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New Fic: True Gift

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New Fic: True Gift

Postby Patches » Wed Feb 12, 2003 12:57 am

Title: True Gift

Author: Patches

Email: in my profile, please read note in bio.

Rating: R – NC 17 (violence with –potentially- explicit sex in later chapters. Will update warning when necessary.)

Pairing: W/T

Spoilers: Up to Season 5 – “The Gift,” with many alterations and crossovers in the story line from “Tough Love” and “The Gift.”

Feedback: Yes Please! Prefer posted commentary, but if something’s really biting you, feel free to e-mail me. I am always interested in, and encourage, constructive criticism.

Disclaimer: Characters and dialogue taken for this story from BtVS are copyright of the writers and Production Company, ME (and all the rest of the legalese). The alterations and story beyond what is portrayed in BtVS are the twisted musings of my mind. I don’t own anything associated with BtVS and receive no remuneration for this work. And, unfortunately, “The Gift” was written by :joss and since I did use some of his dialogue and story as a jumping off point – ya, he gets a nod.

Magic Note: Magic is a skill (it’s not an addiction), period. Dark magic costs, white magic does not; the darker the magic the higher its cost. Dark magic is paid for after it is used.



Acknowledgements: Dark Magic Willow, first, I offer humble thanks to you for beta’ing for me. This story would be nothing without your guidance, encouragement and sage words. I can’t thank you enough for your insight and thoughtful feedback. You have redefined constructive criticism and taught me that writing is about “show” and not “tell.” Thank you! I too hope it lives up to its potential. To Mary (Queen of Scots) who said, So type and post away, good Patches—I’d love to see it! and gave me the courage to go forward with my tale. For episode transcripts I thank Psyche And finally, to the Tigger of my heart, for putting up with my obsession for writing (especially this story), and encouraging me to follow my dream.



Summary: The Prologue is based on “The Gift,” but you will find some significant changes to timing, setting of events, events and motivations. Some aspects of Season 5 really bothered me and I address them here in this story. A most significant change is that Tara is quite lucid. However, do not expect things to go exactly as they did in the show. Things will be very different in the following chapters, where the angst-o-meter is likely to blow off the scale. Finally, next time this preamble will be shorter, promise :)



BTW – Amy is still a rat. Amy will always be a rat.



)WARNING: This story is very, very dark; angst might be an understatement. Please remember that regardless of what happens, or what is portrayed in the chapters, Willow and Tara will be together, in love at the end. I will take good care of our girls – they’re just going to have a bit of a terrifyingly bumpy journey to get to the blissful ending.



~~~~~~~~



Prologue: Courage:



Giles closed the door of the Magic Shop, shutting out the daylight. “Glory has been busy.” Tara heard the weariness in his voice, saw the hesitation in his step as he walked toward the counter. Had he slept at all in the past two days?



“M-more?”



“Yes Tara, more. Many, many more. But these people are different somehow. They carry that same vacant look, as do all Glory’s victims. These ones, however, seem to move with a ... purpose. Oddly, they are all walking in the same direction.”



Willow’s red hair appeared from behind large stacks of books haphazardly strewn about on the table in front of her. Her face remained hidden. “Purpose? Purpose, as in going somewhere purpose? Like-”



“To a r-ritual,” Tara finished for her.



Giles looked shocked. He removed his glasses and wiped them with the chamois that always appeared out of nowhere. Glasses in hand, he tilted his head back. “Yes, of course, of course. That’s where they would be going. How could I have ... Buf,”



“Hey Willow,” said Xander, “do you realize that Tara-”



“Just finished your sentence for you,” Anya completed for Xander, the two of them happily talking over Giles.



Willow’s whole head emerged from behind her wall of books. She looked into Tara’s eyes. Tara sighed, rested her chin in her hands and sat spellbound by the sparkling green eyes that held her gaze, eyes that seemed to dance in the red glow of the afternoon sun. The corners of Willow’s mouth turned from frown to smile, catching Tara off guard with an enchanting Willow smile. Tara realized it was the first time anyone had smiled since Glory had taken Dawn. Willow smiled, and for a moment, Tara had hope.



“Oh good lord! The world is about to end. Can we please just stay focused for one minute.” Giles’ snapped at them. His words hung in the air and a fleeting moment of frivolity waned and was lost. Reality returned.



Everyone went silent, heads and eyes downcast. Tara felt her hair fall against her cheek. The only sound in the room was the painful beating of their hearts. She sighed, saw Willow return to her books, Anya hug Xander and Buffy cross her arms and glare at Giles.



“He’s right you know. Sun’ll be down soon. The platelet hasn’t got much time. She bleeds, we all die.” Spike appeared from the back room and broke the silence, saying the words they all feared to utter.



“At least now we know how to find her,” said Giles. Tara caught his gaze and held it. Giles’ eyes were troubled and belied the confidence in his voice. He continued quietly, “even if not where.” She might not be as powerful as Willow, but she could read emotion and intent. Eyes, she knew, were the window to the soul.



“Will, what‘cha ya got for me?” Buffy walked over to the table and peeked over Willow’s rampart of books, eyes questioning.



“Well, a couple of ideas. Well, notions, or theories based on wild speculation.”



“Don’t lose it on me now, Will. I need you. You’re my big gun.”



Willow looked horrified, eyes open wide, head shaking. “Let’s not go all crazy with the I’m a gun thing. Someone else should be the gun. I could be a maybe a cudgel, or a razor or a sharp pointy thing.



“Willow, you’re the strongest person here. You know that right?” Buffy’s voice was soft, compassionate. “You’re the only one that’s ever hurt Glory. You’re our best shot at getting Glory on the ropes. Will, you’re our best hope.”



“Not so big on the hope thing.” Willow looked at Tara, then back at the thick, musty volume open in front of her. She did not look at Buffy when she said, “Well ... I, I ... do sort of have this one idea...”



Both women fell into silence. Willow was hesitant. Buffy reached around and hugged her. Willow held on tightly, seeking the warmth and comfort of friendship.



“One idea in that, last resort, world’s gonna end kinda hope is lost kinda way, Buffy,” she whispered in her ear.



Willow broke the embrace and sat down. She heard Buffy walk around the room, talking with each of them, making sure everyone knew what to do. She flipped halfway through the great thick volume and removed a small book with a vermilion cover. It looked like it had been dyed with blood. The inside pages were thick. The script was dark rust. When she was certain no one was watching, she slipped the volume under her shirt and tucked it in the waistband of her pants. She shivered as the book touched her skin. It was the darkest of magics. She felt the mystical energy gnaw at the fringes of her soul.



Tara was still looking at Giles when Willow’s voice intruded on her thoughts, “Tara, honey, I need you in the basement.”



“Sure t-thing Will,” she searched Willow’s face, sensing something. “Willow?”



She felt the reassuring press of Willow’s hand in hers, though Willow kept her gaze on Buffy. “I found ... no, I just remembered something I forgot to, ah, ...forget.” It was an odd thing to say, even for Willow. Still holding Tara’s hand tightly, Willow led Tara into the dark basement.



Tara yelled up from the bottom of the stairs, “Anya! W-where’s the flashli...” They heard a soft thud from beneath them, and Willow’s voice called up, “never-mind.”



Sometime later, they re-emerged from the basement and were about to walk into the shop when Willow stopped and pulled Tara to her. “I love you Tara.”



Before Tara could reply, she felt the familiar warmth and velvety touch of Willow’s lips on hers. Felt Willow’s hands on her back, pulling her close so that every possible inch of their bodies touched. They did not hurry and for a brief moment, the apocalypse was meaningless.



“Willow,” Tara began when they broke the kiss.



“Shhh,” said Willow. “I know.”



Willow led Tara by the hand back into the Magic Shop. Buffy was the first to notice their presence.



“Hey girls, you’re back. Remember what you were looking for?” said Buffy, a hint of mischief in her voice when she noticed Tara and Willow were breathless and blushing furiously.



Willow stole a look at the clock. They had been down there a while. Tara didn’t seem to notice how long they were gone.



“Xander Harris! Why didn’t you think of that! We’re all about to die. You proposed to me, but they had sex.” Anya pushed Xander away and pouted.



“Oh, uh, NO! I mean I wish and all. Wish I’d been able to do that, instead of... Hey! Wait a minute. Anya, did you just say,”



Everyone, except Anya looked at Xander and said in unison, “PROPOSED?”



“Yeah. She told me to ask her again, if ... well – ask her tomorrow.”



There was a collective sigh but no one spoke. They all knew, it was February and apocalypses weren’t supposed to happen until spring.



Each turned silently and resumed their tasks, preparing weapons and doing whatever to stay busy, and to avoid talking about ‘what if.’



“Sunset,” said Tara.



“It’s time. Everyone ready,” said Buffy.



Tara looked at Buffy and thought, Her voice is so calm, it’s like we're going to a movie, not an apocalypse.’



Buffy lead them to the front of the shop, looked over her shoulder, took a deep breath, said, “Once more into the breech dear friends, once more into the breech,” and walked out the door.



Giles turned to Spike and smiled. “Perhaps there is hope for this night after all.”





On the street, they walked amid Glory’s army of the insane, toward the centre of town. The press of sentientless bodies separated the group. Tara and Willow were being held back by the press of the crowd while Buffy and the other Scoobies were being swept up in the quickening pulse of activity ahead of them.



Surrounding her and Willow the crowd prattled incessantly – words overlaying words, muttered pieces of rambling thoughts.



“W-what are they s-saying?” Tara looked worriedly at Willow. The crowd began to press against them, separating them from each other. Vacant eyes staring blankly, single minded in their purpose.





By the pricking of my thumbs, something wicked this way comes.



“Is”



The multitudineous seas incarnate, making the green one red.



“This”



By the pricking of my thumbs, something wicked this way comes.



“A”



YOU! Out damned spot.



“Dagger”.





Tara saw a man move from the group. He was not like the others. She looked into his eyes; they were black as the darkest cavern: ominous, evil, soulless. Before she could warn her, he ran to Willow, grabbed her and threw her to the ground. “Is this a dagger I see before me?” light reflected off the silver blade poised to plunge into Willow’s heart.



“WILLOW!” Tara screamed. “WILLOW! NO!” She lunged, her sole intent to stop the descent of the deadly blade. She threw her body recklessly against his back, knocking him off balance. He stumbled, released the knife and ran. Tara’s momentum carried her and she fell heavily, landing beside Willow. The knife clattered as it hit the pavement between them.



Buffy, hearing Tara’s urgent cry, bowled through the throng, knocking bodies aside. By the time she reached them, the man had disappeared back into the crowd. Willow and Tara lay winded, but very much alive on the ground.



“Will? Tara? Okay?” Buffy said, kneeling over them while searching for the perpetrator, or other signs of danger.



The others appeared, standing over them, faces like mourners at a grave sight, grim and full of despair. Tara realized they expected to find her and Willow dead. She shook the chilling implications of the tableau from her mind. It was the kind of foreshadowing she could live without.



“Fine,” Willow answered tonelessly.



“Just s-scared me. Willow, oh Willow. H-he just ... He had a knife. They’ve never been violent before. He was s-so different.”



Willow sat up and pulled her into an embrace. Tara could feel the slowing of her heartbeat as Willow’s arms held her securely.



“Willow, it was s-so awful, c-cold; it felt dead. B-but it wasn’t dead; it wasn’t a v-vampire; i-it was something else.” Willow said nothing but held Tara even tighter. Tara buried her face in Willow’s shoulder. She wanted to cry, but she could not. There would be time for tears later, when it was over.



“Willow, Tara,” said Anya, hands on her hips, sensing the danger had passed, “please do not die before it is time to die.”



“Thanks An, I’m sure they’ll do their best.” Xander frowned, but caught sight of the blade still lying between Willow and Tara. “Hey look Will, a souvenir.”



Willow looked down at the ground, picked up the sleek, engraved silver blade and slid it handle first into the sleeve of her shirt under her cloak.



“Oh, lucky me. A souvenir. A sharp pointy thing.” Her voice was hushed.



“Right! No more of this! We stay together. That crowd’s bloody ugly.” Spike’s voice rose above the din.



Everyone looked at him. “What? Well I do care, you know.”



“Every one all right? Tara, Willow, what happened?” Giles was the last to reach them, concern etched in the lines on his forehead.



Tara explained, and Giles responded, “Where’s the knife?”



“It doesn’t matter. We’re fine, time’s a wastin’ and we’ve got an Apocalypse to stop.” Willow stood and helped Tara up. Then, as if remembering something important, she looked at Tara and said, “Are you okay baby?”



“As long as I’m with you, Willow,” she gave Willow’s hand a re-assuring squeeze.



“Everyone ready?” said Buffy.



“Lay on, Mac Duff, And damn'd be him that first cries, Hold, enough!” said Willow.



“Isn’t that,” Spike began.



Giles looked at Spike. They both looked at Willow and said in unison, “the wrong play.”





They approached the tower. Rising ten stories, it stood like a harbinger in the night, silhouetted by the shimmering glow of the full blood red moon.



Anya, with her baseball bat resting on her shoulder, looked up. “What is that?”



“Steps to the very gates of Hell,” whispered Giles, following Anya’s gaze. His mouth was tight, the lines around his eyes deepened as if the tower itself was speeding the passage of time.



“The portal will open up there,” Giles continued looking at the platform at the top of the tower.



They all looked up, holding their breath.



Anya craned her neck, looked up at the tower and blinked once as the enormity of the structure and of their task hit her.



“Guess it’s going to be ... a little harder ... than we thought,” Xander’s voice trailed off. He put his hand in his pocket, feeling the engagement ring he wished Anya had taken from him. Would there even be a tomorrow to ask? He swallowed, struggling and failing to push away apocalyptic thoughts.



“Isn’t it always?” Buffy’s voice cut through their thoughts; it was a statement of fact, no one answered, not even Spike.



No one could answer her. They’re afraid, Tara thought. For the first time all of them together felt it. She sensed it, then saw it in their faces, in their body language, in their eyes; the uncertainty, the ‘what ifs’ were carved on each and every one of them, subtle changes reflecting doubt.



Tara watched them. The skin on Anya’s knuckles stretched and threatened to rip, so tight was her grip on the bat. Giles’ eyes, normally staid, glistened in the reflected light of the construction lamps surrounding the tower. Xander shuffled listlessly, and Spike paced like an animal in a cage.



Buffy stood apart from the group.



Tara looked to Willow for reassurance, for the Willow smile that held so much hope. There was no smile. Instead, Willow’s eyes were lost and afraid, and the green was hidden by the reflected garnet hue of the moon. For the first time in her life, Tara truly understood what fear was. No brave words were to be found. She understood fear, it was written all over them.



Tara looked at the cast on her hand. Body, mind, and spirit remembered pain felt in so many ways. How it had hurt when Glory crushed her bones and made her bleed. The agony as Glory tore Dawn from her arms. And now, the torture of wondering how many. How many of her family would live to see the red glow of the morning sun. Would anyone? She felt her heart hammering in her chest. How it all seemed so insignificant now.



They all stood at the base of the tower, Glory’s drones ignored them, her acolytes absent, preparing Dawn for the ritual. Buffy shuddered and reminded herself that they didn’t have to kill Glory, just prevent the ritual from starting.



She looked to them, “Remember, the ritual starts, we all die. And I’ll kill anyone who comes near Dawn.”



“It’s not even guarded, the tower. Why?” asked Xander.



“Because Glory thinks we can’t stop her,” Willow whispered under her breath. She reached over and rubbed her wrist. Beside the Dagon Sphere, she felt the cold metal of the knife blade pressing against her flesh, her pulse beating against it. Willow clenched her fist. The knife bit into her flesh at the base of her thumb. She felt a sharp pain and the warm trickle of blood run down her hand.



Buffy looked at the tower once more, then turned and said, “Will, Tara, you’re up.”



“Need anything?” Giles looked at Willow, eyes smiling softly, the hint of gentle kindness incongruous with their situation. She did not meet his gaze.



Her fear was palpable; Tara could feel it, on Willow, on them all. If this didn’t work… She shuddered and her heart beat faster.



“I could use a little courage,” whispered Willow. Tara reached over and grasped Willow’s hand. Her fingers brushed over Willow’s wrist where the Dagon Sphere lay hidden by magic in the sleeve of Willow’s blood red cloak. She prayed her masking spell would fool the Hell god. The spell was the purest of the white magics, and hopefully the most invisible. Squeezing tightly for the barest of seconds, Tara released Willow’s hand, hoping her touch was enough to give Willow the courage to do what needed to be done. Tara looked at the hammer in Buffy’s hand. To fight a God, use the weapon of a God.







Willow and Tara walked toward the swarm of humanity that was Glory’s work force, each a little cell sacrificed to sustain the Hell god. Beings devoid of thought, they worked mindlessly on one single task, completing Glory’s tower to bring apocalypse.



Tara watched Willow pause, clench her fists and bring her hands toward heart. As if gathering her life force she held her hands steady, breathed deep the acrid air, then threw her arms outward. Splayed fingers crackled with crimson lightning, dark power surged through her and the bodies of Glory’s army dropped wordlessly to the ground, unconscious. But as they fell, others moved to take their place.



From every direction they came, the mindless ones – empty vessels consumed by Glory’s appetite, and now her obedient slaves. Moving slowly, coagulating pools of the insane picked up where their comrades in madness left off. Acting on primal instinct, they sought to serve and to protect their god. Blank faces and empty eyes turned menacing; some dropped their tools and moved on them. Only a few, just enough to push them back. She and Willow had but one job, keep the odds even, give the others behind them a chance to guard the entrance to the tower while Buffy fought Glory.



Around her, Tara heard the clash of combat and the babbling of the mad. She knew the Scoobies would protect the tower with their lives, and she would protect Willow with hers.



So it began.



to be continued

