Title: In the Arms of the Dead
Fandom: Sleepy Hollow
Pairing: Ichabod/The Horseman
Author: ZzoaozZ
Feedback: zzoaozz@wireco.net
Rating: Adult Only (sex, gothic atmosphere)
Disclaimer: The characters unfortunately do not belong to me. They were created by Washington 
 Irving and totally remodeled by Tim Burton No money has changed hands and this is entirely for my 
 own amusement.


With Katrina and young, master Masbath settled in with family in New
York, Ichabod felt secure in returning to Sleepy Hollow. The nightmares had grown worse since his
return home and had become intertwined with dark fantasies he could not understand. The
only thing that he knew for certain was that if he did not find a way to lay his ghost to rest, he
would never sleep in peace again.

The carriage jounced along a track too pocked and intermittent to be
called a road. The constable tried with limited success to nap in the confined and uncomfortable
passenger compartment. As sleep reluctantly claimed him, the dream began again.

The western woods surrounded him. He was running. Pain lanced through his
side and his breath was a ragged litany of half sobs. The mist swirled around him
caressing him with damp, cold hands, the hands of the dead. The thunder of hoofs grew closer and
closer behind him until the ground seemed to shudder beneath their assault. Then he was in the
clear and the Tree of the Dead loomed before him. He reached the darkened slit that served as the
doorway between this realm and the pits of Hell. 

The Horseman was upon him, he could feel the fiery breath of his mount
on the back of his neck.
He scrabbled desperately at the tree. His clawed fingers drew rivulets
of blood from the trunk, but it did not open. There was no escape for Ichabod Crane in the arms
of death. The whistle of a blade slicing the winter air mingled with his own scream as the
world went dark.

Then, in the manner of dreams, he was elsewhere. Total darkness
surrounded him. He stumbled about seeking anything solid, any point of reference in the vast
echoing darkness. He knew that he was in danger of losing something, perhaps himself, but strangely
there was no fear. Between one heartbeat and the next, he was no longer alone. He could hear the
shallow breathing of another in the darkness and he knew that it was Him, the Hessian, the
Horseman. He fled deeper into the darkness until, at last, he collapsed to his knees gasping for
air. A strong, cold hand brushed the side of his face in an oddly tender gesture. He looked up
into the demon's eyes...

