The Kitten, the Witches and the Bad Wardrobe - Willow & Tara Forever

General Chat  || Kitten  || WaV  || Pens  || Mi2  || GMP  || TiE  || FAQ  || Feed - The Kitten, the Witches and the Bad Wardrobe

All times are UTC - 8 hours [ DST ]



Post new topic Reply to topic  [ 801 posts ]  Go to page Previous  1 ... 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10 ... 27  Next
Author Message
 Post subject: Terra Firma Chapter 7: Prodigal Daughters
PostPosted: Wed Jul 17, 2002 4:09 am 
Hey, Tommo and MadeinNZ, gush away. I love gushing. Gushing is great. Um, we're still talking about feedback, right?

I am posting later than I had intended, but without further ado...

Title: Terra Firma Chapter 7: Prodigal Daughters.
Author: Tulipp. Email: tulipp30@yahoo.com
Feedback: Please. Distribution: Please let me know.
Spoilers: Everything.
Rating: PG-13 in this part.
Pairing: W/T.
Summary: Willow tells Tara what happened after she died.
Disclaimer: All characters and various plot events that set up this story belong to Joss Whedon, Mutant Enemy, etc. I am borrowing them and making no money.

Acknowledgments: Thanks, Ruby, for your insights and your ideas and your insistence that words be fresh. And thanks, J, for being suspicious of the melodrama. I kept it anyway, but I thought twice.

Terra Firma
Chapter 7: Prodigal Daughters

And there were daughters older than the mothers who had borne them,
Being older in their wisdom, which is older than the earth;
And they were going forward only farther into darkness….
--Edwin Arlington Robinson, “Valley of the Shadow”


Something had happened. The very air was charged. If he held his head right, tilted his ear to the breeze, the air crackled. Perhaps the wind had changed, and his Mary Poppins had flown into town on her umbrella after all.

Because there was a new energy in Sunnydale, one that hadn’t been there yesterday. And certainly not before the spell.

Resurrections were tricky; everyone knew that. Even a powerful sorcerer had to face the fact that a resurrection would work…more or less. How many times, after all, had he given this caution to young widows and parents and sisters and….daughters?

He had done everything correctly, but he went through the evidence again. The sacrifice of the blood of witnesses to bring her forth. The chanting to conjure her essence. The doorway through which she would pass. The rope to bind her to this reality. And the gift of milk…a gift for a God.

Yes, the elements had all been there. It was just possible, of course, that the spell itself had been incomplete, but he had spent countless hours attempting to cross-reference the ingredients, perfecting the Latin of the chant.

A University education was such a gift. Doc smiled. And the transformation to half-demon had been value added. He had so much to be grateful for. A father who had brought him up with a classical training and paid for his studies. And an adopted mother who had taken him under her wing, compelled him with darkness, showed him the lap of a God.

But now, perhaps, the son would become the father. And the mother would become the daughter.

It would be a miracle.

It was so simple, really; he should have realized it much sooner. He’d been expecting Glory’s essence to return at the tower because he’d assumed that’s where she had left this reality. Not having her appear there…well, it only meant she had appeared somewhere else. Which meant she had left somewhere else.

He only had to sniff her out. And then he could set his plans in motion.

It would be delicious. But perhaps…a cup of cocoa first.



****



It was a miracle.

It had to be, Buffy thought, stirring milk into her coffee. A miracle. How else could she explain the fact that Tara had walked through the door the previous evening, picked the pieces of Willow up off the floor, and with a simple touch, put her family back together again?

A miracle. Or something else.

Buffy wanted nothing more than to hug Willow and tell her that everything was going to be just fine. To assure Dawn that all her sisters were here for good. To keep everyone safe. But under the thin skin of her relief, her Slayer-sense bubbled up and boiled over. Events—good or bad—always had causes. Often deliberate causes. And motivations.

And consequences.

This uneasy knowledge tugged at the edges of her contentment. They had to figure out who…or what…had brought Tara back, and why. They had to remove the threat. And then they could celebrate. Go on.

She looked up to see Tara pausing in the kitchen doorway. The familiar half-smile felt like a hug to Buffy. “Tara,” she said, getting up to get her a cup. “How….

“She’s okay,” Tara cut in. “She’s taking a shower, and then she’ll come down.”

Buffy smiled. The world had just turned upside-down—again—but some things didn’t change. “No. Tara, how are you?” She poured coffee and set the cup in front of Tara.

“Oh.” Tara smiled ruefully. “I’m fine, Buffy. I mean, I’m confused, and I can’t really get my mind around what’s happened…well, you know…but last night, being with Willow…it was so right, so….” She broke off, her cheeks flushing. “Sorry.”

“It’s okay,” Buffy said, putting a hand on Tara’s arm. “Tara, it is so okay.” She bent her head to look into Tara’s eyes.

