Beneath You
by Jerry
In "Beneath You", written by Doug Petrie, we revisit the debris
of last season's relationships, and perhaps get a bit of a feel
for where they may be headed this time.
First, though, we open in Frankfurt, in some sort of club, with
blaring techno-music. A young woman, dressed in punk garb and wearing
a bright pink wig (we'll call her Sydney, although her real name
could be Lola), is fleeing the robed figures last seen in Istanbul
in last week's episode. Like her unfortunate Turkish counterpart,
Sydney puts up quite a fight, but still winds up on the wrong end
of a knife. As she dies, she says in a voice clearly not her own,
"From beneath you, it devours."
Then we discover that the whole scene, and perhaps by extension
last week's as well, was one of Buffy's Slayer dreams (Remember
those? It's been over two years). Buffy tells Dawn what she saw.
"There's more of them out there. And they're going to die."
From there, we cut away to a peaceful looking Sunnydale street.
As ominous music builds, some sort of burrowing tears through the
ground. We're not on the WB anymore, so this probably doesn't mean
Bugs Bunny missed the right turn at Albuquerque. It looks like we're
in for a homage to "Tremors" (or, less likely, to "Caddyshack").
After the credits, We're down in the Sunnydale High basement, where
Spike is stalking a rat. He's muttering, William-like, about lack
of breeding and etiquette (while stalking a rat, mind you). He says
he's not ready yet, though he doesn't say for what. The basement
starts to shake, seemingly from an earthquake, but more likely from
the mystery burrower. Spike freaks - "Make it stop!".
Dawn, Buffy, and Xander are on their way to school for Buffy's
first day on the job. Dawn is downright bubbly at first about having
Buffy around, but soon makes it clear she doesn't want Buffy mingling
with her friends and making her social life any more awkward than
it already is. Xander gushes about how lucky the kids are to have
Buffy there, and waxes nostalgic about high school. Sure, he admits,
it was hell, but at least he was dating. Buffy and Xander both bemoan
their dating lives (Dawn gets put in her place when she suggests
they try not dating demons), though neither seems to be even vaguely
considering dating the other.
Buffy is shown her desk by Principal Wood. He tries to explain
why he hired Buffy despite her utter lack of qualifications. There's
something he's not telling. Of course, Buffy's pretty cute, so his
hidden agenda could be less sinister than it appears. After some
awkward efforts at humor by Wood (apparently, "the boot, the bat,
and the bastinada" isn't even funny when you find the one girl who
knows what a bastinada is), Buffy leaves him to go check out the
school.
It turns out that Buffy's idea of checking out the school is looking
for Spike. She makes the effort, but doesn't find him.
Over in England, Willow is sitting wistfully in the doorway of
Giles' house. Her bags are packed, and Giles approaches to tell
her that her taxi is ready, but she's reluctant to leave. She claims
her instincts are telling her not to go back to Sunnydale. She's
got some decent-sounding Hellmouth related fears, but what she really
fears is that her friends won't want her back. You can tell she's
mostly over the whole homicidally evil thing because of her penchant
for lapsing into Willow-babble. Giles notes that no matter how long
she stays, she'll still eventually have to go home, and there are
no guarantees what reception she'll get. "You may not be wanted,"
he tells her, "but you will be needed." He eventually gets her to
go.
Back in Sunnydale, a young woman (Nancy, we'll learn) is out walking
her dog at night. As she turns her back for a moment, the disappears
into a hole that suddenly appeared in the sidewalk. A second later,
she's dragged toward the hole herself by the leash. as she reaches
the edge, a large creature breaks through the sidewalk right in
front of her. Looks like "Tremors", after all. She turns and runs,
and soon runs right into Xander.
Cut to Nancy in Buffy's living room, where she recounts what happened
and is surprised to be believed. Xander's obviously interested in
Nancy, but joking about a woman's dead dog is generally a poor pickup
line. Buffy and Dawn both relate the account of the worm-creature
to the "from beneath you it devours" line from her dream, which
would suggest something really nasty. When Dawn suggests rounding
up the gang, Xander notes that the three of them are the gang now
(Anya having apparently been de-ganged over the summer). Suddenly,
however Spike shows up. And all of a sudden, he looks like Spike
again.
Buffy doesn't really know how to react to Spike's sudden appearance.