Ichabod woke, barely smothering the scream building in his throat. The carriage had jolted to a bone-crushing stop.
The driver was shaking him roughly in an obvious hurry to be away. He nodded at the man and swung down stiffly. He had forgotten to pack anything except the book of white magic he carried always in his breast pocket. He had no more than cleared the coach when the horses bound away accompanied by the snap of the long cartman's whip. Sleepy Hollow spread out before him just as it had the first time he had seen it. It was a small but prosperous village like so many others, only the feeling was different. No kids played in the town commons, running to see who the carriage brought. The few people who were out barely glanced at him before going quietly about their business. He had vanquished the murderess among them and the demonic ghost she had commanded, but these people had looked into the heart of evil that night in their picturesque little clapboard church and found it a reflection of their own greed and desire. Some things were never meant to be exposed to the light of day and the darkness of a human soul is one of those things. It could not help but leave an indelible mark on man for he is a frail creature bound by beliefs and values to which he clings like a drowning man for stability. It is impossible to look openly at another knowing that they have seen your own true face and you their own darkest desire. All these thoughts had crystallized in the Constable's mind just the night before as he lay awake desperately pursuing sleep that would not come. It was madness of a sort and it drove him to seek his own truths in this place where all he had known as fact had been stripped away. Ichabod checked into the single boarding house in town without speaking or being spoken to. The silence made him nervous, what he intended to do made him plain old scared. Only a stubborn need to understand, a burning desire to know, prevented him from turning on his heels and taking the next coach back to New York. He rested from the difficult journey as well as possible. He did not eat as his stomach was feeling decidedly rebellious. At the blacksmith, he borrowed a horse without explaining why. He saw with a sense of foreboding that it was Gunpowder, the heavy-boned mare he had ridden the first time he had seen one of the Horseman's victims, the first time the Horseman had pounded past him intent on another's head. The sun was already sinking below the horizon when Ichabod headed down the overgrown path into the western woods.
As in his dream, the mist swirled about him, touching him with damp little fingers plastering his dark curls against his neck. The woods were quiet almost as if they held their breath waiting for something or someone. "Stop that right now," Ichabod berated himself aloud, "or you'll frighten yourself into fainting at shadows. " His scornful voice seemed very loud in the darkness. All too soon the trees began to thin until one tree alone stood before him. Its twisted and tortured trunk loomed over him. Pepper balked refusing to walk under those grasping branches. "I don't blame you." Ichabod whispered dismounting awkwardly. Cautiously he circled the massive trunk until he reached the Hessian's grave. The long straight sword still marked the sight. Time and nature had repaired the damage he had done most of a year ago. The ground looked undisturbed. Reaching out hesitantly, Ichabod touched the sword wrapping his fingers around the hilt, the hilt HE had touched, the sword HE had used to lop off the heads of his enemies. It felt warm and alive in his hand. He drew back with a small gasp and looked at the weapon as if it might turn to a snake and strike out at him. It did not move so much as a hair. "I imagined it, that's it. I just imagined it. My hands were colder than the sword is all." As soon as he could control the fierce pounding of his heart, he turned to the tree trunk itself. The place where the doorway had opened seemed to draw him. He half expected to see a skeletal hand protruding from the bark, but there was nothing but smooth wood.He reached out a trembling hand and stroked the trunk. It seemed to pulse slightly as if some ancient heart beat sluggishly pushing blood and other darker fluids through its ancient veins. He felt sure that if he pressed his ear to the massive trunk he would hear that heartbeat like hooves in the distance. He placed both hands on the spot from which he had seen the Horseman emerge, the place where everything he had ever believed in had been burned away and cast to the wind like so much ash. How long he stood like that with his hands and forehead pressed to the cursed tree, Ichabod could not have said. He could tell it had been a long while because he was stiff and shivering with the cold when heard the sound behind him. The sound was unmistakable, the low creaking of leather tack. Gunpowder was tied to a tree on the other side of the clearing. Someone on a horse was standing silently just behind him. Summoning every ounce of courage he possessed, Ichabod Crane turned to face the impassive and motionless form of the Horseman, and fainted. Consciousness returned slowly. The first thing he became aware of was heat. He was lying on a pallet of furs and cushions. A heavy quilt covered him. He opened his eyes a crack and found himself staring into a fire burning in a massive fireplace. The flames burned steadily and eerily without a sound or a flicker . The logs beneath the flames glowed red but showed no signs of being consumed. The light from the fire illuminated and warmed a small area, yet, he had the impression that this room was endless. There was a small sound behind him and Ichabod turned with some reluctance. The Hessian sat quietly on the floor
watching him. He had removed his leather armour and cloak and was clad in a loose dark shirt. He was waiting motionlessly. His long sword lay across his lap. The dark blade shone in the firelight. Gracefully the dead man rose and moved to the fireplace . He stooped and reached back into a hidden corner. Soundlessly, he returned and knelt at Ichabod's side. With exagerated care, the Hessian offered him an aged-looking, pewter mug, handle first. Ichabod took the stein cautiously. It held some sort of broth, perhaps rabbit, savory with onions and other less familiar herbs. The warmth felt good in his hands. Hesitantly he sipped the broth,and when it proved to be quite delicious, drained the cup. The food was comforting as well as fortifying,He did not even jump when the Horseman took the cup from him just as silently and replaced it on the hearth. The Horseman returned to sit close beside Ichabod's feet facing him with the sword resting between them and the fire. The firelight softened his face and made his grey eyes glow with an inner light like a snow sky in the dead of winter. The Horseman's voice when it came was as heavy and cold as that same sky. His English was passable if heavily accented with German. "Why did you call me." Crane curled a little onto one side in order to face the apparition and thought a while before replying with a question of his own. "Why did you answer." To his credit, his voice only wavered a little. "You returned what was taken from me; you gave me my freedom when you could have commanded me." The Hessian reached up to touch the thick scar that ran around his neck as a silent reminder of his past. Choosing to be simply honest Ichabod replied, "I couldn't sleep. Your presence haunts my dreams. Since I left here, I have felt compelled to return as if I had left something important unfinished. I don't know who I am or what I'm supposed to be anymore. I feel trapped, afraid. I can't bear to be near people and I don't want to be alone." He trailed off, embarrased at sounding like a petulant child. A strange half-smile touched the Hessian's lips fleetingly. "Do you fear me?" "You frighten me, of course, but somehow it is something in me that I'm afraid of, not the idea of you chopping off my head. It's as if I've lost myself. " Ichabod struggled up to a sitting position but could not look at the Horseman. He closed his eyes and pressed his thumbs into the corners. Dark circles stood out even more for his pale complexion. He had not had a single night of uninterupted sleep since that terrible night so long ago. A cool hand on his chin startled him out of his reverie . The Hessian tilted his face up forcing him to meet those stormy, grey eyes. He made contact and was lost. When the human could breath again, he realized the phantom had moved closer without him noticing. Their faces were mere inches apart. His chin was held immobile in one powerful hand. The Hessian's breath was slightly warm against his face. Without willing his body to move, Ichabod found himself swaying closer to his companion. Their lips met and the world outside ceased to exist. The kiss began gently , then the Hessian was over Ichabod pressing him back into his makeshift bed with the weight of his body and the pressure of his mouth. Ichabod met the fierce kiss with a passion that surprised and frightened him. His mouth opened beneath the bruising force. He felt sharpened teeth nip at his lower lip, his tongue. After an eternity the kiss ended and the Horseman pulled him up into a rough embrace against his strong shoulder. He could not seem to stop trembling. He pressed his thin body against the larger frame of the Hessian for warmth and comfort. He buried his face in the powerful neck breathing in the faint scent of pine and peat. After a short while he felt hands stroking his hair and supporting the small of his back. Eventually the soothing motions and heat relaxed him. For the first time in a year, he felt safe and protected. Too many nights of restless fear took their toll. Ichabod Crane fell into a deep and dreamless sleep in the arms of the object of all his fears and confusion.
The Hessian lowered the sleeping mortal back onto his own bed. The boy
was undeniably beautiful. His flesh was as pale as the dead, his hair black as night.His small frame and sharp features made him delicate and pretty as any girl.
The boy took him back to the time he had been alive bringing forth
nearly forgotten memories of riding into some town of beaten and demoralized survivors after thebattle was won and the fields put to the torch. His employers would be spouting theirphilosophy and moralistic ideas in a vain attempt to assuage their conscience, to wash their hands clean ofinnocent blood.
He laughed at their self-delusion. He was a mercenary not just a hired soldier and he enjoyed it. That made him different, colder, a monster and not a leader orconquering hero as they fancied themselves. The fine lords and ladies were only too glad to rush him off after the deed was accomplished, as if they were somehow above him for keeping their own blades clean. He wondered sometimes, who the real monsters were.
He often remained behind in the conquered town until another job came
or he grew bored. He had coin and food. Sooner or later they began to come to him. Men, women and children coming to beg from the very monster that had left them broken and cowering. A hungry person has no pride. That was the one universal truth he had found in all his travels. They had nothing to offer for trade except their flesh and nothing to lose in offering except a life of need and pain they no longer wanted. Sometimes he took one offer or the other, sometimes he just turned away sickened.

