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The Apothecary - August 20 - Chapter 34: Surrender

Willow and Tara live happy together in a place untouched by Mutant Enemy. This is a forum for Willow and Tara Fan Fiction (i.e. fan fiction, top 10s, etc...) Please read the content advisories on individual stories, read at your own discretion.

Re: The Apothecary - May 6 - Chapter 26: Curiosities

Postby Zampsa1975 » Thu May 07, 2009 11:22 am

Yay for great update-y goodness... I'm wondering what role the volcanos play...
We few, we happy few. We band of buggered.

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Re: The Apothecary - May 6 - Chapter 26: Curiosities

Postby sadie » Thu May 07, 2009 12:04 pm

Holy crap. That was hot. If I thought the previous chapters were intense, this one's even more so. It just keeps getting better! I absolutely love their interaction, but I think I said that before. The synopsis was great, too, thanks so much for posting that! :D It was good to read the whole story so far in a "nutshell", a really well-written nutshell! ;)
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Re: The Apothecary - May 6 - Chapter 26: Curiosities

Postby Dorothy » Thu May 07, 2009 1:39 pm

:D much enjoyed it, thanks :)
Manchmal in der Nacht hab ich phantastische Träume. Aber wenn ish aufwach, quält mich die Angst.
Manchmal in der Nacht bin ich so hilflos und wünsch mir, es käm einer, der mich führt und beschützt.
(__/)
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Re: The Apothecary - May 6 - Chapter 26: Curiosities

Postby Zooeys_Bridge » Mon May 11, 2009 8:37 pm

My goodness, I'm glad you're updating speed has slowed down substantially these past few weeks, as is I managed to still miss three updates! Now, of course you have my full permission to resume your crackershot postings.

I will say, all this lack of Buffy has created this ghost that seems to occupy space. I miss her here, though not nearly as much as Xander and Willow do (which goes without saying).

But unlike Buffy and The Lamb, Xander's presence goes heartily felt, and I'm enjoying him here so much! I've always wished there was more Willow-Xander action, both on the KB and on the show, and am fiercely glad you brought him to life so vividly here.

This brought a smile to my face
He had, after all, Scooby-Doo pajama bottoms and a Spiderman watch.
You can take the Xander out of Scooby-Doo and Spidey land, but you can't take the Scooby-Doo and Spidey out of Xander. Xander is Xander, and despite all your world has done to him, I betcha he still has a collection of X-Men lunchboxes in his supertechy Tehran place. :) I love you, Xander.


And Willow and Tara's light banter in the car, before everything got a little heavy? So wonderful! Morris and Gisella are hilarious, but nothing beats the pants off of Puddinpop and Chocolate Hoo Hoo. Way to knock another ticker in the 'Reasons I Love Xander' column, Sparky. Even a little levity was so sweet, and the back-and-forth was really spot on. I hope at the end of this epic tale ( or perhaps sometime in the middle? or did that just happen?) we can get a little clip of that domesticity and happy couple-dom, think you could swing it? Pretty please? You do the grief good, so good but that run-of-the-mill sweetness comes out, too. Which, hello, I love too.

Thanks, Jen!
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Re: The Apothecary - May 6 - Chapter 26: Curiosities

Postby irishgrl3 » Wed May 13, 2009 5:24 pm

That was a nice Willow & Tara moment. :) Especially the snuggly's there at the end. :blush No really, it was nice for them to just talk and to hear Willow share with Tara things about Buffy. It seems they still are struggling a little with trust issues.

Wow Tara is 6000 yrs old? I bet she has seen some things in that lifetime...

"An astute deduction. My favourite volcano is the House of the Sun, the Haleakala of Maui."

Been there... sunrise is beautiful!!!

Wonderful update!
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Re: The Apothecary - May 6 - Chapter 26: Curiosities

Postby Tara the Phoenix » Thu May 14, 2009 7:36 pm

Overdue feedback response, and an overdue chapter to boot! Sorry, guys. Let's roll!

ceridwen - Congrats on the dibs for Azadi. So cool that it's similar to your own name (nice to meet you, Azalia!). All the guesses on Azadi's mother are quite interesting. I'll let you know, eventually!

You also scored the dibs for Curiosities. Good on you! You might be starting to get Rachel nervous! I'm glad that the story is still very interesting to you - it looks like I'll have to answer the question about volcanoes, too - eventually! I hope you enjoy the next chapter!

lorius 222 - Good to see you again. I'm glad you enjoyed the update. I hope you continue to love the story!

Dorothy - Glad I could make your waking up enjoyable in the morning. Good luck on your bunnies to world domination thing!

Zampsa - Hello, glad you're still reading and enjoying. Interesting to hear your theories on who Azadi is - what she is. You, like everyone else, will find out soon what role the volcanoes play. Man, I love writing this story! Enjoy the next update!

LittleBit - Always great to hear from you - it's nice to know you're still reading and enjoying. Smiles on the "make the story as long as you want" front - thanks! I'm having far too much fun. Thanks for the kudos on the writing (love the word 'exquisite') and I hope you like what's coming!

Nue - Glad you could celebrate your birthday with an update. Good on you for the rock band, music is so liberating! I'm also glad I took the time to write a synopsis - with updates taking longer in between, it's good to remember where we are. Enjoy the next one!

irishgrl3 - Hi Anna! I'm glad that I can still interest you in non W/T chapters - this one about Xander has been long needed. I'm excited to share more of his story, and the stories of the other characters. I've got a whole Faith history I'm dying to unveil. About the trust issues - there's a whole lot at stake, so there's going to be some shaky moments yet. So you've been to the volcano in Hawaii? Too cool! Tell me about it sometime - I might be able to work it in! Enjoy the next update!

And for being 6000 years old, Tara is looking good! :blush

CrazyTaraWitch - Glad to see you still here and commenting. Thanks so much - I really appreciate it. It's like a drug, getting feedback. Hmm. This story has a lot to do with addictions, doesn't it? I hope you enjoy what's coming!

edob - You must know what a thrill it gives me to know that you, fresh little newbie, used my story to post your first feedback. Welcome to the board, I hope you find as much happiness here as I have! Enjoy the next chapter!

Paint The Sky - You were feeling kinda sassy, weren't you? ;-) I'm glad you took a moment to comment - I always enjoy what you have to share, yes, even with the morning silliness. You had a question about Xander: he does indeed outrank Willow right now. That's going to play very nicely with some upcoming story developments. (See my little evil hands rubbing in mad glee?) Stop reading, get to work!

Actually, stop working, get to the story! Enjoy!

restlessminds - Wow, I made you forget your own name. Oh, the power! Regret, loss, innocence, oh am I having the time of my life! I hope you continue to enjoy the little webs I weave... Thanks for sharing!

ophelia11 - I can stop feeling guilty, now that I've left feedback for Impulse. Rock on for your sister and Sweet Adelines - if she went to Hawaii, she must be good! Thanks for the good vibes concerning the way I take conflicting images and lend them elegance - this story, like all my stories, has a certain rhythm and style that I LOVE playing with. I'm glad you recognize it, and enjoy it. Thanks for commenting, and enjoy the next update!

Owl - For being a newbie feedbacker, you hide your noobness really well. Awesome comments, thank you! There is certain a dichotomy going on between thought and speech - I'm glad you recognized it.
I swear though the ratio of information to what-the-frak factor in this story is like 1:76 billion.....Okay, I may be exaggerating slightly on that but it's definitely significant and yet definitely most delightfully awesome.
Bust my gut, would you? Thanks! I loved it.

sadie - Glad you enjoyed the synopsis, and the hotness factor. I love writing their interaction, and I'm glad you're enjoying it. I'm just glad you are enjoying reading the story as much as I enjoy writing it. Keep enjoying! That's an order! :)

Zooey's Bridge - Well, hi, Rachel! Good to see you again. Yes, the updating frenzy has cooled with the BRUTALITY of my job lately - I never take my work home at night, but the 7:30 to 5:00 deal with eating lunch at my desk sucks. Oh, well.
Morris and Gisella are hilarious, but nothing beats the pants off of Puddinpop and Chocolate Hoo Hoo. Way to knock another ticker in the 'Reasons I Love Xander' column, Sparky.
I had a blast writing that - Chocolate Hoo Hoo is actually a name we used to call my sister-in-law. Bear in mind, we called my brother Spaghetti Princess. (My family can be a bit silly, which really helps in the story department!) I love putting in the run-of-the-mill sweetness, just to temper all that drama. And, of course, more drama is coming. I hope you enjoy it!

That's everyone!

Masterjendu, muchos gracias as always. Concerning the etymology of Morris and Gisella - they were the first words that popped into my head, so I didn't argue with them. Much fun will be coming your way when I finally finish writing Fruit.

Update coming shortly!

Jen
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Re: The Apothecary - May 6 - Chapter 26: Curiosities

Postby Tara the Phoenix » Thu May 14, 2009 7:46 pm

[center]~27~
Anyanka
[/center]

Tara was vaguely aware that they had arrived at the back entrance of the den, near the shed where she kept her motorbike. It took several moments for her to regain her composure; every Willow-moment was intoxicating, and Tara felt herself becoming as addicted to Willow's touch as Anya's clients were to the poppies. Yet every moment with Willow skirted a narrow chasm of anxiety and fear: what if she led Willow to harm? What if Willow wanted to save her?

What if Willow died because of her?

She could let Willow into her heart, but she ached with indecision regarding Willow's role in her future. As First Lieutenant of the Drakensdvaerder, Willow stood a better chance than anyone at freeing Tara from her imprisonment. But if harm should come to her, should death stop the curiosity of the green-eyed wonder-seeking girl, Tara would go mad or give up entirely.

The physical pain of this moment was nearly unbearable, with her skewered side and the sutured rip down her leg. Never had Tara wanted Anya's assistance more, but she felt she should not even speak to her colleague while Willow was around, let alone be party to Anya's brand of magic.

Secrets.

She held Willow's hand as they slowly got out of the car. It had not been a long drive, but it had been an intense one. The street children were already clamouring around the car, begging Faith for cigarets or games. The lush, dark-haired driver ignored them while she helped Willow and Tara to their feet. After that, she made no motion to follow them; it seemed she would stay by the car until summoned or dismissed.

