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Fic: The Watcher

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Fic: The Watcher

Postby Indygo » Sun Aug 11, 2002 10:25 pm

Hey guys, here's a new fic I wanted to put out there called "The Watcher"



Author - Indygo (This has nothing to do with my other ongoing piece "Walking Shadows")



The story so far…

OK, so this idea has been kind of kicking around in my head a bit for a while now, but bits and pieces of Season 6 got in the way and screwed things up. So, for reference… Everything in Season 6 has happened. Somehow the Scoobies were able to resurrect Tara and have her live a long and happy life together with Willow the way it should always have been. I haven't covered the resurrection in this first part - perhaps I will later.



This story is set 15 years in the future. A lot has changed. A lot stays the same.



This isn't going to be a long piece, just some fun speculation on their futures. Let me know what you think of the idea.



I'm not sure how much sex, angst or violence there will be in future parts, but this chapter has none of the above.



Spoilers for everything up to and including Season 6. Nothing else to report.





THE WATCHER



The phone rang, echoing through the house. She wasn't sure how she knew, but before she even answered Willow could sense that something important had happened.



Picking up the phone, she spoke softly into the receiver. "Hello?"



"Professor Rosenberg?"



"Speaking."



"It's Willis. We're sending the Slayer to you. She's been called."



Willow froze. A shiver of anticipation crept up her spine. "Which one?"



"Well, as you know we've been watching three possible candidates. It seems the girl from Miami is our lucky girl."



"Lucky?" Willow repeated. She wasn't quite sure Buffy would agree with that description.



Willis hesitated, unsure of Willow's tone. After a while he pushed on. "Yes well, she's on her way in any case. She arrives in Sunnydale on Friday with her family. They've been prepared."



At least this girl had that much, Willow thought. She turned her thoughts to the grim reality of the calling of the new Slayer. "And Faith?"



"Dead. Three hours ago. She died in a prison riot trying to save some other women." He coughed lightly. "It was almost what I'd call heroic."



She was silent for a few moments, absorbing the news. It wasn't a shock to her that she found it difficult to feel anything. It wasn't even worth trying to pretend that Faith had ever meant anything to her on a personal level. Even the animosity she used to feel towards the rogue Slayer had faded over the years into nothingness. "Well, at least that's something." She offered.



"Well, in any case, its time. Are you ready?"



She grunted. "Would it really matter if I said no?"



"No." The voice at the end of the line chuckled softly. "But we still need to know that you're confident you can do this. Others are trained and willing…"



"No." Willow said firmly. "I'm ready. How could I not be? I've almost spent more time in my life around Slayers than not. Who better than me?"



"This one could still surprise you."



Willow smiled into the receiver. "If she's anything like the other three Slayers I've met, I'm counting on it."



"Excellent." A lilt in his voice betrayed his hesitation.



"What?" Willow asked, nervously.



"The news, of Faith's death… we haven't told anyone yet."



"Buffy doesn't know?"



"No."



Willow sighed, heavily. Behind her she heard the front door open and close, the steady rhythm of her lover's footsteps coming down the hall towards her. "Let me handle it. Faith and Buffy weren't close, but it will probably still be better coming from a friend."



She heard Willis's breath of relief. "I was hoping you'd say that. It's difficult, being the bearer of bad news."



"Apart from the fact that Buffy still isn't on speaking terms with anyone in the Council, except me."



"Well, yes, there's that." Willis replied, slightly more agitated.



She smiled to herself. The Watcher's council had probably changed more in the past fifteen years than in its entire thousand year history, but they were still a bunch of stuffed British shirts at heart. She still loved tweaking their noses from time to time. It kept them aware of who they were dealing with. "Don't worry about Buffy. She'll come around."



Willis laughed out loud. "With all due respect Professor, you've been saying that for ten years."



"Yeah well, she's a little stubborn about the whole 'giving her stupid orders' thing. I think she knows how changed the whole thing is now. I don't think she'd accept me being a part of it unless we were making some real changes."



"Changes? That's the understatement of the year, if I've ever heard one. I think Buffy has single-handedly managed to turn every Slayer tradition on its head. And the ones she hasn't, you have."



"Well, I do my best." She replied cheekily.



He laughed again. "Well, Buffy has certainly achieved one very noteworthy thing. She'll be the first Slayer in history to ever hand over the reins to another Slayer and still be breathing. This isn't the usual way that Slayers retire."



"Believe me, whatever deities are hanging around right now have my undying love and devotion for that fact." She replied, a smile spreading across her face. She wondered how Buffy would react, knowing that she could hang up the stake for good now. A thought, fuelled by the many conversations they'd had on the subject, sprang to her mind. "Have you considered the possibility though that Buffy might not want to retire?"



"How could she not?" Willis asked, puzzled. "Why? Did she say something to you about it?"



"Oh, we've talked about it, thousands of times. I still have no idea how she'll feel about it though, now that the time is finally here."



She felt Tara's hand on her shoulder and looked up into curious eyes. She held up a hand for Tara to wait, trying to follow what Willis was still babbling about on the other end.



"…surprising seeing as she's getting on a bit. Well, I guess that will be up to Buffy. It has no bearing on the new Slayer in any case. All the arrangements have been made. We've set up a house for her family, arranged a job for her mother. The father disappeared quite early on I believe."



"She an only child?" Willow asked.



"Yes. But Slayers have a tendency to be. It would be interesting to know why that is. Something to do with genealogy perhaps?"



"Buffy wasn't… oh wait, hang on, I keep forgetting."



"Yes, I often make that mistake too. But, it has been best for Dawn for people to let themselves forget her origin."



"Hmmm… yes. Well, all right, I'll have everything ready for Friday. I'm looking forward to meeting her."



"As are we, Professor. As are we."



The two exchanged pleasantries before hanging up. Willow turned immediately to greet Tara, burying her face into her shoulder and wrapping her in a huge hug. "Hi. You're home early. How did it go?" She mumbled into Tara's hair, pulling her lover close.



"The meeting didn't take as long as I thought. It was basically him saying 'I don't like the last chapter' and me saying 'bite me'. Was that what I think it was?" Tara drew back from the embrace, concern etched on her face.



Willow frowned. "You need a new editor."



"That's not news. You going to answer my question?"



"I wanted to finish talking about you first." Willow took Tara's hand and led her into the lounge, pulling her down beside her on the large, overstuffed couch.



"I'm done and I think the news you obviously just got is more important. It's starting, isn't it?" Tara asked evenly.



Willow shifted a bit on the couch, looking uncomfortable. "Yes, and I'm worried that you seem a little under-whelmed by the whole thing. I thought you were OK with this?"



Tara reached out and threw her arms around Willow's shoulders. "I am OK with it. I'm just worried, that's all. It's going to be a huge change for us."



"How? Why? It's not like we're not already involved with a Slayer. We're, like, veterans."



"Yes, but Buffy is a take-charge kind of gal. Now it's not her calling the shots any more, it's you. Professor Rosenberg, writer of books, teacher of students, Watcher of the Slayer." She looked down at her hands, a gesture Willow recognised as easily as she did her own reflection.



"Tara" she said, softly. "This isn't going to change anything between you and me."



"Yes, it will. You remember what Giles and Buffy were like - she was almost like his daughter. This is like…like…you're having a child or something. Except already grown up and able to pass judgements on everything and anything. And then there's all the responsibility, the extra time, the danger…"



"No more danger than we've been in for years." Willow reasoned. "I've been hurt, Xander's been hurt, you died for God's sake!"



Tara shuddered. "I don't want to think about that. And you know what I mean."



"Tara, we knew all this. We talked about all of it when I decided to get the Council to train me. You said you liked the idea."



"I do! I still do." Tara clutched Willow's hands for emphasis. "Darling, you were born to do something like this, with your talent, it would be a waste if you didn't. I guess then it was just a 'sometime, maybe'. Now that it's real, it's here, it just seems so…so big."



"I know." Willow replied simply, leaning in to give Tara the gentlest of kisses. "But we'll deal with whatever comes along."



"We will?"



"Yep."



"Anything?"



Willow nodded with certainty. "Anything."



"How do you know?"