This boy had come to him in much the same shape as his victims of so
long ago, but for what reason the Hessian did not know. The pale child, only lately into manhood, had all the moral quandries and questions of those very leaders he despised, but in the depths of his rich brown eyes there was something more, a stark honesty and an innocence tempered with intelligence and curiosity. It had been those eyes that had stilled his blade the first time he had seen the boy, not any binding of the witch's spell. It was the memory of those eyes that had pulled him out of his eternal purgatory and drawn him to the boy's half-formed desires tonight.

He brooded over the sleeping form examining his own thoughts wondering
at himself for bringing the mortal here. He was so absorbed that he actually started when the mortal's voice broke his concentration.
"I don't know your name."

The Hessian glared at the boy propped on his pillows his stormy eyes
giving away nothing. His name was something he'd had not heard or thought of in years beyond counting. He was forced to reach back into the darkness of memories long hidden to grope for the sounds that had once defined him. When he finally spoke it was in a voice heavy with suspicion. "I was called Christiaan when I lived. Now I am only the Horseman."
"My name is Ichabod Crane."
"Why are you here, Ichabod Crane?" his voice was a dangerous growl.
"What do you want? Why should I not send your soul to whatever rest awaits it?" Like a thing alive, the blade leapt to the young man's throat drawing a thin bead of blood and cauterizing it in the same moment. Ichabod felt the fiery metal of theblade bite into his throat just below his chin.
The Hessian's expression did not change by the slightest fraction. He felt the world withdrawing and heard a familiar humming in his ears.
'Not Now!' his mind screamed at him. With an effort he focused on staying aware.
"I won't hurt you. I just wanted to talk to you."