Tara led the way up the stairs, pockmarked with rust and eroded with time. At the top of the second landing of the stairs, she looked down to see the voluptuous woman lighting up. As before, something chimed in her memory, something she ought to know but was eluding her. Faith was blowing smoke rings to the delight of the children, but her laugh was hollow and her smile was mocking no one as much as herself.

Tara wished that Eva were home. Eva would know how to read her, especially when she managed to seduce her. Never if. When.

Willow was behind her now, trying to be quiet and graceful. Tara touched the lock, which immediately slicked back at her touch. "You must have reengaged the lock when we left yesterday," Tara said.

"Yes, I had Faith bring a cleanup crew and she took care of the lock and the mess. It wouldn't be very nice if everything you owned got plundered while you were gone."

Tara nodded, but she could care less for her worldly possessions. All she cared about were the contents of her workroom. Willow seemed stunned by the simple way in which Tara opened the door; she asked, "You don't need keys?" Her voice was timid and small. Did she remember stumbling down these stairs with Tara in her arms, the den ripped to shreds and blood in Narnia?

"There is no lock on earth that I can't penetrate," Tara said, opening the door.

(I'd make a very good Drakensdvaerder if I wasn't one of the bad guys)

A faint whisper of scent came to her on the draft of the door; Tara smiled. This was home. She couldn't help but notice how Willow also seemed to breathe deep. She had only to look at Willow and raise an eyebrow for Willow's face to turn crimson, a strangely menacing colour next to her black eye. "It smells like you," Willow said, sniffing again. "Could we bottle this somehow so I could take it with me wherever I go? Every moment I am not with you I could open it and sniff it and perish with delight."

"I don't believe you're allowed to perish of anything, missy," Tara growled, smiling. She almost timidly led the way into her apartment. "I guess you've seen some of this already," Tara said. "I haven't quite figured out how you broke into my apartment."

"I didn't want to overly invade your privacy," Willow admitted quickly. "I used one of my cool espionage tools called a resonator to spring the lock just after midnight and then I waited in the den until morning." Willow didn't say it, but Tara could imagine it, how Willow would have paused at the entrance to Tara's bedchamber, watching her sleep, before retiring to the den. Did Willow sit in Tara's chair, sniffing and perishing in delight?

No. Back then, Willow had a mission. A purpose. A design. She would have slept but little, rehearsing her plans, and then listening to Tara scream.

(I give dreams, Willow, and every night I scream in the collected nightmares of the world.)

Tara paused at a bolted steel door, put her fingers to the door and the door sprang open. "This is my workshop," Tara said, entering the space and beckoning for Willow to follow her.

By the evidence in Willow's library, Tara knew the redhead had seen many interesting things. Willow might have been inside the Papal Vault of Vatican City. She most likely had seen the subterranean armory and treasure house of the Shah. In Tokyo and Tenochtitlan, she could have seen the tourist shops of harmless white magic.

(What is the name of the harpy imprisoned by the shah? Do I know her?)

By the look on Willow's face, she'd never seen anything quite like this.

Tara stood back and watched as Willow began to wander the long and narrow stacks of shelves. She seemed amazed by the thousands upon thousands of jars on these shelves, containing nearly every substance known to man. There were livers of newts, and petals of hellebore, and scrapings of rust. There were thick and gelatinous substances as well as red powders and thin tinctures. Herbs of every variety. Specimens of ash and sand. Bonemeal and pyrophite and volcanic glass. Shredded diamonds. Feathers. Seeds. Hair. Dusts.

Bright with pain, Tara went and rested at her worktable while Willow worked her way through the stacks. Her eyes narrowed as she noticed the slow gait of her new girlfriend, the hand that would occasionally lift to her chest as if to touch the ribs that Tara had broken. It seemed apparent that Willow did not regard pain as any sort of obstacle whatsoever; a thought that saddened her. How many broken noses and broken limbs and wounds had been dealt to her to make her deem them so inconsequential? Willow's face when she finally made it back to Tara's side was open yet pained. She touched the scarred worktable and the stone mortar and pestle and flipped idly through the enormous bound ledger. Her face was a touch too pale, and there were beads of sweat on her brow, whether from pain, nervousness, or heat Tara could not say.

"I had wondered why they called you The Apothecary," Willow said, once again surveying the room with an appreciative glance.

Tara kept her eyes on Willow as she said, "This is where I make dreams. I cast myself into a trance, collect ingredients from my jars, combine them in my pestle and then breathe upon them. For my clients, I swallow the concoction, and then kiss them on the forehead to transfer the dream. For others, I make generic dreams and take them to random homes, sifting the powder over them and hoping they absorb it."

(do you wonder why I didn't kiss you on the forehead?)

"And the hair colour?" Willow asked.

"It is a barometer of how much I will scream in the night. The more complicated a dream, the more I will scream. I don't lose much hair colour making free dreams, which is why I have clients at all."

"Because your screams turn into oil," Willow said, apparently linking all the information together. Tara wondered if Willow had seen the twisted screamcatcher on the wall above Tara's bed, and if she had wondered what it meant.

"Yes."

"And with the oil, your Master will ruin the world."

"Yes."

"So you dance this narrow and dangerous path, trying to keep him appeased with your progress while taking what time you can."

Tara had been slumping her shoulders until Willow said these words. Eased, Tara said, "I don't know what good it will do. I wonder if this apocalypse can even be averted. Part of me believes that postponement is the only grace." She looked at Willow, whose eyes had gone fiery and hard. "Despite what you are, Willow, despite your abilities, I don't want you coming up against my Master."

"Why, Tara? What if I can save you?" There was a grim undercurrent in Willow's voice which Tara was beginning to recognize.

"Don't you understand, Willow? Every scenario I build that has you in it ends with you dying. I know you are strong; my Master is stronger. He will kill you and there you are, dead."

A sundering chasm erupted in the space that followed the words, and Tara could almost see the protest behind Willow's eyes. Willow opened her mouth as if to object, but Tara softly touched Willow's lip and whispered, "Even if you do defeat him, and I am freed, you are still going to grow old. Whether through age or disease or a Drakensdvaerder war, you are going back into the ground and I'm going to keep on living."

Willow took a deep breath when Tara removed the soft touch of her hand, as if to rally her arguments.

When the words came, they were iron, rank and bitter. "Then why do this, Tara? Why will you have anything to do with me?"

Desolate, Tara got up from her chair. With trembling fingers she took Willow's hand; lifting her fingers she kissed them softly. "Because loving you gives me strength to endure even this, Willow. Loving you gives me hope for the day that I will be free." Seeing Willow still unsure, Tara kissed her, incredibly hard, and retreating but a little, said, "Because loving you, being with you, brings me so much joy."

Before she could interpret the look on Willow's face there was a chime from the vid. Tara immediately glanced at her computer monitor, which had instantly flashed into life. The momentary panic she felt at the chime that had so callously intruded on this moment quickly faded as she recognized the slow climb of Anya up the stairs.

"It's Anya," Tara said aloud, even though she had no need. Willow was already familiar with the brash purveyor of the poppy den.

Willow, however, did not really know who Anya was. And Anya would not expect Tara to have company. After all, she very rarely entertained guests outside of her clientele, who could hardly be deemed guests at all.

They were only necessary.

Their fingers locked, Tara pulled Willow out of her workroom and into her living room. Tara's apartment was miniscule in comparison to Willow's house, yet there was no expense spared in her own decor. There were paintings on the walls, by obscure and enormously talented artists. There was a tiny assortment of curios. There were no weapons in her house, save for a revolver that Wilkins insisted she own. Though she appreciated and enjoyed her things, they were just as transitory as the world around her. They would perish in the slow ravaging of time as all things on this earth invariably did. There was no permanence on this world.

The sun was beginning to set, and the light in her apartment began to grow dim. As if enchanted, Willow's hair continued to shine.

Heat was growing within Tara, an undeniable urge.

"Could you wait here, please?" Tara asked as she waved at her recliner. Willow did not object; she merely sat down, looking at Tara. Tara's own muscles had stiffened in the brief rest in the workroom, and were busy shrieking their displeasure to her. Tara ignored it as best as she could, limping through the silken curtain that led to the steel door of the den. Anya had a key to her apartment, as did Eva, but Tara would be courteous and open the door for her.

(will she offer her magic?

and can Willow know?)


In a moment she had unlocked the heavy door. Anya swept inside with as much energy as she could muster, but by her pale visage Tara knew something was wrong. "You've been MIA, Tara," Anya said brusquely, walking past her to enter the den, the naphtha lamps igniting with the motion sensors.

Only truth for Anya. Always only truth.

Hide whatever possible, but never lie.

"One of my clients injured me yesterday," Tara replied, closing the door behind her guest. She thought of Willow sitting in her living room, listening, no doubt, to every part of Tara's conversation.

Curiosity.

"I didn't send anyone up yesterday," Anya replied, stopping to stand in the centre of the room near the replaced chair that looked exactly like the old one. "So what happened?"

"It was Willow," Tara replied. "She found out about me."

"That hasn't happened in at least a century. Did you give her a nice funeral? Perhaps I should send flowers; she always tipped well. On second thought, I might as well keep my money exactly where it is. She certainly didn't need any extra. I'm sure that scarred Steward of hers ordered plenty of flowers for her funeral."

"I didn't kill her."

Anya put her hand on the back of Tara's garish chair to support herself. Tara wanted to step forward, but knew Anya hated pity more than nearly everything. "She defeated you, Tara? I didn't think that was possible. Did she have backup? She must have had backup, maybe that bodyguard of hers, or the Steward."

Tara limped closer, very aware of the silence coming from the living room and the nearly horrified expression on Anya's face. "She was the most skilled adversary I've met in a very long time," Tara admitted.

"That doesn't explain where you went."

"She took me back to her estate and had Giles, her Steward, patch me up."

"Quack witch doctor. Did you seduce her, Tara?" Anya asked. Though Tara had centuries of Anya-experience, the woman still managed to surprise her. Her cheeks went hot and crimson; she ducked her head and blinked. "Or did she seduce you?" Anya rephrased.

