Title Love Untied
Rating PG
Warnings (if applicable) NA
Summary You’ve redefined
your definitions of pain.
The summer between S3 and S4
of Btvs.
Disclaimer: They belong to
Joss, evil being that he is.
I’m just playing with his
toys.
Letting go, it’s so hard,
The way it’s hurting now,
To get this love untied.
~
Washing of the Water by
Peter Gabriel
Pain.
You expected a lot of things
when you walked away from
her. You expected to miss
her. You expected to grieve
for her smile, her laughter
and the way she looked at
you.
You didn’t expect pain. At
least not like this.
Not the kind of pain that
rips your soul. The kind of
pain that wakes you up in
the middle of the night
drenched in a cold sweat and
sends you cowering to the
corner to whimper like a
whipped puppy.
And you consider yourself an
expert on pain. Just how
much the human body can
take. Just how much the
vampiric body can take.
You’re testing the limits
with this pain.
You didn’t expect to become
a vigil ante so soon, but it
drives back the memory of
her just enough that you can
no longer taste her blood in
your mouth, feel it in your
veins.
And that presents its own
sort of pain.
You are relentless from the
moment the sun goes down
until the moment it comes
back up. And it always comes
back up.
Except for a one cold winter
morning.
Sometimes you wonder if they
held back the sun to spare
you, or because they knew
you would leave. They knew
the kind of soul rending
pain it would cause. So much
more pain than Hell can
produce.
And you should know. You’ve
been there.
You fall into bed,
exhaustion breaking you
down. You don’t want to
sleep. You know you’ll find
her in your dreams and spend
the day wrapped in love,
hope and sunlight.
Only to wake up.
Pain. You consider yourself
an expert on it.
~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~
~ The way it’s hurting now
To get this love untied.
Pain
You focus on every single
breath just to get through
the next. You expected it to
hurt. It started hurting the
moment he told you he was
leaving.
You’ve redefined your
definitions of pain. That
wasn’t pain. That was
numbness. Emptiness, a part
of you gone.
You’d like to go back there.
Please.
Pain digs its claws into
you, hanging on your heart
and jerks you through each
day. Otherwise, you know
you’d never get out of bed.
You could write a script for
your days, right down to the
conversation. Breakfast with
Mom. Choke down some orange
juice. Keep up the bright
smile so no one can hear you
scream.
Only they would.
If they’d listen.
Kicking ass is comfort food.
You remember telling Giles
that, not long ago.
The graveyards are empty and
tourism on the Hellmouth is
way down.
The word is out.
He hurt you. And to chase
that pain away you’ll kill
everything that starts with
d-e and ends with m-o-n.
It doesn’t really make the
pain better. It isn’t
comfort food like chocolate
ice cream. You thought it
would. You thought you could
put his face on every demon
you kill and somehow it
would make the pain better.
You don’t want to kill him.
You want him to not be gone.
“Buffy, why don’t you go
visit your father? I talked
to him last night. He’d love
to have you for a month or
so.”
Change of location. That’s
all it will be.
And you won’t have to listen
to your friends tell you
it’s better this way.
What are the odds? You
think. What are the odds
that you would find him
standing here in one of
hundreds of Starbucks in Los
Angeles? Of course odds
haven’t ever meant that much
to either of you. What were
the odds that a slayer would
fall in love with a vampire?
And he with her? And yet you
wouldn’t be here if both of
you hadn’t beaten the odds.
Sometimes you hate beating
odds. You wish your life
were less about miracles and
impossibilities, more about
normal.
“An-Angel.”
It’s not a question. You
know it’s him. No one else,
nothing else causes this
much pain. This much hope,
this much happiness or this
much heart ache.
“Buffy.”
Why does he have to say your
name like that? Why can’t he
just say your name? It’s not
a sacrament or a prayer.
It’s just a name.
But not when he says it.
“What are you doing here?”
You ask.
“I…this is where I
came…after I left.” He
stuffs his hands in his
pockets and shuffles his
feet. You know from
experience it’s a gesture
that means he’s getting
ready to run.
You nod. “I’m here visiting
my dad. Not that he’s here.
The company needed him in
Seattle. I didn’t know-I
wouldn’t have come.” You
would have gone the other
direction, as far from him
as possible. At least that’s
what you tell yourself. Part
of you knows you’d like to
be here, to watch, to lurk
like he used to.
“No. It’s-I’m sorry…that
he’s in Seattle. Did you…if
you wanted,” he flounders
and glances up at the
Starbucks sign. “Can I buy
you some coffee?”
“You don’t have to. I can
turn around. We can pretend
we never saw…” you trail
off, knowing you can never
pretend. You wonder if he’s
gotten better at pretending.
Maybe he was always good at
pretending. He just didn’t
with you.
“No. I’d like to.”
~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~
Conversation is still
awkward and stilted with
coffee between you. She
fiddles with the plastic top
on her cup. You miss real
coffee mugs.
“How have you been?” You
finally ask. There are so
many other things you want
to ask like are you seeing
anyone new?
“Fine.” She gives you the
smile that works on her
friends and her mom.
It doesn’t work now. You
know she’s trying to keep
from screaming. It’s not
your problem anymore.
You wish it were.
“You?” She finally asks.
“Alright. I’ve got an
apartment. I’ve been…there
are lot of…I’m still
fighting, Buffy…demons and
vampires I mean.”
It’s important that she know
that. It’s important that
she knows she changed your
life, gave you your life.
“Oh,” she nods. “Good,” she
manages to choke out.
And you’re reminded that you
were supposed to fight
together. Be strong.
Together.
But you remember the sixteen
year old girl that wanted
normal so bad. And you can’t
take that away from her. You
won’t be that guy, even if
she wants you to, but you
never imagined it would be
so difficult to not be that
guy. Falling in love with
her was easy. Hurting her
was even easier. You never
imagined that getting this
love untied would be so
hard.
“I’m sorry, Buffy-” You need
to apologize for hurting
her. You know there will
never be enough apologies
for that.
She stops you mid sentence.
“Can we just not? I’m trying
so hard not to die inside
and anything you say is just
going to make it worse.”
She walks out the door.
And you’ve never wanted to
go after someone so much in
your entire existence.
Instead you wait a long
time, making sure you won’t
run into her again. In a
city of 9 million people
what are the odds you’ll run
into one girl again?