Xander does - he's unsurprisingly hostile (and really has no reason
not to be). Spike tries to explain away his craziness in the basement
the week before, which leads Xander and Dawn to angrily confront
Buffy for not telling them that she saw Spike. Buffy and Spike go
off into the foyer. Spike says he won't try to apologize, but he
does want to help with the Big Evil he can feel brewing. Buffy looks
conflicted - like she should just hate Spike for what he's done
to her, but finds her feelings a lot more complicated.
She decides to let Spike help. Back in the living room, she decides
they should go in pairs. Ordinarily Xander would probably object
more strenuously to Buffy going with Spike, but he's got other things
on his mind, and is content to take Nancy home. He's also eager
to refute Nancy's belief that Buffy is his girlfriend, which he
wouldn't always have been in the past. Dawn grudgingly accepts that
she'll be staying home and doing her homework. As they are leaving,
Dawn coldly informs Spike that if he ever hurts Buffy again, "you're
going to wake up on fire".
As Buffy and Spike approach the scene of the worm-attack, she remains
unsure of what to make of him. She asks what happened, and he attributes
his former craziness to the ghosts in the basement, not willing
yet to come clean. He asks her why she didn't tell the others she
saw him, and she can't really answer - I think she didn't want to
talk about him because she didn't know what to say or how to feel
about him.
Their hands touch briefly, and Buffy flashes back to his assault
on her, bringing back her resolve. She forcefully reminds him that
he tried to rape her, and that they are no way, no how getting back
together. Spike says that's not what he's after - he doesn't ask
to be forgiven, but he's willing to help because he's got nothing
better to do. He says he's changed - Buffy agrees, but she doesn't
know into what. Buffy says she knows Spike has a secret. He says
he does, but as they're not friends anymore, he's not going to tell
her. He heads off, leaving her confused and conflicted.
At Nancy's apartment, Xander is about to make his goodbyes. Nancy
asks if she can call him, so things are looking up for the Xanman.
Then the floor starts shaking. The worm burrows after them as they
run down the hall, eventually bursting through the floor, menacing
them a bit, and leaving for reasons only a worm would understand.
Nancy comments on having a monster chasing her just after she got
rid of her abusive ex-boyfriend, Ronnie. "You know the feeling you
get when your ex is ruining every part of your life, and it just
doesn't stop?", she comments in describing Ronnie. Xander says he
does, which seems like a radical interpretation of his breakup with
Anya. But thinking of Anya gives him an idea of where the worm-monster
may have come from.
At the Bronze, Anya (the hair looks better, but the clothes still
need some work), is chatting up a client. Just as Anya's about to
make the woman's boyfriend literally spineless, Xander and Nancy
approach ("Oh, penis!", is Anya's reaction). Buffy and Spike are
with them. They confront Anya about whether she turned Ronnie into
a giant worm. She says she did, because that's what Nancy wished
for. Nancy wants to know who Anya is, and Xander admits she's his
ex. Spike tries to talk to Anya, and it comes up that they slept
together. Nancy asks if any of them haven't slept together. Xander
and Spike exchange awkward glances. If turns out Nancy only wished
for a regular worm, but apparently Anya embellished a bit in an
effort to restore her reputation for nastiness. She says they wouldn't
understand her situation, being they're all so ... human (she seems
surprised to find herself using that as a putdown). Spike says he's
not, he's a demon just like her. Then Anya really looks at him for
the first time. She's amazed, and seemingly excited, and it's clear
she can tell he's regained his soul. "I can see you," she says,
and wants to know how he did it. Spike isn't ready for anyone to
know, and as she continues to pepper him with questions ("it shouldn't
be possible"), he slugs her to end discussion. As Anya's lying on
the ground, Spike hits her again, and she responds by kicking him
halfway across the Bronze in a display of demon super strength that
we've never seen before, and that I'd think would have been useful
against Willow. She's in gameface, and threatening to kick Spike's
ass, and he goes into gameface too. Before they can mix it up, Buffy
steps in. "You haven't changed, Spike", she says as she belts him
in the face. He hits back, seemingly more comfortable resuming his
old, bad persona. He taunts her about their relationship, she beats
on him for doing so, and he seems to feel like he's back where he
belongs. At least on the surface.