"I haven't told you about my love life in centuries, Anya. Do you think I'm going to start now?" Tara said, trying to erase that damning blush.

"That's because you haven't had a love life in centuries," Anya replied. "There's a difference, you know."

"If I'm so overdue for a love life, then perhaps you should leave me alone to get on with things," Tara said, knowing there would be one reaction from Anya, a reaction that may have her forego her earlier questioning. It would be better if Anya didn't discover Willow's tattoo just yet.

"You mean she's here?" Anya asked. The blonde purveyor of poppies made to go through the silken curtain, but Tara moved in front of her.

"Yes, she's here, and you're cramping my style."

"Have you had sex yet?"

There was a barely contained laugh from the adjoining room. "No, Anya, and if you keep on like this, we probably won't either."

"It's not like I want to watch, Tara," the woman replied with a laugh. Then she brightened and said, "Well, actually..."

"Forget it," Tara said. "Now vamoose." She began to push Anya back towards the door, but she dug in her heels. Before Tara could blister her a little harder with a well-delivered vituperation, she noticed the expression on Anya's face.

She was so pale.

"What have you done, Anya?" Tara whispered.

Anya hesitated, then she looked past Tara's shoulder. Before Tara could turn to see what Anya was looking at, Anya said, "Come on in, Willow."

There was no sound through the thin curtain as Willow came through, so Tara turned her head to watch Willow walk into the room, slow and careful, a sheepish expression on her face.

"I didn't think you knew I was there." There was light hesitancy in Willow's stride, so Tara opened her one arm as invitation. Willow came to her, and her scent was a battering ram before her, fresh and exotic at the same time, that beloved coconut and Chanel. Then Willow's arm was around Tara's waist, and Tara looked between Willow and Anya to behold both of them reassessing their new positions in Tara's life. "I didn't mean to interrupt you," Willow continued, addressing Anya. "Are you all right?"

"You discovered Tara's secret?" Anya asked.

"Yes."

"She tried to kill you."

"Yes."

"Yet you are beside her."

"Yes."

Anya looked back at Tara. "This changes things, doesn't it?" she asked.

"That could be the understatement of the millennia," Tara replied.

"Have you told her about me and Eva?"

"Not everything yet." Tara was acutely aware of Willow next to her, the hard and lean body of the fighter hot against her side. The longing growing in her was no longer a soft and gentle thing; it was rapidly turning into a ravenous beast.

She still had not tasted the skin of Willow's wrist. Oh, how she wanted to!

And as awkward as it would be to ask, Tara inquired, "Do you want me to tell her?"

Anya looked back at Willow, her gaze strong. "I don't think so," Anya finally replied. "The secret of you is dangerous enough. If you want her to live, we better not tell her everything. Sorry, Willow."

"Do not apologize," Willow replied. "I understand. We protect what we hold dear, don't we?"

Tara's chest was hurting, but she couldn't tell if it was her wound or the joy in her heart. Willow softly squeezed her as she said those last words, and like so many of her beloved words, they settled deep in Tara's heart.

"Yes, we do," Anya replied. "You should realize that if you hurt Tara again, I will have you killed."

"I'm not that easy to kill."

Anya shot Willow a half-wistful, half-resigned look on her face, as if she were dealing with a stubborn child.

Tara understood that look on Anya's face, even if Willow did not. Willow likely surmised that Anya was not human merely through their conversation, but it looked as if the full truth of Anya's heritage would wait. Besides, Anya was right - any more knowledge of the supernatural world could be very dangerous to Willow. She was not the Marshal-General of the Drakensdvaerder, with gifts borne of ascension; she was only the First Lieutenant, and Tara very much wanted to keep her alive.

Anya was being polite. She wouldn't have Willow killed; she would be the one doing the killing. Anya could kill anyone she wanted to, without even lifting a finger. If she decided she wanted Willow dead, Willow would die, and none of her fancy sword skills would do any good.

There were reasons that Anyanka was kept enslaved at the Sunnydale Poppy Den instead of at one of the other twenty dens across the world; proximity to their Master. There were some fourscore of Tara's race scattered throughout the world; he had enslaved more than half of them. He was relentless in hunting down all those belonging to other Masters and transferring ownership of their collars.

(the blood that humans shed in their fight over us)

The last free dozen of her kind remained in hiding, protected in the only place on earth they could not be touched.

(the volcano)

But Anya was the only one of her kind, and she was dying.

Anya looked at Tara, and Tara knew instantly what Anya was thinking. "Can I help you, Tara?" she asked slowly. "I hate seeing you hurt."

Willow was also a master of reading between the lines. She immediately pulled away from Tara. "Let me give you some privacy," she said. Tara wouldn't give up her hand though; Willow had to pull until their hands parted. "It's all right, Tara," Willow said, winking.

"Wait, Willow," Anya suddenly said, and both Tara and Willow looked at her. "Stay."



To be continued next Wednesday, May 20, with 28: Cartography

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Re: The Apothecary - May 6 - Chapter 26: Curiosities

Postby masterjendu » Thu May 14, 2009 7:47 pm

dibs? You there, Rach?
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Re: The Apothecary - May 14 - Chapter 27: Anyanka

Postby Zooeys_Bridge » Thu May 14, 2009 8:00 pm

me? dang, good one Jen, I was way off.
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Re: The Apothecary - May 14 - Chapter 27: Anyanka

Postby ceridwen » Thu May 14, 2009 8:35 pm

Hmmm... so many interesting developments.

I would love to see Faith seduced by Eva... in the good way though.

It seems Anya has a lot more abilities than I had originally thought. I can't wait till you disclose them all.

"Not everything yet." Tara was acutely aware of Willow next to her, the hard and lean body of the fighter hot against her side. The longing growing in her was no longer a soft and gentle thing; it was rapidly turning into a ravenous beast.

Hehe... I wonder if that is what I think it is :tongue
Nadie debe decidir por mí a quién debo amar, con quién debo acostarme.

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Re: The Apothecary - May 14 - Chapter 27: Anyanka

Postby WillowRulez » Fri May 15, 2009 4:34 am

Hi :pinky
My first official feedback for this story!
It is a barometer of how much I will scream in the night.

Ahhh, I thought there was another reason for her hair changing, that it's kinda her sacrifice and that it changes over night again for some reason. As you can see I havent thought it through and of course your explanation is much better!
"Have you had sex yet?"
There was a barely contained laugh from the adjoining room.

Gotta love Anya!
I cant wait to read what Anya is gonna do next and of course if she will ever leave WT alone again :rofl
"I don't get your crazy system!"
"System? It's called the alphabet!"
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Re: The Apothecary - May 14 - Chapter 27: Anyanka

Postby Zampsa1975 » Fri May 15, 2009 8:58 am

Yay for great update-y goodness... I'm really curious about what Anya has done and what she is going to do now... I hope Tara is able to contact those final free djinn and get their help in her quest to vanquish her master and save Willow in the process...
We few, we happy few. We band of buggered.

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Re: The Apothecary - May 14 - Chapter 27: Anyanka

Postby LittleBit » Fri May 15, 2009 6:55 pm

Another superb update!!! And I too like the word exquisite! It is definitely a word that can be used as an adjective to describe your writing!

I'm really enjoying the way you are developing your characters (or more importantly continue to develop your characters). This is often something that many writers fail to do.

I now must know much more about Anya! :D
Patience is a virtue I have yet to acquire
-- me


I am my beloved and my beloved is mine
-- King Solomon's Song of Songs


Only reality can escape the limits of our imagination
-- Rivka Galchen, Atmospheric Disturbances


Man is nothing else but that which he makes of himself
-- Jean-Paul Sartre
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Re: The Apothecary - May 14 - Chapter 27: Anyanka

Postby Owl » Sat May 16, 2009 6:15 am

Ouch. I've read this update a couple of times now (which is a wonderful benefit of being stuck in essay writing procrastination land) and each time I do, I can't fail to feel the pain that the girls are so obviously in, both physically and emotionally. The physical pain is a double kicker because, as well as just plain hurting, it acts as a constant reminder of the forces working against them and the badness they still undoubtedly have to face before things can get all snuggly-wuggly. And emotional pain is always a double kicker, it doesn't even need reasons. So ouch, I say.

Anya was wonderful (I always find her bluntness delightful when everyone around her is in the midst of very serious turmoil, plus her jedi-esque mind killing powers sound awesome) as was the description of Faith at the beginning and that of Tara's workshop. Thanks for yet another lovely update and the welcome distraction from the perils of academia. Oh, and in regards to my seeming un-noobness, I'm pretty sure it has something to do with how much I love this story and the sheer volume of awesome stuff in it to comment on. A feedbacker is only as good as what is being feedbacked to.....or something of a more coherent nature resembling that anyway.
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Re: The Apothecary - May 14 - Chapter 27: Anyanka

Postby Zooeys_Bridge » Sat May 16, 2009 9:25 pm

Hee, I wonder if this Anya will get with this Xander. It's just a random thought that crossed my mind.

This past week I've been watching Buffy with my friend, a first-timer, and, to my dismay, she said she hasn't really enjoyed Xander. But she's started to warm up to him since we started Season 4 (thank goodness!). We discussed largely how good Anya is for him. I can't help but love the canon pairings, for the most part, I'd say they worked so well. Anya and Xander just have this fantastic dynamic relationship where they very much balance each other out. She helps him outgrow a lot of his childishness becuase he's forced to slowly 'teach' her how to be 'human'. How to act, what's appropriate, what's not. That in turn I think affects him, makes him act in a less flitty way by giving him a purpose. And Anya desperately falls in love with him and her bluntness in many respects helps Xander see things. She clues him in to a lot of the subtleties he otherwise doesn't notice because, well...he's a guy and Xander. But as an ex-demon trying to understand the world, Anya's sharp eye (and her ever-delightful somewhat lack of tact) reveals things he would otherwise miss. And the tragedy of their relationship is that he couldn't recognize his own fears and faults before it was too late. Poor Altar Anya, that was the saddest thing ever. They would have made a lovely husband and wife.