“Tara…” Buffy spoke into her cup. “Did Willow talk to you yet about…what happened?”

Tara gave her a sharp look. “No, not yet,” she said. “I mean, I had a feeling that there was something to tell, but… I thought it could wait until today. Last night…we didn’t really talk. Buffy, she just…she needed me.”

“Of course,” Buffy agreed quickly. “Waiting was totally the right thing to do.” She frowned at her coffee. “It’s just that….Willow, well, Dawn can tell you more, since she’s the one who spent most of the summer with her, but she hasn’t really been talking that much at all, and so….”

“Willow,” Tara said softly. Buffy glanced from Tara’s face, flushed pink again, to Willow, standing in the doorway and twisting Tara’s blue shirt in her hands. Her lips were pressed tightly together, her knuckles white. Buffy slid off her stool and crossed the room in a few strides.

“Willow,” she said gently. “Let me wash that for you.” She reached for the shirt. Willow looked down at the fabric, surprised, as if she hadn't realized she was holding it. She unclenched her fingers, and the fabric slid out of her grasp.

“Buffy, I….” Willow hesitated. “I have to talk to Tara.” She glanced at Tara again but didn’t move.

“I know, Will,” she said. “But it will be okay. I promise.” She hugged Willow, a brief, hard hug, feeling the rigid shoulders under her arms.

Willow nodded and held her hand out to Tara. “Will you…come outside?” Their fingers trembled when they touched, and Buffy’s chest ached. Willow had Tara back, and that was the best gift in the world, but the conversation they were about to have would not be easy. Maybe she could….

“Hey,” she said suddenly, and they turned back. She searched her mind for a strategy, a way to just tell Tara about Willow’s rage and get it over with. Or to tell Willow to wait, to delay this confession until later, when they knew more about Tara’s return, when things felt more secure. Or to take the blame herself, somehow, so that Tara wouldn’t have to know.

But no.

“Just…just come have some breakfast after you talk,” she said finally, lamely. Tara nodded. Willow’s smile did not reach her eyes.

Buffy sighed and went to pour herself another cup of coffee. Caffeine would help. She couldn’t carry this burden for Willow, no matter how much she ached to. And no matter how much she wanted to, she couldn’t take the pain of hearing it from Tara. She’d once thought she could protect her friends from their biggest demons, but this was a monster they had to face for themselves.

And it was necessary. She knew that. No, it wouldn’t be easy. But it would be right.



****



“They’ve been out there a long time,” Dawn complained. “ I want to see Tara. And I’m getting hungry.” She crossed her arms on the counter. “Can’t I at least have a piece of toast?”

“Have some more juice,” Buffy said flatly. She heard the front door open and voices in the hallway. “We’re not eating until they come back. This is our first meal together, Dawn. It’s important. Anyway, juice has calories. It’s like toast, only…it’s in a glass, and…it has less butter.”

“Great,” Dawn said, rolling her eyes. “Like you’d ever put butter on your toast anyway,” she added under her breath. She welcomed the distraction of Anya and Giles, who pushed into the kitchen with arms full of brown paper bags.

“So then,” Anya was saying, “I said, ‘Xander, what more do you want? They don’t make bags of chips any bigger than that.’ You should have seen his face.” Anya set down her bags on the counter with a flourish.

“Ah, how clever,” Giles said, smiling sideways at Buffy. “The vengeance demon at home. Kind of a busman’s holiday, isn’t it, Anya?”

Anya tilted her head at him for a moment. Then she turned to Dawn and Buffy and beamed. Giles looked around with raised eyebrows, but Buffy only gave him a blank look, and Dawn didn’t really get it either.

“Wait until you see what we got,” Anya said proudly. She began to remove items from the bags. “First, we found some of that tea she used to like, and this notebook with kittens on it.” She passed the notebook to Dawn.

Giles stepped forward and started rummaging. “Oh yes, look at this,” he said. “It’s a—what do you call them—a barrette…for her hair. I thought….”

“And this,” Anya interrupted excitedly. “This is the best one.” She presented Dawn with a small paperback book.

“ The Big Book of Insect Reflection Jokes and Other Hellmouth Hilarity.” Dawn read the title out loud. She wrinkled her nose.

“You know, in case she feels depressed or something, like when Buffy came back,” Anya said. “This could cheer her up. Cheer us all up. God knows we could use a little old-fashioned insect humor now that Tara is here to explain it to us.”

“So where are Snow White and Prince Charming, anyway,” Xander asked, coming through the door with two more bags. “And no, I’m not going to say who’s who. You’ll never get it out of me. So don’t even try.”

“Outside, and no one’s trying,” Buffy said drily. “Jeez, Xander, did you buy the whole store?” She unloaded eggs and bacon and bread and bagels and fruit and doughnuts onto the counter.