~~~~~~~~~~~







You know I've heard about people like me. But I never made the connection. They walk one road to set them free, And find they've gone the wrong direction. But there's no need for turning back 'cause all roads lead to where I stand. And I believe I'll walk them all No matter what I may have planned

Edited by: Patches at: 2/12/03 8:44:54 am
Patches
 


Re: New Fic: True Gift

Postby deixs » Wed Feb 12, 2003 1:56 am

Hi!



Great start!:clap :clap :clap



Stef :p



Willow: Hey, clothes!

Tara: Better not get used to 'em.

Willow: Yes ma'm

deixs
 


Re: New Fic: True Gift

Postby willntlover » Wed Feb 12, 2003 2:06 am

Dude, that got my attention. :)



Question. How come Tara's arm is broke, but she isn't brain sucked??



Really enjoyed the beginning.



-Will

"I think finding her soulmate would have made Tara a more confident and secure person" -Amber Benson

willntlover
 


Re: New Fic: True Gift

Postby Little M » Wed Feb 12, 2003 3:38 am

:applause :shock :shock :shock



Very cool!!!!!!!

------------------

'I go online sometimes, but everyone's spelling is really bad..it's depressing' - Tara



Amber Online www.amberbenson-online.cjb.net

Little M
 


Re: New Fic: True Gift

Postby saphire tear » Wed Feb 12, 2003 6:01 am

Excellent start. :clap I like that Tara is not brain sucked...cause that...sucked!

Keep up the great work!

saphire tear
 


Re: New Fic: True Gift

Postby Stroke of Luck » Wed Feb 12, 2003 6:57 am

Great start!!:clap

A lot of angst, hope they will survive!



Update???



Cu:wave

SoL/Natti



I love my family but I´m a part of you. I want it to be that way - Gabrielle - The Abyss

Stroke of Luck
 


Re: New Fic: True Gift

Postby tommo » Wed Feb 12, 2003 11:13 am

I like this new way of looking at a classic episode. There are some truly impressive ideas in here, the notion of the Shakespeare throughout was fun, in a really not-fun way, seeing as you decided to go with the Scottish play rather than something a little more positive. ;)



Loved the idea of "coagulating insanity". Fabulous description. I'd really like to see more detailed narrative of this type, as I feel that your descriptive paragraphs are good enough to leave me wanting more than what's there right now.



Thanks for this. :)



It's in your eyes, I can tell what you're thinking; my heart is sinking too...It's no surprise, I've been watching you lately; I want to make it with you...

tommo
 


Re: New Fic: True Gift

Postby WiccansIllusion » Wed Feb 12, 2003 6:58 pm

To think I almost missed this. This was a really interesting start and caught my attention right away. I hope you continue :)

Tara nodded in agreement "She has magic fingers." TheWisdom of War, Chris Golden



You dont really think this is like, Psycho Buffy Cheer Squad central, do you?-Xita ala Julia "Lessons Parody"



WiccansIllusion
 


True Gift: Feedback

Postby Patches » Wed Feb 12, 2003 10:21 pm

Well Kittens – thank you for the wonderful words of encouragement, I’m working on the next instalment and should be sending it off to beta tonight or tomorrow. Check back in a day or so. Oh ya, it gets more “interesting” from here.



Deixs, thanks for the applause. I’m pleased you liked the beginnings – lots more to come.



Will, glad I got you attention. To answer your question (well partially anyway), yes, Tara’s hand is broken. You’ll find out a little later why she’s still sane. Be patient my friend, all will be revealed in good time.



Little M, Oh, don’t fret, there’s lots more :o :o :o to come, promise.



Saphire, That Tara’s not brain sucked seems to be a popular theme in the feedback. To me Tara’s not a plot device. I didn’t like what they did to her, so it’s not part of my story. But just to wind you up a little, I will say, they’re not out of the woods yet. ;)



SoL. Yes, a lot of angst. And just to warn you the angst-o-meter gets turned up a few notches, so buckle up, the fun is about to begin. Don't worry, I'll take good care of our girls - promise.





Tommo, Thank you, so much! I didn’t like some of what transpired in Season 5, so presto – Tara is no longer a plot device. As for Shakespeare, the Scottish Play has always been my favourite. The imagery and themes are powerful and fit nicely with what I wanted to set up.



I’m delighted you liked “coagulating insanity.” It is my favourite image. Trust me, you may regret asking for paragraphs that are more descriptive. Next update - you ask for it – you got it Toyota ;)



Wiccansillusions – glad you dropped in, be sure to check back ‘cause there’s lots more.



Cheers!!

Patches







You know I've heard about people like me. But I never made the connection. They walk one road to set them free, And find they've gone the wrong direction. But there's no need for turning back 'cause all roads lead to where I stand. And I believe I'll walk them all No matter what I may have planned

Edited by: Patches at: 2/12/03 8:24:16 pm
Patches
 


Re: New Fic: True Gift

Postby AntigoneUnbound » Wed Feb 12, 2003 10:22 pm

Mary danced, just a tiny little jig, at the realization that Patches was writing a story. And then she sat down, suspecting that she looked somewhat foolish.



Yay, Patches! Lay on MacDuff, indeed! Ah, where to start? I love the classical touches (references to great plays and lines from those plays) you instill here. I also love seeing anything through Tara's eyes, and it seems that you write her (which, to do well, you must understand her) very effectively. I think that my favorite element, though (at least w/in this installment) is your portrayal of the collective fear that clutches at everyone's heart. The fact that Willow (whom I've always seen as the most optimistic of the original Scoobies) can't even return Tara's smile says volumes. In that episode on TV, I was so struck by the images of each person struggling to have faith that tomorrow would even come: Xander proposing to Anya; Willow continuing to try desperately to find a cure for Tara's insanity. You've captured that extremely well here, Patches. I guess that's all about writing ambience, creating a mood. It's true: the "show me, don't tell me" mandate in writing is there for a reason! You show us the fear, the sense of the overwhelming odds, the hope that battles despair...All of these people (except Tara) have been through an Apocalypse before, yet there's something different about this one.



Finally, let me extend my most riotous thanks for an absolute gem of a moment: Spike referring to Dawn as "the platelet." I literally rocked back in my chair with laughter. How apt!



And so, good Patches, Mary (Queen of Scots) bestows upon you the Royal Seal of Esteemed Writers and welcomes you unto the breach!



Great start~~

Mary

AntigoneUnbound
 


Re: New Fic: True Gift

Postby darkmagicwillow » Thu Feb 13, 2003 5:40 pm

Patches, you'll have me blushing if you keep that up. Seriously though, the ideas and words are all yours, and that's a lot more than nothing. Your concept of rewriting The Gift and the changes you've made to season 5 is great, especially with what's happening next.



I love how you use the Shakespearean references to build the mood as they approach the battle, but my favorite image is still Willow peeking out behind her rampart of books to shine a ray of hope on Tara.

--

"Omnia mutantur, nihil interit." -- "Everything changes, but nothing is truly lost."

Edited by: darkmagicwillow at: 2/13/03 3:41:28 pm
darkmagicwillow
 


Re: New Fic: True Gift

Postby justin » Fri Feb 14, 2003 2:57 pm

I just wanted to agree with all the people who said that this was a great start to a story. :clap



You've certainly wetted my apetite to read more. :D



I understand, you should be with the person you l-love


I am


justin
 


Re: New Fic: True Gift

Postby Patches » Sat Feb 15, 2003 11:51 am

Quick note: Mary, DMW, Justin - will get to individual comments in a bit. Sorry for the delay in response and the update. A friend from out of town just dropped in; will have next update Mon or Tues.



Cheers!!

Patches.