BUT I digress. Clearly, muchly, and often. And none of that really held much water here in The Apothecary, but my brain went with it. And I really love Anya. And Xander. So there you have it, Jen, the off-topic musings of a midnight rambler.
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Re: The Apothecary - May 14 - Chapter 27: Anyanka

Postby Tara the Phoenix » Wed May 20, 2009 6:49 pm

Hello, dear Constant Reader,

I am sorry to say that there will be no update tonight. I like to be at least two chapters ahead - in case I get a sudden plot idea that needs to actually be worked in a little... I have, however, been so incredibly busy lately with work and with Revenant, that I am not ahead as I would like.

So, the next update will not be tonight. I'm not sure when I'm going to put it up - I'll see how long it takes to write one more chapter as a buffer.

I was in Boston all last weekend and spent my time in various airports quite judiciously working on the plot of this story, so now I just need to write! Since I will be home this weekend, not in Boston, and not sick, I plan on having a grand time at the laptop, when, of course, I am not working on new contest songs for my chorus and seeing Star Trek.

So you might see something up on Sunday - the latest will be next Wednesday for the next update. Thanks for being patient! (Though it's not like you have a choice, though, is it?) ;-)

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Re: The Apothecary - May 14 - Chapter 27: Anyanka

Postby ophelia11 » Wed May 20, 2009 7:12 pm

Damn fine updates. I loved the tenderness of 26 with Willow and Tara in the back of the car. Their feelings for one another are so strong, but there are still so many unanswered questions between them. Reading how they push the boundaries a little farther each time is sweet to experience.

I've been very interested to learn more about Anyanka because there is such a fierce loyalty between Anya and Tara. Chapter 27 definitely didn't disappoint. The mystery of her identity is very intriguing and I'm eager to learn more. Willow and Anya clearly love Tara very much and watching them size each other was sweet and at times even amusing. Asking Willow to stay at the end was a very pleasant surprise.

Believe me, I know how tough it is to leave feedback even with the best of intentions. Your comments were wonderful and I believe I'm overdue for an update myself.

Oh the work we get done in airport lobbies. lol. I hope you have time to rest and as always, I'm looking forward to more. Take care!
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Re: The Apothecary - May 14 - Chapter 27: Anyanka

Postby irishgrl3 » Thu May 21, 2009 3:20 pm

I always liked anya in BTVS, I found her extremely funny. I remember being so crushed when they killed her off. So getting off my high horse now... I love that she's in your story funny as ever. I was nervous when they arrived back at Tara's apt. because I wasn't sure how Anyanka was going to react to Willow. But I think she had quite a bit of respect for Willow after seeing that she could hold her own in battle.

I really like the secondary character stories too with Xander and Anya, so a Faith chapter maybe coming??? ;-)

So we find out how Tara makes dreams and why she is The Apothecary; cool!
Tara paused at a bolted steel door, put her fingers to the door and the door sprang open. "This is my workshop," Tara said, entering the space and beckoning for Willow to follow her.

"I had wondered why they called you The Apothecary," Willow said, once again surveying the room with an appreciative glance.


Awesome update Phoenix!
-anna
P.S. sorry no great Haleakala volcano stories, we went for sunrise and it was cold as hell at 10,000 feet and then drove back down to the beach where it was warm in the same day. Been to Mauna Kea as well nothing exciting there but a lovely sulfur smell :)
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Re: The Apothecary - May 14 - Chapter 27: Anyanka

Postby Tara the Phoenix » Mon May 25, 2009 5:40 pm

I'll be piggybacking feedback before the next update, cuz there just isn't enough time! Sorry, everyone!

[center]~28~
Oath of Blood
[/center]

"What do you know about blood, Willow?" Anya was asking.

The three of them were sitting in Tara's living room; Willow and Tara side by side on the divan, and Anya across from them on the recliner. Willow didn't think Anya was going for the scientific reply, so she decided to answer, "Blood is more than the body's delivery system for nutrients. It is, quite simply, life itself."

(it was all washed out of Buffy's hair by the time I saw her in the morgue)

Anya seemed to want a deeper answer, as if weighing whether or not to trust her, seeing as she had nearly killed Tara yesterday. It was obvious now that Anya wasn't human. A whimsical part of Willow was beginning to wonder if anyone was human at all, or if she was secretly the last of her kind.

Xander. Xander is human.

Well, as human as the Marshal-General of the Drakensdvaerder can be. Xander had been remarkably close tongued about his ascension to the rank, but it was obvious that he had somehow been altered. Buffy had been the same way.

Tara was holding her hand, and was quiet. The silence wasn't menacing, but it was certainly not golden, either.

Willow loved the feeling of Tara's hand, the womanly fingers so long and lithe and warm. She wondered what it would feel like to have those fingers touch her in the soft and secretive places of her body. So caught up in the sensation of Tara, and this most delightful ruminating, Willow missed Anya's next comment.

"I'm sorry," she blurted after Anya had noisily cleared her throat. "I was...thinking of something else." Willow was blushing, which she knew was information enough for Anya to make some rather frank and likely naughty conclusions.

"I asked if you believe in magic," Anya said. She was staring between their eyes and their joined hands.

Willow smiled a precious and whimsical smile. Should she reveal that she believed in Santa Claus even when her parents taught her not to? Or that, like Linus Van Pelt, she used to wish for a Great Pumpkin at Halloween? Money used to appear under her pillow when she lost a tooth.

She had been devastated when Xander finally told her the origin of that myth, information nearly lost to time yet granted to the line of Marshal Generals. It ended up being the same reason that Xander burned the clippings of his toenails or the leftover hair from a haircut. It was to keep evil shamans from casting curses, targeting enemies with discarded DNA.

Anya was waiting. "As a child, I did, in childhood magics like Santa Claus and the Tooth Fairy. As I got older, I didn't believe in them anymore. But now... even before I met you or Tara, I started to believe. I haven't seen much magic in what you do, Anya, but I know that what Tara does is magic." She could almost feel Tara's eyes boring into her and her skin between her shoulder blades tightened in response, as if the tattoo itself was conscious and warning her. It was one thing revealing her tattoo and her identity to the woman of her dreams, and it was quite another to spill this information all willy-nilly, especially to this gabby and talkative and unflinching woman-not-quite-a-woman. She could feel Tara fidget next to her, and could only silently implore Tara not to reveal her secret.

She still wasn't sure that Tara would not betray her someday, whether under compulsion or not.

"Will you swear not to reveal my magic to anyone?" Anya asked. Skepticism still hunkered down in her voice.

Tara was trembling next to her; pain was evident in the white knuckles of her grip, the sharp and high breathing. Anya said she could help her. How yet, Willow did not know, but that did not matter.

She instinctively knew what to do, the only thing to do in this circumstance to prove her loyalty. It was one of the first lessons of a Lieutenant, a ritual as old as time and as deep as the world itself. It was late evening here in Sunnydale, California; it would be morning in Tehran. Xander would feel the power of this oath the moment she made it.

He would not be pleased.

(the second oath of the blood)

Almost in a trance herself, floating on clouds of pain, Willow rose from her chair, her ribs crackling and screaming, and she knelt at Anya's feet. She heard Tara's sharp inhalation of surprise, but Anya's pale face was strong, her eyes clear and challenging.

"Upon my life and my blood, my hands and my breath, I so swear," Willow said, her voice firm.

She immediately felt the magic of the words even as she heard both women sharply inhale. The repercussions of betraying this oath were formidable and unchanging.

Still she continued, kissing Anya on the forehead, then upon the backs of her hands, and then, the gazes of both women scorching the back of her neck, her own body screaming in violent protestations of wildfire pain, Willow kissed the top of Anya's feet.

The solemnity of the act, the ripple effect of truth mixed with magic, was enough for the blonde purveyor of poppies. Willow retreated back to the couch, her limbs trembling with the effort, and Tara's hands were upon her immediately, as if surprised to see that Willow was still real.

Her tattoo was throbbing. Distantly, Willow knew it for the same pain Tara would feel from her elbow mark when she challenged her boundary. For all her knowledge of the Drakensdvaerder, Tara knew nothing yet of Willow's own boundaries, her own compulsions, or what had happened the first time she made an oath of the blood.

Young and impestuous Jessie had known, and now he was dead.

Tara could not know just how much Willow had now pledged to her. Their fates were tied now more than ever, tethered and strong. There were other oaths, stronger oaths, that would make such a bond impenetrable.

Which of them would destroy the other first?

"Close your eyes, please, Willow," Anya asked.

Willow closed her eyes and gripped Tara's hand even tighter. There was a shuffling sound as Anya came near. Then a sharp inhale on Anya's behalf. Willow could feel Tara moving slightly, but whatever she was doing was not betrayed by sound. Then Tara sighed, in pleasure and comfort and relief so deep Willow felt a stab of jealousy.

(what is going on?)

Silence raged.

"Do you trust me, Willow?" Tara asked softly.

"Yes," Willow replied, mired in the blackness of her eyelids.

"Open your mouth."

Her heart pounding, Willow opened her mouth. Upon her tongue fell a single thick, unknown droplet. The moment it touched her tongue, all richly sweet, a shock coruscated throughout Willow's body. With a jolting sting, Willow felt the pain of her broken nose disappear. The healing flood continued, warming and sparking her muscles, knitting them together again as if they had never been sundered. The gash along her belly was erased, the stitches falling out in a slow sigh. Her broken ribs fused together, and her heart beat in a wild and feral flurry of motion before becoming slow and steady once more.

"Tara?" Willow whispered, incredulous.

"Open your eyes, Willow."

Willow opened her eyes to see Tara's face, softly glowing in the evanescent evening light. Without weighing the consequences of her action, desperately needing to verify her information before coming to a conclusion, Willow ran her hand down Tara's side to touch the place where she had skewered the Apothecary the day before. Tara smiled and lifted her shirt slightly, tugging away the bandage to reveal smooth, unmarked skin.

Willow's hand was surprisingly steady as she touched that skin, unsullied, unbroken.

If only all of her mistakes could be erased so easily. Buffy would still be alive. Xander would have his eye, and Giles his fair cheek. Only Dawn would still be dead.

