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New Fic: Three Years Later

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Re: MORE!

Postby sapphocrazygirl » Wed May 19, 2004 8:17 am

Yvonne - oops! I meant to show that Buffy was angry with herself for not realizing earlier that Willow's isolation and strange behaviors had to do directly with Tara. I guess Buffy might also feel some resentment towards Tara and Willow, but most of her anger and guilt deals directly with her own actions (which I think is very Buffylike; she takes responsibility for everything). Sorry that Buffy's feelings towards Tara and Willow were not as clear as I wanted them to be. I'll polish that in the next few updates.



I actually wasn't planning anything from Tara's POV until she shows up in Sunnydale (oh no, a spoiler! But you all knew she'd be back). The next update deals mainly with Faith and Buffy working out their issues - where Faith has been, if she's changed, if Buffy can trust her.



mollyig - Glad that you like my Dawn. Now that she's a senior in high school (which, as it recently occurred to me, doesn't fit the Buffy timeline properly; so I'm taking liberties here with ages) she needs to be both the bratty little sister, and slowly maturing into a grown-up who can handle herself and help her friends.



Michellex - unfortunately the next update is going to mostly deal with Buffy and Faith working out their issues. But Tara's coming home soon, I promise.



Arwen276 - I guess it is strange that Buffy lives for Willow rather than Dawn. But she feels more responsibility towards Willow at this point, because Buffy feels that she's been neglectful in their friendship.



Okay all, I've got a nasty essay final, as well as a vocal performance jury and a trip to the zoo with second-graders today. I'll get the update in by Thursday. Next update is working out what's up with Faith. After that we'll be dealing with Willow's witchiness and a bit of Tara.



Stay tuned!



"Alright, we're here, we're queer, let's kick this shit into high gear." - Five by Five (Tara's Shadow)




"I got my axe, I got my honey...

I'd say all I need is a quiet room and some body lotion and I've got me a party!"


- Faith, in Torturing Touch

sapphocrazygirl
 


Re: MORE!

Postby Ginner WTluv » Wed May 19, 2004 1:20 pm

Just wanted to say how much i'm loving this fic. Really can't wait to see what happens and find out what that dream really meant.... and oh my god!!! Faith!! it's not secret on the board, never has been in my *thinks about it* three years here (wow), i'm a faith addicted. you have no idea how much i love that you put her in this fic. :D But yes, can't wait to read more!! And i can't wait for Tara to show up either!!



~ Jen:pride

Helen - Oh please Nikki, be serious!

Nikki - I want to make love you to all night long... is that serious enough?

** Helen and Nikki in "Bad Girls" **

Ginner WTluv
 


Re: MORE!

Postby Grimlock72 » Wed May 19, 2004 4:57 pm

Dawn three years after s6... I'm going to start with the more mature Dawn from s5 and add four years to her, much better :) Anyway, she seems helpfull enough here. Never saw Buffy as much of psycho-analytical person myself... seeing her as counsillor is weird. I suppose she works hard at her job and in that way she can be very good at it, she has enough experience with trouble :)



It's worrysome that Buffy thinks about her problems at home while patrolling. As is nicely demonstrated in this update that is rather dangerous. She was just lucky someone was there to help her out.



I would beg to differ if Dawn would be okay if Buffy got vamped or killed by the way. I think Dawn would disagree with that assesment. Sure, Willow is sort of 'unfinished business' too but Dawn is Buffy's sister... what makes her think she'll happilly go on without her ??



Ah well, we'll just have to wait and see I guess :)



I wonder what kind of excuse Faith has to be out of prison already. I'm fairly sure she was sentenced to a longer sentence than 7 years, would hope so anyway for murder-1 at least.



This line was fun: "Willow was fortunately tied up in grading dancing-duck programs" :lol . It does seem a rather tough assignment for highschool-students, programming a nicely dancing duck... (not for Willow of course but she was far ahead when in HighSchool :-)



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: 5/19/04 4:41 pm
Grimlock72
 


Re: MORE!

Postby bindingwiccan » Wed May 19, 2004 5:51 pm

FAITH!!!!!!!!!! holy fuck yeah! yes this is so awesome. sorry for the language but i dunno how else to explain it!!!! :heart





more please!!!

-Kelsey

bindingwiccan
 


cool

Postby ShyTemptress » Thu May 20, 2004 6:46 am

howdy:bigwave

This is awesome!!!:clap

-Shy Southern Temptress:kitty

ShyTemptress
 


Re: more feedback!

Postby sapphocrazygirl » Fri May 21, 2004 9:26 pm

Jen - It's gonna take a while to totally understand the dream...in fact it's not fully explained until the very end (which I've already written...now all I have to do is get from here to there, somehow...) Three cheers for Faith. I love early Faith. And Tara will soon be home.



Grimmy - wow, great feedback. Thank you for pointing out where I'm making mistakes in my Buffyverse. It is somewhat difficult to picture Buffy as a counselor, especially since in this fic she's feeling so much guilt about not noticing Willow's pain (irony's kind of ironic that way).



It is worrysome that Buffy takes her problems patrolling, but she's always done it, so it makes sense that she's still doing it. I think that's one of the things that makes Buffy different than some other Slayers - that slaying does not negate other parts of her life, that no matter what happens she has to go home at the end of the night and make breakfast for Dawn and go to work and so on.



Would Dawn be okay if Buffy died? That's certainly debatable. The important thing is, at that very moment, Buffy thought that Dawn could handle it. I'm sure that if Buffy rationally considered her life as it is now, she'd see that Dawn might not be okay, and/or Willow might be. It was a very "heat of the moment" idea for Buffy. I think it ties back in to the Slayer death wish.



I've definitely taken liberty with the law regarding Faith's freedom. But, after all, it's Sunnydale. They're probably used to really, really strange things happening.



Kelsey - breathe girl! I'll be spending a lot of time trying to resuscitate the Faith that we know and love...and of course there will be some B/F lovin'. It's all about supply and demand :)



SST - glad you enjoy.



On to more updates, yes? I need to spend some time on the upcoming bits with Willow, since I've been drawing her character and her friendship with Buffy in the wrong light. So this bit's on Faith. Hope you all enjoy.




"I got my axe, I got my honey...

I'd say all I need is a quiet room and some body lotion and I've got me a party!"


- Faith, in Torturing Touch

sapphocrazygirl
 


Re: UPDATE!

Postby sapphocrazygirl » Fri May 21, 2004 9:55 pm

They walked through the cemetary. Neither spoke. Even their breathing was quiet. Buffy noticed, and was surprised that she had never noticed before, how their feet fell together, how their strides matched each other.



She had, for the moment, completely forgotten her immense guilt about not being the friend that Willow had needed. It was so easy to bundle people into packages: best friend, witch, lesbian, friend in need, friend who was perfectly fine. What Buffy the counselor had learned so well – that no one ever fits their label flawlessly – she felt that she had failed to practice in life. She had wanted so badly for Willow to be fine.



And Buffy knew, consciously, that it wasn’t her fault, that Willow had walled herself off, that Xander and Giles and Dawn had missed things as well. They were all human – all flawed – those flaws had just all occurred in conjunction on this one area. That was okay. They had all wanted, to the core of their being, for Willow to be alright. Their intentions really were for the best; all their actions had been out of love. Buffy knew that.



But Buffy was thinking less along the lines of flaws and compassion and more along the lines of: Faith. In town. Walking next to me. Not trying to kill me. Huh.



Faith, meanwhile, was struggling for words. She was surprised to find Buffy alive. She was even more surprised to find Buffy two seconds from death.



Faith had come back to Sunnydale to put some demons – most of them metaphorical – to rest. She didn’t know how much Buffy knew.



She had heard, of course, that Buffy had died, and then unexplainably was alive again; that monstrous apocalypses came and went; that evil was still putting up a fight, and still losing a million to nothing, in the Valley of the Sun.



She wondered how Red was. How Xander was. How Dawn was.



“So, B,” she said, not looking at her and yet trying to look as cool and collected as possible, “how’s life?”



Well, since you went AWOL in the super-crazy way, Willow became gay as well as a super-powerful witch, and then cut all semblance of spunk and zest out of her life when her girlfriend left; Xander met and married an ex-demon, and became not only head manager at the construction company but a bit stuck-up when he accidentally stopped four Zolak demons from opening the Hellmouth; Dawn’s really a mystical ball of energy that an undefeatable goddess wanted to stuff into a portal to unleash Hell on earth, but she’s doing really well in English class; and I died, went to heaven, and then was brought back here, and it has taken a lot to not want to die again. Which is where you found me when I was about to make a contribution to the Sunnydale Blood Bank.