You know I've heard about people like me. But I never made the connection. They walk one road to set them free, And find they've gone the wrong direction. But there's no need for turning back 'cause all roads lead to where I stand. And I believe I'll walk them all No matter what I may have planned

Patches
 


Re: New Fic: True Gift

Postby Magrat70 » Sun Feb 16, 2003 2:18 pm

Great start it has really caught my imagination. I can't wait to read more

The Glorious People Republic of Treacle Mine Road;



Truth, Justice, Freedom, Reasonably Priced Love and a Hard Boiled Egg


Magrat70
 


More feedback and excuses

Postby Patches » Wed Feb 19, 2003 10:31 pm

Phew ... Draft # 3 for the next instalment is off to beta. This second chapter has taken much more time than I anticipated. To whet your appetite, the gang faces Glory and her army of the insane (which, if I don’t finish this chapter soon, is going to include me!) with a few very nasty surprises for the Scoobies.



Sorry I have been neglectful with the feedback. RL and this story have consumed me over the last week.



Majestic Mary, you have the option of taking back your dance after you read the next chapter. Though, thanks for the visual, after writing this next instalment, I really, really, really, needed something to make me smile. Thanks also for the seal of approval and kind words. ‘Course, there was that humbling moment (READ: stark horror) when I read your closing line and realized I’d not only misquoted, I’d also misspelled “breach” – serves me right for being lazy and not looking up the passage. :lol :blush . Obviously, you know that was intentional, I mean, it was Buffy speaking after all (that’s my story and I’m sticking to it ;p) But, I will tell you that I’m, ahem, looking up _all_ my quotes now.



I’m happy (relieved, ecstatic) you’ve picked up on the essence of this story. There is something very different at work here. I think you’d be interested to know that I didn’t start out writing this story from Tara’s perspective. She just kinda jumped in and took over. Aside from her youth, stunning good looks, blonde hair, blue eyes and perfect size 6 body, I think hers was the character I related most to in the series. So I guess it’s fitting that she be my guide.



DMW – blush away. I’ve learned more about the essence of writing in the past two weeks than in all my many years of reading books on the subject. Believe me, I have an impressive collection of writing guides (also believe, they actually helped - lol). Your collections of “slow down(s)” and “I’d like to see that(s)” have really opened my eyes and my mind. The ideas exist in my head, and I’m learning how to express them in the written word. It should get better from here. So, do you know how many letter there are in the Greek Alphabet ;)



Justin and Magrat: Thanks for tuning in. The second instalment is in progress. It’s been difficult to write, and when you read it, I hope you’ll understand why, and forgive my tardiness at getting things moving.



Thanks Kittens all. Your encouraging words mean a lot.



Cheers!!

Patches



You know I've heard about people like me. But I never made the connection. They walk one road to set them free, And find they've gone the wrong direction. But there's no need for turning back 'cause all roads lead to where I stand. And I believe I'll walk them all No matter what I may have planned

Patches
 


Betrayal - Part One

Postby Patches » Mon Feb 24, 2003 9:53 pm

Title: True Gift – Chapter 1 Betrayal.

Author: Patches

Email: in my profile, please read note in bio.

Rating: R – NC 17 (VIOLENCE with –potentially- explicit sex in later chapters - will update warning when necessary.)

Spoilers: Up to Season 5 – “The Gift,” with many alterations and crossovers in the story line from “Tough Love” and “The Gift.”

Feedback: Yes Please! Prefer posted commentary, but if something’s really biting you, feel free to e-mail me. I am always interested in, and encourage, constructive criticism.

Disclaimer: see first post

Acknowledgements: DMW thanks for the thought provoking commentary and for pushing me to delve deeper into the dark and dusty corners of my imagination. (Oh ya, and for the grammar lessons, some of which might actually stick – but don’t count on it.) To the brilliant Kittens whose writing continues to inspire me to turn it up a notch, or twelve.

Summary: First of a two-part chapter. The Scoobies get the sh*t kicked out of them. Part two should be ready by middle to end of next week.





WARNING: This story is very, very dark. Please remember that regardless of what happens, or what is portrayed in the chapters, Willow and Tara will be together, in love at the end. The bumpy road begins – NOW.





Chapter 1a: Betrayal





Into the courtyard, like blood gushing from a severed artery, Glory’s obsequious soldiers flowed toward them. They surrounded the gang and fought for their god with bare hands, sticks and stones. What they lacked in weaponry, they made up for in numbers.



The scene was madness and chaos. Everywhere there was blood. Tara could smell it, taste it and worst of all she could feel it.



She didn’t have to look to see and to know what was happening behind her. The emotions, the fears and the rage of her companions weighed down her soul. Tara sensed their blood lust. This cruellest of emotions was the one that would keep them alive.





Swift swords met the soft resistance of flesh and bone to bloody end as the Scoobies hacked down the advancing horde.



Spike looked at his comrades fighting by his side. Giles, broadsword in one hand, short sword in the other, indiscriminately swung at anyone who made it past Buffy. Behind him, Anya and Xander formed the last line of defence to the tower’s entrance. He would protect them, whatever the cost. He’d made a promise to a lady. For the first time in his miserable existence, he made a difference.



Spike abandoned his weapons in the close quarter fight. He used his hands. It was faster. Fighting like a hellhound, he ripped apart anyone or anything that dared threaten a Scoobie. Demon, human, it made no difference. Bodies lay strewn about his feet, a veritable vampire smorgasbord. Not so long ago he would have revelled in the slaughter, now it sickened even him. Pain exploded in his head with each blow and his cries of agony mixed with the wailing of the wounded. He roared, “We few, We happy few, we band of brothers."





The gift of life flowed freely from a dozen wounds on Giles’ body. The choking stench of the dead and the dying assailed his senses. Dante’s Hell was nothing compared to their reality. Beneath their feet, chunks of demon and human flesh rejoined to form macabre abstracts of what was once the living. The images clawed at the fringes of his sanity. Gurgling cries of the wounded assaulted their ears, but there was no time for pity. No time to consider the killing of the innocent whose only crime, misfortune, should not have been punishable by death.



“What say you? will you yield, and this avoid, or guilty in defence, be thus destroy’d.” Giles whispered.



Eerie light from industrial lamps high atop the tower shone down on the Scoobies, silhouetting the battle and casting macabre shadows on the ground and walls of the surrounding building. The harsh lights both illuminated the battle and, with the insidious shimmer of the red moon, blinded them to all but the hell created at their feet. Bodies piled up, forming a gruesome rampart behind which the Scoobies fought. Glory’s army pressed them away from the scaffolding, one step at a time, stepping on, over and into the fallen. Step by step, the vacant ones pushed, inching the Scoobies away.



Anya shuddered. Her baseball bat connected hard to the chest of a young man, she heard the sound of crunching bone. She knew him. He used to buy things from the Magic Shop. Beside her, Giles’ sword ripped across the midriff of a woman, staining her white lab coat red. She was the kind doctor who had treated Tara at the hospital.



As a demon, eviscerations were Anya’s raison d’etre, but this went beyond the pale. She’d delighted in vivisection, but she’d never had to step in its aftermath. Bile rose in her throat. Beside her, Spike’s hands squeezed the life out of a young man. She knew him also, Warren, a robot building murderer. Looking at Warren’s lifeless form, Anya smiled, briefly.



Xander cried out in pain when a two-by-four slammed into his hand, tearing skin and crushing bone. More blood spilled. Anya summoned a millennium’s worth of vengeance rage and pulverized Xander’s attacker with her bat. The man’s blood splattered her grim face. She turned her attention back to the advancing horde, her own sanity ebbing against the press of the incoming tide. So the Scoobies fought, single minded in their purpose.



“They’re pushing us away from the stairs,” exclaimed Giles. “We cannot surrender another step. We must-” He was interrupted by a gnarled hand clawing at him; jagged nails dug deep and raked across his face, tearing into his flesh. Giles swung his blade and sliced into the arm of his attacker. The hand dropped away from his face. Sweat poured into open wounds and the sting of salt and blood threatened to blind him.



“Giles!” Xander’s voice, shrill with desperation, rang out. “There’s too many.”



Giles caught Anya’s gaze, hoping to get her to rally Xander, but her eyes were bleak, lost. He sensed Xander and Anya were losing spirit, weakening.



“We must hold our ground,” he continued, gasping. “Hold the entrance to the tower. We must remain close to Buffy. Xander, take the left stair rail. Spike, the right rail. Anya and I will hold the middle.” The Scoobies formed a human barrier across the mouth of the stairs. By sheer force of will, they held their ground, turning away all comers.



From amid the swarm, another familiar face appeared. Brandishing a scimitar, he hacked his way through the throng toward the Scoobies. The quiet, unassuming man looked at the gang and smiled, “Thought you might like to see a friendly face.”



A collective sigh of relief issued from the Scoobies. A friendly face and extra set of hands was welcome.



“Doc,” said Xander, “you have no idea how glad I am to see you.”



“As equally glad as I am to be here,” Doc replied smoothly.



“If you please,” said Giles, exasperated, “reunion later. Apocalypse now.”



Doc joined in the Scoobies in battle. Under his breath, so none would hear him, he murmured, “Away, and mock the time with fairest show. False face must hide what the false heart doth know.”





A few feet away Buffy pulled out every stop, every trick in her book and weapon in her arsenal, to keep Glory’s followers from the Scoobies at the tower. Even with Tara and Willow working point, it was impossible to stem the flow of the mindless hoard advancing up on them. Is this how the villagers felt when they saw the Hun horde approach, she thought. The ridiculous image refused to leave her mind. She pictured the Huns, pointed heads riding on horseback, descending across the green meadows and forests of the world, trampling peasants.



To the left, behind Willow and Tara, the crowd parted. “BUFFY!” Xander yelled, using his broken hand to beat away Glory’s slaves. Pain meant nothing to him now. “It’s Glory!”



“Get ready. You know what to do.” Buffy called, then wheeled to deal with several scab encrusted, knife-wielding minions. “Remember. No one goes up those steps!”



Like Moses before the Red Sea, the path between the Scoobies and Glory parted. The battle abated. The Scoobies held the tower, while Glory’s army backed off. It was a stalemate.



Glory made her triumphant entrance.



“Hey Slayer, fancy meeting you here.” Glory stood like a Queen, smiling confidently, robed in her ceremonial gown. It was ornate, ugly, cumbersome, representing the worst the Middle Ages had to offer: colours of orange, crimson and burgundy bled together, while faded edges once red were bleached a ridiculous pink. The headdress was adorned with silver piping crusted with gaudy jewels that spiralled like steps to reach a peak. Atop it was a single red gemstone, the sister to the Dagon Sphere, and her ticket to her own dimension. “So, you decided to come to my farewell party after all. And oh, look, how sweet, you brought your little friends with you.”



Buffy continued to pound the faces of Glory’s followers into red pulp. The more bodies on the ground now, the less they’d have to fight later.



Nice outfit, Attila,” said Buffy, pausing long enough to laugh at Glory. “Where’d ya find it, the bargain rack at K-Mart?” Her fists and feet moved with lightning speed as she ripped apart Glory’s purulent minions and edged ever closer to the Hell god.



“That wasn’t very nice Buffy. Why would you say something so mean to me? So, anyway, what are you doing down here?” said Glory.



Buffy shook her head in disbelief. “Thought I’d see if you wanted tea and crumpets.”



“Huh?” said Glory, brows knitted together, a dazed look of confusion on her face.



“You’re not exactly the brightest god in the heavens, are you?” Buffy kicked her way through the swarm encircling her, nearing Glory, who was mere steps from the base of the tower, “I – WANT – MY – SISTER – BACK!”



“You mean, my Key.”



“NO! You insane slime infested festering bag of putrid decay. I mean my SISTER!” Buffy turned her head and called back, “GUYS! NOW!”



Giles, Xander, and Spike together, picked up the Troll Hammer and threw it to Buffy. She caught it deftly with one hand. Buffy’s hands alternately flexed, twisted and relaxed around the handle of the Troll Hammer, like a home-run slugger seeking to find the perfect synergy between flesh and wood that would deliver the home run hit.



“Oh, did I mention, Glory, you also have lousy taste in hats?” Buffy swung the Hammer with her full Slayer strength and connected with Glory’s head. The impact punched a hole in Hell god’s head and crushed the side of her face. The blow sent Glory flying. She landed several feet away, hitting the ground with a satisfying thud.



The ornate diadem, designed to sit atop a rounded skull, teetered and fell from Glory’s reconfigured, concave head. Her crown was lost in a shuffle of feet when her acolytes scurried to assist their fallen god. She ignored their tittering supplications.



“Hey,” said Glory, reaching up to touch her head, perplexed. “That, actually hurt.” Her hand disappeared into the hole created by the god weapon. “You’ve wrecked my face.”



“No,” retorted Buffy, “it’s an improvement, bitch.”



Glory’s eyes turned red with fury.