“We didn’t know what she’d want to eat, so we thought we’d get everything. I mean, who knows what kind of appetite you work up when you’ve just been kind of hanging out for three months, right? And we thought maybe we could tempt Willow-the-wisp with variety. Buff,” Xander’s voice dropped. “Did she eat a single thing yesterday?”

“Her herbal drink,” Dawn said, vaguely, over her shoulder, wandering to the window. But she forgot all about breakfast when she realized she had a clear view of Willow and Tara, standing close together near the bench in the back yard.

“They’re talking,” she announced from the kitchen window. “It looks like they’re talking.”

She glanced back to see four startled faces turned her way.

“Dawn,” Buffy said reprovingly. “Don’t spy on them. You shouldn’t be looking at them.” She set down the barrette she’d been turning over in her hands. “It’s not a nice thing to do. It’s very not nice. It’s wrong.” Buffy joined Dawn at the window. “You can see them?”

Dawn turned back to the window.

Willow was speaking, her hands wrapped around herself. And Tara was listening. As they watched, Willow’s head dropped, and Tara touched a finger to her chin and lifted her face back up. Willow spoke again.

Tara’s face changed. Her hand fell, and she stumbled backward across the grass. She turned and gripped the back of the bench, doubling over. Her shoulders heaved. Slowly, her hand tight on the bench, she pulled herself upright. She stood there for a long time, her back to Willow. It looked like she might be crying. Willow didn’t move.

The kitchen was absolutely silent. Dawn felt like she might throw up herself. The moment seemed to last forever.

But then Tara turned, slowly. Dawn could see, even at a distance, that her cheeks were wet. Wiping her mouth on her sleeve, she tilted her head at Willow, seemed to study her. And then, without pausing again, without another second of hesitation, Tara closed the distance between them, wrapped her arms tight around Willow, leaned into her.

From behind her, Dawn heard Xander’s whisper of relief and Anya’s contented sigh. “Okay, that’s enough,” Buffy said sternly, putting one hand on Dawn’s shoulder and the other on Xander’s. “Anya, come on.” She pulled them forcibly from the window. But she was smiling.



****



Willow’s hands slid to her shoulders and gently pushed back. “Tara,” she said quietly. “It’s okay if you need…time. You’re alive. That’s all that matters.” Tara heard her voice as if from far away.

Tara reached for her hand. The fingers looked the same as they always had, small and on the bony side. Tender. But these fingers had soaked up currents of black magick. They had crushed metal and split the air and bloodied friends. They had…killed. Tara had prepared herself for pain, for revenge even, but she honestly hadn’t been expecting that. Not cruelty.

The image of this Willow—so driven by fury, so vengeful, raging—she felt it as a wound, a gash. It stung to think of Willow so desperately alone that she would threaten Dawn. So lost that she would give herself over to a nightmare rather than face a day without…her.

But that wasn’t the worst part. Maybe it should have been, but it wasn’t.

It hurt more to think that Willow had lived inside the knowledge of what she had done for three months. Without hope.

At least she’d had something to hope for the first time Tara had left her. The hope of a reunion. And she’d never really doubted it, had she? Even after Dawn’s arm, Tara knew that it was her own absence that really fueled Willow’s resolve.

She had tried to explain it to Dawn.


“I forgave her,” Dawn had said one afternoon while she and Tara were shopping for new gym shoes. “I finally did. But if you do, then why won’t you come back? It’s been like a month. Isn’t that enough time?”

Tara handed her a pair with purple laces. “It’s just…she has to know she can do it,” she said finally, reluctantly. “If I come back now, after only a month, w...what happens the next time something goes wrong? The next time she’s tempted to use dark magick? She has to be sure.”

Dawn glared at her. “You mean you have to be sure,” she said angrily. “This isn’t about Willow. It’s about you . You say you love her, but you don’t come home.” Her shoulders sagged as her anger drained away suddenly, and her lower lip trembled. “You never come home.”

Tara tucked Dawn’s hair behind her ear. “Dawn, I do love her. I love her more than anything. And that’s why I have to stay away for a little while longer. If I stand beside her right now, she’ll never learn to stand on her own. Without me. Without the magick. And she h... has to. She just has to.”

Tara heard the note of desperation in her own voice. She knew Dawn heard it, too, because Dawn looked at her hard, and then without saying another word, she bent to pull on the next pair of shoes.


The conversation flashed through Tara’s mind, and she thought briefly how surreal it all was. She had come back from the dead, her lover had just told her she’d drained a powerful sorcerer and killed a human, and all she could think about was buying Dawn shoes. With purple laces.

She just has to. The words echoed.