“Not all bad,” Buffy answered. All her reason stood against trusting Faith. But with every step, with every beat of her heart, she heard in the back of her mind: You can. You can trust her. Something’s different. You don’t have to know it. You feel it. “How ‘bout you?”



“Oh, you know me, girlfriend. Always five by five.” But Faith’s laugh was forced.



Buffy looked directly at Faith. Enough playing around. Time to get down to business.



Faith tucked the stake back into her belt. Buffy’s eyes on her made her nervous. She danced on the balls of her feet. “So, onward and upward?”



“Where have you been?” said Buffy suddenly.



Faith looked at her for a moment.



“I was in Mexico for a while,” she finally answered. “Nice place. Kinda –“



Faith stopped. She didn’t want to do this, didn’t want to tell the story; but if she had to, she didn’t want to make jokes.



“It was hot. But no one knew me. You know?”



Buffy nodded.



“I went by – this is stupid – I was calling myself Hope. You know, like Faith, Hope and L-love?” Faith tripped on the last word. Love. Do I even know? Am I even capable of knowing? Just a murderer. A killer. I can never know. Again the old thoughts. Again she pushed them away.



Faith gestured madly, turned away from Buffy. “After maybe four months, a couple of different jobs around the city, I’m out walking late at night and I fall in with a bunch of vamps. And I stake ‘em, five of ‘em, without even thinking about it.”



Buffy watched her, watched her frantic motions. Faith was punctuating her phrases with fists and hands. Much more set now, more determined. Her gestures were sure, were firm, not floaty and loose and wild. But the words were old Faith – the sudden shyness, the set descriptions.



Faith turned to her now. “It wasn’t a question. They were taking a little girl. I was there. I had to fight them.”



Faith sat on a headstone, her legs spread, elbows on her knees. The old Faith posture. Totally new Faith emotions.



“It wasn’t a choice anymore. Isn’t. I have to help. I – there’s something in me, something about me, something permanent and natural and unstoppable, that has to help. To fight the darkness.”



Buffy stood there. She was amazed. She’d never heard Faith speak so passionately, so openly. Faith was sometimes quiet, held back, or totally unreserved, or completely crazy, but never open like this.



Trust the difference, murmured Buffy’s mind.



Faith had been staring right at Buffy. Now she totally lost her nerve, ducked her head, let her hair cover half her face. She glanced at the ground, looked back and forth, couldn’t quite focus again. “So I, ah, I went to this coven. In England. I turned myself in to the Watchers’ Council. They –“ Faith laughed, sarcastically – “I think they were originally planning to kill me.”



Buffy had been standing, looking at Faith from seven feet away. But something in her said, Move, and she moved, and sat by Faith on the headstone. Not touching. Not saying anything. Not looking at each other. Just staring into the darkness.



Faith felt tired. Sore. Emotionally overwhelmed. She couldn’t look at Buffy. “But there was this, this older woman there, named Shannon. She, ah, she took a real interest in me, and worked with me, and tried to help me. She convinced them I was okay, you know, in the not-crazy, no longer likely to align herself with the epitome of evil sense of okay.”



It was funny. Neither of them laughed.



“It took her almost four years,” said Faith, turning just slightly so that she was almost looking at Buffy. Her gaze stayed on the ground.



“No prison?” Buffy asked, with an edge of curiosity.



Faith was silent for a moment. “Quentin says he ‘handled’ it,” she murmured. “I don’t know what that means, really. I think he meant that he’d had the record cleared, or – the Council gave me permission to go, and I was outside this afternoon and no one - I mean, it’s still dangerous for me to be here, I guess…”



She trailed off, unsure of how to finish.



“But I wanted to see – I wanted to see if –“



Faith looked up at Buffy, who was leaning backwards and looking down at her. Faith didn’t know how to finish. How could she explain – that strange, unresistable pull she felt, to come back to Sunnydale, back to where Buffy was? Knowing that Buffy was likely dead again, for good this time – knowing that there was no chance of a warm welcome?



I wanted to see you. I missed you. Faith couldn’t admit it. Buffy couldn’t admit it. It was completely unspoken, mostly repressed, but both women felt it, and both felt too afraid of what it might mean – what it meant – to think it, much less think of saying it.



So Faith, in old Faith style, tried to joke. “You know, check out the old hunting range. Kick some vamps around. Maybe hit the Bronze.”



“You always knew how to have a good time,” answered Buffy, without looking at her. And although the comment was sarcastic, Buffy had said it easily, almost with boredom, as if it she just wanted to get it over with and say what she really felt.



But she said nothing else. The silence filled in around them.



It was a few minutes before Buffy suddenly realized how sore she was, how much her neck hurt from the bite, her stomach from the kick, her whole body just from being. Her brain ached, too. First Willow, now Faith. Life just moved too fast to understand it as it came at her. She hoped that, the next time she died, she’d have enough time to rest and figure it all out.



“Come on,” she said, standing, and almost taking Faith’s arm. She transformed it into an awkward gesture, and didn’t make eye contact.



“Where?” said Faith, standing slowly, her limbs unfolding, her mind racing.



Buffy turned away, looked past the graveyard into the night.



“Home.”



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



“Are you crazy?”



Buffy stood in the doorway to the living room, her arms crossed over her chest. “I know what I’m doing, Dawn.”



“Buffy, at the risk of sounding rather uptight, I must ask you if you’ve even slightly considered exactly what you’re saying.” Giles wasn’t cleaning his glasses yet, but Buffy guessed he could only go another two minutes before he had to get out his handkerchief.



“I have.” Buffy glared at both of them. “Don’t you trust me? Don’t you think I know what I’m doing?”



Dawn crossed to her. “Buffy, I love you and I trust you, but I’m pretty sure that the first rule in the Summers Household Manual is ‘No inviting known killers to move into the spare bedroom.’”



Buffy sat on the couch, and Dawn slowly sat next to her. Buffy leaned forward and gestured. “Look, I know you guys are making good points. But she’s changed. She really has. She’s different.”



They were silent. She shot an annoyed look at her Watcher. “Giles, didn’t you call the Council?”



He shifted slightly. “Yes, I did.” But he said nothing else.



Buffy demanded, “What did they say?”



Now Giles turned away from them and began cleaning his glasses. “They unanimously confirmed that none of the violent tendencies nor the – the sort of – moralless lifestyle that Faith was leading –" here Buffy frowned, and almost interrupted him - “none of that – was observed in her – in the years that she stayed with them.”



“See?” said Buffy.



Giles turned to her now, putting his glasses on rather forcefully. “Be that as it may, Buffy, we don’t know what inspires that kind of danger in her. It may be fighting demons – it may be Sunnydale – it may very well be you, for all we know, that brings that out in her.”



Buffy couldn’t explain it until much later, but Giles’ words infuriated her. She held in her anger, didn’t jump to her feet and scream, as much as a very large part of her wanted to. She simply gave him a glare of utmost impatience and said, “Giles, I don’t think I inspire people to insanity.”



“Not unless you’re family, anyway,” murmured Dawn. Buffy looked at her, getting slightly more annoyed.



“Faith isn’t a danger. If she was, why didn’t she just let the vamp kill me in the graveyard?”



Giles was annoyed now as well. “For thousands of reasons. But that’s not our concern right now. I am still your Watcher, and as your Watcher I will not permit-“



Buffy stood now. “I can’t believe I’m hearing this. I’m not sixteen years old inviting Angel into my bedroom! I’m an adult, and this is my home, and –“



Dawn touched her forearm. Buffy looked down at her sister, expecting some protest, some words of anger or disappointment or general dissention.



But all Dawn said was, “Okay."



Buffy melted. She thought then of how much Dawn had been through – the complete destruction of everything she knew, the realization of being something of so much power, the simple terror of nearly being bled to death, having to watch her sister die, having to watch so much over the years. Buffy understood then how afraid Dawn had to be, and how much she was sacrificing in that single word.



She smiled softly at her sister, and stroked her hair. Still standing, Buffy looked at Giles and he nodded, though somewhat regretfully.



“Well, alright. At least for now. Why don’t you invite her to dinner tomorrow night, and then – well, we’ll see exactly where we go from there.”



Buffy smiled briefly and gratefully. She sat on the couch again, putting an arm around Dawn.



“However,” said Giles, and Buffy turned to him as he sat on the edge of a chair – “there is something else which we need to discuss.”



He and Dawn looked at each other. Dawn continued, stuttering and rushing. “W-well, Giles and I talked about it while we were researching. And, and we were thinking, well we decided, or we decided to talk to you about deciding –“



“Dawn, just spit it out,” said Buffy kindly.



