When they first have sex in the episode "Smashed," their passion erupts in a drawn-out fight that tears down the very foundation of the abandoned house they're fighting in.
Buffy's relationship with Spike began gradually in Buffy the Vampire Slayer season 5, but didn't culminate in anything substantial until season 6, when the two shared a kiss after the acclaimed musical episode, "Once More With Feeling".
She gets drunk with Spike, and calls him "a neutered vampire who cheats at kitten poker." After a demon's spell makes them express their emotions in song, and Buffy sings "I want the fire back", Buffy and Spike begin a physical relationship, consummated two episodes later.
Buffy and Spike have sex for the first time since "As You Were", being their first time after he got his soul ("Grave"). The two were last seen together as such in Buffy's imagination in Last Gleaming, and they had slept together in "Chosen".
In Season 5, Spike realizes that he's fallen in love with Buffy and pretty much hates himself for it. He does everything he can to convince him it's not true, but he can't deny it for long. When Buffy eventually learns of it, she's disgusted, which both upsets him and pisses him off.
In "Seeing Red," Spike goes to Buffy searching for forgiveness after having sex with Anya. Buffy is hurt and angry. She tells him she could never trust him enough to love him.
First Kiss: Season 6, Episode 7 (Note: The pair also kissed under a spell in Season 4's “Something Blue,” and Buffy kissed Spike while pretending to be the BuffyBot in Season 5.)
Their true goal is to absorb magic and use it as a weapon. Of course, Buffy and the gang can't allow this to happen. They manage to defeat the corrupt government forces behind the attacks and the camps. All ends well, with Buffy confessing her love for Spike at last.
Making up his mind fairly easily, Spike confessed his love to Buffy and desperately tried to convince her it was real. Drusilla suddenly laughed at him, revealing that she had known all along he loved her as a result of her unique abilities.
In the episode "Surprise", Buffy loses her virginity to Angel, an event which triggers the loss of his soul and unleashes his sadistic alter-ego, Angelus.
Buffy finally told Spike that she loved him — the first time she used the words "I love you" romantically to anyone since Angel —, but Spike replied: "No you don't, but thanks for saying it," and told her to leave him behind.
Why "Earshot" Was Banned From Airing On The WB. On April 20, 1999, a mass shooting occurred in Littleton, Colorado at Columbine High School.
Glory tortures Spike badly, but he refuses to give Dawn up because he knows that it would destroy Buffy. At the end of the episode, the real Buffy pretends to be “Buffybot” to find out what Spike said. After Spike reveals that he did not tell her anything, Buffy kisses him.
The thing about Buffy's romantic love is that it never works out for her. She is powerfully drawn to Angel, and later powerfully drawn to Spike. Riley is a bit of a 'make-do' in between. But her love for Angel is destructive, and her desire for Spike even more so.
Feeling overwhelming affection and sympathy for her, Angel was motivated to start his path as champion and help her in her fight against evil. A year later, he moved to Sunnydale. When reflecting over this, Angel eventually admitted to Buffy he fell in love with her the moment he saw her.
Something Blue (Buffy the Vampire Slayer)
Season nine continues, after issue five's cliffhanger revelation that the Slayer was pregnant, with Buffy deciding what to do about the unwanted pregnancy – the result of a drunken night at a party. Eventually she decides to have an abortion. "I want to do something.
Rupert Giles is a fictional character created by Joss Whedon for the television series Buffy the Vampire Slayer. The character is portrayed by Anthony Stewart Head. He serves as Buffy Summers' mentor and surrogate father figure.
Buffy – a young woman whose mystical powers allowed her to battle evil forces – dated Angel during the show's first three series, before she ultimately chose vampire and initial villain Spike (James Marsters) to be her partner.
Spike starts out as a minor character in Degrassi Junior High, but comes into prominence late in the first season, early in November 1988, when she is impregnated by her very first (unprotected) sexual encounter with her boyfriend, Shane McKay (portrayed by Bill Parrott) ("It's Late", DJH ep. 111).
Spike (who goes by different names in a few episodes - Killer for four episodes, Butch for two episodes, and Bulldog for one) is portrayed as an American Bulldog, who is generally amiable and friendly, and a loving father to his son Tyke in several episodes.
Buffy: “The hardest thing in this world is to live in it. Be brave. Live.”