Well, she’d had to, all right. Look what had happened. Yes, she’d killed out of revenge and rage, and that was…God, it was unimaginable. But after that, with Tara dead, on the edge of her own despair, Willow had—somehow—stepped back from the cliff. She had put one foot in front of the other and walked herself through three months of empty, endless days. She had done that. And that was something, wasn’t it?

The time for object lessons was long over.

Now it was time for something else.

“Willow,” she said finally. “I’m not saying it’s all going to be fine. I don’t know.” Willow’s grip loosened instantly, and Tara clutched at her hands to keep her there, to keep her close.

“Tara, I.…” Willow said, crumpling.

“Willow, don’t,” Tara said. “Just don’t.” She looked into the wretched green canyons of Willow’s eyes. “There’s nothing you can say now, nothing, that’s going to make me leave.” She watched the hollow in Willow’s throat deepen, but Willow did not speak.

Tara gripped Willow’s fingers and pulled their clasped hands to her own chest, pressing Willow’s fingers to the bone between her breasts. She felt the blood pulsing, the heart contracting and releasing under her skin.

“You feel that?” Tara asked hoarsely. Willow swallowed hard. “Well, that belongs to you. And I’m not going to take it away from you. Never again. No matter how hard it is. No matter what.” Willow swayed back, made a little sound.

Tara moved their joined fingers to the scooped neck of Willow’s shirt. She slipped her thumb under the fabric until she could feel the pulse of Willow’s heart. “And this…?” Willow nodded mutely. Tara swallowed over the tight ache in her throat. “This belongs to me. And I’m going to take care of it now.”

Willow lifted her eyes then, and Tara was flooded with green. Still holding Willow’s fingers tight, she slipped her other hand around the back of her neck, pulled her close. She pressed her lips to red hair, to pale forehead, to eyelids and ears.

“Willow, baby,” she whispered. “I’m going to take care of what’s mine.” She held Willow tight, and when she finally felt the thankful arm wrap around her back, felt the heat of the palm through her shirt and the breath on her neck, her tears came again.

She had heard everything. Willow had just showed her the darkest side of herself, the shadow Willow that she had always tried so hard not to see. And that Willow lived in a dark place, darker than she had known.

But Tara was no stranger to dark places. And now, with the darkest corners exposed to light, with the hardest confessions out in the open, with no secrets left to tell, they would find a way out. A way home.



****



“They’re crying again,” Dawn said slowly, from the window. “That’s good, right? Crying is good? Or is crying bad?”

Buffy came to the window and looked out. Maybe, after all, she thought, they didn’t have to wait to celebrate. Maybe there was a simple explanation for Tara’s return, A simple as the sight of two women clinging to each other in the middle of the backyard, lost in a private and long overdue reunion. As simple as need meeting need. As simple as forgiveness.

Buffy put her arm around Dawn’s shoulders and pulled her close. “It’s good,” she said softly, hugging Dawn to her. “This kind of crying is very, very good.”

And, after all, they did eat together, although it was more lunch than breakfast. Willow and Tara sat close, their shoulders touching. Willow obediently drained the glass of orange murk that Buffy set in front of her, but she mostly watched Tara eat, reaching to refill her coffee cup or to slide another piece of toast onto her plate. The others ate ravenously, scarfing down eggs and bagels like it was their last meal. Or their first.

Buffy waited until Dawn had popped the last bite of bacon into her mouth before she rested her forearms on the table and caught Giles’ eye. He nodded and dabbed at his lips with a napkin.

“Tara,” he started to say, but Anya stood suddenly, scraping her chair back and glancing at the screen on a tiny black box she pulled from her skirt pocket.

Anya glanced around, saw the curious looks. She shrugged, holding up the black box. “It pulses. Like Xander used to.” Dawn made a face while Xander sunk down in his chair.

She turned to Tara. “I’m really sorry,” she said. “But duty calls. I’ll be back later.” And she was gone.

Tara glanced around the table, bewildered. “What just happened?” she asked.

Xander shrugged. “Anyanka just happened,” he said. “Big Daddy D’Hoffryn calls, and she goes running. She’s a good girl.” Tara heard bitterness in his voice. She shook her head.

“I guess I missed a lot,” she said slowly.

Willow squeezed her hand. “Oh yeah,” she said. “I guess with…everything…I forgot to mention that….”

Tara’s forehead wrinkled. “Vengeance demons have beepers now?” she asked. Xander just rolled his eyes, but Buffy and Dawn giggled.

Giles cleared his throat. “Tara,” he said. “Before we talk about your, well, your resurrection, have you thought about calling your father? I…I’m not sure what you’d tell him, but perhaps your family should know that you’re alive.”

Tara looked around the table. She reached out and ruffled Dawn’s hair, and then she pulled Willow to her and kissed the top of her head. To Buffy, it looked like a protective kiss, shielding and possessive and infinitely tender.