Her throat was thick. She had to rip her gaze away from Tara, so luminous, a fallen star, to look at Anya with unfathomable gratitude in her eyes. "Thank you for helping her," she said, swallowing over the words. "For helping us."

Curiosity a bonfire, a conflagration.

(but who are you?)

"You're welcome," the woman said, looking more worn out than even before. "Now that you're feeling better, go have some sex."

Willow flushed crimson and Tara simply chuckled, a sound as dark and sultry as Merovingian chocolate. Tara got up to escort Anya out of the den, and Willow watched her walk. There was no limp.

Tara returned to sit next to her on the divan. Willow drank her in. Her skin was tingling under the heat of Tara's returned gaze. Tara had reclaimed Willow's hand. "I'm kinda having a 'where do we go from here' kind of moment, Tara," Willow said. As much as she would desire such a moment between them to last forever, a viscous drop of honey in time, Willow was all too aware of the insistence of time itself, especially on humans.

Her stomach agreed with her, growling with a sudden petulant noise, loud enough for Tara to hear.

"Are you hungry, Willow?"

"I guess I am," Willow replied, loathe to deal with the necessities that were coming, like eating, and sleeping, and anything else that took her from Tara's side. Wasn't there any way she could just stay here, cocooned in the volcanic heat of Tara's body, ignoring the press of the world?

Willow didn't often get what she wanted in the way she wanted it. Everything that came to her came hard, on torturous pathways through blood and time. That was the way of her world now, a world without Santa Claus, without the Great Pumpkin or the Tooth Fairy.

A world of scimitars and the house of mirrors in the palace of the Shah, of harpies screaming and blood oranges. A world of Gyptian Queens and their zburator familiars, of volcanic glass and finger bones.

(when will Jenny be called back home to be their Queen?

when will she leave me?)


A world to save by the bite of the sword, pitted against an adversary whose army included the djinn she loved.

Tara touched her face, and Willow looked at her. The Apothecary was smiling, and she asked, "How do you manage to stay alive when your mind goes elsewhere so often?"

Willow's face fell, and for a moment Tara looked embarrassed that she had asked such a question, but then Willow replied, "I don't have to protect myself when I'm with you. When I'm with you, I can be a human, not a superhero."

Intensity flickered in Tara's eyes, igniting Willow's nerves, sparking her breath. It felt glorious to breathe without painful effort, and Willow silently thanked Anya once more. The moment being catalyzed by Tara's heated gaze might have led elsewhere if Willow's stomach hadn't growled again.

"Is Faith still outside?" Tara asked. The moment was sundered.

"I should think so," Willow replied, half resentful of the change in topic. "I hope she hasn't gone through an entire pack of cigarets. Giles will tan her hide if she starts losing lung capacity in training."

"We should get some supper into you before you fall over."

"You could use some nourishment yourself, you know," Willow replied, forcing levity. "As far as I see it, we have several options. A, we can eat here. B, we can eat at my house. C, we can get some take out food from somewhere nearby."

"I don't keep a very well-stocked fridge," Tara admitted. "I tend to just pick at things until Eva comes home and feeds me properly."

"No wonder you're rather scrawny," Willow teased.

"Look in the mirror, missy," Tara laughed back. "With all that red hair you look more like a matchstick than a woman."

"Matchstick, am I? I wonder if there is any way for me to prove your hypothesis is incorrect."

"You're a smart matchstick, Willow. I'm sure you'll be able to find a way." There was a definite leer in those last words, accompanied with a squeeze of her hand.

Willow felt her stomach bottom out even further at Tara's smouldering look. Her mouth dry, Willow said, "Well, seeing that eating here is out, we can either go back to my place or find something down the street." Willow said the words, not really caring what happened or where, just as long as she could stay right here, wrapped in this scent, this embrace, this unfamiliar and intoxicating warmth.

If Tara was anything, Tara was hot.

Volcanic.

Tara was softly hesitant in the lights, and her face was pale and shining. "Would you be able to stay with me tonight, Willow?" she asked. "I could be coy and play some meaningless game of hard-to-get, but after 180,000 empty nights I'm rather tired of sleeping alone."

Willow couldn't quite keep her face from flushing at the mere idea of sleeping with Tara, especially considering Anya's parting words. Stammering and self-conscious and not allowing herself to hope, Willow said, "I'd love to sleep with you, Tara, and I do mean just sleep, because that's what I think you mean, not that I wouldn't love to... you know... but we nearly killed each other yesterday and we're only now just magically healed up and I shouldn't be expecting you to just jump into the sack with me just because I'm the only warm-blooded person around right now..." Willow's voice tapered off as Tara's grin got larger and larger, and finally Tara simply laughed and kissed her quickly on the lips.

"There you are, Willow," Tara said softly after she retreated. "A little taste of the Willow that was."

Willow looked at Tara, and remembered dreaming of her in that grey silk dress, floating through the masses of the fair, with the scent of hot oil and buttered popcorn and spicy tomatillos, the raucous laughing of the people and the piped music from the carousel.

(my side of the candy apple incident

I would dance with the Devil himself)


"I thought I had lost that Willow forever," Willow replied, a note of nostalgic pain in her voice. "I can't help but think you would have liked her. As nerdy as she was, that Willow was pretty special."

"The Willow that was, the Willow that is, and the Willow that will be don't have to be separate entities," Tara replied, low and firm. "Do you think you could be this Willow, this amazing and enchanting Willow sitting with me right now if not for the Willow that was, nor the dreams of the Willow that will be?" Tara glanced at the small array of books on a nearby table and Willow followed her gaze, feeling light and somewhat dizzy. "Every story in life is written as only you choose to write it. How many flashbacks will there be, Willow? Or can we just get on with living, because the future is built only on the bones of the present, not on the secrets of the past."

(is she channeling Xander now?)

Before Willow could articulate anything, for she was only absorbing these words now, and writing them in her own mind-journal, to read again and again in the slim spaces of imagination before sleep, recalling them until they became magic, Willow felt again the soft press of Tara's lips against her own. The kiss was infinitely sweet and innocent, just this contact of lips with no other contact at all, no frantic pull of fingers and hands, no hard breasts pressed together. Just this pressure, only this pressure, deepened by words.

After Tara pulled away, they stood and looked at each other for a long time.

Willow's world was rearranging, coastlines evolving, whole continents spreading and drifting and anchoring anew, and Tara was her cartographer, mapping these new vistas as Piri Reis did those centuries ago, making his recordings on the skin of a gazelle.

And the Willow that is couldn't help but wonder if this would all end up being a lie. A mongrel dog whipped too long is just as wary of the kind hand.

Gazelles are hunted by jackals.

"What were we talking about?" Willow finally asked, breaking the silence.

"Faith, I think, and supper."

"I'll ask if she can find us something to eat. You've got a fireplace in the other room, maybe we could roast some s'mores."

"Chocolate is at least one human vice that I completely understand," Tara replied. "But I think I have a better idea, that is, if Faith is up for some shenanigans."

"I don't know a lot about Faith, but I do know she is always up for hooliganism, especially if there is money involved."

"Let's go talk to her, shall we?"

Willow began to fish her phone from her pocket, but Tara softly closed Willow's hand. "Human contact, Willow," she said. "Even rebellious drivers with hooliganistic tendencies enjoy human contact."

Willow smiled as Tara kept her hand, leading her through the apartment without limping at all, emerging finally through the back door. The summer light was certainly fading fast, and there was only one street lamp in the alley. The rank smell of the alley was nearly a sledgehammer blow of vileness compared to the sweetness of Tara's apartment.

To their surprise, Faith was not smoking, nor was she busily corrupting the children with games and smokes. She was actually reading a small red leather book by the falsely bright electrical light of the street lamp, leaning against the post. In the fading light, Willow noticed Faith's posture, her shoulders slightly hunched over as she read, her face blank but her eyes tight. As soon as Faith noticed them step from the apartment, she straightened up and carefully put the book back in her jacket pocket.

Willow immediately wondered what kind of book it was. Damn curiosity. Though she'd never seen Faith with that book before, it was slightly familiar, like the shadow cast by an old friend.

They came down the steps easily, Faith's eyes narrowing at their non-limpiness, the absence of their battle scars. Faith pushed off from the post and met them near the car. "What can I do for you, Miss Rosenberg?" Faith asked as they drew close.

She seemed to be trying to ignore their clasped hands without revealing that she was trying to ignore them. There was a tiny and momentary jab of anger in Willow's heart, but then she told herself that Faith's look could be attributed to nearly anything, not just this simple show of gay love. Her dark hair was flowing over her shoulders, and her lips were that full and luscious red.

No wonder Spike leered at her so often. How often, and in what circumstances, Willow did not want to guess. Who else had feasted their eyes on this girl, or found themselves spun inside her?

(What is in the book?

and where have I seen it before?)


"We're getting hungry, and I'm sure you are, too. Should we go get some supper?" Willow asked. She mentally logged the book in her brain, to go over at a later point in time.

"Master Giles had come by about an hour ago with a cold supper Miss Calendar had prepared for us. It's ready whenever you are." Faith reached into the sedan and pulled out a rather large cooler. "I hope you don't mind, but I ate my share right away."

"Of course I don't mind," Willow replied. "I'm just glad and amazed that she thought of us."

"I'll carry it up for you," Faith volunteered. "Neither of you should risk falling on the stairs."

Willow looked over at Tara, not knowing what to say or how to say it. In the end they just went back up those stairs, Faith carrying the cooler behind them. Once back inside the apartment, Faith was shown where to set the cooler, and then she and Tara bundled off into the corner where Tara whispered of her idea.

Willow had to tell herself not to actively eavesdrop, though her resolve was taxed when a huge smile broke out over Faith's face (this joyful smile being a relatively foreign structure on her face, though she was quite expert at sultry smiles). Tara handed the driver a rather large stack of bills and Faith fled the premises.

Then Tara proceeded to unpack the cooler in a leisurely manner, humming a little to herself as she drew out containers of this and that. The food looked absolutely scrumptious, so Willow sidled over, her stomach gurgling in anticipation, and asked, "Um, curiosity, remember? What sort of hooliganism has Faith agreed to?"

"Don't you like surprises, Willow?" Tara asked, her own smile going decidedly wicked and alluring.

