Wes fidgeted, listening to Giles clatter around in the kitchen. His stomach was doing flip-flops and not only from the nausea. The urge to turn and look gnawed at him, but he fought it, keeping his eyes trained on the fire.
It was nothing, he kept telling himself, repeating it as if the mantra would become a shield against further embarrassment. Still, his mind kept throwing up the image of Giles' lips, so close they'd have filled his vision if he'd have let them.
"Here you are."
Wes jumped at the sound of Giles' voice, his mind having wandered off into the memory.
"Did you doze?" Giles sat next to him, a cup of tea in either hand. Wesley accepted his without ever meeting the other man's gaze. "I'm sorry if I startled you."
"I wasn't sleeping," Wes replied after a grateful sip at his mug. The warmth of it did more for him even than the taste, which was pure heaven after so long without proper tea. He could feel it chasing away the cold inside him and that made him drowsy.
"But you will be soon," Giles chuckled, settling back onto the couch, one arm stretching over the back.
Wesley almost choked when he felt that arm brush him, just slightly. He recovered quickly enough to send a reassuring look to Giles, who'd straightened immediately, worried.
Worried . . . about him?
"Swallowed badly," Wes muttered, leaning back. His eyes felt so heavy, but he really shouldn't fall asleep here. It wasn't polite. Wasn't he supposed to stay awake?
"Here," Giles took the warm cup from his hands. Wesley opened his mouth to protest, but the older man cut him off. "You can have it back as soon as I've looked at those cuts. You'll be falling asleep soon and I want to get them taken care of first. Is that all right?"
Wes nodded, not sure he had words.
"I'm just going to fetch the first aid kit."
Again, Wesley nodded. Why was Giles doing all this? Why be so nice to him? The man didn't even like him. He could have just as easily dropped Wesley at the hospital and washed his hands of the whole affair. So, why hadn't he?
"Here we are," Giles said as he returned, probably attempting not to startle him once again.
Attempting to avoid the other man's eyes, Wes found his gaze stuck on Giles' hands. He'd looked at them before, knew they were large, weapon roughened. He'd never let himself stare though. Now, he couldn't help himself. He watched each muscle flex, each tendon pull tight, each scar bunch and pull at the surrounding skin. There were many scars, though Wes didn't know what put them there. He wanted to ask, to know something about this man whose fingers brushed his lips gently, dabbing at blood and who knew what else. The words wouldn't come. His mind felt hazy and it was so much easier to close his eyes, to relax into the strong touch and pretend.
"Wes? Are you falling asleep on me?" The words were vague things, buzzing in his ear, but easy to ignore. A sigh followed, but there was no anger in it and so Wesley continued to ignore. He felt as if he were sinking, but if felt good. His body no longer seemed so cold and he was comfortable, more so then he'd been in ages. The ache remained, throbbing in the background, but not enough to disturb his exhaustion.
There were hands on him, unbuttoning his shirt.
"No!" Wesley sat up with a start, eyes snapping open. Mr. Giles had jerked back, falling on his ass and staring at Wes with bewildered eyes.
"Wes? Are you all right?" The use of the nickname only further disoriented him. Mr. Giles had never called him that, was always formal, if not polite.
"Mr. Giles?"
"Rupert."
It took Wesley a moment to process that, confused by the rapid change from sleeping to waking. The abrupt movement had set his head to pounding again and his mind spun like a top. He realized how hard he was breathing and tried to calm down as he blinked and looked around the room, trying to orient himself.
"Wesley."
His eyes snapped to Mr. Giles at the sound of the older man's voice, his mouth forming words just as reflexively. "Yes?"
There was that look on the other man's face again, the one given only to the children when they laid their problems on his doorstep. Wes had watched the ex-Watcher talking to them, wondering if they knew how lucky they were to have . . . anyone look at them with such compassion and caring. He knew he must still be asleep then.
"Is this a dream?"
One of Mr. Giles' eyebrows lifted, a bemused smile lightening his face. "I don't believe so. I doubt you'd be so injured if either of us were dreaming."
Wesley didn't know what to say to that. It was true, but then it wasn't. Sometimes pain carried through into dreams, even if it wasn't enough to wake you up when you were drained, when everything was dark and too cramped to move.
"I need to see how bad it is, Wes. Wesley?"
