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Menorah Tales - Update 12/15

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Re: Menorah Tales - Update 05/24

Postby JustSkipIt » Wed May 24, 2006 7:06 pm

mole – Yes, sometimes it flows and sometimes it doesn’t.

Dianneswillowtree – Thanks for being such a fan.


Title – Menorah Tales – Part 10

Author – JustSkipIt

Pairing – T/W

Feedback – Definite-a-mundo

Spoilers – None

Rating – G- PG

Disclaimer – Joss Whedon and Mutant Enemy own Willow and Tara and the Buffyverse.

Note 1 – Thanks for Candleshoe for her help regarding London. I have to admit that I kind of ignored a “research” focused update for a much more vague piece.

Note 2 – Justin, Sally, Emms, & Candleshoe, thanks for the names…


About a year later

Tara closed the book she had been reading and gently brushed her fingertips over leather binding. A smile graced her face as she slowly traced the fine lettering on the volume. As an adolescent she had no understanding of the beauty of books; she understood words but not books themselves.

[blockquote]”Let’s get out of here,” Faith practically bellowed as she reached across and pulled the book from Willow’s hands, slamming it shut and tossing it into the empty chair next to her.

Tara jumped at the sound of the book hitting the surface of the chair, completely level so that it sounded throughout the cavernous library before skidding into the slats at the back of the chair. She took a deep breath and protested Faith’s interruption. “W-willow was reading that, Faith.”

Faith smiled at the two girls. “Oh come on. It’s boring.”

“It’s not boring,” Willow argued. “You’re such a semi-literate, Faith. It’s passionate and exciting and violent. How can you not like it?”

“The Cliff’s Notes says he choked to death on a pill-bottle cap,” Faith sneered. “How great a writer could he be?”

“One can certainly be a magnificent writer without living a perfect life, Faith.” Giles voice sounded across the room and all three girls looked up to see him walking toward them. He bent slowly and picked up the book from the chair, running his hands over the binding as if checking a small kitten for injuries from a recent scuffle. He pulled out a chair and sat at the end of the table holding out the book for all three girls to observe. “Your recent abuse of Mr. William’s masterpiece has damaged the binding right here,” he pointed with his index finger, “and here.”

“Sorry, G-man,” Faith said without very much enthusiasm. “It’s still readable isn’t it?”

“Well yes it is,” he breathed out a long sigh, “but I shall have to undertake to repair the binding.”

Willow’s head snapped up as she finally entered the conversation. “But we can finish reading it first right?”

“Yeah, Giles,” Tara pleaded. They were nearing the climax of the play and she wanted to know how it turned out. And Willow would have half a melt-down if she had to stop reading one book and start another. Tara didn’t care about reading multiple books at once. She usually had the book Willow was reading to them after school, two or three she was reading, and her school assignments but Willow wanted to start one book, devour it, and finish it.

“Books are valuable and precious.” Giles said seriously. He looked directly at Tara. “It’s not just the words within them which make them works of art. Their very workmanship is impressive.” He held out the biding to the blonde and began pointing out the detail which had gone into this edition.

“Hey look at that,” Faith interrupted, “Willow’s dad will be here any minute to pick us up.”

“You are in detention,” Giles admonished with a roll of his eyes as Willow and Tara both quickly stowed their books in their bags and stood from the table.

“And it’s been great,” Faith said with a sarcastic wave of her hand. She patted the librarian on his tweed-covered shoulder and winked at him. “Thanks for having us.” The three girls went quickly through the swinging doors giggling as they went.
[/blockquote]

She lifted the book to her nose and breathed deeply the smell of the leather. Giles had lectured and lectured, first in middle school and then high school. And somewhere in there Tara noticed that her own attitude toward the books was changing. He was right; books were works of art in every way. It wasn’t just the wonderful words within them but the very way they were made. Willow loved the words. She loved the knowledge within books but she didn’t really care how her knowledge arrived. A good website was as beautiful to her as a Hemingway first-edition. And Faith? Faith wanted to hear a good story and get Bs in all her classes (a relatively easy task with Tara and Willow studying alongside her).

The blonde remembered the day she’d gone to visit Giles at the library and discuss her option to study in England for a year. She found him in his office eating a cold turkey sandwich and cursing Thanksgiving leftovers. His reaction to her request for counsel was nearly as excited as she’d ever seen him as he described his favorite collections in the British Museum. He offered invaluable advice in finding a place to live and learning her way around the city. And she’d been at the Sunnydale High School Library for two hours before he casually asked if Willow was excited about her opportunity. When she didn’t respond, he’d simply muttered, “Oh. I see. Well then,” polished his glasses, and continued discussing her specific interests for her year abroad.