“We think we should talk to Willow about starting magick again.”



Buffy looked to Giles. “You think my dream means she’s practicing again?”



“No, not at all,” said Giles. “Quite the opposite. I believe Dawn’s interpretation was correct, and that Willow is silently dwelling on her own power. It probably frightens her. She brought you back from the dead, Buffy – that takes incredible skill. I hate to think what might have happened if she had ventured into the dark forces, when –“ He paused.



“When Tara left,” Buffy finished.



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



“Are you crazy?”



Buffy wanted to look to Dawn, or to Giles, or to Xander for support. But she knew she had to say it on her own. “We’ve been discussing this, and we really think it might be a good idea.”



“Especially me,” pointed out Anya angrily. She was leaning against the wooden cabinet, with her arms folded over her chest. “I’ve been saying it for years. Finally people are starting to listen.”



“Ahn,” said Xander gently. He was standing just inside the opening to the living room, leaning slightly against the same cabinet. “Don’t help.”



“You’ve been discussing this? Behind my back?” Willow’s voice was rising in pitch and her green eyes were storming. “Have you all lost your minds? Have you totally forgotten what happened the last time? Let’s recall the total loss of recall.”



“It won’t be like that again,” said Xander.



“How do you know?” she demanded.



“Because we’re all here. We won’t let you – won’t let the magick go all –“



“Wonky,” supplied Dawn, standing anxiously by the coffee table, halfway between Buffy and Willow.



“Wonky,” echoed Xander. “We’re here, Will. We won’t let anything happen.”



“Do you really think you could stop me? Do you honestly think that if I started again, I wouldn’t just dive back to the way things were – messing with your lives, with your minds? Even worse, yanking you out of Paradise and forcing you back into this world?”



Everyone stopped for a second. Willow didn’t look at Buffy, but everyone else did.



But there was no question for Buffy. No hesitation, no regret. She knew – oh, did she know – how dangerous it was to let herself be tempted into remembering, into wanting that place back. And life here isn’t all that bad, Buffy thought. Some parts of life – like fighting demons and staking vampires and realizing that your best friend’s in a world of pain and having no idea how to talk to her – some aren’t so great. But there are other parts, really beautiful parts that make life worth living. It’s not Paradise. But it’s home.



“You did what you thought was the right thing,” answered Buffy. As did I.



“Good excuse. But it’s not good enough. There’s a power inside me. I feel it every day. I have to live with it every day. And I don’t understand it, and I don’t ever want to.”



“Willow – “



“No!” Willow almost screamed now. “I’ve told you, over and over again. I just can’t. It won’t help.”



“But it might help,” protested Dawn.



“It could help quite a lot,” added Giles.



“Help with what?” yelled Willow. “Haven’t I gained enough weight? Am I not teaching complete idiots how to run a simple computer program? Is my demon research lacking now?”



Willow was breathing hard, almost gasping. She was on the verge of tears, but she fought them back. It occurred to Buffy then that she had not seen Willow cry in three years. Willow’s eyes were dark with anger, pain, so much held back.



“It won’t change anything! It’s not going to help. It’s not going to bring her back.”



Xander stood up slightly.



Giles covered his eyes with one hand.



Buffy stared at Willow, her mouth slightly open, her mind a swirl.



Dawn looked from Willow to Buffy, and then back to Willow again.



Willow felt the tears coming now. She knew that the dam was broken, that she was going to cry, to sob, to scream in pain. She had blocked it so well, for so long. For so long she’d forgotten, she’d pushed it away, she’d refused to think let alone speak about what had happened. But it was over. She was breaking.



She suddenly felt so tired. I’ve been fighting so long. I don’t know how to keep going. But she had to keep going, she had to block it out, she had to force herself to forget. She couldn’t function, couldn’t live, couldn’t even breathe when she would consciously admit that the person – the woman – she loved with all her heart and life and everything that ever might be hers – she was –



“Hey.”



A single word broke through the air.



And although everyone turned, and everyone’s jaws dropped a little bit farther, and everyone experienced some kind of heart-stopping shock, no one was really all that surprised to see the figure standing in the living room doorway.



“Tara,” said Dawn, her eyes wide.



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



Looks like it's Homecoming Cliffhanger Week in the saph world. Leave me feedback. Am I communicating Buffy's feelings well? How about Willow? Let me know. If it's bad, I would like to remedy it as soon as possible :)




"I got my axe, I got my honey...

I'd say all I need is a quiet room and some body lotion and I've got me a party!"


- Faith, in Torturing Touch

sapphocrazygirl
 


Re: UPDATE!

Postby bindingwiccan » Sat May 22, 2004 1:15 am

omgomgomgomgomg i love faith. and.. how insecure they both are.. its just.. incredible.:heart but.. cliffhangers?!?!?! are you crazy?:fit2 hehe just kiddin. but.. well.. ok maybe only kidding a little bit. but.. um.. is it too soon to whine for an update? :flirt :flirt :kgeek love it





thanks!, keep it commin!

-Kelsey

bindingwiccan
 


Re: UPDATE!

Postby Arwen276 » Sat May 22, 2004 2:16 am

OH MY GOD!!



1. Faith has changed, so much! it's like WOW!!!

2. It was so sad, I could feel Willow's pain, it was gut-wrenching!

3. that was like the nastiest cliffhanger EVER!!!



UPDATE SOON PLEASE!





~Arwen

Hear That Baby? You're My Always... Willow

Arwen276
 


Re: UPDATE!

Postby onyxsundrops » Sat May 22, 2004 10:26 am

I think you're communicating Buffy and Willow's feelings really well. Buffy during her questioning (phase?) seems genuine. Especially in regard to Faith. She is comparing what she sees with what she knows (knew), while seeing right through Faith's body language.



And Willow's tug of war with herself. I read that scene as Willow thinking that the Scoobies insistence that she begin magick again, was her punishment. Mainly because she was asking what she had done wrong, i.e., lacking in research. And honestly, when the others were saying that they'd help her if things got out of hand- I was sort of unbelieving. Not because they didn't appear sincere, but because we've heard that pitch before. Then again, I'm mixing canon with what I'm reading, so I might be wrong.



Loved and hated the slightly twisted cliffhanger. Obviously, Tara has right timing- sort of. Her coming back when Willow is on the verge of possibly practicing again. And although I know there's a lot they (the entire gang) need to deal with, hopefully if Willow does decide to start up again, it will be slow. I mean, two spell words per day, slow.:)





Yvonne:peace





onyxsundrops
 


Re: UPDATE!

Postby Ginner WTluv » Sat May 22, 2004 3:49 pm

Oh..... my.... GOD!!!! You can't just end it there!!!! I need more!!! :gnome That really was the nastiest cliffhanger ever!!! And i've seen my fair share of cliffhangers:p

I really love the way your handling Faith and Buffy. Showing both their insecurities in an incredible way. All of them really, especially Willow. Her breakdown was.... just wow. There's so much i wanna say about the way you write and handle the characters, but i don't know how to say it! lol. and i call myself a writer :wink But i just wanted to say, basically, your writing is amazing. :bow And i love how you're portraying the characters. I can't wait for the next part!!! No.... really.... i can't:p lol.



~ Jen:pride

Helen - Oh please Nikki, be serious!

Nikki - I want to make love you to all night long... is that serious enough?

** Helen and Nikki in "Bad Girls" **

Ginner WTluv
 


Re: UPDATE!

Postby DreamsToDream » Sat May 22, 2004 10:56 pm

damn cliffhangers :rage

LoL! well it does make me want to read more so i guess that is part of your plan eh? LoL waiting for the next update :)

:bounce :bounce

DreamsToDream
 


Re: UPDATE!

Postby mollyig » Mon May 24, 2004 4:08 am

It's good that Buffy didn't get sanctimonious with Faith, and just let her tell her story. Otherwise Faith, despite her good intentions, might have bristled and reverted to being unwilling to tell anything. Nice twist that she attended the coven.



I liked how the Scoobs united to show Willow they care about her and want what's best for her. I don't think they're the right people to get her to start magic again though. She needs someone she trusts implicitly - and luckily enough that person has just arrived!



Thanks for this.


"Love is just like breathing when it's true" Indigo Girls

mollyig
 


UGH!!!

Postby SilverWingedNemesis » Mon May 24, 2004 5:40 pm

cliffhangers are really starting to annoy me..



UPDATE SOON PLEASE!!!



*giggles*





*hugs*



Nickole

SilverWingedNemesis
 


Re: Feedback! Yum!