"Wiccan insight. It's a powerful thing you know." Willow winked, sending Tara into a burst of giggles. "I might not be the witch I once was, but that kind of thing never goes away."



They snuggled closer on the couch, Tara leaning her head against Willow's shoulder. "What is it about you that makes me feel 19 years old again? I mean, we've both grown so much older and we've done so many things and been together for so long, but sometimes I feel like I've only just fallen in love with you. I don't understand it."



Willow looked thoughtful. "I don't know either, but I don't think it's something we want to think too much about. It just is, you know?"



"I know."



----



"So" Buffy began, stirring her mocha absently with a long silver spoon. "Faith's dead."



Willow gave her a sympathetic smile. "I figured it would be better coming from me, rather than from the Watcher's Council."



Buffy simply nodded, not looking up. She kept stirring.



Willow touched her arm lightly. "I thought you might take it badly. How are you feeling?"



She shrugged. "You know, more numb than anything else."



Willow nodded. "That's pretty much the way I felt. Not happy, or sad, just numb."



"I feel bad about it being so long since I visited her." Buffy said quietly.



"No Buffy, I won't sit here and listen to you feel guilty about anything to do with Faith." Willow admonished firmly. "You did everything you could do with her. Angel did everything he could. Everything else was up to Faith, and she kept blowing it over and over again."



"I don't think Angel has been back to visit either lately."



Willow spooned some of the melted ice-cream into her mouth from the puddle in the dish in front of her. She licked the edges of the spoon. "I've been wondering…"



"What?" Buffy looked up.



"What do you think about how Faith died? Would Faith have let herself be killed? I mean, if she'd had enough of being in there?"



Buffy let out a long sigh. "It's possible. Unlikely."



"So maybe there was something else to it?" Willow suggested.



"Will, what are you getting at?"



Willow frowned, leaning forward. "This whole prison riot thing. It sounds contrived. Too neat and tidy, brown paper package tied up with string."



"Like all my favourite things." Buffy retorted.



"Ha ha. I'm serious."



Buffy considered it. "Hand-to-hand combat. Maybe small makeshift weapons. Small space. Lots of angry people, anything could happen."



"That's just my point. In those conditions, who do you think is more likely to come out alive? Your average inmate, or a trained Slayer?"



"What if one of those 'average inmates' got in a lucky stab with something sharp and deadly?" Buffy reasoned. "Or, taking a more honourable line, maybe she preferred to be killed than having to kill someone else?"



"All of these are possibilities," Willow agreed. "I'm just saying it seems weird. I'm sure she didn't have that much longer left on her sentence. She could have been out soon." She screwed her face, trying to fetch some long buried piece of information from the recesses of her mind. "I can't remember how long the Council told me she had left."



"Assuming she would have gotten parole. They might have kept her there until her hair turned grey. It takes a while to get 'psychopath' erased from your criminal record." Buffy sipped at her mocha. "Will, you think too much. She's gone. Let's just let it go."



"That's me, I'm the thinking gal." She quipped. "But I think I'm also turning into 'Watcher Gal', you know, like everything seems to have some dark and sinister purpose behind it."



"Now there's demons in Faith's prison cell?" Buffy replied sceptically, lifting an eyebrow. "Maybe a vampire or two?"



"Don't look at me like that. I just mean, we haven't seen the body yet, we don't know how she really died."



"That's a touch on the morbid side. We didn't visit her while she was alive, and now you want to see her to make sure she's dead?"



Willow's gaze narrowed. "Well, I sure as hell don't trust an autopsy report to tell me the real reason why. When have those things ever told us anything?"



"Willow, don't you think you'd be better off worrying about the new Slayer you're about to get, rather than think so much about an old one?"



"Maybe," she replied, "But maybe I can do both. That's my job now, worrying about Slayers in general."



Buffy smiled, wistfully. "Including me?"



"I never needed to be a Watcher to do that."



"I still can't get over you and the whole Watcher thing, Will."



"Why? If I remember rightly it was you who suggested it in the first place."



"That was high school. That's like me saying 'I want to be a fireman when I grow up'! I never expected it to really happen." She laughed.



Willow's face grew serious. "That's almost exactly what Tara said. That she'd thought about it, talked about, but never really supposed that it would ever happen."



"Willow, I was kidding! You're going to make a great Watcher. Giles would be proud."



"I know. And he is. I spoke to him last night. Xander too."



"Well, there you go then!" Buffy aimed a tickling hand at Willow's ribs.



Willow squirmed out of the way, giggling like a schoolgirl. "Besides, you should've known better than to say stuff like that. I meant what I said just before graduation. All I've ever wanted to do since I met you was fight evil."



"I remember that. 'It's a good fight Buffy, and I want in'. I think that was how it went."



Willow nodded. "Exactly. That hasn't changed. That's why I've spent the last however many years turning the Watcher's Council into something we could work with."



Buffy smirked. "Much appreciated effort. You have no idea how much easier my life has been since you kicked Watcher Council butt."



"Actually, I think they only listen to me because they're afraid of you."



"Whatever." Buffy waved her away, but the implied compliment made her smile.



"And there's something weird going on with this Faith thing, I just know it. I cut down on my class load so I could be a Watcher full time. The Professor thing is pretty much just a cover now. So I've got time to dig where others might not get around to digging." Willow insisted.



Buffy shook her head. "Why dig up old memories?"



"Just call it a hunch."



"I've heard of Forensic Medicine, but Forensic Watching?" Buffy joked.



"I'm going to need your help, if I'm going to get to the bottom of this." Willow looked at her with beseeching eyes.



"You know what? I was wondering when that was coming. I still think it's a waste of time."



"Well, if it really does turn out to be all human and nothing icky about it, then I'll let it go. But if there's something demon-y involved…"



"You'll need the Slayer." Buffy finished.



Willow nodded. "At the very least, I'll need the experienced Slayer. I don't think the rookie will be up to it for a while."



"Hey, I faced a bad-ass vampire in my first week on the job!"



"Yeah, but you were like Super-Slayer. Faster than a speeding bullet."



"That whole leaping of tall buildings is still giving me problems though." Buffy retorted.



Willow shrugged. "Nobody's perfect." Seconds later she was giggling again on the receiving end of another Buffy-inflicted tickle attack. "Stop it, this is not a respectable way for a Watcher to act! I'm not a kid any more!" She laughed.



Buffy sat back in her seat, her repentant face undermined by the mirth gleaming in her eyes. "Uh oh. I'd almost forgotten what it was like to have a boring old-fart Watcher around."



Willow poked her tongue out. "Hey, I'm not that old! And I won't wear tweed. That's where I draw the line."



"Gosh Will, you really have made some changes in that Council." Buffy said, emptying the last of her coffee.



Willow puffed up her chest proudly. "Just dragged them kicking and screaming into the 21st Century. We even have laser guns now."



Buffy shook her head in mock awe. "Nothing beats good old Mr Pointy. I hope you're still going to teach her the basics."



"You know what Slayer? You're no fun."



----



"Is that her?" Willow asked, pointing to a lithe, dark haired girl emerging from the small airplane.



Willis referred to a polaroid he had clipped to the top of his notepad. "Certainly looks like her."



"She reminds me a little of Faith." She said absently, not really thinking about the implications of her statement.



"Professor!" Willis looked shocked.



She looked at him, nonplussed. "I didn't mean it that way, stop panicking. It's just the dark hair, the form of her."



"Faith is not a subject we take lightly, you know that." Willis muttered.



"I know, I'm sorry. Don't get all worked up." She hesitated. "Why don't you let me go meet her by myself? We may as well get off on a good note, just me and her."



"Well, if you think that's best…?" he replied, disapprovingly.



Willow ignored his unspoken objection. "Great. See you in a minute." She bounced excitedly away, feeling not a day over sixteen, and certainly nowhere near her thirty-eight years. The walk down to the terminal was a matter of minutes, and she stood, restless, waiting for the few passengers on the small flight to disembark.



The girl made her way through the ticket gate and looked around, expectantly. Willow frowned. The girl looked terrified. At the last minute the Council had voted, against her objections she noted mentally, to send the Slayer on ahead of her family. Once again, seeing the poor girl standing near the terminal, she regretted not pushing her objection more vehemently. Some kind of support for the girl wouldn't have gone astray.



