," she purred and grinned contentedly. "Did anyone ever tell you, Mister Giles, that you have great arms?"
He chuckled and lifted her down to his level. "Not in so many words, no."
"Well they are," she told him as they headed for the kitchen. "All strong and manly."
Giles pushed open the kitchen door. "I would have thought you'd had far better examples of strong, manly arms, than mine," he teased back.
Buffy turned, suddenly serious. "They weren't. Not like
" She stepped into his embrace again. "It's like
your arms just want me. Their arms wanted me to want them. I was supposed to be there for them, make things all right for them
all of them, even Angel. He
he said he wanted to take comfort in me
a-and Parker
we know what he wanted me for
" Her expression grew hurt. "And Riley
Riley
"
Giles closed his arms around her as the hurt radiated outward from her. "You don't have to talk about it, if you don't want to. It's obviously still very painful."
"I didn't love him, Giles. I couldn't even say the words. I needed him
I wanted him
to make it all right, to make things
normal, but I didn't love him. A-and I think he knew
that's why he
"
Giles looked up at the ceiling. "Granted, it was difficult for him, but no one ever said that it was mandatory to fall in love in every relationship one is going to have. It would, perhaps, have been fairer to tell Riley the moment you realised how strongly he felt about you, but it wasn't your fault that you didn't grow to have the same feelings for him as he obviously does
did
for you."
He looked down again and met her troubled gaze.
"Did you tell Olivia?" she asked softly.
If he was disturbed by the question, he didn't show it. "Not
not at first. Not in so many words. I love Olivia
as a friend
and she loves me
but she has a boyfriend in Milan, another in London
an ex-fiancé in New York, with whom she is on excellent terms. Her life is not lived on the same terms as most other people. Her work means that she is almost never in the same place for more than five or six weeks at the very outside. She has learned to live
and love
within that frame of reference."
Buffy searched his face. She knew him. "And you didn't mind
that you weren't the only one?"
He met her gaze, and she saw the truth before he spoke. "I would have
" he said quietly.
"
If you were in love with her," Buffy finished.
He smiled at the concern in her eyes for him and nodded. "Shall we leave this fascinating discussion for the time being and forage for something nourishing?"
"Sounds like a plan," she agreed and reached up to brush his lips with her own. "You don't mind if we do that every now and then though, do you?" she grinned.
He chuckled. "Not in the least. In fact I insist upon it. Now let's see what's in the refrigerator."
A cursory inspection of both refrigerator and freezer revealed much Christmas fare, as well as two bottles of wine, exotic fruit, pate, and smoked salmon, obviously bought in preparation for the return of the prodigal husband...
The larder produced crusty bread, an extensive array of packets, cans and home-bottled fruit and jam and jellies, a rack of root vegetables. A large box of pickling onions and bottles of vinegar explained the jars Mrs McAllister was retrieving when she fell.
Giles raised his eyebrows, then went and lifted the wall phone from its cradle. It was still dead. They both moved to the window to look out at the un-abating storm. Only the wind had eased slightly. The snow was still tumbling down in the darkness.
"We're lucky we've still got power," Buffy observed.
"Indeed," Giles agreed soberly. "We won't be back in Sunnydale for Christmas at all, I'm afraid. Even if the snow stops by morning, the road will be impassable. And we may even have to wait until Spring thaw to come back for Sowi's talisman, the way things are going. I don't like the chances of finding anything resembling a cave with the 'Marking of Kyrroth' on it, up here, after this."
Buffy smiled slowly. "I guess it means that Mrs McAllister won't mind what we eat, as long as we replace everything when the weather clears."
Giles grinned back. "My thoughts exactly."
Rhiannon McAllister had made short work of canned soup from the pantry, bread, and some of the smoked salmon from the refrigerator, arranged in thin slices on a roll. She also bade them help themselves to anything they wanted, as Buffy had anticipated. Not having eaten for many hours, they needed no second invitation.
They settled back in the living room, at Buffy's suggestion, on the carpet in front of the fire, with the picnic they'd assembled, including a steaming bowl of the left over soup, and bread, some of each of the brie, pate, salmon, rolls, and fruit, accompanied by one of the bottles of wine.
When they were done they were both glowing, from both the fire and the wine. Sleepy and content, Buffy had moved around to sit in front of Giles, leaning against his chest as they sipped their last glasses of chardonnay and watched the flames dance on a new knot of tree root right in the centre of the hot coals.
"Pretty how the flames keep changing colour," Buffy mused.
"Mmm," Giles agreed, deciding that technical explanations were not required. "Very pretty," and kissed the top of her head as naturally as breathing.
"We're going to make a tradition of doing this," Buffy murmured contentedly. "You've got a great fireplace in your apartment."