Postby sapphocrazygirl » Wed May 26, 2004 1:45 pm

Kelsey - I'm glad you liked the insecurity between the two Slayers. It's been a long time, and they have to almost get to know each other again - yet at the same time, so much ties them together. It's been really fun writing their hesitations, their stops and starts and their underlying feelings which are definitely running way beyond friendship. Hope you enjoy this next bit.



Arwen - yay! I'm really happy that you liked it. I hope Faith's change is believable; I know it's big, but it's been a while, and something needs to reconcile the Faith we loved versus the slightly not-nice Faith. Hope my way works, even just a little bit.



Yvonne - I always love your feedback. I'm glad that Willow's emotions are somewhat upsetting and a little irrational - because I think that's where she might be right now. Maybe she saw the encouragement to start magick as punishment because she believes she needs to be punished. Willow's magick will definitely be going slow - even with Tara's help.



Jen - Glad you like it. When I read over the things I write, I'm never sure if they're as clear to readers as they are to me, because I'm seeing my mental movie as well as reading the words. And I love your sig, by the way :)



DreamstoDream - next update on the way!



mollyig - I never considered that Buffy might get sanctimonious with Faith, but now that you mention it, I totally agree that she could have gotten very high-and-mighty especially since she's in an emotionally vunerable place right now. I think Buffy needs Faith to come home in the same way that Willow needs Tara - even if she doesn't acknowledge it. Anyway, hope you like the next update.



Nickole - sorry about the cliffhanger. It's a trait of the show that I tend to over-copy in my writing. I promise the next update will be a little less jolting.



Speaking of which ...






"I got my axe, I got my honey...

I'd say all I need is a quiet room and some body lotion and I've got me a party!"


- Faith, in Torturing Touch

sapphocrazygirl
 


Re: New Fic: Three Years Later

Postby sapphocrazygirl » Wed May 26, 2004 1:58 pm

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



No one spoke.



Tara stood there, her hands at her side. She was wearing a graceful flowy blue shirt, with a T-cut at her collarbone and brown leather lacing. Her khaki skirt reached down just to her brown boots. She seemed a little taller than they all remembered her.



She and Willow stared at each other.



“Well, finally,” said Anya eventually. “Hey Tara. Where’ve you been?”



Now all gazes were on Anya, scolding her silently. With one exception – Willow was now staring vacantly at the coffee table.



“What?” Anya asked, shrugging to everyone.



Tara smiled graciously. “Hi Anya. It’s nice to see you again.”



Anya waved a hand at her. “Oh it’s fine, you don’t need to pretend with me. I haven’t changed,” she said proudly. “I still find all social artifice completely appalling.” Then her smile broke into a slight curiosity. “So where’ve you been? Dawn said she figured you’d head to L.A.”



Dawn's expression was a mixture of No I didn't, we never discussed this behind Willow's back (even though we did), we would never do something like that, ever (really I promise), shut up Anya, and Is Willow going to attack Anya first, or me? She looked to Buffy, then to Willow, whose eyes flitted nervously around the room, stopping on Dawn for only a second, then to the chair, the coffee table, the kitchen door, anywhere but Tara. She definitely was not in attack mode.



“Well.” Giles tried to smile. But he couldn’t think of anything else to say.



Buffy decided that the situation couldn’t get any worse, and therefore it was her turn to attempt dialogue. “Tara, why don’t you sit down? I’ll make some coffee.”



Tara smiled, so gratefully that Buffy was sure that Tara would run across the room and hug her. “Thank you. I’d love that.”



Dawn moved towards Buffy, but her sister turned away from her. “Anya.”



“Yes?” Anya turned to her expectantly.



“Come help me.”



“But I –“ Buffy gave her a look that would have shatted several hard objects. “Right.”



As they exited, Buffy glanced back at Willow, who was still staring blankly at random furniture. She looked at Buffy once – her eyes said nothing, only shock – and then away to a stuffed chair. Buffy glanced at Dawn with a sisterly “Do something to help” look, and followed Anya into the kitchen.



Everyone stood uncomfortably. Tara glanced from face to face, and finally looked at Willow.



Willow’s wasn’t even sure if she was thinking anymore. She was mostly operating on complete amazement. Tara. Standing in the living room. That was about as much as her brain could handle at the moment. She was avoiding eye contact with anyone. Including Tara. Especially Tara.



Dawn decided to take action. “Guys, why don’t we sit down?”



“Right, of course,” murmured Giles as he folded himself into a dinner chair. Xander almost sat on the cushioned chair next to him, but realizing that Tara would need somewhere to sit, he headed for the couch across from Willow. Tara sank into the empty chair, her eyes darting anxiously, her hands smoothing her skirt.



Dawn glanced at Willow, who hadn’t moved. Taking more initiative, Dawn walked around the coffee table and took Willow’s arm, pulling her down onto the couch.



Tara looked at Willow, who glanced at Dawn and tried to smile. Then Willow turned and almost met Tara’s gaze, but instead stared in the direction of the carpet.



Dawn took a breath. Obviously Willow wasn’t going to be of any help. “So, Tara. Where have you been?”



Tara looked away from Willow and sat back slightly, trying to relax. “Ah – I was – I was in L.A.” She gave Dawn a crediting smile.



At another time, in recounting the story, Dawn would have to make a sincere effort not to look overly pleased with herself – but at this point, she was just focusing on getting Tara to talk, and Willow to breathe, and Buffy back in this room as fast as possible so Dawn didn’t have to run everything.



Tara couldn’t look at Willow now, so she directed her next sentence to Giles. “I – I got an apartment after –“ She stopped.



After I took off with a few cardboard boxes and one seriously shattered heart. After I left the one woman I loved with all of my being.



This conversation was going to be much harder than she had expected. Actually, she had expected someone to try to kill her. She had been betting on Buffy, though Dawn probably was carrying enough rage to take her out as well. Considering the situation, she was doing really well so far.



“So, you’ve been staying in L.A.?” Giles repeated.



“Yes,” said Tara, and was enormously amazed that she was able to spit out that one word without the stutter that she was sure was going to rear its ugly hesitant head any time soon.



Dawn nodded with her whole body, trying to encourage something. She looked at Willow. She was still staring at the floor, and she was, seemingly unconsciously, wringing her hands.



Come on, Willow. Say something. Do anything. Sneeze.



Tara decided that no one else was going to say something, so she kept going. “I – I finished college there, and I – I’m working at a little coffee shop just outside the city. I – I was working there.”



Silence. Tara had never believed that silence was deafening, but she was sure she understood it now.



“You quit?” said Xander slowly, leaning forward and knitting his fingers together.



“Y-yes,” said Tara, and cursed her tongue. She still couldn’t look at Willow.



The room was still silent. Tara was beginning to wonder at her strange assumption that she’d actually be able to carry on a conversation.



Xander was used to the feeling of not knowing what to say. When he later thought about the events of that evening, he would take small pride in knowing that he wasn’t the only one who had been tongue-tied.



Giles was seriously considering cleaning his glasses. Or perhaps helping Buffy in the kitchen. Or perhaps discussing the weather. Sports even.



Dawn had completely forgotten about the speeches she’d written and memorized years ago, the wonderful monologues she’d spiced up for Tara’s eventual return, wherein Dawn was life-changingly eloquent about the powers of love overcoming the power of magick.



They all just sat there. Waiting.



“So-“ and the word was quiet and small, and its speaker could hardly move her lips, but everyone heard and looked at her. She blinked, a little longer than a normal blink, and finally looked at Tara.



Tara and Willow stared at each other.



Now Willow’s mind went into full blown crazy babble. Okay, Rosenberg. You have the next thirty seconds to say something so perfect and concise that you both indicate that you assume all blame – because you do – and also get Tara to fall back in love with you – because you will die if she walks out that door again…



Tara gazed at Willow. My God, she’s so thin…so little…so terrified of me. I never even imagined that I had that kind of power – that dangerous power – I have only a few seconds to tell her how much I’ve missed her, how broken I’ve been without her, how I never should have left, how I should have stayed and helped her…I’ve got to say it now or it might never happen…



They stared, silently, at each other.



“So you’re – you’re –“ Willow stopped. So many thoughts, and I’m out of words. “So I’m gonna go help Buffy in the kitchen.”



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



“So it sucked?”



“I wouldn’t say sucked. I would say it was incredibly awful to the point at which anything else, including a swan dive into a pit of vampire monkeys, sounded much more agreeable.”



“Lovely.” Faith laughed.



Buffy smiled. “So you’re still up for tonight?” Her voice shot up half a register. My God, I sound like a high schooler. I need a new job.