“Looks good on you Glory. Adds a whole new meaning to crushing good looks.”



“Enough toying!” said Glory. “Take ‘em boys. Get them away from the tower, but keep them alive. I’ll need a couple of brains to suck before I leave. Call out the reserves.”



Glory’s voice turned into an insidious growl. “Remember, I want them - alive. I want them to feel every ounce of pain, and appreciate how totally and absolutely they failed. Leave the Slayer for me. And find my hat!”



The remainder of Glory’s parasitical followers surged upon the Scoobies, surrounded the base of the tower and separated them from Buffy. With Buffy’s attention fixed solely on Glory, the odds were no longer even, and Glory’s followers were beginning to overwhelm them.



Xander looked at Giles and said, “I think I finally understand how the French felt,” then he turned his weary, battered, and bruised body to parry a blow that would have decapitated Spike, Now there’s irony for you, Xander thought bitterly.



The Scoobies retreated up the first few steps of the tower. It was impossible to battle the overwhelming numbers on the ground. The narrowness of the stairs made fighting difficult, but at least the confined space limited the number of attackers.



Amid the carnage and in the heat of battle, no one noticed Doc slip further behind them, up the stairs.



Glory, reduced to a hideous caricature of her former vainglorious self, slowly stood up and advanced threateningly toward Buffy. With the side of her head staved in from the blow of the Troll Hammer, she could seemingly see forward and upwards at the same time. “You should have let me do it my way, Buffy. It would have been over sooner.” Glory reached into the hole in her head, grasped her ear and pulled, trying, but not quite succeeding to re-shape her deformed skull.





Xander risked a quick glance past the melee to Willow and Tara. The women held a shimmering wall of white energy in place, keeping Glory’s advancing reserves at bay. Well at least that spell worked, thought Xander.



A hand, grasping at his legs, snapped Xander’s attention back into focus as it tried to pull him down. He kicked, mindlessly to get free.



With everyone’s attention focused elsewhere, Doc seized his opening and silently disappeared up the tower steps.



Xander saw Willow turn and focus her attention on Glory. He heard Willow shout, ”CAPTURE!” A crimson and sapphire energy flew from Willow’s fingertips. It danced and weaved its way around random bodies in its path, seeking that which Willow commanded it find. Reaching Glory, the shimmering energy twisted into thick chains and descended on the prone god. The magic coils encased and constricted around her; tendrils loosed from the chain snaked around Glory’s mouth, gagging her.



Got you. Bitch,” Xander thought.



His jubilant smile was erased in a heartbeat. Almost immediately, Willow’s body begin to shake as she fought to contain Glory. The strain on Willow’s face was unmistakable. Willow’s eyelids clenched tight. Head tilted heavenward, the muscles, tendons and arteries in her neck and shoulders threatened to rupture under the strain. He could see blood drip down Willow’s chin from where she bit into her bottom lip, using pain as an anchor in an effort to strangle the god.



It wasn’t enough. Willow’s spell flickered, dissipated, then dissolved, freeing the Hell god once again.



Even with everything they had faced in the past, demons, monsters, apocalypse, this was the first time Xander grasped the real meaning of despair. It was one of those moments. The telling moment when you know things have gone from bad to worse, from hopeless to absolute despair.



Willow’s magic was not strong enough to hold the god. The only hope was that Buffy could kill Glory before they could bleed Dawn. But how can a mortal kill a god?



“That the best you got, witch? You don’t actually think that’d work twice, do you? FOOLS!” Glory shook her disfigured head. She looked contemptuously at the Scoobies.



“You mortals think only on one plane. Disappointing really, I was looking forward to a good fight. Is this the best you could muster? An ex-demon, a neutered vampire, a librarian, a carpenter, two feeble witches, and not a single brain among you. Pathetic. Can’t even find what’s under your very noses. Not even when you’re told where to look.”



To her minions she called, “It’s almost time. Bleed her slowly. I want the portal open as long as humanly...” She stopped and laughed at her pun. “What Slayer, no smiles for me now? Keep it open as long as humanly, possible. What’s the matter Buffy? Can’t appreciate a good joke?”



“Appreciate this, Glory.” Buffy swung the Troll Hammer and aimed for the other side of Glory’s head. This time, however, Glory was prepared for her and easily deflected the blow.



Back and forth Glory and Buffy danced under the pale light of the red moon. Glory was laughing. She was almost hysterical. “You still haven’t figured it out have you? Damn Ben, and that nagging little pinch of humanity that makes me go for the hurt instead of the kill.”



“But you know what,” said Glory, with a pitiless smile, “I think I’m liking it better this way.” She swung her god fist and connected with a punishing blow to Buffy’s jaw. Bones collapsed. With a satisfied smirk Glory said, “Payback’s a bitch, little girl, and I’m the bitch who’s going to make you pay, with blood. I. Owe. You!”



Before Buffy could recover from the first punch, Glory’s foot connected hard with her arm, snapping the humerus. The Troll Hammer fell from Buffy’s useless hand. A swift uppercut lifted Buffy off her feet, snapping her head back violently. Buffy crumpled to the ground.



Willow heard and saw the sound of crunching bones and muted cries as Glory landed blow after blow on Buffy. It took all her focus to keep the swelling horde in front of her and Tara at bay. She could feel Tara by her side, fighting with magic and fists to keep her safe. Willow’s body trembled at the force of the crimson bolts surging through her. Willow felt the small book pressing against her, its darkness leaching through her skin. She reached in and pulled more of the Dark Magic to the surface, and in doing so, slipped a little deeper into the heart of darkness. She stopped trembling.





Through the pain, Buffy fought back. From the ground, she grabbed the Troll Hammer with her good arm and swung viciously at Glory’s legs. She was rewarded with the sickening sound of breaking bone. Buffy fought with a strength borne of desperation. She had to keep Glory from the tower. But where was Dawn? Why hadn’t they brought her out? She was near. Buffy could sense her. Where was she? Buffy looked over her shoulder. She couldn’t see the base of the tower.



“Whas’a matter, little girl, worried about your friends? You should be worried about more than that.”



She looked up at the apex of the tower, a cruel smile formed on her still twisted, misshapen face. Glory shook her head. “You still don’t get it do you?” Try this, ’Aye, there’s the rub; for in that sleep of death, what dreams may come when we have shuffled off this mortal coil.’



Anya looked around and cried out, “Where’s Doc?”



Far above the din, Doc moved toward Dawn, whose prone body was immobilized and secured to the platform high above the ground. Under her body, strange symbols were carved deep into stone, channels for collecting her blood. Her body was trussed head to toe in stark white muslin, bare arms stretched tight above her head. Her face was encased in a solid metal mask bolted to the platform, shielding her eyes from the crimson glow of cruel the night sky. The ceremonial gown swaddling her was marked with garish red jewels, lines of demarcation for the ritual knife. The only areas of her flesh exposed to the cruel night air were those reserved for the ritual knife’s keen blade. Her throat ached from repeated attempts to scream. Tape expanded and contracted in front of her mouth as she hyperventilated, trying to force the sticky substance to yield to her will and remove itself.



Dawn heard approaching footsteps. Adrenaline pumped through her body. Her heart pounded. Blood raced from her heart to feed the oxygen starved muscles of her tightly bound limbs. She tried in vain to free herself. The footsteps stopped. She felt the cage being lifted and she looked into the kind face of Doc kneeling beside her. Her eyes said what her mouth could not. Relief spread through her body. Gesturing with any part of her body that would move, she urged Doc to work quickly and free her.



“Yes, my dear. I understand. You must be very frightened,” said Doc gently. “Unfortunately, I have to introduce you to a new emotion; are you familiar with terror?” From beneath his coat, he withdrew a dagger.



In the light of the crimson moon, Dawn saw the pattern on the deadly blade was identical to the one under her.



“I just thought you’d like to take one last look at your world, Dawn. It is about to be changed – forever.” Doc said nothing more as he replaced the copper death mask on Dawn’s face.





“Fools! You missed it.” Glory spat at them, turning to the Scoobies. “I told you, you only think on one plane. I even let the witches think they were contributing, giving you one – more – opening. One last chance. She was up there the whole time! Your failure is complete.”



Glory exalted and cried triumphantly, “LET THE BLOOD FLOW - BLEED HER NOW!”





As the edge of the knife sliced into her flesh, Doc ripped the tape off Dawn’s mouth. Her piercing scream reverberated in the night, “NOOOOOOO,”. In rapid succession, the knife’s cruel blade cut the pattern of the sacrificial stone into the soft underside of Dawn’s arms. The tip of the razor sharp cutting edge opened dozens of tiny wounds. Blood welled to the surface forming little red menisci until the pressure from Dawn’s beating heart broke the tension and little rivulets of blood trickled down to cold stone beneath her. The stone pulsed to life as it fed upon her essence.



The heavens rumbled, and a beautiful, terrible light filled the tenebrous sky. The void oozed hideous creatures from other dimensions as world met world and realities haemorrhaged together. The totentanz, the
Danse Macabre
had begun. Spectral apparitions appeared, silhouetted against the blood red night. They raked the sky with their triumphant cry.



Time and dimension ceased to have meaning. A putrid stench assailed them from the heavens. From Earth’s own past, the void spewed hideous creatures from nightmare. A wyvern, with razor claws, descended to feed upon the crowd.



The hydra, reborn again, tumbled to earth in front of the Scoobies at the tower, crushing the unfortunate. Giles, Anya and Spike swung swords as one, and hacked the heads off the beast, praying silently that the legends were not true. Ogres, great filthy creatures, rank with decay, tumbled earthward and set upon the crowd. Rocs emerged and took flight. Eagle-like in form, the beat of their powerful sixty-foot wings created a vortex of turbulent air, knocking down all but the strongest of creatures. Seizing the opportunity for easy prey, the colossal birds swooped down. Giant talons seized ogres and anyone, or anything, unfortunate enough to stand in their path. Above them, more dimensions bled. Cobalt lightening issued from the fissure in the sky, striking buildings, exploding brick and mortar.





The portal spun, unlocking more of Earth’s tumultuous secret past. Gargoyles and disfigured grotesques fought each other. Monsters long buried and discarded as fiction assaulted both people and demon indiscriminately. The portal unbound not only dimensions; it unchained time. It turned ever slowly, slipping further and further back in time, back to the beginnings, back to that place where the heavens were separated from the firmament, back to the time when the Hellmouth was created.



Great winged beasts sailed over Sunnydale, giant wings blocked out the moon. As the portal spun, more beasts appeared, some trapped in the walls of buildings while pieces of other creatures extruded from the ground as dimensional walls collapsed and overlapped.





Giles’ words ripped through Willow’s mind, “If the ritual starts, then every living creature in this and every other dimension imaginable will suffer unbearable torment and death...” Beneath her feet she felt the turbulent rumble as the firmament was breached and the Hellmouth prepared to disgorge it’s own vision of hell on earth. Willow whispered, “Come, thick night, And pall thee in the dunnest smoke of hell, That my keen knife see not the wound it makes, Nor heaven peep through the blanket of the dark To cry "Hold, hold!” Her face reflected a grim darkness and a fate more terrible than apocalypse.



Green eyes brimming with tears, Willow turned and grasped Tara, urgency in her voice. “Buffy can’t win. There’s no time. Trust me. No matter what Tara, trust me and love me.”



Blue eyes locked with green. “Always Willow, you are my always. But w-what…”



“There’s no other way.” Willow cried, kissed her and murmured, “sleep” under her breath. The light faded, Tara’s senses dulled. As consciousness left her she felt Willow lift her gently and say, “Trust me Tara and love me; it is the only way.”



Stepping into shadow, Willow heard a male voice,

By the pricking of my thumbs,

Something wicked this way comes.

Open, locks,

Whoever knocks!




Willow’s eyes went black as she journeyed into the deepest heart of darkness.





****To be continued****





You know I've heard about people like me. But I never made the connection. They walk one road to set them free, And find they've gone the wrong direction. But there's no need for turning back 'cause all roads lead to where I stand. And I believe I'll walk them all No matter what I may have planned

Edited by: Patches at: 2/25/03 8:34:45 am
Patches
 


Re: Betrayal - Part One

Postby AntigoneUnbound » Mon Feb 24, 2003 11:21 pm

Patches~~ Oh, you just have to feel bad about a chapter that includes the word "betrayal," and which intimates that there's another aspect of betrayal coming up.



That was simply an amazing battle scene, Patches. I could see it, and I could feel the pain and exhaustion of everyone involved. You also do something that helps the reader take in the full scope: you give us the wide-angle view, a look at the battle in all its horrific carnage; and then you take us to individuals, so that we look through a smaller window but see the characters in greater detail. Thus we see Anya fighting the kind nurse who took care of Tara. It's an effective set of lenses to use, one that lets us realize both the macro- and micro-levels of destruction and loss.