Nancy runs away, and Buffy goes after her, leaving Xander to try
to persuade Anya to reverse the spell. Outside, Nancy is pursued
by worm-Ronnie. She runs down an alley and tries to flee up a fire
escape, which starts to come loose from the building. Buffy arrives,
running along the rooftops. Spike is behind her.
Back at the Bronze, Xander is working on persuading Anya. It's
clear she's under fire from D'Hoffryn, and reversing the spell will
make it worse. Anya explains she's only in this bind because of
Xander leaving her at the alter. Xander points out (correctly but
a bit too self-righteously) that at some point that ceases to be
an excuse. Anya got herself into the situation, and she'll have
to get herself out.
Buffy manages to swing over and carry Nancy to the ground before
she falls. Worm-Ronnie bursts up through the ground yet again, and
Spike starts to beat on him/it. As he runs it through with a rebar,
the spell is undone, and the worm turns back into Ronnie, with the
bar through his shoulder. The chip, the guilt, or both are too much
for Spike to maintain his facade any longer. "Help me!", he wails,
but Buffy figure's the guy with the stab wound needs her help a
bit more urgently. He mutters to himself until Buffy tells him to
go away. Spike envies Buffy's ability to just walk away from the
situation he's in - that's not an option for him anymore. Besides
his guilt, there seems to be someone or something in his head -
perhaps Lurky gave him a "gift with purchase". "From beneath you,
it devours", he tells Buffy, clearly channeling the Really Bad Thing
for the moment. Then he tears up and runs away, leaving Buffy confused
and conflicted.
Xander and Anya show up. Nancy is appalled by what Anya did, and
leaves. Xander notes that his dating prospects with her are dim.
Anya notes that she's in way more trouble than Xander can comprehend.
Buffy realizes she needs to find out about Spike, and runs off.
Buffy is wandering through the graveyard, and spies a church that
has sprung up like the way Springfiled manifests a casino or a dam
as needed.
She enters the church, and is surprised by Spike. He's shirtless,
having cast off the costume that he thought would allow him to resume
his place in the world. Buffy's unsettled by him, and asks for no
more mindgames. Spike answer is "no more mind". She wants to know
what happened to him. When she tries to touch his chest, he pulls
back - "no more touching!" He questions whether he is flesh, or
wants to be. Then he tries to accept that role. "Get it hard. Service
the girl", he says, joylessly unzipping his fly. He remembers the
place Buffy would allow him in her life before. She's horrified,
and throws him across the room. "Girl doesn't want to be serviced",
he mutters. "There's no spark - ain't we in a soddin' engine?" The
spark is the soul, and I guess he sees the church as seat of the
soul, as an engine might be home for a spark. "Did you think you'd
just come back and - be with me?", Buffy asks. "First time for everything,"
he answers, clearly believing he hasn't been with her yet despite
all the "servicing". From Buffy's perspective, it's easy to see
how she'd be horrified by all this, but she does hang in there and
try to find out what happened to him. He tells her he tried to find
the spark, the missing piece that would allow her to love him. "I
can't... not with you looking, " he says as he scurries into the
shadows. He confesses to dreaming of killing her, and Buffy grabs
a stake. He talks of "holding myself, spilling useless buckets of
salt over your - ending." I think he means tears, but I've seen
smuttier interpretations, and I can't say they're wrong. "Angel
- he should have warned me" he says, finally giving Buffy the Rosetta
Stone that allows her to figure out the whole situation. "I wanted
to give you what you deserve." She realizes his anguish is, while
not her choosing, all because of her. "They put the spark in me,
and all it does is burn." Buffy realizes he's got back his soul.
"Bit worse for lack of use," he notes.
Buffy wants to know how he did it, but that's not important to
Spike. He wants to know if it's what Buffy wanted. Or if it's "what
YOU wanted", as he shouts to the heavens. He's got voices in his
head, the voices of his victims, and I think a few genuinely external
voices as well. "Him, and it, the other - the thing. Beneath you."
Buffy is staggered - she never asked for this, and she wants to
know why he did it. "Why does a man do what he mustn't for her?
To be hers. To be the kind of man who would never-" He starts to
walk towards the alter. "And she shall look on him with forgiveness,
and everybody will forgive, and love, and he will be loved." As
Buffy looks on in tears, moved and confused by the magnitude of
this enormous gesture she didn't seek but does have to deal with,
he drapes himself, smoking, over the cross. "Can we rest now, Buffy?
Can we rest?"
-- Jerry
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