Mr. Giles voice dragged him back to the moment and for that, alone, he was grateful.
"What?"
"Your chest. I can see the bruising around your collar . . . it looks as if someone tried to strangle you." The last was ground out, Mr. Giles' jaw clenching around the words.
Wesley blinked, trying to follow the change in tone as much as the words themselves. "Someone choked me? You want . . . what?"
"I need you to take off your shirt," Mr. Giles sighed, standing to come and sit beside him on the couch. Heat rolled off the older man's body and Wesley began wonder what his skin would feel like, only to quickly cut off that train of thought, turning his mind to the words.
"Oh . . . uh, y-yes of-of course."
Wesley flinched at the first prod, but forced himself to be still when Giles winced and apologized. He'd have liked to get a look at the damage for himself, but didn't have the energy to get to the bathroom mirror.
"Is-is it bad?" He couldn't keep the words inside any longer. He had to know the extent of it.
"You're black and blue," Mr. Giles commented, voice rough and hoarse.
I must be a mess, Wes thought, closing his eyes so he didn't have to see the anger or reproach on Mr. Giles' face. He already knew he should have done better, already knew that he was a pathetic excuse for a Watcher. He'd been told often enough and didn't need Mr. Giles to confirm it.
"I . . . I didn't even see them," he murmured, mostly to himself. It wasn't an excuse, he knew that, but he only wanted to try to explain before the older man could get too worked up.
"I know." The soft comfort in Mr. Giles' voice took him by surprised. Wesley opened his eyes to find the other man watching him. Wesley's breath caught in his throat as he met the man's eyes, nearly choking him when Mr. Giles laid a reassuring hand on his shoulder. "We'll find them. They won't get away with this."
Wesley could only stare, realizing for the first time that the ex-Watcher wasn't angry with him.
"You, you don't think that I . . ." unable to finish the sentence, Wes looked away, his eyes finding their way to the other man's' hand. Wes' stomach knotted, realizing that Mr. Giles hadn't moved his other hand. It still rested on his shoulder, kneading gently.
"That you what, Wes?"
That nickname again. Hearing it said in such a low, intimate way had his heart beating fast, even as he frantically tried to convince himself it was nothing, meant nothing. It hurt to get his hopes up; or rather, it would hurt worse later.
"I should have been able to protect myself," he answered without thought, listing the things he'd done wrong. "I should have been more aware. I should have--"
"No," Giles interrupted, voice so intense it drew Wesley's eyes back to his face. "This isn't your fault."
Four words. Just small words, but strung together in a way that made his breath catch, made tears prickle at his eyes.
"I . . . I should have--"
Mr. Giles' lips cut off his words this time. The man closed in so quickly that Wes didn't have time to panic. Out of nowhere, it seemed to him, there was a firm pressure, soft lips rubbing against his own.
A whimper escaped him when the ex-Watcher's tongue slipped out, licking at him almost urgently. Wesley opened under the onslaught, his body reacting quick and fast, his heartbeat thudding in his ears. Giles' tongue snaked into his mouth and Wesley moaned, his muscles relaxing. He melted against the older man, half-disbelieving and half-desperate for any touch at all.
Then Mr. Giles was pulling away and Wes heard himself whimper at the loss.
"I-God, Wes, I'm so sorry," the older man muttered before fleeing to the kitchen.
Wesley stared at the wall, shocked, unsure. Finally, he blinked, heat rising to his face as he tried not to cry. The last thing he needed was to cry, and in front of Mr. Giles no less. As if he hadn't embarrassed himself enough for the next century.
"Here."
He jumped at the sound of the older man's voice, sending pain jolting along his bruised torso.
Mr. Giles handed him a fresh cup of tea and sat on the couch once again, this time putting far more distance between them.
He's probably afraid I'll want to kiss him again, Wes thought with a self-deprecating snort. Still, he . . . he had to know what he'd done wrong. Having been handed something he'd wanted for . . . a long time, he had to know why it had been taken away.
"Was . . . I, uh. What was wrong with it?"
"What?" Giles looked at him as if he'd just asked why the moon was crimson. "What was wrong with what?"
Perhaps he wanted to pretend it didn't happen?