Then again, she noted to herself, that's apparently what I'm for.



"Maia?" Willow asked, taking a few tentative steps towards the Slayer.



The girl's face lit up. "Oh thank God. I wasn't sure if anyone was coming to meet me."



"Actually, we thought about it, but negotiating the Sunnydale bus network isn't something we would inflict on anyone - even if she is the Slayer. It's too cruel." Willow threw the word in casually, watching for a reaction. The look of panic that crossed the girl's features at the mention of 'Slayer' was palpable.



She evaluated her new Slayer carefully, checking by habit all the things she'd been taught by the council - height (half a head taller than herself, she noted enviously), weight, apparent muscle definition (excellent - was this girl an athlete before she was called?).



She stopped, mentally admonishing herself. Maia had been in her company all of sixty seconds and already she was sizing up her potential ability to fight vampires! Was that how long it took for a girl to be downgraded from "person" to merely "Slayer"? No wonder Buffy had gotten frustrated with Giles in the beginning.



She held out her hand. "I'm Willow. Rosenberg. Your new Watcher."



"You make it sound as if I've had an old one." The girl commented. Willow noted there was no sarcasm in her voice.



"Believe me, even though I've never been what you are, a Slayer I mean, I remember being where you are. Only I was being attacked by a vampire and running for my life when I found out they existed."



The girl's eyes popped open all the way, revealing huge brown eyes previously hidden under long, thick lashes.



"You haven't even seen one yet, have you?" Willow asked, gently.



Maia shook her head. "Only in books."



Willow chuckled. "Oh, the real ones are a lot uglier. And faster."



Maia's eyes seemed to be permanently stuck on huge. "This is supposed to make me feel better right? Cause I'm thinking I'd rather go get my teeth pulled. All of them. At once. With a pair of nasty looking pliers."



"You're that scared." Willow added, more a comment than a question.



Maia puffed up her chest a little. "I prefer apprehensive. I think it makes me sound more cautious than downright petrified."



The older woman couldn't help laughing. "You know what? I think you're going to do just fine."



In a few moments they caught up with Willis, who was standing stiffly, staring out the airport lounge window.



"Did someone iron his shirt a little too much this morning?" Maia whispered as they approached.



Willow suppressed a giggle. "He's Watcher Council to the core. They're all bark, believe me. And if they try to bite, flexing a bit of Slayer muscle usually helps make them back off a bit. As Buffy reminded them years ago, their jobs only exist because of the Slayer."



"I'll guess I'll learn that." Maia replied, staring Willis up and down.



"Willis, this is Maia."



While the two shook hands, Willow's gaze was caught by a familiar, blonde-haired figure standing off in the distance. A smile played at the corners of her mouth. "Will you two excuse me for a moment? I'll be right back." She winked at Maia before stepping past them, walking briskly up the corridor.



As she reached her friend she held out her arms for a hug. "I wasn't expecting to see you here."



The two embraced for a few moments. "I couldn't resist, seeing the latest model and all. Though I feel a bit like a Honda meeting a Ferrari. Will you look at her? She's got muscles I can't even remember having any more."



"Yeah sure," Willow teased. "Even I could take you now."



"With or without magic?" Buffy shot back.



Willow cringed. "Come on. I'm sure she's dying to meet you."



"Piece of advice, Will. Don't use the word dying on a Slayer's first day. There's gotta be some bad cosmic energy in that somehow."



"I'll try to remember that. Don't forget, I'm new at this!"



Buffy just grinned and walked ahead, holding her arms outstretched to take Maia's hands in her own. "Maia? Hi, I'm Buffy. Welcome to the Hellmouth."



Willow slapped Buffy's shoulder. "Now see, that "H" thing was the word I was going to make sure not to use until later!"



"Hellmouth?" Maia asked, perplexed.



Shrugging, Buffy stared up into the new Slayer's face. "So, you're my replacement. The next in a long line of Slayers."



The girl managed to shake off her confusion enough to stammer out an answer. "A…apparently so."



Buffy turned to Willow, steadfastly ignoring the Council member standing in their midst. "I wish I'd known even that much when I was called."



Willis was standing to one side, a look of annoyance gradually beginning to form on his officious face. "Yes well, you were a shock to the Watcher's Council."



"I'll bet." Maia quipped, earning herself a stern glare from Willis.



Buffy gave her a huge grin and gave her and enthusiastic slap on the back. "Oh I like her, she's going to be just fine."



Willow stepped in, pushing her diplomacy instincts to the fore. "Come on, let's go. We'll have plenty of time to talk once we get to my place." Willow urged, attempting to steer the group off towards baggage collection. "Tara's waiting for us, I think she was promising to cook something."



"See now Will, I can never tell if Tara is a good cook or not since she made that crack about using magic to hide the taste of the food if it ever came out bad." Buffy joked.



Maia turned quickly. "Magic?"



"She's a witch." Willow responded, without thinking, watching in fascination as bewilderment threatened to overwhelm the poor girl.



"Yeah, but so's she." Buffy added, pointing at Willow.



"Forcibly retired. It's a long story." Willow threw Buffy a hard look. Maia's face grew suddenly pale. Willow checked her temperature, worried "Are you all right?"



The girl nodded. "You know how you feel when you eat too much crap food and you feel like your stomach is about to explode and you have nasty indigestion? Well, I feel like that, only it's my head."



"I know, information overload." Willow rubbed Maia's shoulder sympathetically. "It'll be like that for a while, then you just get used to the fact that there are always a million things you don't understand."



"Yeah, you don't need to get everything. That's what a Watcher is for." Buffy supplied, helpfully, earning herself a glare from Willow. "You know how to speak Sumerian yet, Will?"



"I'm working on it." Willow replied, indignant. "The vowel sounds are tricky."



Willis was at the end of his rope. "Could we please save this discussion for the appropriate time and place? I hardly think an airport…"



Buffy turned on him brusquely. "Who asked the Council to be here?"



With infinite patience, Willis turned to face the Slayer. "It's part of the procedure…"



"I don't remember that part of the procedure." Buffy stated, hands on hips.



Willis reddened. "Well, things have changed since you were called…"



Willow stopped the man as he started digging in his satchel for a copy of the regulations. "Look, both of you, this isn't necessary." She looked pointedly at their young Slayer and then back at the two offending parties. "I agree with Willis. There are some conversations that have a time and a place."



Willis looked like he was about to say something, but stopped at a look from Buffy. Willow let out an exasperated sigh. "Willis, why don't you head back to the Council and let them all know that the Slayer has arrived safely. I'm sure they're anxious to hear all about her. I'll take her straight home, she'll be fine."



"But…"



Willow interjected before Buffy could step in again. "She's in the company of her Watcher and another Slayer. I'm sure that's enough of a presence to satisfy Council regulations."



He backed down at the look of authority on her face. "Yes, I…ummm…yes, I see your point. Good idea." He threw Buffy a last withering glare. "Maia, I'll be seeing you tomorrow when you begin your training."



"Whatever you say. You're the boss." The young girl replied. Buffy stifled another chortle. They all watched silently as Willis stalked angrily down the corridor ahead of them, heading towards the main exit.



Buffy did a little dance, to the amusement of the young Slayer. "That's definitely the best part of a visit from the Watcher's Council. The bit when they leave."



"I take it you don't like the Watcher Council?" Maia asked, innocently.



Buffy snorted. "Oh, big understatement. It's a personal prejudice though. A grudge you might even say. Whatever you like to call it. I've had a problem with them since they tried to kill my boyfriend."



Willow scowled. "Refused to help save your boyfriend Buffy. There's a bit of a difference. And he was a vampire. It was a law that had been there for thousands of years. Besides, he got better."



Maia turned white again. "Your boyfriend is a vampire?"



"Was." Buffy corrected.



"Was your boyfriend, or was a vampire?"



"The former."



"That's it." Willow shoved Buffy aside and grabbed Maia by the arm, practically dragging her towards baggage claim. "We're going home. And on the way there we're not talking about anything except famous Sunnydale landmarks and how good the weather is this year."



In the car on the way to Willow and Tara's house Buffy talked non-stop about which vampires and demons she'd killed in all the famous Sunnydale landmarks, and what the weather was like while she'd done it.