That slimy little Doc...You know, Joel kinda creeped me out in "Cabaret," and he did it again here (both on TV, and in this story).



And now Willow is asking Tara to trust her, and of course Tara does--but what will happen? That whole theme (Willow embracing dark magic) is such a powerful one. How many of us have made decisions under the encroaching heat of a crisis, or a situation in which full reflection or temperance didn't feel like an option, and we've told ourselves that it had to be that way. Did it? Could we have known for sure in that instance? Isn't it only in retrospect, through the lens of known outcome, that we come to see a course of action as wise or imprudent? Can Willow truly grasp the extent of what she's doing? And does she really have any choice? These are just great questions, and I can't wait to see what happens with all of these folks.



Oh--I also have to thank you for the following insult, which I will hurl at my next great foe (provided I do anything so dramatic as to earn me a great foe): "You insane, slime-infested festering bag of putrid decay." Yo' mama, indeed...



I was so glad to see this update, Patches! I trust the path you're inviting us to walk with you. Sign me up for the hike!



Mary

AntigoneUnbound
 


Re: Betrayal - Part One

Postby WillowPowered » Tue Feb 25, 2003 1:39 am

Awwwwww now that was just mean leaving it there.



Runs and sits on the update couch, next bit pleaseeeeeeee.



Jill

~~~~~~~~

Willow - Say, you all didn't happen to do a bunch of drugs did ya?

Willow - I'm a blood sucking fiend, look at my outfit . . . .

WillowPowered
 


Re: Betrayal - Part One

Postby deixs » Tue Feb 25, 2003 1:56 am

Wow! I am at a loss of words!

PLease update soon!!!



Stef :glasses



Willow: Hey, clothes!

Tara: Better not get used to 'em.

Willow: Yes ma'm

deixs
 


Re: Betrayal - Part One

Postby justin » Tue Feb 25, 2003 3:51 am

You were certainly right to warn about this story being dark, there was much darkness at the end there.



That said I'm really enjoying this story. You certainly brought the battle to life well.



And you know where to end a part in order to leave your readers desperate for more.



I understand, you should be with the person you l-love


I am


justin
 


Re: Betrayal - Part One

Postby darkmagicwillow » Wed Feb 26, 2003 3:17 pm

Patches, I'm really enjoying this version of The Gift, finding it such an improvement over the original for so many reasons. You fix the parts that didn't make sense, by eliminating the Buffy/Dawn switch, by preventing Glory's unexplainable defeat, and by explaining how Doc ascended the tower. You add such wonderful detail, in the battle as Antigone explains, and in the constant thread of Shakespeare running through this part. Finally, you take another great idea that ME mishandled, the dark Willow thread, and give it not only a rational foundation, but also a more compelling story.

--

"Omnia mutantur, nihil interit." -- "Everything changes, but nothing is truly lost."

darkmagicwillow
 


Re: New Fic: True Gift

Postby WiccansIllusion » Wed Feb 26, 2003 11:30 pm

Continue..please??

oh i am a lonely painter, i live in a box of paints

i'm frightened by the devil and i'm drawn to those ones that ain't afraid. i remember that time you told me

"love is touching souls" surely you touched mine 'cause part of you pours out of me in these lines from time to time-Joni Mitchell 'A case of You'

WiccansIllusion
 


Feedback: Betrayal - Part One

Postby Patches » Wed Feb 26, 2003 11:43 pm

Hello lovely Kittens! Thanks so much for tuning in. I am working on part two. Though I will admit, I took the last couple of days off to recover. Our dear Scoobies weren’t the only ones shell shocked after that encounter. I should have an update ready for posting by mid-week.



Jill, Stef, and Justin Oh dear, you think this one leaves you hanging – just wait until the end of the second half (lol). Our girls have a ways to go, but fret not, unlike ME – Willow’s journey into the heart of darkness has a reason and a wonderful resolution. I verily bounced in my chair when you said you were speechless – thanks!



Mary, what a thrill it is to see your name in the feedback. You’re insight and observations thrill me. Pack a lunch and buckle up girl, the fun has just begun. Just looking at who my beta is should give you an indication of what you’re in for! And now, to address your comment ...



This chapter was a challenge to write. In my very first draft, this whole scene was one paragraph! I was initially going to gloss over the whole thing. I’m now glad my kind beta, DMW, prodded me to explore deeper. I was afraid that I wouldn’t be able to give proper tribute. It wasn’t just the complexity of dealing with all the characters in an action sequence; I wanted to make the scene meaningful. I hope I accomplished this. I was fortunate, as an undergrad, to be involved in a Regimental History project where I interviewed WWII Vets. One of the many things I learned from these brave souls about battle is that it is "easier" to shoot what one cannot see. If one cannot see the eyes of the opponent, one is left with a feeling that “maybe it wasn’t my bullet.” However, when the ‘enemy’ has a face, the game changes completely, as do the emotions. I decided that Anya would provide the best frame for bringing the humanity into what the Scoobies had to face. This was one of the things that bothered me in ME’s Gift – holy sh*t, these weren’t just soulless demons or walking corpses the Scoobies were fighting, they were their neighbours. Where the hell is the rationale of the greater “good,” fighting “evil” when the opponents didn’t lose their humanity, they just lost their sanity. (But I will admit, Anya wasn’t the only one smiling when Spike took care of Warren – ooh, no SR in my Buffyverse – it wasn’t even a conscious thing, his face just appeared in Spike’s hands.)



I’m glad you liked Doc’s placement here. Your reaction was the effect I was going for. He’s a smarmy little bastard isn’t he.



I’m very mindful of the implications of the journey into darkness. I’m also scared sh*tless too, which should serve to keep me in line. I’m printing your questions off and keeping them close to my heart. All I will say to you, Mary, is – would Willow make this journey if there was any other way? (and if you think of one, e-mail me quick, ‘cause the whole point of this chapter was to establish, firmly, Willow’s ‘choice.’ There are a few hints buried in the Prologue.)



DMW I finally sat down with my very first draft, and realized that not only was this whole chapter only one paragraph, the first two full instalments were originally only a couple of pages long. Holy smokes! I have to admit, more than a few curses rolled off my tongue when I got your commentaries back – lol. Hey, it was worth it! There is a richness I’m slowly finding a voice for with this story. I remember reading in another thread that you didn’t particularly like Shakespeare, so I’m even more pleased that you’re finding its use here effective. The rhyming couplet from Henry V’s speech that Giles uses is particularly poignant if you know the whole speech (there are times I’m tempted to hyper link to the whole soliloquy – humm, footnotes in fiction). I’ve endeavoured to select material that has and adds meaning to the story. Compelling is certainly what I'm aiming for.



Thanks muchly for the guidance.



Cheers Kittens!!

Patches



ETA: I shouldn't try to write when I'm tired - editing isn't much more effective either - sigh.



You know I've heard about people like me. But I never made the connection. They walk one road to set them free, And find they've gone the wrong direction. But there's no need for turning back 'cause all roads lead to where I stand. And I believe I'll walk them all No matter what I may have planned

Edited by: Patches at: 2/27/03 9:21:17 am
Patches
 


Re: Feedback: Betrayal - Part One

Postby Grimlock72 » Sun Mar 02, 2003 12:42 pm

I still say destroying the staircase going up that tower would have been easier. Heck, destroying the tower itself would have saved God knows how many people... dumb monks. If you want to be nice you could even get Dawn down from that tower, why on earth leave her there ??



Anyway, the fight-scene was described well. I'm not a fan of big scenes since it's usually hard for me to follow all that happens. Managed to keep up with most of it this time :)



Why didn't Buffy hit Glory when Willow had her restraint ? That would have been like a *good moment* to do some mayor damage, but noooo... moment was wasted (as was the power spend on that spell).



"Trust me" sounds nice but usually leads to someone doing something bad or not wise, letting Tara fall asleep definitly does NOT qualify as nice or trusting. Granted the world is about to end, so the alternatives are kinda limited anyway... still I want to know who that man is Willow met up with. Judging Willow's action in hindsight is easy though not exactly fair so I'll just wait what happens next :)



Do rest a bit before writing the next chapter though, can't have a kitten overworked writing fanfic :D



Grimmy

"You hurt Tara," Willow said too calmly. "The last one who tried that was a god. I made her regret it." -- Unexpected Consequences by Lisa of Nine

Edited by: Grimlock72 at: 3/2/03 10:45:26 am
Grimlock72
 


Betrayal - Part Two

Postby Patches » Thu Mar 06, 2003 3:19 am

Title: True Gift – Chapter 1 Betrayal – Part 2.

Author: Patches

Email: in my profile, please read note in bio.

Rating: R – NC 17 (VIOLENCE with –potentially- explicit sex in later chapters - will update warning when necessary.)

Spoilers: Up to Season 5 – “The Gift,” with many alterations and crossovers in the story line from “Tough Love” and “The Gift.” - Especially here

Feedback: Yes Please! Prefer posted commentary, but if something’s really biting you, feel free to e-mail me. Please, bring it on.

Disclaimer: see first post – I don’t own anything associated with BtVS – I just want to see their characters get taken care of properly.

Acknowledgements: DMW Let’s see, I envisioned this as a 5,000 word short – what are we up to now, 13,000 words, and the fun’s just started. I was exceedingly pleased when you keyed into my two favourite passages and only two drafts this time. I now read and write through another’s eyes and that’s a really cool thing to learn. Grammar’s still a bitch though - grammar will always be a bitch. And to the other Pens writers – after reading your incredible work, I work diligently and dream to be half as good.

Summary: Second of a two-part chapter. You’ll laugh, you’ll cry and by the end of it you’ll be trying to hunt me down. Did I say “bumpy” ride yet? Chapter two should be ready early next week. It’s not quite as involved, but then again ...



WARNING: This story is dark. Please remember that regardless of what happens, or what is portrayed in the chapters, Willow and Tara will be together, in love at the end. Bumpy road’s first stop – the gates of hell.



Grimmy, I’ll post my response after this chapter. It should answer some of your questions.

Mary, the local pharmacy's empty

~~~



Tara’s mind struggled toward consciousness. Her senses were dulled. She felt strange, disconnected, like she was dreaming. She was adrift in space, enveloped by darkness. Her body felt like it was floating, miraculous in its defiance of gravity.



Eyelids, impossibly heavy, opened a fraction and her blue eyes gazed blurrily up into the face of her love. Willow was cradling her body in her arms. Her head rested against Willow’s breast. She felt the beating of Willow’s heart. How many times had she lain like this after making love with Willow? Willow’s arms cradling her tenderly while she listened contently to the gentle lub-dub beat of Willow’s heart. How the cadence of that rhythm accelerated when her hand moved over Willow’s body and the passion that lay just beneath the surface was rekindled. As Willow had held her then, so she held her now. Tara tried to move her arms to embrace her love and a jarring reality assaulted her. Her body would not respond. She felt cold. Her mind disassociated from her limp body.



Unfamiliar sensations coursed through her; confusing images warped her perception, disaffected sounds reverberated in her head. Through closed eyes she saw worlds and dimensions converge and meld together; felt pain surrounding her senses.



Her arms ached as if a knife were slicing her flesh, draining her of her essence. A terrible fear gripped her heart. She remembered: The bloodcurdling scream. Dawn, Dawnie! The horrible monsters of nightmare. Glory’s unrelenting fists, and her brutalizing minions. She remembered the feel of Willow’s bruised and bloodied lips crushing against hers; the taste of salty tears which, like waves of agony breaching a sea wall poured from Willow’s eyes and mixed with the bitter metallic of Willow’s blood in her mouth. Willow’s words as her mind faded from consciousness - “Trust Me. Love Me. It is the only way.”



Tara searched Willow’s face and struggled for understanding. Her lover’s expression was blank.



“Where are we?” Tara spoke, but her voice had no sound. Her mind continued, though her voice was mute. Willow. Willow, what has happened? Love?



Tara heard Willow’s voice echo through faint shadows. The sound ricocheted around her, distant. “I have that which you demand.”



“Excellent!” a rumbling, malevolent voice boomed. “You shall have your reward witch, and we shall have our end. I knew you would see it was the only way.”



The words overlapped in Tara’s mind as she wrestled to make sense of what she was hearing. Why did she know that voice? Lucidity returned, slowly.



Tara tried to force her senses to process the distorted images around her and to react to them. What’s wrong with my body? Why is Willow carrying me? Tara probed her body, I’m not wounded, why can’t I move? A word floated in her mind, she reached out to grasp it, but it slithered away. She searched further and felt the cold desolate edges of dark magic binding her against her will. What could be holding her? Another fragment of memory returned; Willow kissing her and uttering a single word, sleep, under her breath. Willow? You did this? No. It’s not you. It can’t be you.