The Horseman's eyes widened. Then to Ichabod's amazement the dark
figure laughed. The sword dropped to disappear in the moment it touched the charcoal
grey floor.
"Hurt me, Boy?" his grin revealed the savagely pointed teeth. "And how do you think you could hurt me? I am already dead."
Ichabod swallowed. "I, umm, well...Maybe I can't hurt you, but Iwouldn't if I could.
Umm, that didn't come out exactly right, did it?"

The Hessian laughed agin, more gently and caught the human's chin as
before, tipping his head back. This time the shifting grey eyes were brighter more relaxed ; they even held a glint of humour. "You dare much, Pretty Child. Perhaps, I will give you what you seek and you shall repay me with what I desire."

Ichabod shivered at the open lust in that gaze. "But I don't know what I'm looking for."
The Horseman trailed one finger across the prominent line of the boy's
cheekbone. "You were a man of science and fact. You believed in what could be seen and felt, and measured. Yes?" At Ichabod's nod, he continued, brushing stray hair back from the youngman's face and tangling his fingers in the dark, silky mass. "You came here looking for a man and found a ghost. You expected a conspiracy and uncovered magic. Am I correct?"
"Yes." Ichabod's voice was a mere whisper. Warm hands seemed to be
everywhere, tracing the curve of his ear, stroking the line of his neck and shoulder, brushing his lips. The low purr of the dead man's voice held him captive as the light touches left trails of fire on his flesh.
"You thought you loved the White Witch, but once the danger was past,
the feeling began to fade." Ichabod trembled beneath his hands. A tear ran unheeded down the mortal's cheek.
"How do you know all that?", Ichabod's voice was hoarse with emotion.
"You knew what you had lost before you came here, before you called me.
What do you seek;what do you want from me, Ichabod Crane?" The heavy German accent turned his name into a thing of beauty andgrace, a thing that could not possibly belong to him. Yet, it held a power over him, it commanded he look into the eyes of the Hessian. Ichabod found himself pinned beneath that gaze.
His body trembled uncontrollably at the touch. Fear and desire raced through him overloading his nerves and filling him with a visceral need that was making coherent thought impossible.
He thought he made some noise then, but he was deafened by his heartpounding in his ears.
He opened his mouth to speak again but demanding lips closed over his swallowing any words he might have formed.

The Horseman tasted of wind and rain and felt like steel and stone.
Ichabod's hands found their way beneath the loose shirt to the flat stomach and lightly furred chest . The flesh beneath them was warm and smooth. Powerful muscles moved beneath the skin. He could feel the sliding of tendons and ligaments as his lover moved down to his neck nuzzling then biting the hollow at his collarbone.

"You're dead, this can't be real," he whispered, wondering who he was
trying to convince.

The Hessian drew back until he was sitting astride the younger man
bearing his weight easily on his knees. His face was flushed and his eyes bright with desire. He grasped the front of the human's shirt ripping it open. Then with the same ease and economy of motion, he stripped away the trousers beneath him. Deliberately he placed powerful, dangerous hands, the hands of a killer on Ichabod's narrow waist holding him pressed to the pallet.

"I AM dead, my pretty boy, yet I live. You live, yet you came here
seeking death." The battle calloused hands moved slowly upward still pressing into the pale flesh.
"Have you found any answers here?" He paused in his upward stroke to tease his captive's nipples until they were hard enough to ache." He shifted forward letting the weight of his body pin Ichabod's erection between them. "Does your body respond so for your witch? Tell me now, what do you want?"

Ichabod moaned thrusting his hips upward rubbing his erection against
the impressive hardness beneath the Horseman's leather pants. "I want you, God have mercy on my soul; I want you." he whispered wrapping his arms around the ghost's neck pulling himself hard against the other's body burying his face against one broad shoulder. Tears ran unheeded into the Hessian's mane of ebony hair. "I wanted you from the first moment I saw you, I need you."

Those words were a release Ichabod had not expected. Fear and confusion
faded into a fierce exhilaration. For the first time since he had originally set foot in Sleepy Hollow, he felt free. This time it was Ichabod Crane who caught the Horseman's face in both
hands and captured his mouth. He tore at the fabric seperating them until the Hessian laughing against his mouth pulled the offending garment over his head. Boots and pants soon followed suit. Ichabod let his hands and mouth wander all over the muscular body. He
had never loved a man before. The hard muscles and coarse hair fascinated him. The knowledge that this man could kill him in an instant without benefit of blade or gun was an unbelievable aphrodisiac. When the Hessian entered him joining their bodies at last, some final, vital wall exploded in pain and pleasure and the world above ceased to be.

 

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