Indygo

Edited by: xita  at: 11/3/02 10:13:31 pm
Indygo
 


Re: Fic: The Watcher

Postby MadeinNZ » Sun Aug 11, 2002 10:51 pm

Great start. So many possibilities. Love the fact that Willow is a Watcher and has a rookie to train. Looking forward to the next chapter.

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


"When someone falls for Willow, they stay fallen" - Normal Again

MadeinNZ
 


Re: Fic: The Watcher

Postby WiccansIllusion » Sun Aug 11, 2002 11:18 pm

This is an awesome start. Great that the fact that Tara is alive, and with Willow.

Tara nodded in agreement "She has magic fingers." Then, as though the words had just echoed back to her and sounded not at all right, she perked up and glanced around at the others. "On the keyboard."

TheWisdom of War, Chris Golden

'My heart is cleverer then I and it knows what to do.'-MC Legends of the Kiss

WiccansIllusion
 


Re: Fic: The Watcher

Postby KrisBo5 » Sun Aug 11, 2002 11:35 pm

This was really good. Very well-written and very interesting. And, honestly, I don't even feel like you need to address Tara's resurrection; it just seems so natural that they were able to do it and she's back. Yay! Looking forward to reading more. . . soon I hope.

Kris

"Frell that!"

KrisBo5
 


Re: Fic: The Watcher

Postby Latsric » Sun Aug 11, 2002 11:42 pm

Wonderful start you have here. It is so cool to have Willow being a watcher and her getting a new slayer. It's sad that Faith had to die for that to happen, though I suspect that there is some foul play involved. And thank you for bringing Tara back and showing us their future, I don't care how they did it as long as she is back:)



-lat-

- I need my obsessions, they keep me sane -

Latsric
 


Re: Fic: The Watcher

Postby xita » Mon Aug 12, 2002 2:52 am

I like the new slayer and I am intrigued about what happened to faith. Great start!

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

Childie -"Not all girls are raving bloody lesbians, you know!"

George - "That's a misfortune of which I am perfectly well aware."

The Killing of Sister George

xita
 


Re: Fic: The Watcher

Postby mollyig » Mon Aug 12, 2002 7:00 am

Hmm, an interesting setup. Can totally see Willow as a Watcher, very credible. And I trust her instincts, and want to know how Faith really died.





Adding up the total of a love that's true, multiply life by the power of two
Indigo Girls

mollyig
 


Re: Fic: The Watcher

Postby Tulipp » Mon Aug 12, 2002 9:16 am

I like the start you've gotten here, and I think it works to just assume that Tara was resurrected without getting into the details. I like this image of Willow and Tara writing books in the future, and I like the tension that Tara feels about a new member of their "family." She seems to sense that this is something that, if it doesn't exactly come between her and Willow, will be mostly Willow's gig, and that's got to feel strange. I can see her worrying about how this will affect her relationship. She wants things to be for her and Willow, if that makes sense.



Anyway, nice beginning. I'm curious...is it hard to write two completely different stories at once?

Tulipp
 


Re: Fic: The Watcher

Postby Puff » Mon Aug 12, 2002 9:42 am

I really like what you have written here, that's my way of trying to say great start differently :D I like the new slayer and really like Tara's anxiety over Willow as a watcher and this new relationship that is going to form between watcher and slayer. Looking forward to more :)

-----------------------
You know, it's a real deal relationship and that's why people can relate to it
Amber Benson

Puff
 


Re: Fic: The Watcher

Postby Indygo » Mon Aug 12, 2002 5:43 pm

Quote:
Anyway, nice beginning. I'm curious...is it hard to write two completely different stories at once?




Hey Tulipp...



Not so hard to write them both as long as they are completely different. If they were too close in content, timeline, etc I would find it difficult to keep them separate.



I have always tended to write lots of different things at once though! (Low attention span I think!) Currently I have two W/T stories, an original space opera type thing and another more realistic original novel in the works. It keeps me sane from the pressures of my real job! :)



Indygo

Indygo
 


Re: Fic: The Watcher

Postby Emily First » Sun Aug 18, 2002 5:24 am

I'm liking the look of this...Love the way you've set up the scenario with just the sparse details available so far...Please update as often as possible...Thank you,in anticipation.



******

Coming soon - Fic:Paradise by CandleLight.

vive,valeque.

Emily First
 


The Watcher - Part 2

Postby Indygo » Thu Sep 19, 2002 5:18 pm

Disclaimers - All still apply from part 1

Authors Notes - Apologies for the delay, but this story is under way again! Thanks to all the people who encouraged me from part 1, and I promise updates will come a little more regularly from now on, now that I've only got one story going!

Thanks to - As usual, thanks to Lelak.



THE WATCHER - part 2



"Maia, you're dropping your guard again."



Maia scowled up at Willow. "We've done this twenty times already. I need a break."



Breathless, Willow lowered the pads she was holding. "Yeah, that'll work on the first vamp you go up against. Ask for a time-out and see what he says."



"At the moment, I don't really care." Maia dropped to the floor, letting her body fall limp onto the exercise mats. "I just need to stop."



Buffy interrupted from the sidelines before Willow could launch into her next tirade. "Let her rest, Will. Believe me, when she's out in the field the adrenalin rush will give her all the extra energy boosts she needs. Slayer strength kinda works that way."



Willow relented. "Five minutes, then if you're still too tired we go onto meditation techniques."



Maia was about to open her mouth to protest, but thought better of it as she caught her Watcher's stern gaze. "Yes, boss." She closed her eyes.



Willow looked over at Buffy and rolled her eyes. "Were you this much trouble for Giles?"



"More." Buffy smiled. "Much, much more. I never shut up."



"The man has the patience of a saint."



"Yeah well, you and Xander weren't really around for some of Giles and my worst battles while we were training." Buffy slung a casual leg over a nearby chair and sat down. "I called him names. He called me names. It was a Name-Call-A-Palooza."



Willow's giggled. "I'm sorry, but I'm having a hard time imagining what names Giles would call you."



"Girly giggling? Very un-Watcherly, Will." Buffy teased.



"Yes well, haven't you heard? I've re-written all the Watcher rules. Literally."



"I read the manual." Buffy nodded.



Willow looked sceptical. "It's over six hundred pages."



"OK, so I skimmed the manual. Very interesting. Kinda like the Slayer handbook I never got."



"Oh hey, I never did get my t-shirt."



Buffy sighed. "Yeah well, as fun as it is remembering the past, things have changed a lot since my first Slayer days."



"Vampires weren't quite as high tech back then. They caught up with the 21st Century, Buffy. All the bad guys did. None of this 'technology is for wimps' attitude the vamps used to have."



"Well, lucky we've got someone as switched on as you to hold back the rising tide of evil." Buffy said.



Maia opened her eyes, a weary look settling over her face. "So, what does that mean for the Slayer?"



"It means you need to be quick up here," Willow pointed to her head, "not just quick with your fists."



Maia turned to Buffy. "I heard you used a rocket launcher once. Cool."



Buffy chuckled. "You know, of all the things I ever did, it's funny that was the one that became legendary."



"Funnier still that it was Xander's plan." Willow said, nostalgia rising again. "But it's a really good example of how things have changed." She leaned forward towards Maia. "Buffy beat the Judge with a rocket launcher because even though he was invulnerable in his own time, he was out of his league in ours. New ideas are sometimes more reliable than old prophecies."



"And yet, the old prophecies still have a rather annoying habit of coming true." A familiar voice echoed from the doorway. Willow and Buffy looked up, responding to that voice instinctively, like they were sixteen years old again.



"Giles!" Buffy was on her feet first, throwing herself at her old Watcher with girlish enthusiasm.



"Giles?" Maia asked. "Isn't he in England?"



"Obviously not." Willow smiled broadly, rising up and moving towards him.



"Professor Rosenberg I presume?" Giles said. He held out his arms and Willow enveloped him in a huge hug. He returned the embrace affectionately.



"Why didn't you tell us you were coming? We could have met you at the airport."



"Why ruin a perfectly good surprise?" He stepped back, his eyes moving to the nervous, young Slayer picking herself up off the mats. Their eyes met. "I couldn't resist meeting you."



Maia blushed, fumbling for something to say. In the end she lowered her eyes and said nothing.