Faith frowned and her stride changed slightly. Buffy slowed down to keep up with her. “Are you sure you want me to be there? I mean, Red’s working through some extreme stuff. I don’t want to add to the trouble.”



“God, please come!” said Buffy, stopping and taking Faith’s arm. “It’s the most awful thing in the world to sit there and not know what to say. Just having you there will make things so much easier.”



They looked at each other. Faith grinned and Buffy was delighted by the way her old friend’s eyes lit up. Faith had changed. She was as easygoing as always, but now with an edge, an acknowledgement that “Want, Take, Have” didn’t work and that there were serious things to do. And because Buffy was extremely tired and very hyped up on the mocha in her hand, her mind was doing strange things, and she thought, It’s like Faith found God. The idea made her laugh.



Any of the discomfort from last night’s patrol had been wiped away; Buffy had wasted all of her awkward silences over coffee last night, and she was so relieved to have someone to talk to who was completely not involved with what was going on that she was gushing.



Faith was fighting to not smile off her own mouth. It felt so good, so solid, so right to be with Buffy, to be walking down the streets of Sunnydale on a bright sunny day, sipping caramel mochas and just talking. It feels so good when life is this good, she mused incoherently.



Faith was also thankful that Buffy hadn’t attempted to gut her. She was willing to dive headfirst into a vat of vampire monkeys, with spiky tails even, just to show her joy at being accepted and trusted and given a second chance at a friendship that (although she didn’t completely know it at the time) had meant so much to her.



Faith started walking again, and Buffy fell in step with her. “So, instead of staring at each other and stammering all night while Red can’t even blink, speak, or apparently get any circulation to her face, you want me to come to dinner and tell naked alligator stories?”



“There are more?”



“I learned how to make green bean casserole too.”



“Is there any end to your talents?”



“B.” Faith stopped again, feeling suddenly vunerable. “Seriously. If you don’t want me to come – “



Buffy shook her head. “I meant it the first time. I had to fight for you for a half-hour last night, I’m not letting you off so easily.”



Faith’s face froze over. “Watcher didn’t go so much for me being back in town, huh.”



Buffy realized then how much she had put her foot in her mouth. “No. Faith, that’s not what I meant. It wasn’t like that, they said that you could - ”



“Look, B, I just don’t want to make trouble, okay? I had enough of the cold English shoulder for the last four years.” Faith turned away, tossing her mocha into a trashcan before walking the other way. “I don’t need any more, not tonight.”



“Faith, that’s not what I meant.” Buffy threw away her own mocha and ran to catch up. She caught Faith’s elbow. “It wasn’t just Giles. It was Dawn too.”



Faith didn’t make eye contact. “Oh thanks, I feel so much better now.”



“No. Don’t you get it? She’s – she’s been through so much. You weren’t here. You don’t know – she’s not my sister.”



Faith looked at her now, her eyes a question.



“Do you remember meeting her? When you first came to Sunnydale?” Buffy’s voice was intense.



“Sure. When I had dinner at your house. She kept playing with my stake. Nearly put a hole through her own hand.”



“Right.” Buffy took a deep breath. “She wasn’t really there.”



Faith took a few moments, and then she gave up. “What do you mean?”



“I mean, she’s a giant mystical ball of energy that was suddenly thrust into a human form. These monks created her, they changed everything, all of my memories, everyone else’s, everyone who ever could have come into contact with her remembers her, but they didn’t.”



Faith stared at her solidly now. “So she’s not really your sister?”



Buffy was so worked up that she didn’t have time to wax poetic about the bonds of sisterhood. “Not technically, no.”



“Why?” asked Faith. “Why the monks and everything?”



Buffy took a breath, slowed down her speech slightly. “There was a goddess who was kicked out of a Hell dimension. Dawn was the key to get back into that dimension. She – she was going to kill her – bleed her to death to open the portal.”



Faith was quiet for a moment, gazing off to the side. “How long ago?”



“A few months after you woke up.”



Faith looked at Buffy. “Serious? Damn. Sorry,” said Faith, the three words conveying possibly sixteen different emotions. “So I’ve never really met her.”



“But you did. She remembers it, you remember it.”



“Wow. That’s gotta be hell on a psyche. Sorry.”



“Quit apologizing. Crude language is completely understandable under the circumstances.”



Faith nodded. They started walking again.



“So, wait – the goddess, who wanted to – how did you stop - oh.” Faith stopped gesturing and looked at Buffy. “So that’s how you died.”



“You heard about that?”



“Yeah, when Giles came to the Council. I mean, I didn’t see him – well, I did, I watched him come in from the taxi. It was really crazy. The Council didn’t tell him that I was there, but they were talking about it constantly. They thought they might have to send me here – but none of them thought I was capable of leaving yet.”



Faith didn’t talk about the absolute devestation of hearing the whispers in the hallway outside her cell. “She’s dead.” “She can’t be.” “But she is.” “Will another be called?” “We don’t know.” “Well, we certainly can’t send-“ And the tension around Faith, the thickness of the air, that had told her, far before Shannon finally confessed that Buffy Summers, the Vampire Slayer, was dead.



Faith had wept for three days, seemingly endlessly, wondering when it would stop feeling like her heart had been taken from her by way of tearing it out of her ribcage. And then, while she was meditating one day, focusing her energy, trying to rid herself of just a little of the pain, someone had come in and whispered to Shannon, and Slayer hearing had given Faith one small sentence: “She’s back.”



That had been the day that Faith knew she would eventually get better, that eventually the demons inside her – figuratively speaking – would subside, the dreams would go away, the impulses to danger would be countered by reason and kindness, and she would go back to Sunnydale.



“That must have been hard,” said Buffy, glancing at her.



Well, yeah, you know, whatever, was Faith’s natural responsatorial inclination.



“Yeah. It was.” And Faith felt that clutch in her heart again, and really hoped that she wouldn't start crying - but she wouldn't have been totally surprised if she had.



“I was –“ Buffy stopped, surprised by the words that were sitting, unbidden, on the tip of her tongue. Against a better part of her will, she let them go. “I was worried about you.”



Faith realized that the conversation had taken a sudden turn. “About me?” She looked at Buffy with an ironic smile.



“Yeah. After you took off.”



Faith felt judged, more by herself than by Buffy. “I needed to – work stuff out, you know?”



“Oh yeah, I’m not questioning that.” Buffy shook her head to emphasize that point. “I just – you know – I missed you.”



Faith stopped and looked at her, then turned away and continued walking. They went for a few steps without speaking.



“You know, I mean, not the – not the, the siding with the Mayor, or trying to steal Angel’s soul, but –“



“Yeah. I know -”



“I missed you.”



Buffy wished she could call the words back. They sounded so – so something that didn’t say what she wanted to say. But she sensed that Faith was uncomfortable, and she decided not to press the issue.



“So, seven o’clock tonight sound okay? Then around nine thirty we patrol?”



Faith wasn’t really listening. “Sounds good.”



“You could make your casserole?”



Faith stopped, turned her whole body to face Buffy. “Sure – look B, I gotta take off, some stuff I need to do, you know, look for a job, an apartment, you know.”



“Right.” Buffy felt crushed. She wasn’t sure why. Her voice also sounded very small. “Sure.”



“So, seven?”



“Right. Seven.”



“Cool. See you then.”



“Right.” Buffy turned to go. She’d said or done or implied something wrong, she felt that, but she couldn’t put her finger on it.



“Hey B.”



“Yeah?” Buffy turned back.



Faith gave her that mostly new but increasingly familiar shy smile. “I missed you too.”



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




"I got my axe, I got my honey...

I'd say all I need is a quiet room and some body lotion and I've got me a party!"


- Faith, in Torturing Touch

sapphocrazygirl
 


Re: New Fic: Three Years Later

Postby irishlassie101 » Wed May 26, 2004 2:50 pm

I so like the new Faith, so much progress, and the Slayers are getting closer to each other

Willow and Tara WILL eventually speak to each other, won´t they ?????? (stupid question, I know)

I really like the way you leed all the different destinies togehter



Aishling



irishlassie101
 


Re: New Fic: Three Years Later

Postby onyxsundrops » Wed May 26, 2004 3:12 pm

Leave it to Anya to break the silence so bluntly. But you gotta love her. Strangely it was sort of funny how each person tried to think of ways to help the conversation along. And Giles even resorting to the thought of talking about sports to end the silence just shows the amount of uncomfortableness in the room.



Willow's reaction seemed fitting, although I would've passed out... not that the thought didn't cross her mind, I'm sure. Furniture is the best diversion, but then again, even the couch probably held memories, so I wasn't surprised when she opted to take the easy way out. Also, I liked both Willow and Tara's silent musings as they stared at each other. Both thinking of ways to change three years in a matter of seconds.