"Yes, if there is chocolate or mochas involved, though not so much with birthday clowns or being jumped in alleyways," Willow replied.

"Then I promise no birthday clowns nor alleyways," Tara said, pulling two plates and associated cutlery from the cupboards. "Though I will caution you not to stuff yourself silly. You'll need to save some room."

"I deduce then that there is food involved in this Faith-assisted shenanigan, which instantly lifts it above the birthday clown category. You're not going to have me eat cow eyeballs or assorted intestines, are you?"

"You watch too much Indiana Jones," Tara laughed. "Sadly, I am fresh out of cow eyeballs and assorted intestines, and the chilled monkey brains are still on order."

Tara pulled a chair out for Willow, so Willow sat down. She was content enough to watch the blonde Apothecary for a while, wondering at the change in her. In Willow's home, she had been somewhat closed off and shy. But here Willow was seeing another side to the genie who had commanded her heart, and every moment in this Tara's presence was enchanting.

Several hours later, Willow would reevaluate everything.




To be continued next Monday with 29: Jackal

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Re: The Apothecary - May 25 - Chapter 28: Oath of Blood

Postby CrazyTaraWitch » Mon May 25, 2009 5:42 pm

I haven't even finished the last chapter yet, but DIBS!! Just cause I can.
"To days to come."
"All my love to long ago.


I hope, we'll have more happy ever after
I hope, we can all live more fearlessly...

~Jas
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Re: The Apothecary - May 25 - Chapter 28: Oath of Blood

Postby ceridwen » Mon May 25, 2009 7:52 pm

I wonder why Xander was made Marshall General instead of Willow... being as she's usually smarter and all that...

And what did Anya give them to heal? Some of her own blood perhaps? Although that would be kinda freaky and gross I guess.

I can't wait to see what Tara has in store for Willow... if Faith's smile is anything to go by, it must be real good. Edible undies perhaps? :tongue

Keep it up :kgeek
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Re: The Apothecary - May 25 - Chapter 28: Oath of Blood

Postby Zampsa1975 » Tue May 26, 2009 3:51 am

Yay for great update-y goodness... I'm also beginning to wonder why Xander instead of Willow was promoted to post of Marshall General and what his augmentations are... I really hope that while Faith is doing the "shopping" for Tara she doesn't betray Willow and Tara... I'm guessing that Xander will be quite pissed that Willow made a blood oath to a "enemy"...
Last edited by Zampsa1975 on Thu May 28, 2009 5:12 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: The Apothecary - May 25 - Chapter 28: Oath of Blood

Postby barnabasvamp » Wed May 27, 2009 4:41 pm

Mercy, this story just keeps getting more interesting!

Each update gives us even more to speculate about, and your take on the characters is wonderful.

Look forward to more.

BV
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Re: The Apothecary - May 25 - Chapter 28: Oath of Blood

Postby LittleBit » Fri May 29, 2009 6:51 am

ooh I like fun, naughty Tara!!! I hope we get to hear/see more of Anya and Faith. I'm really liking their characters as well. Plus, please tell us more about Xander and Jenny! :D
Patience is a virtue I have yet to acquire
-- me


I am my beloved and my beloved is mine
-- King Solomon's Song of Songs


Only reality can escape the limits of our imagination
-- Rivka Galchen, Atmospheric Disturbances


Man is nothing else but that which he makes of himself
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Re: The Apothecary - May 25 - Chapter 28: Oath of Blood

Postby irishgrl3 » Sun May 31, 2009 5:50 pm

Wow that was an intense chapter with the blood oath, no going back now. I wonder how long before Xander reacts? Or if Wilkins can feel the magic as well?

"Altered", what an interesting wording...
Well, as human as the Marshal-General of the Drakensdvaerder can be. Xander had been remarkably close tongued about his ascension to the rank, but it was obvious that he had somehow been altered. Buffy had been the same way.


Ha-ha, true Anya form;
"You're welcome," the woman said, looking more worn out than even before. "Now that you're feeling better, go have some sex."


It was nice how relaxed they were with each other after the oath, a little conversation and a little dinner. I am curious though where Tara sent Faith. And how can you end the chapter like that???? Now I'm dying to know what is going to happen in the next few hours? What is Willow going to "reevaluate"? :hmm

I really liked this part, talk about brutally honest... :)
"I could be coy and play some meaningless game of hard-to-get, but after 180,000 empty nights I'm rather tired of sleeping alone."


Awesome as usual! :)
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Re: The Apothecary - May 25 - Chapter 28: Oath of Blood

Postby Tara the Phoenix » Mon Jun 01, 2009 8:05 pm

Feedback and an exciting chapter for you!

masterjendu - Congrats on the dibs for 27. Thanks always for the beta work - even your beta lite is so much better than no beta at all. I've got some mischievous ideas coming up; I hope you enjoy them!

Zooey's Bridge - You might get lucky tonight! About your aside on Anya and Xander; they did make an interesting pair, and one of Xander's longest relationships. I am very happy to admit, though, that another of his romantic interests will find her way on to this fic - I hope you continue to enjoy it!

ceridwen - Hmm, Faith seduced by Eva? That could be fun. If I do it, I'll totally give you the credit! Anya's abilities will become more clear, but not for a while. It appears a few of you are wondering why Xander was made the Marshal General instead of Willow - that's something else I will eventually tell you, but not yet. You can keep guessing, though, it's fun! Thanks for reading!

WillowRulez - Welcome to this fic and thank you so much for sharing some feedback. We all love Anya, though she is a little tough to write. I hope I can really get her voice down as the chapters go on. Thanks again, so much, for reading and for commenting.

Zampsa - Always glad to hear from you, and I'm glad you're enjoying the fic. You've also wondered at Xander - we've got more coming from his point of view in a couple chapters. For now, I get to introduce another character. I hope you like this chapter as much as the others!

Little Bit - Thanks for you comment on the character development. I am having a great time writing these people, hopefully with their own voices, but in this supremely different alternate universe. As requested, there will be more about Xander and Jenny, and other people as well. I hope you like it!

Owl - Fabulous feedback! Thank you! And I guess I'm not really that sorry for contributing to your lack of essay writing. This story is a sword to wield against the perils of academia. Plus, you totally cracked me up with this:
A feedbacker is only as good as what is being feedbacked to.....or something of a more coherent nature resembling that anyway.
I even understood what you were saying! Thank you!

Phoenix - Would you stop trying to be funny and just get on with posting the story? Jeepers, woman! And no, it's not the end of the world if your characters make you stay up until midnight. It's not like you have a full time job or anything.

Oh, right, you do. Carry on, then.

Ophelia11 - I really loved that you brought up how Anya and Willow were really sizing each other up and almost measuring, if you will, their love for Tara. I see you've updated - I really gotta get over there and check it out. I hope you like this chapter coming up.

irishgrl3 - Funny you should mention a chapter about Faith, now that we've started delving into other characters. "Altered" is the perfect word, and I'm looking forward to sharing what it really means for Xander, and for Willow. Next few hours? Coming right up. I hope you enjoy them.

CrazyTaraWitch - Congrats on the dibs for 28, and I hope you've had time to read and enjoy the update. Good luck on snagging more dibs in the future.

barnabasvamp - Great to see you here. I love upping the ante, and keeping the characters interesting. And mercy? Mercy is for the weak, as whatzisface says in The Karate Kid. Enjoy!

That's everyone. Kinda quiet on the KB these days, but hopefully this chapter will have you all buzzing. It's coming right up.

Slainte! (As Jen taught me...)
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Re: The Apothecary - May 25 - Chapter 28: Oath of Blood

Postby Tara the Phoenix » Mon Jun 01, 2009 8:17 pm

Kay, I freakin love this chapter. I'm very excited for the feedback on it.

[center]~29~
Jackal
[/center]

There was a curtained window on the street level of the poppy den. From where she stood, leaning against a street lamp, Faith could see her dusty reflection. She lifted a hand to touch her lips, her cheekbones, a wisp of her dark hair.

She still wasn't used to the face looking back at her. President Wilkin's plastic surgeon had been incredibly talented. Sometimes she still expected to see her old slant of eyes, her old cheeks and lips. Well, the lips now were an improvement on the old ones, but for one important thing.

The love of her life had never kissed these ones.

Faith could also feel the hard insistent press of the knife hilt against her back while she leaned, waiting. She didn't wear the knife while she was driving, though it was nearby, but habit led to strapping it on the moment she exited whatever vehicle she was driving, habitually ignoring her new face in the rear-view mirror. Giles had just come and gone with a cold supper that Jenny had prepared; he saw her knife as if it were just another appendage, a limb as essential as an arm or leg.

She had had nothing to report to Giles. No sign or signal from Willow or Tara, so he had gone home.

She had already made her report to Wilkins.

She was hungry, so she had eaten. Slowly. Carefully. Just like Wilkins had taught her. The knife was a comforting weight to her; it always felt right in her hands.

It was her favourite knife. President Wilkins had given it to her.

She was a bit surprised at how much she actually missed him. He had become more a father to her than her natural father, who was currently rusting out his kidneys as an alcoholic in a maximum security prison. Wilkins understood her. What was more, Wilkins cared.

Wilkins was also the most diabolically brilliant and patient person she'd ever encountered.

The first quiet moment she had after the spectacular battle between Willow and Tara, Faith had contacted Wilkins to warn him that Tara had betrayed him. She had offered to "take care of Willow" for him, and thus negate any possibility of one of his djinn's becoming compromised, leading to a change in the overall plan.

He didn't bite.

"Haste makes waste," he had told her. "You're just not seeing the big picture."

He must have been speaking through speakerphone; she could hear the soft thock of his golf club hitting a ball in his personal office. Allan Finch would have been a sentinel nearby, never leaning.

"Then what should I do, boss?" Faith had asked.

"Patience is a virtue, even in a business like ours," he had replied, amiable as ever. Faith was not fooled by his seeming friendliness. Those he fooled and befriended often ended up dead. He went on to say that, "For one thing, we don't just kill, Faith. We destroy. And two, we don't destroy something until it's all used up. So Miss Rosenberg knows about my Tara? It will work to our advantage eventually. Patience is finding out just how. Besides, I've got you, my little Jackal, my ace in the hole. Let Miss Rosenberg be First Lieutenant, and let her think she owns the world. She doesn't know who is the head of the Drakensdvaerder Council, does she?"