"Funny, I thought you might have been checking up on my progress." Willow said, her voice cagey.



Giles shook his head. "I have every confidence in your abilities Willow. How you train your Slayer is no concern of mine." He looked over at Buffy. "The welfare of my Slayer is though. Still alive I see?"



"Couple new scars, nothing major. The creepies have been pretty quiet this year." Her face turned darker for a moment. "I'm doing better than Faith, in any case."



"I heard. Any news on how she died?"



Buffy frowned. "Is that like a morbid Watcher thing? You sound like Willow."



"So, it didn't sit well with you either?" He asked. Willow shook her head. "It just seems rather unlikely that the story as we've heard it is all that there is to the matter."



"Exactly!" Willow agreed. "So that's why I've been checking things out, trying to get the lowdown on the prison riot story."



"Unfortunately, the Council has been less than enthusiastic about investigating the murder of a rogue Slayer." Giles said.



Willow raised an eyebrow. "You noticed that too, huh?"



"As cold-blooded as it sounds, I rather suspect they're glad the Faith problem has been resolved, once and for all."



Buffy let out a derisive snort. "The Council? Cold-blooded? Never." She picked up a small punching bag and started juggling it in her hands.



Giles watched Buffy closely, his frown increasing as she proceeded to absently hit the small bag with her clenched fist. "Do you have any idea what else may have happened to her?"



Willow shrugged, frustrated. "Not too much. All I know from the people I've talked to is that Faith didn't start it. She was pretty well liked by the prison guards, believe it or not. She apparently stopped fights."



"Sounds about right, as far as what Angel was telling me in any case." Buffy said.



"And the autopsy report?" Giles asked.



"That's the really interesting part." Willow moved to the side of the room and opened a brown leather briefcase. She rifled amongst her papers for a second before pulling out a folder, flipping it open for Giles to look at. "Here. Small puncture wound to the stomach with a makeshift knife. She basically bled to death."



Buffy looked up, surprised. Maia glanced at each of their worried faces. "What's so weird about that?"



Buffy's face was grim. "Slayers don't bleed to death as a rule. Our wounds heal really quickly, so unless the wound was really awful, and it doesn't sound like this was, our blood coagulates super-fast and the skin tissue would heal quickly enough to stop the flow of blood before it actually killed you."



"Or unless something was introduced to the wound at the time of the stabbing, some kind of anti-coagulant to stop the blood from clotting so she bled twice as fast, before she could heal." Willow added. "I've heard that certain parts of the army use that now, it gives the enemy less time to get to the medics. Nasty."



Maia pulled a face. "Eww, sorry I asked."



"Wouldn't they check for that in an autopsy?" Buffy asked.



Willow shook her head. "Not necessarily, not unless they had a reason to believe it was a factor, and the stuff that does it is pretty under wraps. I kinda found out about it the unconventional way when I happened to be digging around the research lab databases." She said, sheepishly. "But an ordinary person would have just bled to death, just like she did, why should they suspect anything?"



"They had no way of knowing Faith was a Slayer. Or that there's even such a thing as a Slayer." Giles finished for her.



"But someone knew," Buffy reasoned. "If your theory is right Will, someone knew enough to put something on the knife that helped kill her."



"Wouldn't Faith have told people what she was? The other women?" Maia asked.



"I'm not sure," Willow paced slightly, folder still in hand. "It wouldn't make sense to reveal something like that about yourself in that kind of environment. The other inmates might take it as a challenge, start picking fights."



"Since when did anything Faith ever did make sense?" Buffy said sharply.



Giles rubbed his nose, concentrating. "Far be it for me to attribute her with common sense she may not have had, but there was one thing that Faith had that no one can deny."



"Survival instinct." Willow said.



"Precisely. I think Faith would keep this hidden. As much as she possibly could."



Buffy shrugged. "Pretty easy to do. It's not as if we walk around with 'Chosen One' written on our foreheads." She smiled over at Maia. "Or, 'Chosen Two' as the case may be."



"But in fights? In chaotic situations? Who knows what went on in there?" Willow tucked the file away in her briefcase. "But you see, there's the dilemma. Do we assume since this looks bad that there's something creepy going on? Or do we just accept that it looks like another inmate did this and just live with it?"



"If someone did know…?" Buffy said, "If someone is gunning for Slayers, I wanna know about it. I don't care if it is behind prison walls, or down at the local cemetery. I don't like it." She looked over at Maia. "Especially not with a rookie on board."



Maia looked indignant. "I can take care of myself just fine."



"Nice in theory, but we've all been there kid. We know exactly what you can and can't face right now." Maia's look was sour, but she held her tongue. Buffy watched the young girl struggle with her ego for a second and her face softened. "Anyway, I can't let you go out there without some killer witty repartee. The vamps expect it."



Willow raised an eyebrow. "Who gets to decide when she goes out?"



The Slayers exchanged a grin. Giles gave Willow a sympathetic pat on the shoulder. "Welcome to the most rewarding, and frustrating, years of your life."



There was a light tap at the door. "Am I interrupting something?"



Giles looked around, his face alight. "Tara."



"Giles! Hey, how was your flight?" She reached out and hugged him.



"Wait, you're not surprised to see him." Buffy said.



"You knew about this?" Willow accused lightly. "Since when?"



"He called me last week to ask if it was all right to stay with us for a couple of weeks."



"And I asked Tara not to tell anyone I was coming."



"Were they surprised?" She asked, amused.



"Very. Well worth it."



Willow moved towards Tara, wrapping her in strong arms. "You wench! No hints, no weird looks, nothing!"



Tara smiled broadly. "I'm good, what can I say?" She dropped a brief kiss on Willow's lips.



"So…" Maia cut in, impatiently. "What are we going to do about Faith?"



Tara's face grew serious. "Oh, before I forget. I did the research you asked me to do. The print outs are in a folder at home. It looks like there's some interesting stuff there, but I don't really understand any of it."



"Research?" Giles enquired.



"Oh, the anti-coagulant. I knew I'd be wrapped up in training all day so I asked Tara to follow up with some professors at UC to see if they knew anything about it. You know, chemical make-up, that kind of thing. I called in a few favours." Willow explained.



Buffy nodded, impressed. "The Watcher is on the job."



"That's what they pay me for." Willow shrugged.



"They pay you?" Maia cut in. "They don't pay me."



"Another non-perk of Slaying. You'll get used to it." Buffy grunted.



Maia considered this. "Did you ever think about going on strike?"



Buffy laughed. "That's the bitch of being the Chosen One. Not much of a lobby group."



"Well, the research is at our place, and apparently so is your luggage." Willow smiled at Giles. "So, adjourn for lunch?"



"Yippee! Great plan." Maia whooped, instantly whipping off her training shoes and rubbing her sore feet.



"Not so fast." Willow chastened. "We're driving. You're running."



Maia's jaw dropped. "You're kidding me, right? It's like five miles."



"I'll run with you," Buffy offered. "I'm pretty sure I have some shorts and trainers here somewhere."



"You sure you can keep up?" Maia challenged, pulling her shoes back on again.



Buffy snorted. "Will, don't expect her home too soon, I'm gonna take her the long way."



"Knock yourself out." Willow grinned at Buffy, then glanced at Maia. "That'll teach you for disrespecting your elders."



The young Slayer just groaned.



Indygo
 


Re: The Watcher - Part 2

Postby Tulipp » Thu Sep 19, 2002 5:41 pm

Well, Indygo, I for one am delighted to see a second chapter, and so many things work well here. The dialogue feels really natural and well-paced, and I like the image of Willow wrapping strong arms around Tara and Tara kissing her briefly. They seem so solid and strong, both of them, and that feels good right now.



And I'm glad to see Giles. I have a feeling things are about to get interesting. Can't wait! Thanks.


***************

Buffy: "Is there something you want to tell me?" Riley: "What? Oh, yes - I am a lesbian."
--"Something Blue"

Tulipp
 


Re: The Watcher - Part 2

Postby earthlovinwicca » Thu Sep 19, 2002 5:44 pm

v.g but not enough tara for my liking! hope to see her more i the next parts

earthlovinwicca
 


Re: The Watcher - Part 2

Postby Indygo » Thu Sep 19, 2002 9:40 pm

Don't worry, I promise far more Tara goodness in future parts. It may not look it yet but this will be a very W/T centric tale...



