Part 1
Hey all! Here it is, the next chapter in the Do Your Best and Don't Worry saga, Hell Bent.
Disclaimers:
Willow, Tara, all the Scoobies, belong to Mutant Enemy and are not mine. (But they're fun!) ER people belong to John Wells and Constant C. Everything else is my own creation.
Warnings:
Hell Bent is darker than Do Your Best. There is violence and profanity scattered about and it's not too nice.
Feedback:
Yes please! Good, bad, I'm the one with the keyboard.
W/T alerts:
There is some angst still going around, but it does get resolved by the end of Hell Bent. And yes, the will get back together, just not right away.
Author's notes:
a)There is an interplay in most parts between the now and stuff from the past. The past is all Jay and the clans. The now is Willow, Tara, and the rest of the Scoobies.
b)The story starts out elsewhere, but the bulk will take place in Sunnydale.
c)The title, Hell Bent, comes from the the song, 'Hell Bent' by Kenna. (It's awesome!) Some snipits of the song may make their way into the story, or be used to frame different parts.
Summary:
A few weeks after Chicago, Tara and Jay visit their home and discuss the future.
“How’s your ice cream?” Jay asked, looking over at Tara. The pair were seated outside of the local Dairy Queen in their small Minnesota hometown.
Pine Nook seemed even smaller these days. The paper mill had closed in ’99, taking most of the jobs out of the immediate area. Farming was still the biggest business, but the slow economy and lure of the city had taken many of the pairs’ childhood family and friends out of town. In this reality, Tara’s farther, after being laid off from the mill, moved to Fargo and drove a truck for his brother’s milk delivery business. Donny, her only sibling, ran a bar in St. Cloud, where her cousin Beth was a waitress. On this trip, Tara and Jay were pretty much on their own.
“As good as always,” Tara smiled. She looked down the main street to one of the two stoplights in town. It was almost four, but rush hour was non-existent in a town of just under two thousand people.
“Cleo’s mom’s touch still lingers,” Jay replied.
“I can’t believe they finally got her to retire,” Tara bantered back. “She was the manager her for like forever.”
“A true business adept,” Jay chuckled. “It’s still the best DQ in the state.”
Tare looked at Jay. It had been almost a month since the pair had returned to Pine Nook to bury the body of Jack Reed. Jay called County General several times a day to check on Kim’s status, but there had been no change. The charming doctor’s injuries had healed quite well, but she still hadn’t woken from her coma. She was now in a private room, off of all life support, surrounded by family and friends, except for Jay.
“Have you called today?” Tara asked.
“This morning. No change.” Jay took off her sunglasses. “Ask. You’ve been itching to for the last week.”
“I just don’t understand,” Tara said slowly. “How can you be here when she’s there? What if she wakes up? What if she takes a turn for the worse? Don’t you want to be there if”
“No.” Jay’s tone was flat. “She won’t wake up until all of this,” Jay waved her hand in the air, “this prophecy crap is over.”
“How do you know?”
“I just do.”
Tara scowled at her friend. “That’s not an answer Jay. You’re not a seer. I talked to Max the other day and he didn’t see anything like that.”
“He can’t see anything in this area, one way or another. That’s the fun of dealing with Demy. He can cloud almost any vision. Or block it entirely.”
“Demy?” Tara asked surprised. “Are you two best buds now?”
“Demetrious is too long to say. Since we’ll be talking about him a lot in the near future, I figure it’s time to simplify. Plus, it’s a bitch to spell.”
“Back to topic. How do you know about Kim?”
“I saw her, right before we left,” Jay remembered. He face became a mixture of love and grief. “I snuck into recovery. Shirley, one of the nurses, owes me a couple of favors. Anyway, I could tell her vitals were strong, but there was a shadow surrounding her essence. I should have had Max or Claude check it out, because it was fading as I stood there. The shadow, not her essence.” Jay added quickly. “After a few minutes, it was gone. But I knew that somehow Demy had a hold of her and that either I win and she wakes up or I don’t.”
“And he takes her,” Tara added sadly.
“That’s a possibility,” Jay reached for the table and put her sunglasses back on. “So that’s why I’m here. Away.” Jay looked at Tara. “I know myself. If I sit there, looking at her trapped in her own head every day, I’ll do something rash. And we don’t need rash right now.” She paused, and then added. “I’m sure that Willow would be able to sympathize with my plight. Given what happened between you and Glory.”
Tara thought for a moment. Glory had been part of this Tara’s experiences, not hers. She quickly ran the cliff notes version of what happened in her head.
“I suppose so,” Tara replied. “But, technically that didn’t happen to me. That happened to your Tara.”
“But you know what she did for Tara?” Jay asked. “That was some trick.”
“She’s very powerful.” Tara paused. “It’s weird. So much of this stuff is the same. You, Pine Nook, Cleo, Jay, Sunnydale. Even the bad parts, like mom’s cancer, the abuse, and the pain of dying.”
