#this is really just me throwing noir slang at the wall lmao
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housewarningparty · 3 months ago
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hyped that you're writing again!
Fuffy (Faith/Buffy) + scrape, rain, dame
(maybe a noir vibe?)
okay lmao i know you've been wanting this for a minute, I hope it satisfies
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Faith's never seen rain like this, not in the entire time she's been in California. And she might be a recent transplant but she's not stupid — this is no regular summer storm. No, this has to be something else. Driving winds, great freezing wet gouts of water gushing from midnight black clouds, like God himself opened a vein. An arterial baptism for the City of Angels, a place so choked in sin that the blood of lamb wasn't cutting it anymore and the Father, despairing, had no choice but to offer his own.
That or Buffy was right and there's a powerful coven at work and they're running out of time to stop them.
Speaking of Buffy—
She's got her hand clamped tight— bruising tight— around Faith's wrist, heels that couldn't be worse for this weather for if they were trying splashing noisily through filthy puddles in the sidewalk as she ran ahead, tugging Faith along behind her.
“Come on, Faith, come on,” Buffy's saying and Faith wonders, dazedly, why she sounds so scared until she feels herself falter on the slippery pavement, shoots a hand out to steady herself on a glass storefront beside her and sees, even through the dark and dim, the bright red streak of blood her palms leave behind.
Oh, yeah. She's shot.
It's a struggle to tear her mind free of the gauzy haze that surrounds it, but when Faith's ears pick up the distant sound of a motor getting less distant by the second, she manages it.
“They're coming back around,” she wheezes, sure that her voice is too pained and weak for Buffy to hear over the weather.
But she does, judging by the quiet curse she lets out, the way she squeezes Faith's hand. “Okay, okay. I know a place. Hang on, okay? Just a little farther.”
Faith would be the first to admit, if anyone would bother to stop and ask her, that in her current circumstances she is probably not the person best qualified to judge her condition. She's biased, in her own way, and being down a few pints of blood is probably not helping. But she's a detective, or at least Buffy has asked her to play the part, so she can do what detectives seem to do in those dime novels she reads from time to time: look at the evidence, draw a conclusion.
Faith + shot + the goons in that old beater coming back around to take another shot at putting the chill on her and it all adds up to one thing: she doesn't have much of a choice about whether to trust Buffy or not or if she wants to keep running after her through all these dark, filthy allies. 
All her life, Faith has been sure that she'd kick off this way someday: running. Running a con, or from the cops or after some dame with a face too sweet and a mouth too pink and inviting for Faith’s own good. Faith knows enough to know she doesn't know exactly what kind of scheme she's let herself get drawn into, but she figures whatever it is, her chances are still better with Buffy than with those hoods and their irons.
So she goes.
And within a few minutes, Buffy is tugging her to a stop in front of a nondescript door in the alleyway of some big brick building Faith doesn't recognize, someplace downtown. Faith, no stranger to running for her life, is a little disappointed that she'd failed to memorize how they'd ended up here, but she figures she can afford to cut herself a little slack tonight, given the circumstances.
She sags, exhausted, knees shaking, against Buffy, no doubt getting blood all over that smart dove gray coat she'd shown up wearing, that Faith had, a few happier hours ago, fantasized about peeling off her. Ruined now, no doubt.
“Sorry,” Faith mumbles, or tries to, because what comes out of her mouth is more like “Shrrrgghh.”
“Shh, it's okay, hang on,” Buffy says, voice a little too frantic to be comforting. She pounds on the door again, again until she finally lets loose an aggrieved sigh and puts her shoulder through it. She makes it look effortless but Faith hears the wood splinter, sees the metal of the steel lock bend like putty.
Everything else happens in a blur. Buffy hauls her through the doorway, down a dark hall until a man… a green man? With little red horns? Intercepts them. He's wearing a plush royal blue smoking jacket and a look of perfect terror but he does as Buffy bids him and ushers them into a sparsely furnished room with a mattress on a metal frame and not much else.
Buffy settles Faith down on the bed, saying over her shoulder to the man, “Sorry about the blood. And your door.”
He waves her off and rushes back out of the room, returning moments later with what looks like a doctor's bag.
“Now, let's see the damage,” he says, sounding far too cheerful for a man peeling her bloodstained shirt up from her skin. “Sorry, darling,” he at least has the good grace to say. “I know this is terribly ungentlemanly of me, but please bear with me now.”
At this Buffy stumbles back knocking into a dresser and toppling a small mirror onto the floor, where it shatters into bits. As if we needed any more bad luck, Faith thinks.
Aloud, she says, “Where y’goin’?”
Buffy shakes her head, voice quavering. “I'm squeamish. I can't watch.”
And then trips her way out of the room, falling all over herself to leave.
“She'll be okay,” the man says, kindly, warm hands easing her back onto the bed. He produces a bottle, something home brewed but strong that he urges her to sip. “So will you. I'm Lorne, by the way. I promise you're in good hands.”
Faith doesn't doubt him. Life has seen fit to instill in Faith certain skills for survival, one of these being discerning quickly and with good accuracy how much a man with intent to touch her wants to cause pain. There's nothing in Lorne’s hands that reads malice or danger.
No, that thrum of simple minded fear, that prey animal feeling pulsing through Faith's body isn't because of Lorne at all.
It lingers as she watches the door Buffy disappeared from with all the intensity of a rabbit struck still in the brush, waiting for the hawk to pass.