And Tulipp, I totally agree with needing stories that have W/T being strong and secure with each other. After my last story and the angst that they went through I'm really keen to write something that tests them and their fortitude, but not their relationship. I like seeing them happy too :)



Indygo

Indygo
 


Re: The Watcher - Part 2

Postby kbk3022 » Thu Sep 19, 2002 10:07 pm

Indygo, I have to say I missed this one when it started, but I'm glad I found it now. I love the idea of Willow as a watcher, and her and Tara older and together. And I like that line that Buffy says about Tara's cooking, that was funny.



Looks good so far, looking forward to more.



Kasey

kbk3022
 


Re: The Watcher - Part 2

Postby mollyig » Fri Sep 20, 2002 2:41 am

I love that Willow and Giles have the same concerns about Faith's demise. Very Watchery!



Willow asking Tara to help out, I thought was lovely, showing the strength of their partnership.



Love the grumbling of the Chosen Two. It'll be good for Willow's Slayer to have Buffy to help her.



Adding up the total of a love that's true, multiply life by the power of two
Indigo Girls

mollyig
 


Re: The Watcher - Part 2

Postby tommo » Fri Sep 20, 2002 6:47 am

Ah, I'm so glad to see this story back. After your last story, Indygo, I'm making sure I read whatever else you've done. :)



I love the new Slayer on the block here; she's kind of cute and naive and all wide-eyed. Plus, having Willow as her Watcher. It's very reassuring to see Willow in a position of power and yet still retain her old character traits, that you bring out so well in this fic.



Looking forward avidly to more. :)


----------
"Squish. Squish. Squish."

tommo
 


Re: The Watcher - Part 2

Postby Miss1234Kitty » Fri Sep 20, 2002 7:45 am

This fic is fantastic! I just loved the last line. I always thought that Willow would be a watcher. Interesting that Tara's an author, though. Not that she wouldn't be brillant at everything. Does she write fiction or non-fiction?



Quick question - what was your last story? Everyone keeps mentioning it, and I'd like to read it.



Gem

Tara: There's just so much to work through... and can you just be kissing me now?

Miss1234Kitty
 


Re: The Watcher - Part 2

Postby LadyCallie » Fri Sep 20, 2002 1:17 pm

Oooooooooo I've always loved Giles and his role as Buffy's Watcher, and I agree that Willow would make a great Watcher. This is a lovely fic, true to character in each of them. I'm also really glad to see Faith brought back to play, even though she's dead. I always knew she had another story, one that we didn't get to see.



Continue please!

-LadyCallie

~*~

RealLiveTara is my RealLiveGirlfriend! :)

"It doesn't have to be a really frenchish french, I just wanna feel your tongue."- my grilfriend last night.

Moderator of the
Dark Angel Fanfiction Board
and Boo's Corner.


~*~

LadyCallie
 


Re: The Watcher - Part 2

Postby XWickedXWiccan » Fri Sep 20, 2002 5:06 pm

Oh cool story!! Not alot of Tara scenes but I trust you'll put lots of Willow/Tara scenes next update.



-Trinity-





--------------------------
Passion is the source of our finest moments. The joy of love, the clarity of hatred, and the ecstacy of grief. It hurts sometimes more than we can bare. If we can live without passion maybe we'd know some peace. But we'd be hollow, empty rooms, shuttered, and dank, With out passion we'd truly be dead. ANGEL in "Passion"

XWickedXWiccan
 


Re: The Watcher - Part 2

Postby WillowsSlave » Sat Sep 21, 2002 4:38 pm

I really love the potrayal of an older Scooby Gang. I like how you have not explained Tara's resurection, it seems so...natural. I like the idea of Willow as a Watcher, it gives her a place of influence and power without denying the true essence of her character. The new slayer's a pill, and will be fun to grow with. I think it's cool that a mid-late thirties Buffy can still whip up on her. Dampens her ego a bit I suppose. I definantly suspect foul play with Faith's death. A slayer bleeding to death without other factors included? *Pvvst* Doubtful at best. I eagerly await your continuation of this amazing tale.



Yours,

Kerri (The panther kitten with an eternal caffeine rush)
~`~`~`~
Forward, but never Straight

WillowsSlave
 


Re: The Watcher - Part 2

Postby Medic4 » Sat Sep 21, 2002 5:21 pm

Love the story!!!! Keep up the good work.

Just tell me Willow won't be part of the tweed brigade! (Leather brigade anyone?)

Gig' Em

Medic4
 


Re: The Watcher - Part 2

Postby Indygo » Mon Sep 23, 2002 10:33 pm

Hi everyone... the next part is just a couple of days away, but I felt the need to answer some questions...



Quote:
Quick question - what was your last story? Everyone keeps mentioning it, and I'd like to read it.


Gem - the first story that people are referring to is my other completed fic called "Walking Shadows" which you can read on my website here or on the completed fics archive here.



Tommo (or Ruth, whichever you like best :) ) -
Quote:
It's very reassuring to see Willow in a position of power and yet still retain her old character traits


Ahhh, yes... one of the first things my beta reader said to me after reading part 1 was that the characters seemed very "innocent". To be honest, that's kind of what I'm going for. I want to get back to the core characters and their traits. It might not be right continuity-wise, but it's where I like them. (And this is MY fantasy, dammit! :) )



Quote:
I always knew she had another story, one that we didn't get to see.


I'm not a big fan of Faith (as witnessed by the fact I've killed her off so I absolutely don't have to write her!) but I agree with you here... she has so many untold stories, and they're mostly all fascinating. :)



Thanks... and yes, new part coming soon.



Indygo











Indygo
 


Re: The Watcher - Part 2

Postby MadeinNZ » Tue Sep 24, 2002 1:49 am

Its wonderful to see this story back. I'm also a big fan of Giles being back and love the concept of Willow the Watcher.

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


Anya: I have finesse! I have finesse coming out of my bottom!

MadeinNZ
 


Re: The Watcher - Part 2

Postby tommo » Tue Sep 24, 2002 6:34 am

Quote:
the characters seemed very "innocent". To be honest, that's kind of what I'm going for. I want to get back to the core characters and their traits. It might not be right continuity-wise, but it's where I like them.




Well you see, this is the sticking point with a lot of fics I read. I like the stories, I like the style, but the characterisation sucks the life out of me. It's always so important to help the reader along by retaining or hopping through those traits that we know and love. And yeah, this is your alternate universe, or future universe, but you've still got the essence of the characters at the heart of it. And god, considering the hash that ME made out of that last season, it's about time someone did. :)


----------
"Squish. Squish. Squish."

tommo
 


The Watcher - Part 3

Postby Indygo » Sun Nov 03, 2002 11:24 pm

Disclaimer - Same PG Rating as chapter 1. This story is mainly an action adventure, not a sex romp, sorry! *grin*



Author's notes - Apologies for the delay, but between work and everything else going on in my life writing kind of took a back seat. (Anyone who read the Bali thread on the Kitten will know what I mean) This part isn't that long, but I'm back now and updates should be more regular. Hope you enjoy!



The Watcher - Part 3



Dawn Summers paced in front of the huge wall-to-wall windows in her fifty-first floor office, Los Angeles spread like a giant ant colony before her. By habit she ran a hand down her sleek suit jacket, smoothing the material down the slim lines of her torso. Her long brown hair flopped fashionably around her shoulders, loose but tamed.



Settled comfortably around her ears was a sat-link headset, and she frowned as the voice coming down the receiver told her news she didn't want to hear.



"You know what, Congressman Bailey can kiss my ass. If he thinks for one second we're going to be intimidated by his backwards, redneck, twenty-years-ago opinions then he seriously has no idea who he's dealing with." She barked.



A distressed male voice answered her. "Ms Summers, I'm sorry, we did everything we could. He's not budging on Prop 300."



"You know what? All he wants is a little ass-kissing. He knows how much I want this, and he's making it as difficult for me as he can."



"Well, believe me, we couldn't possibly be more, umm, amenable to him than we've already been."



"No, it isn't your fault, it's mine. I should have dealt with him personally. He and I have… history."