And finally, Faith and Buffy. I can actually see Faith using Buffys 'return' as a way of bringing herself back from the darker side and getting better. It's like they are changing together although they've changed apart. What I mean is that there is less thinking or holding back, and it's more about letting their emotions out. Even if they might regret some of the things said, at least it's out there.



Thanks for the update.



Yvonne:peace







onyxsundrops
 


Re: New Fic: Three Years Later

Postby veiled isis moon » Wed May 26, 2004 4:38 pm

Buffy and Faith are actually kinda cute together. I do think they both forgave and worked through their issues with each other a little quickly though. Still really enjoying the fic and i love the tension between Willow and Tara at the moment. Things are so tense and hard which is no surprise, what with Tara leaving. I hope they start making up soon!



Michelle.x

veiled isis moon
 


Re: New Fic: Three Years Later

Postby Sean Gaffney » Wed May 26, 2004 5:47 pm

Really enjoying the fic so far - like the anguish between Willow and Tara. I can see why the previous poster thinks Faith and Buffy made up too soon, but then this is a W/T fic. (Dang, I wish there was a F/B eqivalent to the Kitten Board). Looking forward to more!

Sean Gaffney
 


Re: New Fic: Three Years Later

Postby mollyig » Thu May 27, 2004 2:38 am

Willow dazed by Tara's reappearance. You describe the tension in the room very well. It was easy to imagine Dawn eagerly attempting to encourage Tara to talk more, and Giles looking uncomfortable. Our girls both obviously struggling with the depth of emotions they were feeling.



Faith seems to be finding it easier to be honest with Buffy instead of putting on a facade.



Looking forward to the next chapter. Thanks!


"Love is just like breathing when it's true" Indigo Girls

mollyig
 


update

Postby LizPuRR » Thu May 27, 2004 9:59 am

hey!!

great update....

cant wait for more Willow/Tara interaction

ohhhh and the dinner...

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



"Oops, that kind of talk's more appropriate for the bedroom. I apologize."

Alyson Hannigan, That 70's Show

LizPuRR
 


Re: New Fic: Three Years Later

Postby Ginner WTluv » Thu May 27, 2004 2:50 pm

Well, for someone who was always an avid Buffy/Faith shipper, i'm sure you can see the possition i'm in at the moment. You know, screaming "just kiss her for god sakes!" at the screen when i was ready the buffy and faith part... lol. And Faith's description of how she felt when she heard buffy had died... *sniffs* But now i'm really intrigued... the slayers are indeed getting closer.... i wanna know what's gonna happen there :wink



Oh god, my heart really went out to Willow and Tara... they both feel so guilty for what happened... but Willow's "do something. SNEEZE" line really made me giggle.:D but yeah... i think i would have passed out... lol. anyhoo, i can't wait for the next update!!!:gnome much have more... i'm addicted to your fic! :p



~ Jen:pride

Helen - Oh please Nikki, be serious!

Nikki - I want to make love you to all night long... is that serious enough?

** Helen and Nikki in "Bad Girls" **

Ginner WTluv
 


Re: New Fic: Three Years Later

Postby jessan15 » Thu May 27, 2004 9:21 pm

OMG...just found this and I am hooked. I love Faith being reformed like...i enjoyed the goofy dreams...what does she moved your cheese mean anyway....



Willow freakage...believable...shutting down as opposed to ending the world...much more in Willow like character IMHO



Anya getting shoved in the kitchen...I woulda left her out there...if anyone can get thru an akward situation its Anya. Gotta love her.



So...love the story...looking forward for more...and keep up the kick ass work!

Love Will Find a Way

jessan15
 


Re: New Fic: Three Years Later

Postby sapphocrazygirl » Thu May 27, 2004 10:35 pm

Aishling - I'm really happy that most of the Kittens are getting along with my new Faith. And there will be W/T dialogue eventually (and kissage, and general loveliness, yay!) So stay tuned...



Yvonne - You always catch things that I apparently wrote without thinking - like Faith and Buffy changing together, only apart. This is why I love your feedback. I hope you continue to enjoy :)



Michellex - Faith and Buffy working through their issues quickly, easily forgiving each other and reconnecting is a really blatant plot foil to Willow and Tara. So there's a definite contrast between how easily Faith and Buffy can talk to each other, while Willow stutters and runs out of the room when Tara reappears. But I promise that Willow and Tara will be more at ease with each other soon. Lots of making out - I mean up...



Sean Gaffney - I am a HUGE B/F fan, almost to my devotion to W/T. Most of my fanfic is B/F - since we kittens have very little canon to enjoy in that area. I've tried to tone that down in this fic, which is probably why they seem to have made up really quickly. Glad you're enjoying this.



mollyig - Faith's way beyond a facade with Buffy. They've been through too much together, and fought too much. Hope you like the next chapter.



LizPuRR - more W/T coming up! All talk no smoochies as of right now...but that's gonna change eventually!



Jen - whenever I watch B/F interactions in S3, I wonder when Joss started weaving in a gay character idea. And then Willow's doppelganger...hm? By the way there is a scene coming up that is a direct response to "just kiss her for godsakes!" so stay tuned.



jessan15 - "She moved your cheese" is a reference to a popular self-help business book a few years ago called "Who Moved my Cheese?" It actually has nothing to do with the plot or with the Buffyverse. It just sort of occurred to me as something strange that Faith might say.



I think Buffy dragged Anya to the kitchen in the hopes that Willow (with Dawn's help) would get a conversation going with Tara. It didn't work, but it was a good idea, especially since Willow and Anya's friendship has always been a little strained.



Alright kittens, I've written the next update and it got rather long, so I'm letting it sit for a day in the hopes that it will mature like fine wine. There's a series of short bits dealing with Willow finally opening up, and then a really long bit with the dinner. Willow and Tara will talk, Faith will have a nice moment of realization, and... well that's really all I'm going to tell you. Tune in tomorrow. Same kitten time, same kitten channel.




"I got my axe, I got my honey...

I'd say all I need is a quiet room and some body lotion and I've got me a party!"


- Faith, in Torturing Touch

sapphocrazygirl
 


UPDATE!

Postby sapphocrazygirl » Fri May 28, 2004 12:42 pm

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



“Willow, you have to come out.”



“I am out.”



“You know what I mean.” Dawn pounded on the door with the heel of her hand.



“I told you, I don’t feel well.” And although Willow’s voice was muffled, she sounded perfectly fine.



Dawn bit her lip. It was definitely beginning to look like Willow was serious about not coming down to dinner tonight.



“Hey Dawn,” said Faith, sticking her head around the corner. The rest of her body rolled after her, and she stood, awkwardly, trying to regain that intimidating stance that had come so easily years ago. “Red still not hungry?”



Dawn hesitated. Faith had changed, there was little question about that now. For one, she didn’t dress or walk like a time-ticking smut bomb anymore. For two, she had been genuinely shy when she’d come to the door earlier that evening, standing with one foot tucked behind the other, hesitant, embarrassed, almost stuttering at Dawn when she opened the door. Dawn had been planning to challenge Faith to cross the threshold, just to prove she wasn’t a vampire, but something akin to kindness had struck her when she’d seen Faith standing so awkwardly, and Dawn had smiled, and taken the casserole from her, and invited her inside.



Dawn wasn’t one hundred percent sure that Faith could be trusted. But Buffy had said it, and if anyone had cause to distrust Faith it was the girl who’d been most screwed over by her. So if Buffy was willing to patrol with her, and Giles was willing to invite her to dinner, Dawn figured that confiding in her, just a little, wouldn’t be a huge sacrifice. And Faith did look sincerely concerned.



“I don’t know what to do,” said Dawn. “She’s gonna look really ridiculous if she doesn’t come to dinner.”



Faith’s eyes twinkled. She leaned in and whispered something into Dawn’s ear.



Dawn’s face lit up. She was thoroughly delighted, though not completely pacified in that ounce of distrust she was still carrying. Even so, Faith might be able to get Willow to open the door, and that was enough. Dawn forcefully rearranged her brow into a look of concern. “Willow?” she said, leaning against the door.



“I still don’t feel well, Dawnie.”



“You’re not naked, are you?”



“What?”



“I said, you’re not naked, are you?” Now Dawn couldn’t resist the huge grin.



“What?!” Willow’s voice was definitely louder, and it sounded like she’d gotten off the bed and come towards the door.



“Well, from what I can tell from the gestures and the grunting, Faith’s about to kick your door down and bodily drag you to dinner.”