“Mr. Giles,” Tara said softly. “They already do.”


To be continued in Chapter 8, “Resurrections.”


Edited by: Tulipp at: 10/12/02 12:29:42 pm


Top
  
 
 Post subject: Re: Fic: Terra Firma
PostPosted: Wed Jul 17, 2002 4:38 am 
Hm, I'd love to give some smart feedback, but once again I'm kinda emotional after reading your work, Tulipp, so.... This was, again, amazing. And so natural, when the situation is anything but. I love that the fact that Tara is back where she belongs is but the beginning of it all - you've set up quite a bit of questions there I can't wait to have answered. Your style is excellent as ever, and I can hear all the characters' voices as I read - right now, this is officially my Season 7 premiere, and it has all the looks of a masterpiece.



So, in case you didn't get it, I liked the update.*g*



Rose, as gushy as everyone else

'Magic, thy name is Tara.' - Mariacomet, The Stone Circle.



Top
  
 
 Post subject: Re: Fic: Terra Firma
PostPosted: Wed Jul 17, 2002 4:45 am 
Hey Rose, thanks so much. Your feedback sounds plenty smart to me, especially since it's so nice. *s*



Just popping in to say that there were a few little mistakes in the original post (missing word, extra words); I just fixed them, but I hope that anyone who has already read it and went "huh" will refresh and see that they have been fixed. And now it's way past my bedtime, which is why the mistakes were there in the first place. Goodnight, all. Sweet dreams.



Top
  
 
 Post subject: Re: Fic: Terra Firma
PostPosted: Wed Jul 17, 2002 4:55 am 
Just started readin ur fic, and i Absolutely Love it!! It is sooo good!! i'm really lookin 4ward to seein wuts gonna happen next, can't wait 4 ur next update!! :)

"In my world there are people in chains and we can ride them like ponies" -Vamp Willow (Doppelgangland)



Top
  
 
 Post subject: Re: Fic: Terra Firma
PostPosted: Wed Jul 17, 2002 5:07 am 
Ah, Tulipp. How I love this story. I don't even have enough words to tell you how much I love this story. :)



Beautiful update. Every line from Tara made me smile, and her talk with Willow was heartwrenching, but hopeful. Just... superb.






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


"But when they're playing your song on the jukebox in Hell, you might as well dance." - K. Simpson


"Futile... like a FOX, baby!" - Tara in The Late Shift by wiccachica



Top
  
 
 Post subject: Re: Fic: Terra Firma
PostPosted: Wed Jul 17, 2002 7:33 am 
Tulipp,

I am at a loss for words -- and that's saying something! Brava!

Kris

"Frell that!"



Top
  
 
 Post subject: Re: Fic: Terra Firma
PostPosted: Wed Jul 17, 2002 8:06 am 
Interesting cliff hanger. I like how you showed us, but didn't show us the conversation, leaving that private moment to be well, private like it should be. The less is more angle is most definetly working in this fic, your writing is brilliant. Heh think if I make enough noise and send enough letters they'd let you write season 7?

'It's good to be a chicken casserole'-Sass, answering darkness

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



Top
  
 
 Post subject: Re: Fic: Terra Firma
PostPosted: Wed Jul 17, 2002 8:18 am 
Cool dude! Drama rocks I'm glad you left it in :)



-Will

"Hear that baby? You're my always."

"well, you know, when you play a lesbian witch you've gotta get killed in this fun kind of exciting way, so the heart was the way to go..."

"we have the most amazing fans though they LOVE us."




Top
  
 
 Post subject: Re: Fic: Terra Firma
PostPosted: Wed Jul 17, 2002 8:27 am 
Tulipp that has to be the best part yet. WOW, that was amazing...I'd love to praise it properly, but I don't have the words for it. Thank you!!

A dream is a wish the heart makes.

Willow: "You had two eggs, sunny-side-up. I remember because they were wiggling at me like little boobs."

Tara: "Sassy Eggs."



Top
  
 
 Post subject: Re: Fic: Terra Firma
PostPosted: Wed Jul 17, 2002 9:17 am 
That was an amazing update. I love how the actual telling wasn't heard, but rather seen by everyone else. If anything actions spoke louder than any words could. Learning everything through Dawn's eyes was a nice touch, her curiousity, questions and hopes being ours as well. I also enjoyed Tara's reassurance of Willow with the claiming of each other's hearts. So sweet.

-----------------
Too many of us live desert lives. ~Charles de Lint



Top
  
 
 Post subject: Re: Fic: Terra Firma
PostPosted: Wed Jul 17, 2002 9:36 am 
Prepare for the gush. That was lovely. I liked the way you only showed us the end of the W/T conversation. It was enough. Now - are you saying there's some connection between Glory and Tara?