Faith's answering chuckle was a little hollow.

Jackal. The name of her knife, and her own nickname, both gifts from Persia. From Wilkins.

The neighborhood this evening wasn't particularly quiet; even as she read from her red leather book her ears were always tuned for the slightest hint of action or violence. Not that there were any worthy adversaries here in the slums of Sunnydale. Her training had started long before the National Guard, long before Wilkins.

Here in Sunnydale there were street children, reeking and obnoxious, reminding her far too much of her own barren and noisome childhood. There were a few adults, world weary and distant; apathy the black thundercloud over their lives.

And there was Faith, leaning against the street lamp, reading her book, struggling to appear calm. Despite the rancid air, she breathed through her nose and murmured a mantra.

Her reflection peeked at her over the rim of the book. She looked older, quieter. Gone was the fire of her youth, the conflagration of energy and brightness of battle that had gotten her through the summer training camps, ignoring blackened eyes, cuts and scrapes. In its place was this unfamiliar woman, fettered and chained by self-hatred.

This struggle to appear calm was not so difficult now as it had been in the past. How amazing that she had learned the most from Wilkins, and not as an eager recruit of the Drakensdvaerder.

Thinking of those summer camps, the zeal she had once had for the cause, only now brought her to grief. Thinking of those summers led to thinking of the day it all ended.

Precipitous. Bloody.

Sabotaged.

It had taken time to work off the blotch on her record; no one believed that she was innocent. She was thrown from the Drakensdvaerder without mercy. Only after the requisite three years had passed to clear her record was Faith able to join the National Guard. When she had then been recruited to Wilkins personal staff, she had been headstrong, bitter, and foulmouthed.

"Does this posturing hold any purpose?" Wilkins had once asked her, mild as milk, after she had verbally and physically lambasted one of her peers. Her knuckles dripped in his blood, but it did not sate her.

The posturing was all she had. It hid the pain of the great betrayal.

Wilkins had begun teaching her moderation, in word just as much as in act or deed. Not that he was ever squeamish about ordering the occasional assassination as was the prerogative of any ruling politician, but he did command moderation even in that very act itself; a simple edict to just do it right so it only had to be done once.

"Haste makes waste," was his favourite saying. There was nothing worse than having to murder someone twice, due to unseemly haste or ineptitude. Ineptitude led to officials, and police, and bribery. He once had to shell out a million dollars to buy silence for one of her "hasty" kills. He began the taming of her hard behaviour, proving to her that boundaries had to be set and maintained.

A river, he explained, is only powerful because there are banks on each side to contain it. Just like a bullet is powerful, because there is a trajectory mandated by the barrel of the pistol.

"If you are going to be my weapon," he had said, "then you need to have boundaries as well. Trust me, follow my lead, and you will become more powerful than you can imagine. You can get back everything that was taken away from you."

There was only one thing that Faith wanted more than power, and it was something she couldn't ever get back.

Drinking to excess stopped, as did her foul language and cloudy temperament. Though she never became the neat freak that he was, she now understood the comfort and simple joy of a tidy home. He could never quite cure her of cigarets, though.

Or of mental self-flagellation concerning the person she loved. Thinking of that always led to thinking of Persia.

Persia. The cradle of the world.

Something had happened so soon after Wilkins had first hired her, when she was still rough and uncouth; no more than a brute savage. He was on a presidential tour, a diplomatic mission, of a sort, to the Shah. While there she had saved him from a very talented hassassin, earning herself a knife wound in her gut in the process. She had been only three weeks into her contract with him at the time; it was that night he gave her the knife and her nickname, both derived of the same word.

In Persian, shaghal. The Jackal.

Only later did he tell her he had ordered the hit himself, just to test her. She had been furious, lashing out at him with fists and tongue. After he had subdued her, he asked her to start meditating. "Control your outbursts," he said.

"Be a river," he said.

She became his predator instead; the desert fox, the Jackal, blessed with a new purpose in life. For now, that purpose included Willow Rosenberg, the Gyptian, and the little red book in her hands.

Dusk was falling with soft majesty. If not for the smell, she might have enjoyed having to stay here and stay calm. Despite her outward demeanor, Faith felt incredibly restless; it gave her a perverse sort of pleasure to conquer that restlessness, to deny it any power. Wilkins would be proud of her when she would make her next report. Yet as minutes passed, she nearly wished someone would come and pick a fight, just so she could work off some of her excess energy.

Nought was sent to her but rats and the smell. She crushed their skulls under her heel when she could, but she would not chase them and stomp them like some petulant child. She was a river now.

A weapon.

She waited. Calm. Ignoring her reflection in the window, reading her book.

It also gave her perverse pleasure to read this book, knowing the pains of reading from it were so very great. She knew she would only get stronger if she could just master this pain, as she mastered all physical pains. It was a martyr's stripe, this book, a welcoming whiplash against her back.

Besides, the words held her captive; she was enslaved by them, and this enslavement was the last thing, maybe the only thing, Wilkins did not know about. He knew the book existed, but he always respected her privacy in regards to it.

Just as she always respected the privacy of the one locked cabinet in his home office.

The person she had loved wrote these words, wrote them especially for her, in a two-way magical diary sold to the young or impressionable tourists of the Far East. Faith didn't know what magical mechanism caused it to work the way it did - it operated nearly completely similarly to a chat room via the Interlink on computer vid screens; the difference being the right variety of ink to write with.

Faith hadn't had a supply of the ink for some time now, which didn't matter anyway. The beloved person who had written these words was already dead. There was no more time for apologies.

The pages were worn and ragged with time and much use. It was easy for Faith to find the passages that hurt the most. The pain of reading the words was delicious and intense.

August 4, 20xx

Faith? Faith, are you there?

I need to talk to you.

I know you're mad. Please write back.

Faith? Please?

August 5, 20xx

Come on, Faith. Write back. It's important.

Faith, I swear by my whole box of Oreo cookies, I need to talk to you. Yes, I know it's an inappropriate time for humour, but I also know you love Oreos. If you talk to me, I'll send you a box and even put a sticky note on it proclaiming that it's entirely yours. I won't even eat out all the good white stuff in the middle.

I'm serious, Faith. Write back.

August 6, 20xx

So you're ignoring me. I get it. I deserve it.

But don't you get it, Faith? I did it because I love you!

Damn it, Faith. I love you, all right! I said it! I've always wanted to say it! Now get out your friggin pen and write back! You're still in danger!


Get out of my life, Buffy. I don't need you. I've never needed you.

Faith closed the book and closed her eyes.

There was more writing in the book, but it was too little, too late.

A soft noise whisked into her consciousness; she opened her eyes to behold Rosenberg and the djinn walking down the rickety and narrow staircase. She almost looked down at her phone to see if she had somehow missed a call, but her gaze was arrested by the sight in front of her.

They were holding hands, and the street lights that shone so callously on the detritus and refuse of the alley was gentler to them, alighting delicately, smoothing the lines of shadows on their hands. Neither of them were limping, and there was pinkness in their cheeks.

The book was still in her hands, and Rosenberg's curiosity was legendary. Faith slowly put it away, as if she didn't care that it was seen. Sudden movements would arouse her suspicion.

Anyanka must have assisted them. Rosenberg had always been talented at getting what she wanted, however she wanted it. What wheedling art had she connived to get a cure from the purveyor of poppies?

Did Tara know how manipulative Rosenberg was? What the Drakensdvaerder really did?

No, she's only a pawn, of the Marshal General and the ruling Council. Near useless, especially in the big picture Wilkins had promised.

Tara was looking at her strangely. Faith withstood her glance, holding her trust in the talents of the plastic surgeon, and in the talents of the now dead shaman who had finished the job. Faith had been a familiar face to the djinn; all collared djinns, in fact, when she worked with Wilkins.

So many sacrifices, and all rewards were brass between her teeth; bitter and ill nourishment.

So many secrets.

Despite their unnatural healing, Faith carried up the cooler of food for them, and was surprised to be pulled aside by the Apothecary. Rosenberg was sitting at the table, her face lustrous and endearing, which only made Faith hate her more. But then Tara whispered into her ear, and Faith couldn't help but smile.

She hadn't known Tara for very long, in either capacity of her work. The woman was more a vixen than Faith had anticipated.

Pretences had to be maintained. Faith left at once.




To be continued on Monday, June 8 with 30: Fruit

hehe

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Re: The Apothecary - May 25 - Chapter 28: Oath of Blood

Postby Tara the Phoenix » Mon Jun 01, 2009 8:18 pm

Kay, I freakin love this chapter. I'm very excited for the feedback on it.

[center]~29~
Jackal
[/center]

There was a curtained window on the street level of the poppy den. From where she stood, leaning against a street lamp, Faith could see her dusty reflection. She lifted a hand to touch her lips, her cheekbones, a wisp of her dark hair.

She still wasn't used to the face looking back at her. President Wilkin's plastic surgeon had been incredibly talented. Sometimes she still expected to see her old slant of eyes, her old cheeks and lips. Well, the lips now were an improvement on the old ones, but for one important thing.

The love of her life had never kissed these ones.

Faith could also feel the hard insistent press of the knife hilt against her back while she leaned, waiting. She didn't wear the knife while she was driving, though it was nearby, but habit led to strapping it on the moment she exited whatever vehicle she was driving, habitually ignoring her new face in the rear-view mirror. Giles had just come and gone with a cold supper that Jenny had prepared; he saw her knife as if it were just another appendage, a limb as essential as an arm or leg.

She had had nothing to report to Giles. No sign or signal from Willow or Tara, so he had gone home.

She had already made her report to Wilkins.

She was hungry, so she had eaten. Slowly. Carefully. Just like Wilkins had taught her. The knife was a comforting weight to her; it always felt right in her hands.

It was her favourite knife. President Wilkins had given it to her.