The door opened. Willow didn’t look sick. She looked blank. “I told you, I don’t feel well.”



Faith was startled. Red looked – well, she was pale and thin and totally emotionless, and to be completely honest she looked like a vampire. Even so, Faith considered simply hauling her downstairs and tying her to the dinner chair. She decided that wouldn’t make a good impression on anyone.



“Look Red, I know you’re not feeling well, but Buffy’s put a lot into this dinner and she really wants you to make an appearance.”



“Faith made a casserole,” added Dawn with an anxious smile.



Willow looked as if she was about to say something nasty. She was, in fact; the words “What, did you put arsenic in it?” were dangling on the tip of her tongue. But she felt too tired to be mean. If she opened up the door of sarcasm, the wall might fall in.



“I said I’m not feeling well. Give Buffy my apologies.” She quietly – but quickly - closed the door and locked it.



The two girls on the other side looked at each other.



“You wanna kick it in?” Dawn asked Faith.



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



“She’s gotta come out of there sometime, B. She’s gonna get hungry.”



“Did you see her?” Buffy’s voice was bitter, and she tossed the salad with a bit more vigor than usually required.



“Yeah. She looks like hell. Sorry.”



Buffy didn’t even look up. “She’s not gonna get hungry. She’ll die before she finally remembers to eat properly.”



She was furious. She just wanted Willow to get dressed, get downstairs, and carry on a decent conversation. Maybe even eat something. She didn’t really think that was so much to ask.



At heart, Buffy was mostly angry with herself. She had let this go on way too long – she had ignored everything, all the signs, pushed it away, occupied herself otherwise. She should have been there, with chocolate and chick flicks, to be the best friend, the person that Willow could have talked to and cried on. She hadn’t. She’d believed the façade that Willow put up – she had wanted so badly to believe it. Now she didn’t know how to reach her – how to reconnect with her best friend.



“Look, B, maybe it’s me.” Faith leaned her elbows on the counter and watched Buffy glare at the croutons she was tossing in. “I mean, she hasn’t seen me since I took your body for a joy ride. I didn’t expect her to welcome me with open arms.”



“It’s not you.” Buffy glared up at the ceiling, in the general direction of Willow’s room. “It’s Tara.”



“I know,” said Faith, idly tearing a piece of lettuce.



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



There was a knock on the door.



Willow was sitting on her bed, playing with a stitch in the lace coverlet and staring blankly at the floor.



“Who is it?” she asked, not especially loudly.



“It’s me,” said Buffy. She turned the doorknob and was surprised to find the door open. She tucked her head in. “I brought you some chicken soup.”



“I’m not really hungry, thanks.” Willow tried to make her voice sound light. She failed.



Buffy sat on the bed. “Look, Will, we’re all in shock here. We never thought she’d come back.”



“I told you, I’m sick.”



“And I told you, I’m not stupid.” Willow finally looked at her. Her eyes were green pools of nothing. “She’s back, Will. You’re gonna have to deal.”



Willow only stared at her, and then looked away.



Buffy realized she was getting nowhere. She stared at Willow, unsure of how to continue. In all those times of counseling, Buffy had rarely been at a loss for advice, for answers, for rationality. But she loved Willow so much. She just didn’t know what to do.



Buffy gave up and set the soup on the bedside table. “If you feel like coming down, we’d all really love to see you.” It hurt to leave. But she didn’t know what else to do. She stood up and walked to the door.



As Buffy laid her hand on the doorknob, Willow said, “It’s so hard, Buff.”



Buffy stopped, turned her head and looked at her.



Willow was staring at an uncertain spot on the bedspread. “I’ve been trying so hard, for so long – to keep it all out, to forget about it, to just not let myself think about what I did.”



Buffy came back to the bed, hauled herself up and sat next to Willow, shoulder to shoulder, knee to knee. She slipped an arm around Willow’s back, and when Willow rested her head on Buffy’s shoulder, she began weeping.



“It’s just so hard,” she whimpered through her tears.



Buffy held her, and felt her own tears drop onto Willow’s loose hair.



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



Fifteen minutes later, Willow came down the stairs, albeit a bit shakily. She had washed her face and brushed her hair, and she was wearing a graceful wraparound skirt and a long-sleeved maroon shirt. She looked like she was wearing a tent. Faith had gotten a good look when she’d just barely opened the door, and she could see now that, even as normally thin at Red was, she was really in the need of a good meal lasting about seventeen courses.



“Hey,” said Dawn, who was setting silverware.



Willow gave her a light smile. “Hi Dawnie.”



Dawn stood there, holding salad forks, until she finally gave in, ran across the room, and threw her arms around Willow.



Faith smiled, touched Buffy’s arm and pointed.



Willow and Dawn held onto each other for a long time.



“Thank you, Dawn,” she whispered into her hair.



“I love you, Willow,” Dawn whispered back.



With a slow sigh, they let go. Willow turned to Buffy, who came forward and wrapped her arms around her best friend.



“Welcome back,” she said quietly.



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




"You see, I think love comes from God. And so, to turn away from love, real love, it could be argued, is to turn away from God." - Dare Truth or Promise

sapphocrazygirl
 


Re: UPDATE!

Postby sapphocrazygirl » Fri May 28, 2004 12:45 pm

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



That night was better. Better, as Buffy would comment many years later, in the sense that Willow was finally able to string together coherent sentences; better, as Dawn would write in her Chronicles that evening, because Willow actually talked to Tara, and they carried on what passed for a very normal conversation between acquaintances, maybe even friends; better, as Xander would that night whisper happily to Anya, because Faith was there in the not-crazy capacity and she telling stories with her arms flying.



“So there I was, standing in the middle of a Mexican airport with sixteen vamps on a private plane, about to take off for who-knows-where, with four hostages that they were planning to serve as an in-flight snack.” Faith was gesturing with a knife and capturing the attention of everyone at the table.



“What did you do?” said Dawn, showing an interest that she rarely had for slay stories. Buffy gave her a slight glare, but quickly returned to listening to Faith.



Buffy actually was feeling very little resentment about everyone’s rapt attention to Faith. She wanted them to like her, accept her; she wasn’t going to get all “I’m the Slayer, she’s the replacement” on them again.



“Alright, so, I chase after the plane as it’s taxiing and catch one of the wing supports – so I’m half riding the plane, half gripping onto a six-foot piece of metal that’s going to snap off any second, and three of the vamps come out of the windows.”



Anya was, if possible, more delighted than Xander. She leaned forward, elbows on the table, and stared at Faith with her mouth wide open. It might have been a demon thing, but then Xander was also nodding enthusiastically. Years of Watcherdom had worn down a bit of Giles’ stiffness, and he was also listening with interest.



“So the first one slides down the body of the plane at me, aiming his feet right at my chest. So I swing my feet up, knock him off to the side, and swing myself up the side of the plane and kick in a window, knocking out one of the vamps inside.”



Willow was listening attentively, really, she promised. Okay, no. She was looking at Faith, nodding her head, and laughing when everyone else did, but she kept sneaking glances at Tara. Okay, so it had only been three glances in the past ten minutes, but she felt very bold.



Tara, meanwhile, was watching Willow pretend to listen to Faith. Three years away and I can still read her face like a book, thought Tara, and although she felt a stab of guilt at the thought of three years, she also felt something warm blossom deep in her stomach and spread through her whole body.



“Then the other two come at me over the plane, but at the same time the vamp pilot swerves the plane trying to knock me off, and they go flying right over me, crash into runway lights, and explode in flames.”



Willow decided she could sneak another look at Tara. She turned her head slightly, as if she was trying to visualize the scene Faith described. Then her eyes oh-so-naturally fell on Tara.



Who was looking right at her.



Willow was startled, and a little embarrased at being caught, but she didn’t look away. And Tara gave her a wicked, side-shuffling grin that said, You vixen. I know what you’re up to.



Willow was overcome by a jumble of feelings. The smile hit her right in her heart – that delicious smile that always preceeded more delicious things, just that smile made her body hum – and then she was embarrassed for being such a slut-kitten – and then she remembered that the smile no longer belonged to her, that she had forfeited the smile, that it might never again mean what it had meant once.



Willow had spent the earlier part of the evening – before Tara arrived – telling herself that she and Tara would just be friends. Willow wouldn’t even add for now; she had to keep herself firmly in line and remember that if she expected anything she probably wouldn’t get it.