A gnarled, translucent phantom moved to take Tara from Willow’s arms. Tara’s mind recoiled and she struggled to make her immobile limbs react, to force away the darkness strangling her voice. She rebelled against the thought, You would never betray me like this.



More sensation returned and blurred vision refocused to see Willow’s face flash with an anger that made the hell creature hesitate, then cower before them. She saw the blackness of Willow’s eyes; she knew, and her heart cried. Goddess, Willow. What have you done? Oh, my love. What have you done?



“Don’t – touch – her!” Willow’s voice was cold with fury.



The twisted fiend looked uncertainly at its masters.



More awakenings; Tara felt Willow’s body tense. She sensed the rage within her lover, the fury, and the darkness that was her. Tara harnessed her energy and clawed at the desolating wisps of dark magic holding her, desperately trying to break the energy of the spell keeping her body hostage.



She felt Willow turn and stand defiantly before the otherworldly Dark Lord.



For the first time, Tara caught a glimpse of who, or rather what Willow was speaking to. The ethereal creature stood a few feet away from them, cloaked in shadow she could not see its face or its form. Beside the silhouetted shape another being appeared; it too was masked by shadow, like it was there, but at the same time it wasn’t. There was no cohesive substance.



“Welcome Misereous,” said the first Dark Lord.



Behind the Dark Lords, Tara saw the walls of the chamber churn. Cold fear gripped her as she realized where they were. Willow had taken them into the Well of Darkness. They stood at the very heart of reality, where time and space intersected; inside the eye of the hurricane that is the inter-dimensional void. She knew there was a reason it was called a void, but more terrifying than that was her understanding of the amount energy required to summon and maintain such a portal. Tara’s blood ran cold. What price would the Powers exact for this magic.



Through limited vision Tara saw the carnage the portal wreaked on other dimensions as the individual elements of time and space ceased to have meaning and overlapped. The laws of science were defied as multiple objects suddenly occupied the same physical space and time. They didn’t just merge and shadow one another, they conjoined to form twisted conglomerations of hideous perversions of life, fleetingly sharing the impossible; matter and energy converged and then blasted outwards as the laws of nature fought against the defilement of the portal, tearing asunder its new creations, shredding creatures from the molecular level outward. The curving walls of the Well of Darkness painted a gruesome picture detailing the depth of havoc Glory’s petulant obsession was causing. She saw the cylindrical walls surrounding them constrict, imploding like a dying star, sucking dimensions into the abyss and threatening to redefine emptiness. She saw the beginning, the Hellmouth drawing ever closer to their present.



Beyond the turbulent, semi-transparent void, Tara saw large metal skids marked with Sunnydale Tool and Dye in front of the wall of the dank factory. She recognized the name and Tara knew immediately what had happened. Willow, or someone, had somehow summoned and opened the Well of Darkness, the place of darkest magics, just below the courtyard.



A shadowed appendage waved the hell creature away. The creature withdrew, out of her line of sight.



The new voice rang out, darker and more evil than anything she’d heard in her life. It was hellfire and brimstone incarnate; it didn’t sound evil, it defined it. Though her body could not respond, Tara’s soul shivered in the face of its darkness.



The new spectre looked to its companion. “So much spirit and fury, Dagon.” Then it turned its attention to Willow. “You shall be a – welcome - addition to my legion, together with the soul of that one.” It’s feeler pointed to Tara, laying helpless in Willow’s arms.



Tara struggled to move and to speak, but her body refused to respond to her commands. WILLOW! Tara’s mind screamed. She was helpless to act. All she could do was listen and fear the words she heard.



“Enough! Do it. I will pay. My world is bleeding. My friends are dying.” The last sentence tore from Willow’s throat.



Tara looked up at Willow, her eyes pleading, beseeching Willow to allay her fears deny the depth of her betrayal. What have you offered them? YOU CAN’T DO THIS! They’ll never let you win, Willow. You can’t win!



“Yes, we must act soon. Glory grows - stronger.” The terrifying voice of Misereous filled the chamber.



She felt Willow start. The hesitation was almost imperceptible, but Willow heard something, she could tell from the slight acceleration in Willow’s heartbeat. Tara also heard a catch in the Dark Lord Misereous’ voice. A small catch. Willow knows something, but what. What is she doing? The hesitation in the Dark Lord’s voice and Willow’s reaction to it gave her a faint ray of hope.



She felt Willow turn away from the Dark Lords. A monolithic, smooth black stone slab appeared before her. Tara’s heart raced as Willow walked toward it, and a new terror filled her heart.



Willow gently placed Tara’s inert form on the obsidian altar and bound her with heavy chains stained crimson.



You can’t mean ... YOU CAN’T GIVE THEM ... Willow, what are you doing? What have you done to us? The words ripped through Tara’s mind, but she could not force her vocal chords to utter them. All she could do was cry and beg the Powers that it was all a dream. A sick, twisted nightmare from which she would awaken, with Willow lying by her side. Willow holding her and chasing the nightmare away with a gentle touch and a loving kiss. Anything but this.



The leeching cold of the glass beneath her told her, this was no dream. She struggled against the magic that held her body, against the bloody chains that bound her. She searched out Willow’s face, looking for some hint, some explanation, but Willow would not meet her gaze.



With Tara secured to the altar, Willow released the spell holding her body. She felt the burning as the blackness left her eyes. It was taking too much power to hold Tara. It was only a matter of time before Tara’s will overpowered her, and Willow could not afford to spend the energy required to keep Tara sedated. Tara was a healer, her magic was strong, and it was pure. Not like hers. She hadn’t wanted Tara to see any of this. It would have been easier if she hadn’t. And now she was going to see it all. Willow knew it wouldn’t take long for the effects of her spell to wear off. Soon all Tara’s sense would return. Too soon.



“Take your ease Witch, time has no meaning here.” The Dark Lord Misereous waved its arm toward the wall of the chamber. Dagon stepped back and disappeared into shadow. Like a lantern show, Willow saw the mêlée that raged in Sunnydale, her friends battling and losing. Everywhere there was blood and pain. She tore her eyes from the image of the sanguinary battle. Spike’s words echoed in her mind, “it’s always got to be blood.”



“Do not trifle with me.” The green in Willow’s eyes radiated hatred. The Dark Lord laughed and the sound made Willow’s skin crawl. It knew, behind the hatred was defeat, but there was something else it could not explain.



“You presume much Witch.”



Willow spewed her own unique venom at the Dark Lord. “I presume! You great big obnoxious gob of greasy, grimy, gopher guts, you sycophantic reject from an evangelical Christian revival. YOU NEED ME!”



“You DARE challenge me Witch!” Misereous bellowed menacingly.



“Every extra second I’m here, Glory grows stronger and you grow weaker. So don’t you go telling me what I dare and daren’t do, buster. Look at you; you can’t even hold your form anymore. Whatever you perverted pile of mutilated money meat freaks really look like. You can’t walk in my realm until the portal opens and your world bleeds into mine. Then, it will be too late, won’t it?”



The Dark Lord recoiled, almost indiscernibly, but Willow caught it. She knew the truth of her word . “Glory will return to your realm too soon and once that happens, nothing can stop her and your smarmy ass is so grass. My world will be lost, but yours will soon follow.” Muted fury fuelled her words, emboldened by the knowledge they were as desperate as she, “So help me, if there is so much as one more drop of blood spilt, you can go fuck yourself. GIVE ME THE POWER!”



“So be it,” the beast Misereous commanded.



Through a haze of tears, Tara saw the spectre morph into solid form. He, it, was a hideous creature, a shifting blob of black tentacles, with what looked like rotting pieces of flesh hanging off is gelatinous body. The stench of decay permeated the air. Black tendrils extended from the Dark Lord’s form and enveloped Willow. She heard Willow scream as the dark powers flowed into her.



Tara panicked, her words finally finding voice and called out to her, “Willow NO!” She felt the weight of the chains that bound her, her senses returning to sound of Willow’s agonized cries. “Willow! Oh goddess, NO!”



Tara pulled against the heavy chains that bound her, oblivious to the crushing pain in her damaged hand. She felt the cold metal bite her flesh as she tried to rip her hands from the cuffs that shackled her to the altar. “Leave her alone! Willow stop. Oh please, please love, don’t let them do this to you. This can’t be what you meant. Willow. Oh goddess, Willow!”



The pain in her body was nothing compared to the anguish in her heart. This went beyond death. “Willow, don’t give them your soul,” she sobbed. Tara’s pain reverberated throughout the Well of Darkness.



Willow’s words echoed in her mind. “Trust me. Love me.”



“Willow, I love you. Please sweetness. Please Love. Please don’t leave me. Willow, hang on.” No matter what Tara, trust me, love me; it is the only way. Tara tasted blood as she bit her bottom lip and fought to control her horror. Is this what you meant love. Us, in place of Dawnie. “I love you Willow, always. You are my always.”



“Hold your tongue mortal,” Misereous commanded.



Tara stilled her heart against the fear, quieted her spirit, and focused on anchoring Willow’s spirit, on enveloping her with the purity that was their love. It was all she could do. It was all she had left. Tara cried out softly, “Willow. You are my always.”



“She cannot hear you, she belongs to us now, look to her no more.”



Taking Tara’s silence as a sign of acquiescence, of defeat and resignation, Misereous turned to Willow, “Go now witch. We are united as one with you. Remove this blight, and return for payment.”



Agonizing minutes passed as Tara lay chained upon the cold stone. Fear gripped her soul and tears stained the black altar beneath her. The salt from her tears was like an acid, eating slowly at the smooth, glass-like edifice beneath her. Her tears were not for herself they were for Willow. Her gentle Willow, alone in the darkness.



She held on to Willow’s words – ‘trust me, love me.’ Willow would return to her. She had to.