She was a bit surprised at how much she actually missed him. He had become more a father to her than her natural father, who was currently rusting out his kidneys as an alcoholic in a maximum security prison. Wilkins understood her. What was more, Wilkins cared.

Wilkins was also the most diabolically brilliant and patient person she'd ever encountered.

The first quiet moment she had after the spectacular battle between Willow and Tara, Faith had contacted Wilkins to warn him that Tara had betrayed him. She had offered to "take care of Willow" for him, and thus negate any possibility of one of his djinn's becoming compromised, leading to a change in the overall plan.

He didn't bite.

"Haste makes waste," he had told her. "You're just not seeing the big picture."

He must have been speaking through speakerphone; she could hear the soft thock of his golf club hitting a ball in his personal office. Allan Finch would have been a sentinel nearby, never leaning.

"Then what should I do, boss?" Faith had asked.

"Patience is a virtue, even in a business like ours," he had replied, amiable as ever. Faith was not fooled by his seeming friendliness. Those he fooled and befriended often ended up dead. He went on to say that, "For one thing, we don't just kill, Faith. We destroy. And two, we don't destroy something until it's all used up. So Miss Rosenberg knows about my Tara? It will work to our advantage eventually. Patience is finding out just how. Besides, I've got you, my little Jackal, my ace in the hole. Let Miss Rosenberg be First Lieutenant, and let her think she owns the world. She doesn't know who is the head of the Drakensdvaerder Council, does she?"

Faith's answering chuckle was a little hollow.

Jackal. The name of her knife, and her own nickname, both gifts from Persia. From Wilkins.

The neighborhood this evening wasn't particularly quiet; even as she read from her red leather book her ears were always tuned for the slightest hint of action or violence. Not that there were any worthy adversaries here in the slums of Sunnydale. Her training had started long before the National Guard, long before Wilkins.

Here in Sunnydale there were street children, reeking and obnoxious, reminding her far too much of her own barren and noisome childhood. There were a few adults, world weary and distant; apathy the black thundercloud over their lives.

And there was Faith, leaning against the street lamp, reading her book, struggling to appear calm. Despite the rancid air, she breathed through her nose and murmured a mantra.

Her reflection peeked at her over the rim of the book. She looked older, quieter. Gone was the fire of her youth, the conflagration of energy and brightness of battle that had gotten her through the summer training camps, ignoring blackened eyes, cuts and scrapes. In its place was this unfamiliar woman, fettered and chained by self-hatred.

This struggle to appear calm was not so difficult now as it had been in the past. How amazing that she had learned the most from Wilkins, and not as an eager recruit of the Drakensdvaerder.

Thinking of those summer camps, the zeal she had once had for the cause, only now brought her to grief. Thinking of those summers led to thinking of the day it all ended.

Precipitous. Bloody.

Sabotaged.

It had taken time to work off the blotch on her record; no one believed that she was innocent. She was thrown from the Drakensdvaerder without mercy. Only after the requisite three years had passed to clear her record was Faith able to join the National Guard. When she had then been recruited to Wilkins personal staff, she had been headstrong, bitter, and foulmouthed.

"Does this posturing hold any purpose?" Wilkins had once asked her, mild as milk, after she had verbally and physically lambasted one of her peers. Her knuckles dripped in his blood, but it did not sate her.

The posturing was all she had. It hid the pain of the great betrayal.

Wilkins had begun teaching her moderation, in word just as much as in act or deed. Not that he was ever squeamish about ordering the occasional assassination as was the prerogative of any ruling politician, but he did command moderation even in that very act itself; a simple edict to just do it right so it only had to be done once.

"Haste makes waste," was his favourite saying. There was nothing worse than having to murder someone twice, due to unseemly haste or ineptitude. Ineptitude led to officials, and police, and bribery. He once had to shell out a million dollars to buy silence for one of her "hasty" kills. He began the taming of her hard behaviour, proving to her that boundaries had to be set and maintained.

A river, he explained, is only powerful because there are banks on each side to contain it. Just like a bullet is powerful, because there is a trajectory mandated by the barrel of the pistol.

"If you are going to be my weapon," he had said, "then you need to have boundaries as well. Trust me, follow my lead, and you will become more powerful than you can imagine. You can get back everything that was taken away from you."

There was only one thing that Faith wanted more than power, and it was something she couldn't ever get back.

Drinking to excess stopped, as did her foul language and cloudy temperament. Though she never became the neat freak that he was, she now understood the comfort and simple joy of a tidy home. He could never quite cure her of cigarets, though.

Or of mental self-flagellation concerning the person she loved. Thinking of that always led to thinking of Persia.

Persia. The cradle of the world.

Something had happened so soon after Wilkins had first hired her, when she was still rough and uncouth; no more than a brute savage. He was on a presidential tour, a diplomatic mission, of a sort, to the Shah. While there she had saved him from a very talented hassassin, earning herself a knife wound in her gut in the process. She had been only three weeks into her contract with him at the time; it was that night he gave her the knife and her nickname, both derived of the same word.

In Persian, shaghal. The Jackal.

Only later did he tell her he had ordered the hit himself, just to test her. She had been furious, lashing out at him with fists and tongue. After he had subdued her, he asked her to start meditating. "Control your outbursts," he said.

"Be a river," he said.

She became his predator instead; the desert fox, the Jackal, blessed with a new purpose in life. For now, that purpose included Willow Rosenberg, the Gyptian, and the little red book in her hands.

Dusk was falling with soft majesty. If not for the smell, she might have enjoyed having to stay here and stay calm. Despite her outward demeanor, Faith felt incredibly restless; it gave her a perverse sort of pleasure to conquer that restlessness, to deny it any power. Wilkins would be proud of her when she would make her next report. Yet as minutes passed, she nearly wished someone would come and pick a fight, just so she could work off some of her excess energy.

Nought was sent to her but rats and the smell. She crushed their skulls under her heel when she could, but she would not chase them and stomp them like some petulant child. She was a river now.

A weapon.

She waited. Calm. Ignoring her reflection in the window, reading her book.

It also gave her perverse pleasure to read this book, knowing the pains of reading from it were so very great. She knew she would only get stronger if she could just master this pain, as she mastered all physical pains. It was a martyr's stripe, this book, a welcoming whiplash against her back.

Besides, the words held her captive; she was enslaved by them, and this enslavement was the last thing, maybe the only thing, Wilkins did not know about. He knew the book existed, but he always respected her privacy in regards to it.

Just as she always respected the privacy of the one locked cabinet in his home office.

The person she had loved wrote these words, wrote them especially for her, in a two-way magical diary sold to the young or impressionable tourists of the Far East. Faith didn't know what magical mechanism caused it to work the way it did - it operated nearly completely similarly to a chat room via the Interlink on computer vid screens; the difference being the right variety of ink to write with.

Faith hadn't had a supply of the ink for some time now, which didn't matter anyway. The beloved person who had written these words was already dead. There was no more time for apologies.

The pages were worn and ragged with time and much use. It was easy for Faith to find the passages that hurt the most. The pain of reading the words was delicious and intense.

August 4, 20xx

Faith? Faith, are you there?

I need to talk to you.

I know you're mad. Please write back.

Faith? Please?

August 5, 20xx

Come on, Faith. Write back. It's important.

Faith, I swear by my whole box of Oreo cookies, I need to talk to you. Yes, I know it's an inappropriate time for humour, but I also know you love Oreos. If you talk to me, I'll send you a box and even put a sticky note on it proclaiming that it's entirely yours. I won't even eat out all the good white stuff in the middle.

I'm serious, Faith. Write back.

August 6, 20xx

So you're ignoring me. I get it. I deserve it.

But don't you get it, Faith? I did it because I love you!

Damn it, Faith. I love you, all right! I said it! I've always wanted to say it! Now get out your friggin pen and write back! You're still in danger!


Get out of my life, Buffy. I don't need you. I've never needed you.

Faith closed the book and closed her eyes.

There was more writing in the book, but it was too little, too late.

A soft noise whisked into her consciousness; she opened her eyes to behold Rosenberg and the djinn walking down the rickety and narrow staircase. She almost looked down at her phone to see if she had somehow missed a call, but her gaze was arrested by the sight in front of her.

They were holding hands, and the street lights that shone so callously on the detritus and refuse of the alley was gentler to them, alighting delicately, smoothing the lines of shadows on their hands. Neither of them were limping, and there was pinkness in their cheeks.

The book was still in her hands, and Rosenberg's curiosity was legendary. Faith slowly put it away, as if she didn't care that it was seen. Sudden movements would arouse her suspicion.

Anyanka must have assisted them. Rosenberg had always been talented at getting what she wanted, however she wanted it. What wheedling art had she connived to get a cure from the purveyor of poppies?

Did Tara know how manipulative Rosenberg was? What the Drakensdvaerder really did?

No, she's only a pawn, of the Marshal General and the ruling Council. Near useless, especially in the big picture Wilkins had promised.

Tara was looking at her strangely. Faith withstood her glance, holding her trust in the talents of the plastic surgeon, and in the talents of the now dead shaman who had finished the job. Faith had been a familiar face to the djinn; all collared djinns, in fact, when she worked with Wilkins.

So many sacrifices, and all rewards were brass between her teeth; bitter and ill nourishment.

So many secrets.

Despite their unnatural healing, Faith carried up the cooler of food for them, and was surprised to be pulled aside by the Apothecary. Rosenberg was sitting at the table, her face lustrous and endearing, which only made Faith hate her more. But then Tara whispered into her ear, and Faith couldn't help but smile.

She hadn't known Tara for very long, in either capacity of her work. The woman was more a vixen than Faith had anticipated.

Pretences had to be maintained. Faith left at once.




To be continued on Monday, June 8 with 30: Fruit

hehe

Phoenix
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Re: The Apothecary - June 1 - Chapter 29: Jackal

Postby Foomatic » Mon Jun 01, 2009 8:42 pm

Dibs. And dibs on the double post too.
Foo

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Re: The Apothecary - June 1 - Chapter 29: Jackal

Postby Zooeys_Bridge » Mon Jun 01, 2009 8:54 pm

NICE job, Foo! Congrats, dear Jen on the wins, they're well deserved. (You too, Foo! So glad you won the fluff contest!)
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