She felt his chest move and heard the chuckle. "Which is sadly underused due to your appallingly unsuitable weather," he pointed out.
Buffy frowned. "Maybe we could get Willow and Tara do a cold spell sometimes, just for Sunnydale
or maybe even just for your apartment?"
He made a suitably squashing sound. "Magic is not for such frivolous use, as you well know. There will be days for this
and they'll be all the more special for their rarity."
Buffy turned and snuggled into his chest. "Like you," she sighed happily.
Giles grinned again and closed his arms around her. "Indeed. Exactly like me," he told her, tongue in cheek.
It was well after midnight before they cleared up and scattered the dying coals from the fire before heading for the stairs.
Buffy had never felt so content, relaxed and happy in her short life. "How are your bits and pieces?" she asked apropos of nothing.
Giles gave a great bark of laughter. "I beg your pardon?"
Buffy turned crimson. "I was thinking about the snap frozen bits, potty brain
although I suppose that counts too
" she added mischievously.
"Buffy!" he growled good-naturedly. "My bits are fine. I was very fortunate all round. Fortunate you were here to find me, and even more fortunate that what you found wasn't already irrevocably frostbitten."
They reached the landing and Buffy turned to him, grinning. "My good fortune too," she teased. They gained the top floor and Giles was still chuckling to himself. "You're incorrigible, Miss Summers."
"Of course I am," she agreed, opening her door, then sighed and looked pitifully at the child-sized bed. A split second later a glint danced in her eyes. "Goodnight
and Merry Christmas, Mister Giles."
He moved across the hall and enveloped her in his arms before kissing her very satisfactorily. "Merry Christmas, love. Sleep well."
As her door closed behind her, Buffy muttered, "I intend to."
Giles had just settled in the big bed and was about to turn out the bedside lamp when his door opened, not giving him long enough to be startled before he saw Buffy's beautiful face.
"Something wrong?" he asked immediately, then swallowed as the head that was poked around the door, with its freshly washed and apparently, dried, cloud of blonde hair, was followed into the room by a body in a beautiful turquoise nightgown, just transparent enough to show the outline of her breasts and the turquoise g-string underneath.
He cleared his throat. "Um
di-did you borrow that from Mrs McAllister?" he stammered.
Buffy shook her head. "I bought it for myself after Riley
left. I wanted to do something wild. I brought it because I thought we'd be staying in a hotel
and I wanted
well, just call it a little self-indulgence
" she finished awkwardly. "You don't like it? Too much?"
Giles cleared his throat. "On the contrary," he said hoarsely. "You look beautiful, Buffy."
She grinned engagingly. "Did anyone ever tell you how cute you are when you're doing tousled and flustered at the same time?"
He coloured even more. "Not in recent years, no. Nor has anyone appeared in my bedroom looking like a goddess at two in the morning." The wind gusted and rattled the window. "Especially in a snow storm," he added dryly.
Buffy produced something from behind her back. It was a small, wrapped parcel.
"I wanted to give you your Christmas present," she said playfully, her tone provocative.
His eyes flashed and he smiled. "Ah, so it's not all a plan to avoid having to sleep in the cot?" he teased. "In that case you'd better get your own gift from my bag over there."
Her face lit up. "You brought one for me too?"
His mirrored hers. "Of course, silly girl. It is Christmas, after all."
In seconds she'd retrieved the somewhat larger parcel and climbed onto the bed.
Giles smiled and stroked her arm as she settled near him, then frowned fiercely. "You're freezing. Why didn't you say something?"
"Being cold doesn't exactly go with being sexy," she pointed out, turning her parcel around and around while he took his more sedately.
"It doesn't go, period," he growled and lifted the covers. "Get in, now. The electric blanket is still on low."
She was under the covers and feeling the warmth of the electric blanket seeping into her frozen legs when she realized exactly where she was, and with whom, and suddenly became incredibly self-conscious again.
"O-open yours first," she prompted, trying to sound casual.
Giles, who had been making far too much of examining the wrapper while Buffy slid into the bed along side of him and moved across so that she was close enough to lean against him, began to undo the paper.
Fully expecting it to be some item from his own shop, or Buffy's usual fare of handkerchiefs, aftershave, tiepin or budget cufflinks, he was not prepared for what he found.
As he lifted the gold chain from its box he said quietly: "open yours, Buffy."
Puzzled, Buffy swiftly opened her gift, and lifted the lid inside the wrapping. The pretty floral box contained two separate gifts.
One was the perfume she'd been hinting loudly about for weeks, but the other was a small velvet case. It contained a small, silver antique cross on a chain that looked just as valuable. She picked it up very carefully to look at the subtle filigree, and the tiny but stunning sapphires, three in all, inlaid in the centre shaft.