Her year abroad.

Her planned year abroad.

A year which had grown into a second. The University of North Carolina had mailed her diploma for a B.A. in English specializing in Creative Writing at the end of the summer and repeated their offer for her to begin her graduate studies either in residence or spending her first year in England. She wasn’t sure that she’d be completing her Master’s but she had eventually agreed to the requirements for her studies. It provided her with a stipend and relatively lax writing requirements. In fact, she’d far exceeded the writing requirements for her undergraduate degree the final two years in the program and was still outstripping them. She’d surpassed the University’s unofficial but well-understood standards for publications. By the end of her Junior year, she’d published three poems in respected publications.

She roused herself from these thoughts, glanced at the clock to see that it was nearly half-past five, and finished putting her books and journal into her book bag. On the way she stopped and turned in the book she’d been studying at the counter with friendly greeting to the librarian on duty and a promise to see the woman tomorrow. Gladys was always helpful and friendly to the point that Tara couldn’t tell if she was attempting to be more than just “librarian friendly” but the blonde maintained her distance and Gladys had never pushed the issue.

“See you tomorrow, Gladys,” Tara said with a smile and made her way through the library toward the front doors. She reached into her bag for her umbrella and was surprised to see that it was not, in fact, raining. It was rather gloomy and dark and she walked quickly towards the bus stop as she stowed her umbrella. It was shocking for Tara, having grown up on the West Coast before attending school in North Carolina to move to a locale with such dark weather on a daily basis. Giles had warned her of that too.

But the hardest factor in her move was being away from her loved ones. She’d had virtually no contact with her father nor brother since leaving for college 5 years ago so being in England didn’t make any difference where they were concerned, but Faith, Giles, and, yes, Willow were her family. She e-mailed Faith and Giles regularly but didn’t speak to them by phone more than on special occasions.

The visit from Sheila and Ira last year had come at her lowest point while in England. She was feeling every bit of her loneliness. Then they’d arrived and spent two days touring London together and it had really pulled her together. Both surrogate parents had urged her to get out more, to make some friends and when she had started to do that, it had really helped for the remaining time in England.

But Willow.

Her first instinct was to put all thoughts of Willow from her mind. For two years, unless she was working, unless she was writing, she observed what she thought of as a “Willow-thought diet.” She could and did talk to close friends but she didn’t allow herself to wallow in regret. Two conversations. Two. That was all since that terrible, awful party. Since their fight. She could feel the tears prickling her eyes as the remembered that party, remembered standing in the front yard, in the snow. She knew, just knew that Willow would be out in a minute or two.

But then…

The lights in the house were blazing. And she found herself unable to tear herself away from the sight of Willow’s dancing silhouette. Yes, she’d been unable to tear herself away for at least ten seconds. Perhaps twelve. She’d walked to a nearby house and with tears in her eyes, called Judy who had been so kind in picking her up, taking her to pack, and taking her to the airport. She’d cried on the plane until a flight attendant sat next to her, holding her hand. When she tried to get the woman to leave, she had insisted that the plane was half-empty and that Tara reminded her of her own daughter.

The next day she spent by the phone, barely getting up to eat or even go to the bathroom --just waiting for Willow to call. For nearly a week she waited. When the call finally came, she found herself too angry, too hurt, to even speak rationally and Willow seemed no better.

She unlocked the door to her apartment and let herself inside, hanging her book bag on a hook by the entrance, before crossing to heat some water for tea. It seemed that all those years spent in Giles’s company and now her time in England had created in her a predilection toward a nice cup in the late afternoon.

As the pot started heating she remembered her next conversation with Willow. It was Spring and the trees outside her window were budding. She watched a bird bringing worms to her young and knew that she had to call her former lover. Tara thought of the way the snow fell the last time she’d seen Willow and it chilled her once again. The phone conversation was, simply put, a disaster. Willow wanted to know why she was calling. Why hadn’t she told the redhead about the offer? Why did she want to leave the country? How would they ever make things right with her in England? Tara remembered her own cold tone as she retorted that it hardly seemed a priority. Willow’s pained silence was followed by a tearful “good luck” and a dial tone.

She sat at a barstool at the counter as she sipped at her tea.

Children. They’d been children. Children when they’d met, children when they’d become lovers, and children when they’d torn themselves apart.

And still, Willow was the only woman she’d ever imagined a life with. She allowed herself a minute every night. One minute to imagine falling asleep to the sound of Willow’s voice telling a childish anecdote, to her hand holding Tara’s fingers in her own, to the scent of her hair and the softness of her skin.