To distract from the pain in her side as Lorne goes to work with his tweezers and alcohol and gauze, Faith recalls Buffy's face. They've had their moments in the weeks since Buffy approached her, asked for her help. Long hot glances and lingering touches, loaded silences and innuendo both. Nothing has come of it, but one of Faith’s other survival skills, honed over the years, has been learning how to tell when a broad wants what she has to offer. And she’s felt that want from Buffy, choked as it is by what Faith had assumed this whole time was an abundance of caution. Maybe she had a secret beau, maybe she’d been burned before, maybe she just didn’t think Faith was worth the risk. But Faith had felt the want in her, before. 
And that was nothing compared to the hunger she saw in Buffy tonight, when they’d finally stopped running and Lorne had exposed the sick oozing wound in her side and she had lurched forward, helpless as a drunk. Oh, she’d caught herself right away, pulled back, a little too far, but Faith had seen it. Had seen the way her mouth went slack before she tightened it to a pained grimace, had seen her nostrils flare, her hands shake, the way her pupils had gone big and black, like a gowed-up dope fiend.
Faith had seen. And so now, she thinks about it like a detective, lining up the evidence. How they always met at night, how Buffy had knocked that door in like it was nothing, the way she was able to lug Faith around like she was made of cotton and air.
By the time Lorne is finished, Faith is exhausted, and slips into a deep, dreamless sleep. She wakes up in the daylight, for Lorne to change her bandages.
“Buffy had to go home,” Lorne lies as easily as he stitches her up. “She’ll be back in the evening.”
They talk a little, before she falls back asleep. “Weren’t you green last night?” she asks.
“Guilty,” he says and explains.
“Demon was my second guess,” Faith says amicably, squinting and tilting her head to try to see past the glamour. No such luck, it's solid work. “First was that I was hallucinating from blood loss.”
She drinks some broth, has a few more nips of whisky, and falls back asleep.
It is indeed evening when Buffy comes back. She’s cleaned up, looking sober and genuinely concerned as she hovers in the doorway.
Faith wonders, for one terrifying moment, how much she still smells like blood. If she’s in danger from Buffy losing it.
Then she thinks, if all Buffy wanted out of her was a quick meal, she could have had it weeks ago. 
“You might as well come on in,” Faith offers, eventually, sick of the silent staring. “You’re lettin’ in a draft.”
Hesitantly, Buffy steps into the room. She shuts the door behind her and pauses until Faith gestures to the chair at her bedside.
Settling down, Buffy asks, “How are you feeling? Lorne says the wound looks good. He doesn’t think it’ll get infected.”
Faith shrugs, regretting it immediately but hoping the pain doesn’t show on her face. “S’alright. Basically a scrape.”
“The bullet went all the way through you and out the other side.”
“A deep scrape,” Faith amends. 
Buffy shakes her head and Faith, goddamn her, feels her breath catch in her throat, despite everything.
“Where you been?” Faith asks, trying to sound casual. “Catching up with the mugs that tried to give me lead poisoning?” 
“No. I couldn’t find any sign of them when I left here last night.” 
“Grabbing a bite?” Faith tries, watching carefully for—
Buffy freezes.
Faith waits.
“Yes,” Buffy answers slowly. “I had something to eat.”
“I could tell,” Faith says. “You look steadier than last night.”
She waits another beat while Buffy looks at the floor.
“So, who was he?” Faith asks.
There it is. Buffy’s gaze snaps up to meet hers. “The man who tried to shoot you? I told you I didn’t find any trace of him.”
“Not him.” Faith says, then, despite the pain, she leans forward, holding catching Buffy’s eye and holding it. “Who’d you eat?”
“I didn’t hurt anyone,” Buffy says in a rush. “On the square. I didn’t.”
“C’mon, drop the veil,” Faith says. “I know what you are. A vamp, in both senses of the word.”
“I didn’t hurt anyone,” Buffy insists.
Faith frowns. “So, what? Thralls? Heard about a guy back east who paid hookers for it. That your bag?”
“I… There’s this butcher shop���”
Faith rolls her eyes, “Don’t give me that—”
“I mean it!” Buffy practically shouts. “I don’t feed from humans. I swear.”
Faith wants to believe it. She wants it so badly she’s not sure she trusts the feeling. 
“If you don’t, you’re the first bloodsucker I’ve ever met who doesn’t hunt.” Faith says. “So, what’s different about you?”
“I have a soul.” Faith rolls her eyes and Buffy, affronted, cuts her off before she can speak. “I do. Look, it’s a long story and I’ll tell it to you later, but for right now I need you to trust me. This shouldn’t change anything about our deal. You keep helping me, I’ll pay you what you’re owed, and together we save this city from a whole heap of trouble.”
“You expect me to trust you?” Faiths asks, head aching, wound aching, heart aching, and a special new kind of exhausted she's never been before. She wishes she knew how to stop the way her heart still speeds up when Buffy looked at her just like this — big eyed and sincere. “After lying to me?”
“No.” Buffy reaches out, tentatively and lays her hand over Faith’s. “I expect you to trust me after saving your life last night.”
Warmth flows up Faith’s body, from her belly all the way to the roots of her hair. Just like that.
Dizzy over a dame, she thinks, exasperated. A vampire dame. Ain’t I the world’s biggest chump.
“You said it was a long story,” Faith says, finally. “You ending up with a soul…”
“Yes.”
“Well,” leaning back into bed, Faith is careful to let her hand continue to rest under Buffy’s grip. She jerks her chin down toward the patched wound in her side. “As you can see, I got nothing but time.”
Buffy waits a beat, then nods. “Okay. It all started with a man. His name was Angel…”
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