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


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



Top
  
 
 Post subject: Re: Fic: Terra Firma
PostPosted: Wed Jul 17, 2002 11:12 am 
I loved how you didn't write the conversation, but just showed us the effects it was having. That was very clever, and also had a greater impact, emotionally, I suspect.



There's something infinitely tender about this. I can't quite decide whether I should be laughing or crying. And poor Willow...the way she was watching Tara eat, filling her coffee cup and giving her more toast. I can just see her now, sitting there all forlorn, doing that. God, that hurts.



Thank you so much for this. It's painful but you know, good. :)


----------
It's dirty. It's all dirty. And all
over me. Dirty, dirty, bad. Bad!



Top
  
 
 Post subject: Re: Fic: Terra Firma
PostPosted: Wed Jul 17, 2002 11:40 am 
Does someone want to tell me WHY I was stupid enough to forget that I loved this fic and therefore didn't check for updates??????



Bad Gem. Bad, bad, bad. Although it's good in a way because for a lot of the updates, I wouldn't have been able to wait for the next one! This fic is simply beautiful. I love Tara's unique view of Willow's strength when coming back from the dark side, and Dawn is absolutely lovely. This is the Dawn that Joss should have created. Mature, yet has childish instincts eg spying on Willow and Tara. Also, Buffy finally seems to be returning to her old ways and realising that she's Dawn's sister, not her mother.



Beautiful. But I'm very concerned about Tara's family. Why did they tell them she was dead, anyway? It's not like they had the right to know - they were too nasty!



Gem

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



Top
  
 
 Post subject: Thanks for Feedback on Chapter 7
PostPosted: Wed Jul 17, 2002 12:22 pm 
Thanks for the lovely responses. I was a little nervous about this chapter, not sure I was hitting the right balance of sweet and Oh-my-God for Tara. It seems like it went over okay, but still….



MissQuirky: Thanks!



LeatherQueen: Thank you. Grasshopper is very pleased.



KrisBo5: Loss for words…that can’t be good. Don’t you have a story to be writing?



WiccansIllusion: There was a cliffhanger? Glad you liked the privacy of the conversation. Frankly, I couldn’t imagine writing the actual telling of DMW’s actions in a way that wouldn’t be wrong and disappointing and mostly hard. And ooh, wouldn’t it be fun to quit my job and write season 7?



Willntlover: Thanks for liking the drama; I really couldn’t decide!



SlayerTazz: Thank you so much. I was a little unsure about this part, since to me it lacked the intensity of the last two chapters, but that’s necessary, too.



Thanatopsis: I’m SO glad that the showing-not-telling thing worked here. I love what you say about Dawn’s curiosity and hopes being ours; that’s very true.



MadeinNZ: Thank you so much. Now, wait a minute….Glory and Tara know each other? Is that what you’re saying? I have no idea what you’re talking about. *s*



Tommo: I really don’t think I could have written that conversation—too painful to relive all that stuff. And unnecessary here; what matters is Tara’s response and Willow’s response to her response. In some ways, I thought maybe I was going over the top in this chapter…too much sweet, too much tender. I’m still not sure, to tell you the truth. But at the same time, anything less would have hurt too much, you know?



Miss1234Kitty: Good Gem. Good, good, good. And there will be many more updates, so keep checking. Does that count as shameless self-promotion? I like what you say about Buffy being Dawn’s sister, not her mother. Absolutely. As for Tara’s family, don’t worry too much about them. They only matter in some minor ways that you will see dealt with in the next chapter or so.



Thanks all!



Top
  
 
 Post subject: Re: Chapter 7
PostPosted: Wed Jul 17, 2002 1:17 pm 
oh how long i've waited for this update...now i'm content...and am free to start about my day here at work...*sigh*



steph



Top
  
 
 Post subject: Re: Chapter 7
PostPosted: Wed Jul 17, 2002 5:22 pm 
This story really is amazing and so moving as well. The conversation between Willow and Tara was so well written and had everything that needed to be said obviously in it. And I loved the way the rest of the scoobies all looked through the window because they care about them.



The family line at the end was perfect as well. They are Tara's family *happy sigh*.

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



Top
  
 
 Post subject: Re: Chapter 7
PostPosted: Wed Jul 17, 2002 5:31 pm 
the last line... amazingly powerful



brilliantly done for such a hard series of confessions and scenes



bravo kathleen

"I am my beloved's and my beloved is mine."

To The Land of The RainbowWriters



Top
  
 
 Post subject: Re: Fic: Terra Firma
PostPosted: Wed Jul 17, 2002 6:39 pm 
sigh, I saved this knowing it would tear me in half. No melodrama here, just wonderful moments. Images of Dawn looking out the window , i can see what she sees. And you are right, Tara finally sees the thing Willow always feared she'd see and still she loves her. What else can she do?