She could feel her aide's confusion through the satellite uplink. "History?"



"Just like I said." She considered her options for a moment, tapping an impatient fingertip on the desk. "Tell you what. Invite the jerk to our fund raiser next week. Give him a VIP pass, all the trimmings. He wants me to ass-kiss in person. Fine. But after we get Prop 300 passed he's going to wish he'd never been born."



"Payback is a bitch?"



She laughed coldly. "No, I'm going to be the bitch. Payback is just what I do well."



His amusement was audible in his voice. "All right. Anything else?"



"Nope, that's it for now. Check in again this afternoon. I might have some things that need taking care of before I leave for Washington tomorrow."



"No problems. Good luck. We'll have everything sewn up here by mid next week."



"Thanks. I'll talk to you later."



She hung up and pulled the headset off, placing it gently on her huge mahogany desk. Irritated, Dawn flopped down heavily in her swivel chair, allowing the momentum to twirl her around a few times, watching the skyline of LA as it shot in and out of view. The motion helped soothe her mind as waves of annoyance swept through her.



Damn Jack Bailey. Damn him and his backwards thinking. To hold up something as important as Prop 300 just because he had a grudge about the way he'd been dumped was not only unprofessional, it was downright childish.



Then again, she had rejected his proposal. Over a microphone. At a Lakers game. That had to put the boot in anyone's pride.



Serves him right for assuming I'd just drop my career and follow him around the country like his little lap dog.



She cringed at the unpleasant memory. She was a successful political lobbyist, and a newly made partner in her law firm. There was no way she was giving away any of that, not for someone like Jack Bailey. Not to mention the fact that his uncle was a slime demon.



That wasn't really an issue, or even Jack's fault for that matter, but with her years in Sunnydale behind her Dawn had no desire to hook up with anything that didn't have a full human pedigree. She didn't consider herself prejudiced, just extremely picky. And she could ruin Jack's career if that little detail about his family tree got out.



Even in this day and age, when most people knew that there were things out there that couldn't be explained away and did a heck of a lot more than just go bump in the night, no one wanted to deal with the icky reality that anything like that existed, mingled in amongst the human population.



But she knew all about it, and had since the day she'd been "born". Jack didn't even know that she knew.



Dawn sat back, a little less irritated now that she'd thought things through, and put her feet up on the leather ottoman sitting near her chair.



She loved this office. It was one of the best perks that partnership in Chrysiliou, Eade and Harland had given her. Actually, that'd be Chrysiliou, Eade, Harland and Summers now, she thought, a self-satisfied grin creeping over her face.



Partner. In less than ten years. She smiled. Willow had been so proud when she heard the news. She'd faxed up a piece of paper with WOOHOOO! scrawled across in big, bold letters. One of these days she'd get Willow and Tara and Buffy all up here and they'd have a carpet picnic on the big fluffy rug she'd spread on the floor over near the far window.



But, by the time that happened, she wanted to have some good news to tell Willow and Tara. Something that she'd been working towards for three years now. Prop 300. It was her present to them, something that would change their lives, something they'd always wanted that she and every other heterosexual person in the world took for granted. Dawn couldn't believe that even now the country wasn't really ready for something so fundamental.



She picked up her headset and slipped it back over her ears. She had half an hour until she had to be downstairs for a client briefing. Half an hour could mean a lot at this stage of the game.



"Call Congressman Macklin," she said clearly, and instantly heard the quick succession of beeps announcing her uplink.



A voice answered at the other end. "Senator Macklin's office."



"Hello, this is Dawn Summers from the Prop 300 Coalition. Could I speak to the Senator please?" She always did all her important phone calls in person rather than through her army of secretaries, it gave everything that personal touch that she was known for.



"Certainly, Ms Summers."



She settled in to sweet-talk yet another fence-sitting Senator.



****



Giles settled gratefully back onto the couch, setting his tea on the coffee table in front of him. "Actually Willow, I'm glad Buffy and Maia are taking their time, there was something I wanted to discuss with you. Alone."



Tara looked up from her book. "Oh, I'm sorry, I'll give you two some privacy."



Giles waved her back, chuckling softly. "It's been a while since I was part of a couple Tara but I know how these things work. I may as well save Willow the trouble of repeating it all to you later."



"But I…" Willow protested.



"Besides…" Giles cut her off. "This concerns both of you."



Willow perched on the arm of the chair Tara was snuggled in, stroking her lover's hand absently. Giles watched their interaction with a barely concealed smile. I've been away too long. I've missed them.



He sighed, sorry to burst their happy bubble. "Buffy was right, back at the gym." He paused, his eyes grim. "We have reason to believe someone is targeting Slayers."



"That's why you're here." Willow said.



He nodded, slowly. "Both Slayers are in danger. Yours and mine."



"And they already got Faith." Tara whispered.



Willow frowned. "Who are they? Does the council know something we don't?"



"Well, we certainly hadn't come up with any excellent theories on how someone managed to kill Faith and make it look like your average prison fight. Your research is the only firm lead anyone has come up with yet."



"But?" Willow prodded.



"But… we have some ideas on who."



"Demon, or vampire?" Willow asked.



"A little of both actually. But we have reason to believe that the Three may be involved."



"The Three?" Tara looked confused, glancing up at Willow. "Do we know about them?"



Willow nodded. "We've been up against them before. The Master sent them after Buffy while we were still in High School." She turned to Giles. "But I thought they gave their lives as payment for their failure?"



"Those three did." Giles replied. "The Three is an ancient mystical order, not unlike the Slayer herself. The legacy is handed down when the previous ones die, in this case, from vampire to vampire. Those three died, but others have come along to take their place."



"And you think one of these Three infiltrated the prison and killed Faith?" Tara asked.



"Well, of course we can't be sure, but the signs are there that the Three are active again in this area."



Willow stood and began to pace, hand tapping her forehead absently. "If I remember rightly the Three were like bounty hunters, they obeyed the commands of a more powerful entity. If the Three are active that means someone must have summoned them, someone even more powerful than they are." She stopped. "So, if you're right, we have a vampire or a demon in this area that is powerful enough to summon the Three."



"And if you're right Willow, that demon or vampire must be savvy enough to use technology that barely even exists yet." Tara added.



"A demon with a day job?" Willow mused.



"A demon with a good education and human, scientific resources. That's certainly new." Giles said.



Willow shrugged. "Well, we knew we couldn't rely on them to stay in the dark ages forever. Vamps and demons might be reluctant to change, but obviously they're not immune to it."



"Ohmigod, what time is it?" Tara abruptly changed the subject, scrambling for the TV remote.



Willow glanced at the hall clock. "It's five past three. Speaking of which, I wonder where Buffy and Maia got to?"



"Oh heck! Did you forget, Dawnie's interview is on today!" Tara pushed the buttons frantically, as a familiar face flashed onto the screen.



"Interview?" Giles asked, intrigued.



Tara looked up, pride shining in her eyes. "Something to do with the lobby group."



"I really am out of the loop, aren't I?" Giles replied.



"Sssh!" Willow held fingers to her lips.



"… In our studio we have the spokeswoman for the Coalition for Proposition 300, Miss Dawn Summers, and the President of Families of America, Mr David Swain. Thank you both for joining us."



Determinedly casual despite the bright lights and TV make-up, Dawn smiled. "Thanks for having me."



David Swain looked uncomfortable. He squirmed on his seat, obviously trying to get as far from Dawn as he could without appearing rude. "Yes, hello."



Tara scowled at the television. "She's not a leper you moron."



"Yes well, she obviously has twice the presence he has. Look, he's sweating." Giles pointed out.



"Guys, I can't hear what she's saying!" Willow complained. They fell silent, concentrating on the screen.



Dawn was answering a question, her hands folded neatly into her lap. "…and we're hearing the same opposition that we heard fifteen, twenty, thirty years ago. It never changes. The same tired stereotypes keep being rolled out and debunked time and time again. Gays, lesbians and transsexuals are not asking for special rights, they're asking for equal rights, and there's no one in this country who can come up with a reason why they shouldn't have them. The right to marry, the right to adopt children, these are fundamental in our society. Or at least they should be."



Her opponent bristled. "Are you gay, Ms Summers?"