"With," Wes looked away, staring into his teacup as if it held the answers to everything. "With the kiss . . . did I . . . was I . . ." he didn't even know how to finish the question.
"What? Oh, Wesley," Giles scooted closer to him. "Look at me."
He didn't particularly want to, but all the same, Wes raised his gaze to meet Mr. Giles'. The other man's expression was soft and searching, so caring . . . he wanted to believe it was for him, but he knew it was because he was injured.
"I shouldn't have kissed you," Mr. Giles confused him, saying that, but at the same time reaching out to lie a gentle hand on his cheek. Wesley found it hard to concentrate on what the other man was saying, found it hard to think with those rough fingers rubbing at his jaw line. "You're hurt, and dazed. You have a concussion. It was wrong of me . . . which doesn't mean I wouldn't do exactly the same thing if I had to do it over."
"You'd . . ." Wes stared, leaning his head into that touch, taking a risk, but barely caring anymore. "You'd kiss me again?"
"If you weren't injured? I'd do a hell of a lot more to you than kiss you." Mr. Giles' voice and eyes were frank, blunt even, in a way that Wesley simply couldn't doubt. His cock hardened at what he was hearing, setting up a throbbing ache inside him. Of course, the feel of Mr. Giles' . . . Rupert's hand on his face did nothing to impair his reaction.
"I've . . ." he shouldn't say it. He should take what he'd gotten, more than he'd ever expected, and be happy with it, savor it and pull it close on cold nights, but . . . "I've heard that kisses can be healing to bruises and scrapes."
One of Rupert's eyebrows rose, a smile lifting lips that Wesley now knew were just as soft as they looked. The older man leaned in, so slow Wes thought he might die of the waiting. Then that mouth was pressed to his again. The kiss was little more than a fleeting brush to his split lip, but had Wesley's cock twitching.
Next Rupert was kissing his face, so sweet and perfect that Wesley could have died a happy man. There was a flicker of tongue as Rupert worked over his jaw line and Wesley moaned, hips thrusting up embarrassingly when Rupert's mouth reached his chest.
"Mmmm," the man rumbled against him and Wes let his head fall back onto the sofa, his breathing harsh and rasping. "So responsive," Giles was murmuring, lips rubbing against Wesley's sensitive skin with every word, "so very hot for it." Rupert's hand slipped onto his thigh and Wes arched into the touch, ignoring the dizziness that warned against too much movement. "So eager."
Wesley groaned, intentionally biting the split in his lip and welcoming the pain, as it kept him from coming and embarrassing himself.
Rupert pulled away again, moving to meet Wesley's eyes.
"Have you ever been with a man, Wes?"
There were no words. Fearing the older man's reaction, his laughter, Wes shook his head, but said nothing.
Rupert moved closer, bending one leg under him so that his body pressed along Wesley's side and his lips were right at Wes' ear. Wesley closed his eyes, shivering at the feel of Giles' breath against his neck, drinking in the man's low murmurs.
"I'll change that for you," he whispered, husky and hoarse. "Show you how good it can be." Rupert's hand brushed Wes' stomach, making the muscles contract and pushing a startled breath out of Wes. "Kiss every bruise and scrape. But you need to rest first. Need to sleep and heal. How does that sound, Wes?"
"Like heaven." Wesley felt a blush rise in his cheeks at his own words, but he refused to take them back.
"That's a good boy. Relax. Let yourself go. Sleep and I'll watch over you." Giles pulled Wesley up against him, his back to Rupert's front, and Wes moaned. He let his head fall back on the older man's shoulder with a fidgeting smile. When there was no reproof, he relaxed, breath moving quick in and out of his lungs.
"Do . . . do I have to sleep?"
"Yes. I'm not about to take you while you have a concussion."
Wesley shivered, gasping. Giles rearranged himself beneath him and suddenly Wesley felt the man's erections pressing into the small of his back.
"I . . . I don't know if I can sleep . . . like, um, this."
"I think you'll be surprised at just how easy that will be," Giles whispered in his ear, followed by a few words in Latin that Wes realized as a sleep spell, something easily deflected had he actually wanted to. "You'll . . . you will still be here when I wake up . . . right?"
"I'm not going anywhere, Wesley. I promise you. I'll be here to wake you up, every hour."
Yup, that's it for Warmth. Next, comes Heat. ;-)