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

"Oooh Xita!" - Amber Benson



Top
  
 
 Post subject: Re: Fic: Terra Firma
PostPosted: Wed Jul 17, 2002 8:13 pm 
I liked the beginning with Doc figuring out his problem and I'm still puzzling over your cryptic sentence " But now, perhaps, the son would become the father. And the mother would become the daughter."



I also really liked how you didn't have the conversation but showed us their reactions at the end. I think that was an excellent decision--it really worked for me, showing me all their feelings about it without going over what I already knew. I think Tara's reactions are believable; she loves Willow and really I think if anything is unbelievable, it's Willow's actions in "Grave". I really couldn't see the destruction of the world coming naturally from what had happened; my only explanation is that absorbing all that dark magic must have driven her temporarily insane. Finally, the last line of this chapter was perfect.



p.s.: I laughed aloud at “The Big Book of Insect Reflection Jokes and Other Hellmouth Hilarity.” I'll have to check my local bookstore for a copy for myself...



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

Edited by: darkmagicwillow at: 7/18/02 12:29:34 pm


Top
  
 
 Post subject: Re: Chapter 7
PostPosted: Wed Jul 17, 2002 8:21 pm 
Tulipp, just echoing what everyone else has already said. Seeing their talk through the eyes of the Scoobies was very powerful. Tara's resolve to take care of what belongs to her was very emotional, as was her declaration that she was with her family.



The Doc thing is scaring me, though. Great update. Looking forward to more!

*****

She's my everything!



Top
  
 
 Post subject: Re: Fic: Terra Firma
PostPosted: Wed Jul 17, 2002 8:23 pm 
Quote:
In some ways, I thought maybe I was going over the top in this chapter…too much sweet, too much tender. I’m still not sure, to tell you the truth. But at the same time, anything less would have hurt too much, you know?




Hmm. Not over the top at all. Sometimes life is dramatic. And hey, you know, death and all that...I think their reactions were perfectly suited to the situation. And as far as Willow and Tara are concerned, there's never too much sweet or too much tender. And that in itself hurt quite a lot too. Gorgeous stuff. :)


----------
It's dirty. It's all dirty. And all
over me. Dirty, dirty, bad. Bad!



Top
  
 
 Post subject: Terra Firma Chapter 7 Feedback
PostPosted: Wed Jul 17, 2002 8:58 pm 
Some more responses…and have I mentioned how wonderful it is, truly, to be able to write something down and put it out there and have people read it and write back? I just Thanks so, so much.



This is a pleasant interruption in my work day. Dang, I keep forgetting I have a job….



Funkyasian: Has it been that long? I am glad I sent you off to work content. What’s your secret because I can’t seem to settle in at work these days. Too much on my mind, I guess….and none of it’s work.



Puff: I’m so glad you liked the conversation and the window and the last line. I didn’t want to repeat TOO much from “Family,” but then again, it’s been awhile since we were reminded of that particular kind of bond, you know?



Kathleen: Thanks; I thought it was pretty hard myself. Last line, same thing I said to Puff. Yes, we’ve heard that before, and yes, we needed to hear it again. At least, I did. And from Tara’s mouth this time.



Xita: Oh, sorry you thought I would rip you up…again. I’m glad it wasn’t melodrama after all. Yes, I like how you put it, that “Tara finally sees the thing Willow always feared she’d see and still she loves her. What else can she do.” That is just exactly it. I don’t think I even realized that until just now, hearing you put it that way. I have to warn you, there is a little ripping up coming in the next chapter or so…but it’s necessary and temporary.



Jill: Thanks. I will try to keep it up! I love your avatar, by the way, did I tell you that I love it every time you say “dude.” Every. Single. Time.



Darkmagicwillow: I wonder if it was too cryptic, that line near the beginning? I’ll be coming back to it, of course. As for the conversation, yes, I think it would be been next to impossible to try to capture that conversation in words. There was just too much. Too, too much. And hey, thanks for mentioning the humor; I’ve been trying to get some of it in there, since this is still the Buffyverse, but of course events haven’t permitted too much as of yet. I’ll look up the ISBN number for you. *s*



Tiggrscorpio: Echo away; I am loving seeing what people think. And I also think it was important that Tara got to say what she got to say; in watching earlier eps lately (i.e. research), I am constantly reminded how little she ever got to SAY. She got lots of looks, etc, but not so much in the way of dialogue. I want to hear her talk. As for Doc, well, I’m not talking, but I am, even in angsty times, protecting Tara and Willow. More soon. Pretty soon.



Tommo: Okay, I am going to allow myself to be persuaded by you on this one.