"No, Mr Swain, as a matter of fact I'm not. But I certainly wouldn't have any problems admitting it if I was."



"Then why argue for something that doesn't affect you?"



"It doesn't affect you either, yet you're arguing against it."



"I'm arguing that it affects all families, that it undermines the basis of families. That is the position our association has always maintained." He insisted.



"And that's exactly my point. You have no proof, only conjecture, and you've been proven wrong by research time and time again." Dawn took a deep breath, her sincere eyes facing directly to the camera. "This doesn't affect your family. You're not arguing that gay and lesbian families are wrong, you're arguing that just because you don't believe in it that they deserve less protection under the law than you do. It's the same argument that was trotted out against giving African Americans the vote, it's the same argument that has been trotted out for thousands of years against giving people equal rights. And I can't believe that as a civilised nation we've let these arguments hold water for as long as they have."



The presenter cut in. "But it is curious Ms Summers, and one of the most interesting aspects of your campaign, that the majority of the public faces for the Coalition openly admit to not being homosexual."



"That certainly hasn't been done on purpose." Dawn explained. "And why should it make a difference? All of us involved in the Coalition have in some way or another been touched by this issue at some time in our lives. I was raised through my teenage years by my older sister and a lesbian couple who were the only family I had. That's my interest.



"We're interested in families and all the people who are touched by gay and lesbian families. It stopped being about individuals a long time ago. It's about security and recognition. From our perspective, it is as much a legal issue as a personal one."



Tara looked up, pride shining in her eyes. "She's good."



"Yeah, she is." Willow agreed.



Giles snickered. "She sounds like a lawyer."



Tara laughed. "Funny that. She is one."



The phone rang. Willow reached over to the side table and picked up the receiver. "Hello?"



"Are you watching this?" Xander's voice echoed down the line.



"Dawn? Yeah. Isn't she awesome?"



Xander sounded puzzled. "Dawn? What about Dawn?"



"She's on TV, Channel Four." She hesitated. "What are you watching?"



"Sunnydale local news. You better see this."



Willow held the receiver away from her ear. "Tara, switch over to the Sunnydale local news."



"But, Dawnie…?" Tara protested.



"Just do it. Xander says it's important."



Tara flipped the channel reluctantly, stopping as the TV cameras focussed in on a scene of carnage. Three trucks were mashed together, mangled and twisted metal strewn along the highway. Another three or four cars were lying nearby, their front ends smashed, the seats where the drivers would have been mangled horribly.



"Oh God." She put the receiver back to her ear. "Xander, when did this happen? Are there many people dead?"



"That's just it, they don't know." Xander said.



In the background Willow heard Tara gasp as the news came over the TV. "We repeat, a three truck, four car pile-up outside of Sunnydale has police baffled when a search failed to find any evidence of victims on the scene. At first glance, it appears that no one was actually driving the vehicles."



Willow frowned. "There's no one in the cars? No one dead, or injured?"



"I passed by the accident on the way to work this morning. The cops are standing around scratching their heads, Will. No tracks away from the wreckage. There's some blood in the cars themselves, but no signs of how the people got out. They're just… gone."



"The police are mounting a house-by-house search." Tara reported, leaning in towards the TV. "The people aren't in any of the nearby hospitals."



Willow cringed as more pictures of the crash scene flashed in front of them. "Look at some of this wreckage. It would take jaws of life to pull people out of there."



"Or a couple of strong vampires." Giles suggested.



Willow repeated Giles's suggestion down the phone.



"But it's broad daylight. The police said the accident happened just after dawn." Xander replied.



Willow frowned. "You're right, that's impossible. There's no shelter anywhere."



"Well, something pulled those people out of there, Will. And it sure as hell wasn't human." Xander said.



She considered for a moment. "Xander, keep an eye on the news reports, let us know if any other evidence pops up. With all those cops at the scene we're not going to get a chance to look very closely at the wreckage."



"Can do."



"Giles, Tara and I will figure something out. Thanks." She put the receiver down.



The news bulletin finished. Tara flipped the channels, seeing if the interview with Dawn had finished. She caught the final few seconds as the guests were thanked by the host and sighed. "Lousy timing."



"Somehow I think Dawn will understand." Willow said. "Like we didn't already have enough on our hands."



"We need to get Buffy and Maia back here. I'll call Buffy." Giles said, reaching for the phone.



Willow just nodded, trying to shake the images of the crushed cars from her mind. Tara walked over, eyes questioning.



Willow let out a deep breath. "After all these years, I still can't get used to it."



"Used to what?" Tara asked.



"Death. Carnage. I don't flinch any more, but still…"



Tara just nodded, stepping in to wrap her arms around Willow's shoulders. Willow returned the embrace, glad for the millionth time that Tara had such an infallible instinct for when she needed to be held. She rested her head on Tara's shoulder felt Tara stroking her hair.



"We have a lot to do." Willow whispered, not moving.



"Yeah." Tara replied.



"Those people…"



"Mmm hmmm." Tara kept stroking her head, softly.



Willow sighed. "I love you."



"I love you, too."



"You were right," Willow mumbled into her shoulder. "This is going to be a big change for us."



"Yeah."



"A week down and already we're up to our necks in weirdness. I'm not sure I like sending Maia out into this sort of trouble, not as green as she is."



"And it's just going to get worse." Tara said.



Willow craned her neck up to look at her, still not letting go. "How do you know that?"



"Because it always does."



Willow opened her mouth to reply, but in the end she could only sigh in agreement. She snuggled back down into Tara's embrace and took the offered refuge for a few more precious seconds.



They heard Giles coughing lightly behind them and broke apart. He put the phone down. "Buffy and Maia are almost here anyway."



"We're going to have to fast-track Maia's training." Willow declared, slipping back into business mode again.



Giles just nodded.



"Will you help?" She asked simply. "Maia isn't the only one with no experience at this sort of thing."



"Of course. I'll do anything I can." He said. "But I think you'll be surprised at how capable you are on your own."



Willow looked first at Giles, then at Tara, eyes wide with nerves. "I'm not a big fan of trial-by-fire."



Tara reached out and took her hand again. "It's not like we haven't been here before, Will."



"I know, but for me this is just different somehow." Willow said.



Giles smiled. "Different now this is your show?"



She nodded. "Yeah. I feel a bit confused. Like I'm standing in someone else's shoes. And they're too big. Like clown feet."



"Well, the best way to get unconfused is to start doing the stuff we're here to do." A voice joined the conversation from the other room as two pairs of footsteps echoed down the hall. Buffy entered, hands on hips, barely sweating from her work out. "And there's no time like the present."



Maia walked in behind Buffy, looking somewhat more worse for wear. "We got a job?" She asked, excited. Her breathing was slightly heavy.



Willow looked the Slayers up and down, confidence quickly returning. "We have a job." She confirmed.



Indygo
 


Re: The Watcher - Part 3

Postby mollyig » Mon Nov 04, 2002 3:34 am

Dawnie all grown up. Interesting that she decided to escape the supernatural Sunnydale scene.



Tara scowled at the television. "She's not a leper you moron." Tara's uncharacteristic scowling was funny. Her obvious pride in Dawn was really lovely.



So Faith was deliberately killed and The Three are the likely culprits. Good that Willow is already considering who might have summoned them.

Adding up the total of a love that's true, multiply life by the power of two
Indigo Girls

mollyig
 


Re: The Watcher - Part 3

Postby BigMac » Mon Nov 04, 2002 10:58 am

:clap :clap :clap :clap :clap :clap :clap This is very good I like how you keep simple.

Tara: Assume Crash

Positions

BigMac
 


Re: The Watcher - Part 3

Postby Twisted Minstrel » Mon Nov 04, 2002 5:02 pm

This is fantastic stuff - especially with Dawn now a lawyer in LA - I can totally see her doing this, a nice tribute to her surrogate parents. Very touching. I love that you're not skimpy on story, either. I like all the logical breakdowns, everyone has their place, and we haven't heard from the Three, so nice historic touch there. Only one teeny peeve - more Tara! More smoochies!



Did I mention more Tara? *g*



Greatness ensues! Please continue!



Piper

"Human kind cannot bear much reality." - T.S. Eliot

Twisted Minstrel
 

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