Now her stomach became a giant knot as she realized that she could pretend that she and Tara would just be friends, but it could never be “just” for her. She could spend a hundred years with Tara as “just friends” and she would never, ever forget an iota of how much she loved and wanted this woman. She would never forget all the nuances to Tara’s different smiles, all the hidden meanings in the words she chose, all the ways her hands moved over silverware and plates and glistening skin…



And to top off the mass feeling-fest, Willow wasn’t sure if she deserved to have Tara back.



Okay, she’d spent the past three years totally magick-free, which had been huge. But she was beginning to suspect that totally giving up practicing had been overkill; it had been too much, and not the right thing to do. The right thing, she was slowly starting to parse out, would have been to ask for help, to admit that she was unsure of where to draw the line, where to stop magick from changing the shape of things.



She hadn’t done that. She’d lied, again and again, to do any spell she could get her hands on, and when things went wrong and friends got hurt, she pretended that they were accidents and not a pattern. She’d hurt the people she loved most – her family, really. She should have asked for help; she should have stopped long before she did.



There was the one side of her mind going, Without magick you couldn’t have brought Buffy back. And then the other side said, Hey, you pulled her out of heaven, remember? It wasn’t like Angel in a hell dimension. Remember how much she went through just to get used to life here again? Remember how you made her dig her way out of her own grave?



And the first side said, But you thought you were doing the right thing. Ethic of intention, right? If you try to do something good, even if it turns out bad, it isn’t a bad action? And the other side said, You could have used your power some other way – you could have tried to communicate with Buffy. Tara could have helped. You didn’t have to go all Lone Witchy Wolf on this. You should have thought it through. After all,, Buffy chose to die. She was far away from thinking about Tara now.



Tara watched Willow’s face – her eyes deepening, her mouth twitching slightly, her cheeks turning red and then slowly a shade just barely pale past normal. Tara mentally flogged herself. She had meant the smile to be an opening, a friendly gesture that said – something friendly. But instead of an opening, Willow was closed off now, and something else had opened in her mind – something troubling her, something that she hadn’t been dealing with.



Tara wondered if it was the magicks. She hadn’t asked Willow – wasn’t sure if she could ask her – and she hadn’t had alone time with Buffy or Xander or Dawn to ask if Willow was still practicing. Certain things, though, made Tara think that Willow wasn’t. Candles were missing – the herb that Willow had grown on the side table was gone – and other things, more subtle things, that made Tara not know but feel with all her heart that Willow was done – had been done for a long time.



She wanted to comfort Willow, to reach across the table and take her lover’s hand. As she thought this, she immediately flinched – because Willow wasn’t her lover. The Willow in front of her – this flimsy, withdrawn, stuttering Willow – didn’t dissuade her. She knew that Willow, no matter who she was or how she acted, was Willow, the woman she loved with a passion that overwhelmed her. But Tara had given that up. Or had Willow? Or maybe out of some evil coincedence of the fates they both slipped up on their duties to each other at the same time, and didn’t know how to get past that.



I love you, Tara thought, and she knew that Willow couldn’t hear her, but she thought it and hoped that Willow would eventually know it. I know you made mistakes. I did too. I forgive you, with all of my heart, which is rather difficult since you have all of my heart and have had it ever since – since when? Since you kissed me? Since you said you loved me? Since we first touched – since I first saw you at the Wicca group? Maybe I loved you before I met you. I don’t care. I love you.



Willow broke out of her inner turmoil and her eyes met Tara’s again. Her lover – her ex-lover – was staring at her so intensely, and so tenderly, and Willow didn’t know what to do.



“So then the plane swerves off the runway, and crashes into one of those little silver go-carts with the flashing lights and the whole cabin starts on fire.”



“Oh my God,” breathed Dawn, staring at Faith.



If Willow had any capacity for hearing at that point, she would have been very confused, since she’d missed the past five minutes of the story. But all she was thinking was that she needed to get away, even for a few minutes, just to clear her head, because, she decided, existential questions shouldn’t be solved while company is visiting.



“Dawnie, let me take your plate,” she said, standing a little shakily and taking Dawn’s empty plate. The fork skidded around the edge, but stayed on.



Faith stopped her story and looked at Willow. She saw the turmoil on Red’s face, and her heart went out to her. She knew that Red had stopped the magicks, and guessed that she was still mad in love with Tara. Which sucks. How do you reconnect with someone – someone you loved that much – after three years? How do you make up for all that lost time? And then she looked at Buffy, and something in Faith’s stomach twisted, and something in her unconscious bubbled up to the surface. It’s just like –



Faith pushed it down. Buffy and I are not the same as Willow and Tara. I mean, we were connected, and I screwed her over royally, but after all, we weren’t – I mean – we didn’t – we weren’t in l-



She stuttered back into her story. “B-but, I got all the passengers out. One of them had been bitten pretty badly, but we got her to the ER, and she was fine.”



Willow was in the kitchen now, and she caught the end of Faith’s story. Not that she’d been listening to any other part of it. She wasn’t sure if she was going to cry. Part of her really wanted to, but she didn’t want to be a drama queen in the middle of Faith’s welcome home party – and Tara’s too. She didn’t want Tara to think she was some psycho crazy girl whose emotions were all out of control.



She already thinks you’re psycho, said the part of her brain that Willow was starting to consider the evil part. Do you remember what you did to her? To all of them?



Shut up, Willow answered. She scraped the remainder of Dawn’s dinner into the garbage, and looked at her own plate. She’d eaten almost half of the food that Faith had heaped onto her plate, sending her a look over the gravy bowl that said, Come on, Red.



Willow set her plate on the counter. She knew that if she pressed her fingers to her aching head, she was going to cry.



“Hey,” said a voice from behind her. Willow thought, Okay, apparently I don’t need to touch my temples. All I need to do is hear that voice. I’m going to dissolve into a puddle of complications right now.



But she pulled herself together for a few more minutes, and turned around to face Tara, who was standing there with two stacks of dirty plates.



Tara took a deep breath. “You OK?”



Willow didn’t feel terrified. She was way past terror. She was in the realm of emotion so overpowering that an entirely other language would be needed to convey it. She nodded. “Just – sort of overwhelmed, you know?”



“Yeah,” answered Tara, and she joined her at the sink. They stood there, washing dishes, very obviously and painfully not touching. For a few seconds, neither could speak.



“S-so Faith just showed up?” said Tara, desperately grasping for a topic.



Willow grabbed onto it. “Yeah. Kind of a big surprise. Especially since she didn’t try to kill anyone this time.”



“She’s a lot nicer this time around,” said Tara with a smile, and she and Willow glanced at each other.



Willow scrubbed at a stubborn green bean on a plate. “She’s really changed a lot. It’s amazing. I mean, she’s still very much herself, but something about her – something underneath has changed, and it’s showing through in everything else about her.”



Tara didn’t know if Willow was talking about Faith or herself.



“People change,” she answered quietly.



Willow handed her a dishcloth.



“Especially after such a long time,” Willow added.



They both nodded shyly.



Willow’s brain had relaxed to a minor degree, and the Babblemotor suddenly kicked in. “It’s strange. I want to ask her – why now? Why today? Well yesterday really – but why not last year, or next Tuesday? What told her to return to Sunnydale now?”



Oh, thought Willow. Well, that thought really did start out about Faith, but I don’t think it ended there.



Tara looked at Willow for a long moment.



Then she took a deep breath and let out a slight smile. “Because it was time to come home.”



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



Hmmmm....?




"You see, I think love comes from God. And so, to turn away from love, real love, it could be argued, is to turn away from God." - Dare Truth or Promise

sapphocrazygirl
 


Great Story!

Postby Shy One » Fri May 28, 2004 1:09 pm

Hi! :bigwave

I just caught up with your story. :read

And I must say, I'm completely hooked! :applause

I can't wait for Willow and Tara to make up.

W/T smoochies are always the best! :kiss2

Please write more soon! :pray

This has already gotten VERY interesting!

Can't wait for the next installment!

:applause :bow :clap :applause :bow :clap



Shy One

:shy

Shy One
 


Re: UPDATE!

Postby ange04 » Fri May 28, 2004 2:00 pm

that was amazing! i started getting the sniffles while reading willow's pain. not a good thing when i'm "hard at work at my computer" and i sit directly across my boss.



anyway...i love what you did with faith and buffy. i'm glad this buffy finally bought a clue. thanks for the update! hope to see more soon.



ange

ange04
 


Re: Great Story!

Postby Arwen276 » Fri May 28, 2004 2:09 pm

Indeed Great Story!!



I'm loving all this angst mixed with Faith and Tara's returns... it's a great setting and I can't wait for more!!



~Arwen





ps: I'm sending Willow some burgers! She's really too thin!





Hear That Baby? You're My Always... Willow

Arwen276
 

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