Tara remained silent, pressing fear into the nether realms of her mind. She closed her eyes. She couldn’t bring herself to look as Willow left the chamber. She couldn’t face the possibility that she had lost Willow to the darkness altogether. She had seen glimpses of the dark stain on Willow’s soul, when Willow took her first steps into fringe of darkness. At first she had ignored it, but recently it threatened to overwhelm them. They had fought over it, and it had nearly cost her her sanity. Her mind drifted back, it was only yesterday, but it felt like a lifetime.



~~~

Willow was supposed to meet her at the Magic Shop at noon, so they could go to the fair together. At two-thirty, Tara gave up. She was angry. This was the second time Willow had ditched her to... She didn’t want to consider what came after the ‘to.’ They’d had a couple of tiffs about Willow’s intense interest in the power of the dark magics and it’s source. Tara didn’t like the unsavoury character of the practitioners of the dark magics. They were generous with their gifts, but never upfront about their price. The dark magics had a way of nibbling at the edges of the soul. Tara knew that’s where Willow had gone. It was why she wasn’t here with her, why they weren’t together at the Fair. A nagging fear crept into her heart.



As she collected her things, Buffy approached and sat down beside her. “Tara, you going to be okay?” she inquired gently, resting a comforting hand on Tara’s shoulder.



“Buffy, I-I don’t know w-what to do. This is twice. Anytime I talk to her about the magics, she gets all defensive and closes up.” Tara didn’t look at Buffy. She struggled to hold back her tears.



“Tara,” Buffy continued. “Will’s a lot stronger than she looks, ya’no.” She gave Tara’s shoulder a gentle squeeze.



“I-I know that Buffy. But I-I also know w-what the dark magics exact in exchange for the use of their power. E-eventually, they stop asking for money.”



Anya came over to the table, eavesdropping on the conversation. “You are right, both of you. Willow is strong, so are the dark magics – but they’re expensive. It’s all about power. Like a vibrator. Want quick results, use fresh batteries, and turn it on high; just don’t expect it to last very long, but the effect is very intense. That’s all the dark magics are - high voltage, expensive batteries. The witch is the vibrator, the dark magics are the juice.” Anya was proud of herself, as if she’d just imparted some hidden gem of wisdom or stumbled upon an earth shattering discovery, like finding the lost city of Atlantis. Anya turned away from them without another word and went to dust jars of Eye of Newt, happy to have contributed in such a meaningful way.



Buffy and Tara stared at one another, each shaking her head in disbelief. “I am so not going there,” said Buffy.



“Me neither.” Tara paused reflexively, and then added without thinking, “Well, I have. With Willow, I mean, not Anya.” Then she stopped, realizing what she’d just said.



Buffy’s pop, initially destined for her stomach, made it only as far as her lips before exploding outwards and drenching the cash counter behind Anya, as she sputtered and choked back a laugh.



“W-when am I ever going to l-learn to stop when I’m ahead of the game,” Tara’s voice trailed off as she tried to recompose herself. Her face was now the colour of the crimson tide. “I’m going h-home. If Willow shows-,”



“I’ll tell her you’re at home,” said Buffy walking Tara to the door, giving her a big hug and a gracious, ‘you know that was way too much information, but I’ll forgive you anyway’ smile.



“And don’t forget, it’s all about the vibrators! Oh yes, and tell Willow that Ben dropped off a book for her,” Anya chirped as Tara left the Magic Shop.





Willow showed up at Tara’s dorm room at four in the afternoon dressed in black leather pants and a white crop shirt.



“I’m sorry I’m late. You all revved and ready to go a’multicultural fair’ing with your sexy fairy? See, look’it me, what with being all sexy in leather,” said Willow jovially pirouetting in front of the door.



“T-that’s all you’re going to say to me.” Tara stood beside her bed, arms crossed. This isn’t starting well, she thought to herself.



“Oh-key, so all bets are off on the damsel-in-distress-being-rescued-from-the-clutches-of-the-dragon at yea ‘ole Sunnydale Fair. Right. Well, ah, if you wanna skip the Fair, we could get right to the grateful maiden part.” Willow expounded hopefully.



“I w-want to talk,” Tara said simply.



Willow heard the tremor in Tara’s voice.



“Sure baby.” Willow dropped all pretence of playfulness. She crossed the room and took Tara’s hands in hers. She sat down on the bed and gently pulled Tara down beside her. “What’s up?”



“The magics,” Tara began.



“We’re not having this discussion again.” Willow tried to pull away.



“Yes we are!” Tara said emphatically, holding Willow’s hands tight in her own.



“No, we’re not. But even if we were having this discussion, which we’re so totally not, there’s nothing to worry about. I can handle it Tara. Dark magic isn’t a drug. I’m not an addict. I won’t go any deeper than I have to. I just have to know, just in case.”



“Willow! Just in case? We’re f-fighting a god. How deep do you think you’ll end up going to b-beat her? You,” Tara stumbled over the word, then corrected herself. “It, it f-frightens me.”



“What are you saying? I frighten you?” retorted Willow, immediately jumping on the defensive.



“Not f-frightened of you Willow. I’m f-frightened for you. This is all so n-new to you. You don’t know the limits of your powers yet. You don’t know yourself yet. You don’t know what you’re doing and I’m not even sure you know what you w-want. If this is what you want.”



Tara reached over and gently touched Willow’s cheek.



Willow recoiled as if the touch had been a slap.



“Don’t patronize me. That’s what this is all about, isn’t it? God Tara,” tears brimmed in Willow’s eyes. “I don’t know what I want? I’m not a little girl. I’m your lover. Tara, you do everything better than I do; you’ve been out longer, you’ve practiced magic longer, you’ve been everything while I was just ordinary Willow. I can’t compete with that.”



“Willow, this isn’t a c-competition,” Tara replied.



“Isn’t it?” Willow disengaged her hand from Tara’s and stood up. Arms crossed tightly over her chest she looked down at Tara. “Tara, you’re a healer. You’re strong in ways I can never hope to be. Don’t you see this is all I can do? You don’t have to hold my hand so I can cross the street. Don’t you trust me?”



“With my life Willow, I trust you with my life. I don’t want to lose you. I-I’m sorry. This isn’t c-coming out right. This isn’t what I wanted. W-why don’t w-we drop it. C-can we just go to the f-fair?” Tara wanted desperately to avert what was coming.



However, Willow was far too wound up to let things lie. Too much stress, too much strain, and Tara had invited the argument.



“Not until this is all out in the open, Tara. It’s not just the magics is it? It’s so new to me, all of it.” The words tumbled uncontrollably from Willow’s mouth. A runaway freight train with a single cargo: hurt. “What else are you afraid of, I might just decide one day to throw Sappho in a locker at the bus depot and hitch-hike my way back to boystown.”



“Willow. T-that’s not f-fair,” Tara retorted, her own ire rising, cheeks flushing with anger.



“But it’s the truth. It’s what you think. Little Willow’s too fragile to handle the power of the dark; little Willow’s not Sapphic enough – look, see, leather pants and tight-fitting shirt – big with the butch. I bought them for you. I bought them so you’d see me in them and want me. I bought them so you’d never have to look anywhere else. Will you ever think of me any other way?”



“No Willow, it’s not what I think, it’s what you think!” She continued dejectedly, “look, we’re both tired, and nothing is coming out right. Let’s just go to the f-fair and we’ll talk about this l-later.”



“I’m not going to the fair.” Willow strode angrily toward the door. “Have a good time Tara. I just, I just need to be away from people for a while.”



“Willow, please.” Tara was near tears. “You can’t stand alone against a god! To beat Glory, you’re going to have to give them a piece of your soul. Do you understand what this means Willow – their price will be your soul! I can’t bear to lose you. That’s what I’m afraid of.” Now her tears flowed freely.



Willow stood rigidly with her back to her.



Tara sat on the edge of her bed, knees drawn to her chest, she buried her face in her hands and sobbed.



“Tara?” Willow whispered.



She felt Willow gently lift her chin, bend down and kiss her tear streaked face. Their tears mixed and Willow gently stroked her hair.



“Oh god, Tara I’m so sorry. I, I didn’t mean to make you cry. I never want to make you cry.”



Tara looked into Willow’s eyes and saw the depth of her pain and anguish.



“Willow, I,” Tara began.



Willow placed a finger tenderly on Tara’s lips, quieting her.



Willow’s words were a bare hush. “No Tara, you were right, they are my fears. There’s so much uncertainty. I don’t know what I can do, and I don’t know what will happen. I don’t know myself. Colour me all rainbowy new to Sappho’s spells, but know this my beautiful, beautiful Tara, I. Love. You. Only you, forever you, and only you - always.” She continued to stroke Tara’s silky hair.



“Willow, I-I’m sor,-“ Tara began.



“Shhh, don’t apologize for the truth Tara.”



Tara pulled Willow close, resting her head against Willow’s breast and draped her legs around Willow’s, drawing familiar comfort. Willow held her lovingly.



Willow’s voice was kind and Tara knew how much she regretted her outburst, “I’m sorry baby. I’m sorry. It’ll be okay, I promise. Please go to the fair I’ll meet you there later. Okay, in an hour.”



“Okay, I’m sorry too Willow. I didn’t mean it, n-not like that.”



Willow didn’t reply. She gently lifted her and drew her into a tight embrace, arms wrapped protectively around Tara’s shoulders. Tara held on to Willow and leaned in to kiss her. She heard Willow’s soft moan as her tongue caressed Willow’s tender lips, seeking to heal with her touch and her kiss.



“Fair now,” said Willow gently pulling away before they got carried away, “Sapphic delights later. I’ll meet you there. I’m going to see Buffy at the Magic Shop first.”



Tara looked doubtfully at Willow and held their embrace.



“Magic Shop only, I promise. Then right to the Fair.”



“Love, how will you find me?” asked Tara, reluctantly breaking their embrace.



“I’ll always find you Tara, I’ll always find you.” Willow smiled.



“And I you,” Tara replied softly.



                ___



She sat on the bench at the Sunnydale Fair Grounds, eyes closed, absorbing the remainder of the unusually warm February air. She could feel the people around her; hear children’s gleeful giggles. She was sorry she’d fought with Willow. She’d have to think of something extra special to make it up to her. Maybe something that involved strategically placed berries. Her heart fluttered at the thought.



Her hand rested on the bench at her side. She felt warm fingers entwine with her. The corner of her lip curled into a smile. She’d been found.



Her eyes opened a crack and she looked at the hand tightly holding hers.



“This seat taken?” inquired Glory, solicitously.



Tara looked in fear at the Hell god sitting beside her. She tried to pull her hand away.



“You were expecting someone else weren’t you? How cute, you were waiting for your girlfriend. Let’s hope she shows up soon. I believe I have a debt to repay.” Glory’s eyes narrowed. “As I recall, it had something to do with an express trip to the stars without a spaceship.” Glory smiled maliciously.



Tara felt like she would be sick. She opened her mouth to cry out a warning.



“Uhn, uhn, uhn, don’t say a word.” Glory squeezed her hand tighter, crushing Tara’s fingers. “You so much as utter a peep and those pretty little children over there are dead. You know I’ll do it too. And it’ll all be your fault. No one here to help the poor witch.”



Pain exploded in her as Glory’s fingers dug deep and the Hell god’s nails pierced her flesh; fingers crushing the delicate bones in her hand. Tara struggled against the pain. Her chest heaved against the sobs her mouth refused to utter.



“That’s a good girl, Tara. Wouldn’t want anything to happen to those pretty babies now would you? You’re the key to it all – get it, the Key.”



Tara looked at Glory, trying to hide her horror and her pain. She thinks I’m the key.



“Will someone please tell me what it is about pain that you mortals don’t get, where’s the humour I hear so much about? I really don’t understand you at all. Oh well, it’s not going to matter for very long.”



Glory lifted Tara’s hand and licked the blood dripping from Tara’s wounds.



“EWWWW!” Glory exclaimed. “This is disgusting. You, you’re HUMAN! I’ve been lied to! You’re not my key. You’re just a filthy mortal. WHERE’S MY KEY?”



Tara bit down on the inside of her lip to stifle her scream.



Tara turned the pain toward Glory and spat in her face.



“You little bitch. I’m going to make you pay for this!”



Glory crushed Tara’s hand harder.



“But you know what, it’s not a total waste. Too bad your girlfriend’s not here, but I guess I’ll just have to settle for a little snack.” Glory released Tara’s hand and brought her own hands beside Tara’s head.



“It doesn't kill you. What it does ... is make you feel like you're in a noisy little dark room ... naked and ashamed ... and there are things in the dark that need to hurt you because you're bad ... little pinching things that go in your ears ... and crawl on the inside of your skull. And you know ... that if the noise and the crawling would stop ... that you could remember how to get out.”



Tara sat transfixed as she felt conscious control slowly slip away. She should run, but the babies - the little children.



From across the Fair Ground, Tara heard Willow's voice carry above the sounds of festive Sunnydale Fair goers. Over the racket of noisy rides, "GLORY! Get away from her!" drifted through the pain and encroaching oblivion. Sweet Willow, help me.



“Tara!”



She turned her head slightly and caught a glimpse of Willow's white shirt, dodging unaware fairgoers, Willow racing across the open expanse toward them. Tara felt the earth shift and knew Willow was gathering the power of the goddess. She felt Willow's power, drawn from deep within, ripple and course through space waiting to do Willow's bidding. Willow's voice exploded across the fair ground. “I echo Diana when I decree, that she I love must now be free.” She clapped her hands together once, then threw her right hand out, palm forward and unleashed the spell on Glory.



Glory’s hands, poised on either side of Tara’s temples, suddenly stopped their inward motion.



“What the fuck, witch! What did you do to my hands?” Glory’s hands faded, losing corporal form. They turned black and globular, losing their grip.



“TARA! RUN!”



“I’m going to hurt you for this!” exclaimed Glory.



Willow continued her assault on the Hell god, focusing her energy on Glory’s legs, Tara watched in disassociated fascination as they turned to black jello.



Willow's voice snapped her out of the fog. "RUN. DAMN IT, Tara, RUN!"



Tara felt Glory's hold on her slip away. Her legs moved of their own volition and ran toward Willow. The tears she refused to shed at the hands of the Hell god now flowed freely. Every step she took shook the mangled bones of her hand and sent pain bursting through her brain, bringing her fully back to awareness.



They had no time to think. By the time Tara reached Willow, Glory’s appendages were beginning to reshape into human form.



Willow looked at Glory once more, and yelled, THICKEN. Glory tried to move, but the air around her condensed and contracted to form a thick elemental barrier. Willow’s spell ensnared her inside a constricting bubble of dense air.



Willow and Tara escaped into the crowd. Willow had found her, saved her from the dragon.




~~~



Tara heard rustling around her, and her senses drifted back into the present. She felt the cold gnawing of the shackles holding her to the icy stone.



The Dark Lord Misereous approached Tara. “She has returned.”



“All went well, my brother?” Misereous inquired.



“Yes, Glory is no more. The witch destroyed the gemstone,” Dagon replied.



Willow stood before the obsidian altar, black eyes almost vacant. Her face was bruised and cut, blood mixed and clashed with her fiery red hair.



The ritual was set to begin.



“Willow?” Tara’s voice was hushed.



Willow’s empty eyes looked away from her.



Tara cried out, “Take my soul in her place. I will pay you. Take my life. Take my soul. Leave her alone!”



What thoughts could bind her to the impossibility of this reality? This can’t be happening. They can’t have taken my sweet Willow away from me.



She wanted to scream, but no sound came from her. It wasn’t magic stilling her tongue, holding her body rigid, it was the gut wrenching truth, the stark horror of the images that assaulted her. She tried desperately to feel Willow’s essence, to find her in the darkness.



Tara closed her eyes, holding desperately to one shard of sanity, Willow’s words. Trust me.



