Well, it’s a lovely Saturday evening, and I am watching season 1 Angel re-runs, and I thank you all so much for the feedback. Have I said how great it is to write something and post it here and actually find out something about what people thought when they read it? That is just so cool.
ISABIG, I like your resolve face.
Darkmagicwillow, See, now there’s an interesting question, about how and whether the riddle relates to the dream. I guess I should probably figure that out.

. Just kidding.
As for Giles’ distrust and Willow’s lack of confidence, in some way I struggle with wanting not to keep going back and forth: resolution followed by backsliding followed by resolution followed by backsliding. But that’s how I see it happening. Small steps.
I’m thinking of it not so much as Willow controlling the magick as Willow trusting herself to let the magick happen when it needs to, or letting herself be magickal when she needs to. It is part of her, and it is part of her relationship with Tara, and she has to learn how to be accept that. In season six she was misunderstanding and abusing that. In this story, she’s been fearing it.
WiccansIllusion, I’m glad that Willow’s feelings seemed right, and thanks for being so patient with the updates; they’ve been a bit slower lately, I know.
Ashley, I remember you said that last time, and you were right! Thanks for reading.
Gem, I’m so glad you liked it, thanks for saying so. Giles is tricky…he’s older and wiser and a Watcher and has a lot to add, but ultimately, he can’t live for them. He has a place here, and I don’t want to undermine that, but it’s just one place. Not the in-charge place.
Kasey, it looks to me like you’re great at giving feedback.

. It’s always great to get it. Thanks! And yeah, that prop was meant to be both a jab at Mutant Enemy and an attempt to understand how Tara would feel when she realizes that Willow thinks she was responsible.
Ruth, wow, now I’m having all these thoughts about Tara’s purpose. I do think that, having been brought suddenly back from death with no explanation, she would feel weird, and that’s looming large for her right now. Buffy probably came closest to identifying with that, but they haven’t really had time to talk about it with all these other things getting in the way. And, really, we’re only on the 3rd day of her new life. Ooh…and that’s when she had the dream…how’s that for some saintlike Christian imagery?
Anyway, I’m thinking that in canon, Tara has always struggled with ideas of purpose and her place in the gang, the family, the world. In a way, she is like Xander (shocked pause) in that: they both are uncertain of what their contribution is, of who they really are.
So Tara and Xander as parallel characters….any thoughts?
Edited by: Tulipp at: 9/7/02 4:13:14 pm