And no, it doesn’t really get THAT much more dramatic, I suspect, than newly resurrected lovers and world-ending pain and killing and…oh wait…I’m about to start giving things away. Never mind. *s*



--Tulipp



Top
  
 
 Post subject: Re: Terra Firma Chapter 7 Feedback
PostPosted: Wed Jul 17, 2002 9:00 pm 
ooooh ripping up is good. I am a fan of angst, just with happy endings :)

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

"Oooh Xita!" - Amber Benson



Top
  
 
 Post subject: Re: Terra Firma Chapter 7 Feedback
PostPosted: Wed Jul 17, 2002 9:12 pm 
I just read this straight through.



And it's bloody marvellous.



Every interaction between Willow and Tara is so visceral, and is increased by the way you focus on their actions rather than their words.



It's beautiful stuff. Thank-you :)

- Em

"They were fluffy indigenous kittens. Until ME came along." - What Willow meant to say in Pangs.




Top
  
 
 Post subject: Re: Terra Firma Chapter 7 Feedback
PostPosted: Wed Jul 17, 2002 10:09 pm 
Okay, Xita, then you're in for a real treat. *s*. Hmm, I should really learn how to do those smiley face things that everyone else seems to know how to do.



And Em, thanks for reading this! Visceral, huh? I like it. I like it a lot. I hope you'll keep reading, when you're not busy telling people to eat their crusts, of course.



--Tulipp



Top
  
 
 Post subject: Re: Terra Firma Chapter 7 Feedback
PostPosted: Wed Jul 17, 2002 10:44 pm 
Oooh, I like this fic. It's angsty but it's all good.. always hope in your words. And I love the style. It has some kind of Matrix or Pulp Fiction touch to it, since you look at the same point in the narration from different perspectives and angles and move in time aswell with flashbacks. To achieve such a change in pace in a written piece is pretty .. wow .. you know, since movies have the actual visual to reach that and a writer has to use other means. Really cool, heh :)



*********

Buffy: Kill the bad fairy... destroy the bad fairy's
powercenter, whatever, and all the troubles go away? ...


World is what it is. We fight. We die. Wishing
doesn't change that.


Giles: I have to believe in a better world.

Edited by: Lindy  at: 7/18/02 2:45:46 pm


Top
  
 
 Post subject: Re: Terra Firma Chapter 7 Feedback
PostPosted: Thu Jul 18, 2002 12:00 am 
Hi Juli, I'm in late, but I wouldn't have missed this chapter for the world. Here I am worshipping at your feet again (nice feet by the way, cute toes!)



Another amazing piece of work, that says everything just right, without saying too much - or needing to. Tara's heart is Willow's, and Willow's is Tara's. Oh yes, you know how I feel about those sentiments. Isn't it just wonderful when simple words can make you cry, for all the right reasons?



Give me more. I can take it. I need it. I need chapter 8 now. Yours always, Mike.



Top
  
 
 Post subject: Re: Terra Firma Chapter 7 Feedback
PostPosted: Thu Jul 18, 2002 1:47 am 
I stand in awe.



Brilliant, as usual.



Top
  
 
 Post subject: Re: Terra Firma Chapter 7 Feedback
PostPosted: Thu Jul 18, 2002 3:19 am 
Lindy: Ooh, Pulp Fiction…so cool. I’ve been enjoying trying new things with moments and pacing, but now you’re giving me ideas….thanks.



Mike: My toes…thanks…I’m told they’re slightly too long. At the moment they are very red. Occasionally they are pale blue. Sometimes lavender. Hardly ever pink. But just at the moment…red. Thanks! And I do know how you feel about Tara’s and Willow’s hearts—at least I think I do. More sentiment coming. But you’ll have to wait. It’s angsty, but I know you’re okay with that. Right?



Marilda, thanks so much. More is on the way.



Thanks, all, and again, I find myself saying good night and sweet dreams!



Top
  
 
 Post subject: Re: Terra Firma Chapter 7 Feedback
PostPosted: Thu Jul 18, 2002 3:47 am 
i always loved the part about taking care of hearts in anya's wedding vows, and you've got the same idea going on in here, which worked absolutely beautifully. perfect balance of angst and sugar.....sorta like really good coffee. or something. thank you!!!!!! wonderful as always......:)

*please use both hands....*



Top
  
 
Display posts from previous:  Sort by  
Post new topic Reply to topic  [ 801 posts ]  Go to page Previous  1 ... 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10 ... 27  Next

All times are UTC - 8 hours [ DST ]


Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 4 guests


You cannot post new topics in this forum
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
You cannot edit your posts in this forum
You cannot delete your posts in this forum
You cannot post attachments in this forum

Search for:
Jump to:  
cron

W/T Love 24/7 since July 2000
Powered by phpBB © 2000, 2002, 2005, 2007 phpBB Group