When she looked up again, eyes glistening, Giles was watching her, still holding the gold chain she had given him, the small but heavy gold crucifix hanging at the end of it. It had taken her from the end of the previous summer to pay it off, but she'd done it. The idea had been borne when she realized he was serious about the magic shop, the memory of what had happened to the last several owners sharp in her mind, and galvanized when Giles surprised her with her very own work-out area.
The emotional separation from Riley had been coming for a long time, but the unconditional love and care with which Giles and Xander had crafted that gift just for her, finally crystallized something she'd been unable to grasp since Angel had deserted her.
True love was unconditional. Everything else was irrelevant. All of her relationships had lacked that one fundamental
They were all conditional, in one form or another.
"It's
beautiful," she whispered, the emotion in her voice describing far more than just the attractiveness of the piece.
He looked a little self-conscious, half smiled, looked down then looked up again. "It was my grandmother's. It's been locked away since my mother died. I-I was going to give it to you when
when you turned twenty-one, but since we fought Adam, I've had an overwhelming desire to give it to you sooner. I-I can't explain
but I've always wanted you to have it."
Buffy blinked, flicking moisture out of her lashes, and nodded toward his hand. "Mine isn't an antique, but I wanted
you bought that damned magic shop
and I can't always be around when you need me
"
Giles' hand closed on it, emotion evident in his own face now. He understood, and what it meant was even more precious than the gift itself.
When Buffy realized how moved he was, and that he really didn't know what to say, she put her gift down and took his, unclasped it and slipped it around his neck. When it was clipped she looked up, their mouths just millimetres apart.
Giles reached around her and picked up her crucifix. It felt cool against her skin. She shivered, both from the sensuousness of the metal and the warmth of his touch as he worked the old clasp very gently.
When he was done they were still in almost exactly the same position. Neither of them moved, only the sound of their breathing punctuating the suddenly charged atmosphere.
It throbbed as Buffy very slowly allowed her forehead to rest against his chin, her breast rising and falling faster with each breath.
"Tell me I can stay," she whispered and heard the rasping intake of his next breath.
Giles closed his eyes. It was sweet torture being with her like this, so soon
so very soon.
"I want you more than I want to wake in the morning," he breathed, "but not here, not now. It's not our home, or our time, but I don't want you to go either
" He tilted her chin up and kissed her mouth very gently.
At the same time, he reached across, moved her gift onto the side table and turned out the light, before drawing her into the warm circle of his arms and sliding both of them under the covers.
Neither of them knew just how tired they were, until they woke the next morning exactly as they had gone to sleep, Buffy still curled in Giles' protective arms, her head still on his chest, under his chin.
Woken by, of all things, rooster crow, they both stirred at the same time and blinked at the amount of light in the room.
Moments later the significance sank in. Buffy blinked. "It's stopped," she croaked.
Giles was squinting at the open curtains. "Thank God," he muttered. "We may even have an outside chance of getting out of here after all. Depends whether snow ploughs are going to be needed or not."
Buffy turned her body and wriggled up far enough to kiss his mouth. "Why would you want to plough snow?"
He gave a good-natured guffaw. "Not plough. Push it off the road so that traffic can get through," he explained. "And a Merry Christmas to you too."
Buffy blinked. And immediately felt at her throat. "Merry Christmas, Rupert," she said softly, fingering her precious gift. "From me and your Grandmother."
For a few moments Giles was very still. "I like the sound of my name when you say it," he told her eventually, his voice a shadow of its normal self.
Her blue grey eyes searched his. "But something's wrong?" she asked carefully.
He shook his head and smiled slowly, his eyes, his tone charged with the strength of his feelings.
"Something
something is very right. I can't, quite, believe"
Buffy covered his lips with her fingers. "Believe," she told him. "Believe that I love you, and that this is how it's always going to be from now on." When their lips met again, it was as two burning fires merging into one inferno of passion.
"I know," she breathed whimsically, when they finally broke apart, both breathing heavily and fast. "N-not here, not now
but you are in so much trouble when we get back to Sunnydale.
Giles trailed a finger across the soft skin above the bodice of her nightgown. "We both are," he growled as she shivered
and not from the cold.
"Time to check on our host, see to the livestock and start breakfast," he said, without removing his fingers from the inner curve of her breast.
Buffy held his gaze as her own fingers deliberately slid over the thigh of his pyjamas and came to rest provocatively where it would disturb him the most.
"Do we hafta?" she asked huskily, her eyes dancing.
"Yes," he squeaked, cleared his throat, and repeated, "yes. You know very well we must, minx." And breathed very strangely as her fingers trailed over the area in question, before being withdrawn. "Now," he added in a strangled voice, for good measure.
"Spoilsport," she complained. "I'll check Mrs McAllister. You check the livestock. I'll meet you out there when I'm done."