The Dark Lord Dagon appeared before her. Its form shifted, taking on human dimensions, and she looked into the face of Ben.



“NO, this can’t be! You can’t be! Willow killed Glory. She killed Glory. You have to be dead.”



“Not dead Tara, free. Willow freed me,” Ben said softly. “It’s all part of the deal, part of the price. Glory dies and I live, singular and immortal in your realm as Ben. Misereous takes sole control of our realm. I don’t have to share the two aspects, the male and the female, of this one body with my petulant sister. The portal closes when Dawn stops bleeding. As a bonus Willow seals the Hellmouth.”



“But how?” Tara stared around her in disbelief. “What do you mean, Willow seals the Hellmouth?” Tara felt as if she were going insane, almost wishing Willow hadn’t saved her from Glory. Oblivion looked appealing.



“When Buffy hit Glory with the Hammer, it hurt her as I knew it would and that blow allowed my essence to escape. I drained Willow’s power and with that power I opened the Well of Darkness to allow Misereous access to this realm. All that remained once I was free was to destroy the female form, kill Glory. And we gave Willow our power to do it.”



“You channelled Willow’s power. A power strong enough to summon the Well. That’s why Willow’s spell didn’t bind Glory. That’s why she had to fight so hard to use her magic. You violated her and stole her power.” Tara struggled helplessly against her metal bonds. Immortal or not, if she were free, she would have ripped Ben’s throat out with her bare hands.



“She’s even more powerful than I thought, but she doesn’t know the depth of her ability, she didn’t even know I was doing it. It’s very simple, a perfect plan really. When the ritual is complete, the Hellmouth will close and the worlds will return as they were, minus a couple of souls.” Ben added as an after thought, “Sorry about that last bit, big brother insisted. A god’s power is kinda pricey that way.”



Realization dawned on Tara, driving away the insanity gnawing at her.



“You stole her power! She and Buffy could have killed Glory without your perverse powers. The Troll Hammer was a weapon of a god, wielded by a Slayer and Willow’s own power was strong enough to hold Glory. Buffy and Willow together could have killed her – without your interference!”



“Well sure." Ben said nonchalantly. "But, had Willow and Buffy killed Glory with my essence still trapped inside her, I might have died along with my narcissistic sister. I couldn’t let that happen. I needed a sure thing.”



“You betrayed her.” Tara spat at Ben.



“I wasn’t the one who doubted her strength. Ours was the only way. I just had to convince Willow of that fact. It wasn’t that hard,” he said, wiping spittle from his face.



Tara’s mind wrenched, she felt like she was going to be sick. Her own words to Willow bounded through her consciousness, “You don’t know the limits of your powers. You don’t understand. You can’t stand alone against a god.”





“Enough of this Dagon! You want to know how deeply you were betrayed mortal?” Misereous’ chilling voice called out. “When the witch completes the ritual, the mystical knife will slice your delicate flesh, carve through your bones and sever your beating heart from your chest. By this act, the witch will close the Hellmouth for eternity. It will be sealed with the blood of your mortal soul. This is the witch’s reward, and her payment for using our power to killing Glory. The piece of her soul we exact as payment is YOU!



Willow, cowled in black, stood trance-like with Misereous’ Blade poised above Tara’s heart and chanted,



From shadowy realm, ancient terror dark unknown;

We bleed this mortal’s soul upon your stone.

The gift was given, the price is paid;

Lord Gods of Fury, eternal darkness is made.






To Be Continued.







You know I've heard about people like me. But I never made the connection. They walk one road to set them free, And find they've gone the wrong direction. But there's no need for turning back 'cause all roads lead to where I stand. And I believe I'll walk them all No matter what I may have planned

Edited by: Patches at: 3/6/03 2:12:16 pm
Patches
 


Re: Betrayal - Part Two

Postby justin » Thu Mar 06, 2003 4:38 am

Again with the cliff hangers.



That was a great update :clap It's just I'm not sure that I'm going to be able to stand all the suspense. :thud



I understand, you should be with the person you l-love


I am


justin
 


Re: Betrayal - Part Two

Postby barnabasvamp » Thu Mar 06, 2003 5:13 am

Wow, well done :applause A very interesting take on Ben and the part he could have played in all this.



Poor Tara, but she does know inside that she can always trust Willow.



The cliffhanger, so mean! :grin

BV

"When choosing between two evils, I always like to take the one I've never tried before"-Mae West

barnabasvamp
 


Part Two - Feedback Responses

Postby Patches » Thu Mar 06, 2003 7:30 pm

Grimmy, a thousand and two apologies for being tardy. I had meant to reply to your great feedback sooner, but a Muse took over my computer and anytime I tried to open a word doc, it automatically brought up the story instead of a blank page. No really, that’s what happened ;)



In the series, I wondered how the heck the Scoobies could have missed a hundred foot tower lit up like a Christmas tree. So I figured the only way was if the tower was constructed immediately before the ritual, while the Scoobies were at the Magic shop pondering the meaning of life and how to stop a god from bringing apocalypse – in the next update, you’ll find out why my version of events (hopefully) aren’t as lame as what happened in the show.



Humm, I guess I fell down a little in the pacing of the fight between Buffy and Glory. The Troll Hammer knocked Glory away from Buffy (probably should have been further than a few feet, my oops) and it did hurt her, but one blow wasn’t enough to kill her; Glory’s minions surge around the Scoobies and Buffy, trying to protect Glory – Willow throws the spell on Glory, who is weakened, but it dissipates quickly before Buffy can get at another good crack at Glory with the hammer. The delay allows Glory to recover and prepare for Buffy’s attack (she is a god after all, and survived a mile high drop from above Sunnydale, not to mention her brief stint as a hood ornament on a speeding freight truck will no apparent ill effects, she’s got some stamina working for her). Glory’s an insane narcissist. But, I don’t think she’s as stupid as ME portrayed her. This chapter (1b) explains why Willow’s spell didn’t work. With the element of surprise lost, Glory proceeds to pound Buffy into the ground – and Willow realizes that Buffy’s not going to be able to stop her. Hence Willow’s, ‘world’s going to end, all hope is lost, last ditch plan’ goes into action.



So, I hope you see, it wasn’t really a wasted moment – just the short comings of a novice writer. I'm learning as I go. I appreciate you pointing this out to me. I will endeavour to make sure I look for those kinds of holes in the story and lapses in pacing. I like to hear what doesn't work almost as much as I like to hear what does work.



Ya, don’t you just get all nervous when someone says in the heat of battle, “Trust me?” I always equate that saying with, uh-oh something not nice is about to happen.



That you gleaned that there’s not much in the way of hope is important. There can’t be any alternative in Willow’s mind for what she’s about to do.



Thanks for reading and for the feedback. It’s great to hear people’s thoughts!



Wiccansillusion Absolutely, I’ll keep going – it’s become an obsession for me. There’s much more coming, I promise. Mondo thanks for not changing the dial when you saw my story.



FEEDBACK to Betrayal, Part Two.



Justin They say you should leave your readers wanting more. Cliff hangers are always fun – in that cruel to be kind sorta way. Keep your seatbelt buckled snugly, there’s just a little more nail biting to come. Thanks so much for following our girls on this journey.



bv Happy you’ve hopped on. Thanks for the compliment, I really appreciate hearing that people like what I’m writing. Has a tendency to make me feel a whole lot less insecure about writing. The idea of using Ben in this way came through a discussion with my beta reader (DMW). The whole ‘everyone gets stupid and can’t remember that Ben and Glory morph into each other was retarded. Here, they are two entities sharing the yin and yang (or male and female) aspects of one human body that constantly battle each other for control. He’s not as malevolent as Glory, and in fact actually likes our realm – he’s more than happy to stay here and be a doctor. Except for Willow and Tara, whom he sees as regretfully expendable, he’s happy with the deal that was made. Put it in perspective, Glory’s is causing many, many more people to die to get what she wants.



Tara’s is battling fiercely to reconcile what her heart knows with what her senses are telling her. But you know, deep down, Willow has to have something up her sleeve.



Kitten all, I appreciate you thoughts. Thanks for reading.



Cheers!!

Patches



You know I've heard about people like me. But I never made the connection. They walk one road to set them free, And find they've gone the wrong direction. But there's no need for turning back 'cause all roads lead to where I stand. And I believe I'll walk them all No matter what I may have planned

Edited by: Patches at: 3/6/03 9:37:54 pm
Patches
 


dark indeed

Postby miss calendar » Fri Mar 07, 2003 10:52 am

Bloody hell, Patches, you weren't kidding when you warned this was a dark fic!!



My mind's still reeling and like your Tara I can't quite believe Willow has actually done what you show her doing. It's one thing to make a deal to sell your own soul, but to include someone else's in the bargain? To sell your soulmate's soul?!! And without consent.....is that even possible, doesn't the owner of the soul have to agree to the bargain? Or perhaps since they are soulmates and Tara has repeatedly told Willow, ' I'm yours ' then Willow does possess Tara's soul and can therefore sacrifice it in this way. ( Though then wouldn't the converse be true and Willow's soul already belongs to Tara so she has no soul of her own to bargain with? )

I know that Tara subsequently offered to trade her soul in exchange for Willow's but Willow did not even consult her beforehand. Yes, Tara did say that she trusted Willow with her life but I doubt she expected quite this outcome. Willow must have immense faith in Tara and their love to risk what she has done.



Anyway, you've got me completely hooked, I'm loving the fic so far. I like the way the dark theme is reflected in the dark mood and equally dark descriptive passages. You really convey how hard everyone is trying not to give in to dark despair however hopeless their situation. The description of their final, losing battle was wonderful and it makes total sense that it is when they have already lost and the apocalypse is upon them that Willow would turn to dark magic and her, ' last resort, worlds gonna end, hope is lost ' idea.



It's interesting how much the idea of hope and trust comes up in contrast to the hopelessness and despair. I found it particularly interesting how before and during the battle everyone was placing their hope in Willow. Not just Buffy telling Willow, ' You're our best hope ' but Tara looking for reassurance in ' the smile that held so much hope ' and Xander's despair when he realises that Willow's spell cannot contain Glory and Buffy is now their only hope. In fact it seems that people are placing their hope in Willow rather than Buffy which must be hard for Willow, given that she's ' not so big on the hope thing. ' No wonder she turns to desperate measures......



Your characterisation is great and I liked the glimpse of an affectionate friendship between Buffy and Tara. I liked the moments of humour, especially Anya's helpful explanation about dark magic using the analogy of a vibrator and Giles and Spike's reactions when Willow quotes the Scottish play. I also liked the changes you've made to BTVS canon, as darkmagicwillow pointed out they make a lot more sense than what was shown on the show. I'm so glad that magic is not addictive but the use of it has a cost, that Willow is shown choosing to use dark magic and to pay the price however high that may be, for the sake of the world rather than personal gain.



Another thing I liked were the changes you made to the Tough Love argument and the fact that Willow did rescue Tara from being brainsucked. And though it was painful to read, you really conveyed Tara's tremendous courage and altruism during her encounter with Glory. In fact you show that, given the choice, Tara most likely would offer her life and soul to save the world and all the people in it. However Willow did not give her this choice and that for me is the worst part of her act of betrayal. I thought that passage where Tara regains consciousness, not knowing where she is or what has happened worked very well. From her first understanding that she is cradled in Willow's arms and all the happy associations that brings up to her growing fear and horror as she realises the true situation.....As a reader I found myself going through a similar process and then that terrible ending.....If I didn't know that all fics on Pens have to end with Willow and Tara happily together I might have reservations about where the fic is going but I trust you when you say it will all end ok.



In a dark, dark fic,

There was a dark, dark, battle,

Then a dark, dark, choice,

And a dark, dark bargain.....




and I'm guessing also a dark, dark outcome. Looking forward to seeing where you take this, meanwhile thanks for a compelling if disturbing read.





Edited by: miss calendar at: 3/8/03 6:44:31 am
miss calendar
 


Re: Betrayal - Part Two

Postby darkmagicwillow » Fri Mar 07, 2003 12:10 pm

I love how protective Willow is about Tara, with her "Don't touch her," even as she's giving Tara to the hellgods as a sacrifice. Her worries about Tara experiencing her betrayal as she places her on the stone are quite poignant too.



Your reworking of the Tough Love argument in the flashback improves on the original version, letting us see the source of both girls' worries so their argument makes sense. It also shows the understanding we'd expect between them, even though it's appropriately not enough to resolve their disagreement. Finally, I like how completely the long flashback pulls the reader into the happy world of the past, where the wicca saves the maiden from the hellgod, deepening the shock when the story returns to the bleak present when Willow reappears.



--

"Omnia mutantur, nihil interit." -- "Everything changes, but nothing is truly lost."

Edited by: darkmagicwillow at: 3/7/03 10:16:12 am
darkmagicwillow
 

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