“That part is never fun,” Jay said sagely.
“But some stuff, BIG stuff is so different,” Tara shook her head. “ Moving to California freshman year of high school never happened. The Slayer gang is totally different here, and the entire Glory experience. It’s like I’m watching a TV show in my head about it.”
“And Willow?” Jay prompted.
“That,” Tara collected her scattered thoughts. “That’s the best and worst part of it all. I, Tara, we loved, she loves, I mean I love her so much, but the betrayal. Taking her, my, memories after what happened with Glory. Part of us never totally got over that.”
“But the bond won out.”
“Yes it did. And this Tara’s final days were so filled with joy and love. It warms my soul remembering, watching them in my head. I never had anything like that where I was.”
Tara paused again. Jay just looked at her, waiting, not judging.
“But she was there, her spirit, watching what Willow did after she died. Just for a little while. Enough to see her fill with rage and grief. And she knew. She knew what would happen and it chilled her, even in heaven. It chilled her to know that Willow could be so evil.”
“And you loved her anyway.”
“Yeah,” Tara gave a small smile. “She did. She also knew that Willow would stop before it got too bad. She had faith that Willow’s humanity would win in the end.”
“And she was right,” Jay smiled warmly. “So what about you? Where does that leave you and Willow.”
“I don’t know,” Tara replied honestly. “I want to be with her, but I’m afraid.”
“Her dark days are done,” Jay tone was confident. “She tasted it like I did and she knows it’s not for her.” Jay looked at Tara closely. “It’s not the evil, is it? You’re afraid of losing yourself in someone so much you forget who you are.”
Tara looked away, back at the town’s main intersection.
“Perhaps. I wasn’t the shy wallflower that this Tara was, Jay. You taught me how to stand up for myself, despite what Dad and Donny did to me after mom died. Even before I met Kendra and Jonathan, I knew who I was and where I was heading.”
“Your so strong Tara. My Tara was too, she just didn’t realize it as quickly as you did. If you can take this huge leap of faith and come to this dimension to take over the life of this Tara, then don’t you think you’ll be able to be with Willow? To be with her and still keep your sense of self? Or are your worried that your feelings just echoes of this reality’s Tara and you don’t think you’ll be capable of feeling that way on your own.”
“That’s the rub, isn’t it? Given what I know, objectively about Willow, I think that I could be with her long term. But, you’re right. I need to feel the way I do about her on my own, not based on someone else’s memories.”
Jay gave Tara a teasing smile. “So that kiss in the hallway, that was all based on memories?”
Tara blushed slightly. “That was emotion.” She slapped Jay playfully on the leg. “And how did you see that? Weren’t you busy worrying about other things?”
“I was, but I’m still observant.”
Tara looked down at the empty paper wrapper that had once held her dipped cone. “Are you ready to go?” She asked.
“Next week,” Jay replied. “I’m going to Sunnydale to relieve Billy Joe. Do you want to come with me or return to Australia? I know the Twins miss you. And you still need more training that I can’t provide.”
“Um, I just mean head home from the Dairy Queen but okay,” Tara replied, caught off guard. “And I’ll let you know about where I’m going in a couple of days.”
“Fair enough.” Jay replied standing. “Let’s head home. The Farscape half season cliffhanger is tonight.”
“Geek.” Tara laughed.
“We all need a little escapist entertainment every now and then.” Jay smiled.
____________________________________________________
1991
“Oh fuck,” Jay hissed. “Why does it have to be zombies? I hate those fucking things.”
“Gee, I hadn’t noticed.” Billy Joe replied sarcastically.
“Shut up.” Cleo turned and looked at the pair. The trio was dressed in black combat gear with a wide assortment of modern and ancient weapons, hiding on a water tower ledge overlooking one of the largest zombie farms in Africa.
Cleo looked through her night vision binoculars, surveying the large open area filled with wandering zombies between them and their goal. Across the field was the main house where one of the most feared witch doctors on the continent lived. Their mission was to take out the zombie master, a man known only as Bob.
“And what’s with that name? Bob?” Jay scoffed. “Who’s scared of someone named Bob?”
“Jay,” Billy Joe chided. “Will you focus please? This is a big mission for us.”
“Yeah,” Jay replied.
“Team two, are you in position?” Cleo spoke into a small walkie-talkie.
“Yes.” Claude replied. “Max, Devon, and I are in position behind the house. It looks clear of zombie traffic.”
There was a crackle of static and a new voice spoke. “Excellent.” The voice said. “Proceed with caution.”
“Okay out.” Cleo and Claude replied.
TBC....
Endnote:
I made up the town of Pine Nook, MN. If there is such a place, it's purely coincidental.
"...and if you've got no other choice, you know you can follow my voice, through the dark turns and nosie of this Wicked Little Town..."--Hedwig and the Angry Inch
Edited by: hermitstull at: 9/25/02 11:05:16 am