Her Willow-diet.

And today was a day off the diet. Tara set down her tea cup and crossed the crowded flat to a waist-high bookcase. She ran her fingertips gently over each branch and candle holder. Then she removed one white and one blue candle and placed each in their appointed places. She checked the clock again and confirmed that it was time to light the menorah.

When she had completed the ritual she retook her seat to watch the candles burn. She wondered if Willow still lit hers as regularly as ever and if she thought about Tara when she did. Tara, thought of nothing but Willow when she lit her menorah.

--

“Tara, over here!” Casey waved as Tara closed the door to the pub behind her and she felt relived to see that her friends had snagged the couch and coffee table area. It was not only the most comfortable area, it stayed quieter than the rest of the pub because it was behind the fireplace and the music was in front.

Tara quickly joined her friends. “I’m going to get something to drink. Does anyone else need a refill?” She set her bag in a chair. No one else asked for a drink so she promised to be back in a minute.

“Olivia!” Tara greeted familiar figure working behind the bar with a smile.

“Tara, how are you?” Olivia reached for a coffee cup and held it up with one hand while holding up a pint in the other. Tara pointed at the pint. “Someone’s celebrating,” Olivia teased.

“Just a bit,” Tara admitted.

“I spoke to Rupert this morning,” Olivia said, “he said he’s sending your gift with mine so you’ll have to come by next week.”

Tara laughed. “He should bring yours. He hasn’t been here in eight months.”

“I know,” Olivia agreed, “but he says that work’s been really busy.”

Tara never could tell if Olivia knew what was up in Sunnydale. “It gets like that I guess.”

Tara picked up her pint. “I’ll take that coffee in a little while.”

“You know where to find it, sweetie,” Olivia answered before turning to another customer.

Tara reached her friends and took a seat in the lounger at the end of the coffee table. She took a long drink from her pint and set it on the table.

“See,” Claire said, “I told you she had good news. She’s glowing.”

Bella laughed. “Either she had a poem published or she spoke to ‘her.’”

“Which her?” Casey asked.

Jules smacked the bearded young-man on the upper arm. “Wake up, Casey.” She turned to the others. “Why do we have a friend who is so clueless?”

“Because of my striking good looks,” he asserted.

“Because he always buys the first round.” Claire joined in the teasing.

“Casey, you know damn well who ‘her’ is,” Bella said as she noticed Tara’s blush and the way that she hid behind a curtain of hair.

Tara smiled and pulled two envelopes from her bag. “Actually you’re both wrong.” She waited a second before holding up the envelopes triumphantly, one in each hand. “Two poems.”

Jules leaned forward and snatched both envelopes from Tara’s grasp. “Which ones, Tare?” Before Tara could answer, her friend extracted the first letter and then the second. “’One Shovelful of Dirt’ and ‘Pistachio.’” She declared to the others as she held up the letters proudly. From the way Jules got so excited with each of Tara’s successes, you would have thought that she was the published poet herself rather than Tara. And that was fine with Tara. The few times Tara had read her work, she had felt nervous almost to the point of not being able to speak whereas Jules had no problem acting, reading, or singing and dancing in public.

Bella leaned closer to her outgoing lover and kissed Jules on the cheek. “I love both of those. Especially ‘Pistachio.’”

“You don’t love the funeral ones?” Claire teased.

“I guess I’m just not into the gloom and doom and death and destruction,” Bella explained, “sorry, Tara.” Tara shrugged her shoulders. “I don’t mean that it’s not an amazingly powerful poem that makes me cry my little eyes out every time you read it; it’s just a bit of a downer.”

“So speaks the mistress of understatement,” Casey muttered before speaking more clearly. “She doesn’t want to mess up her mascara.” He had to sit back quickly to avoid the playful swipe from Bella.

Tara joined in the fun. “Like Bella has ever worn mascara.”

“Well it clashes with my combat boots,” Bella said as she lifted one foot from the floor and held it out over the coffee table.

The group laughed as Jules refolded the letters and handed them back to Tara. “Congratulations, Tara. So when are you going to publish a book?”

“And then you can start buying the first round,” Casey said. He stood up and lifted his pint. “Speaking of which, anyone need a refill?” Having finished her celebratory drink, Tara requested a coffee and Claire asked for the same.

In spite of her happiness and pride at having published another poem, Tara had had enough of the spotlight. “Claire, how was your date?”

Jules immediately jumped on the question. “Claire had a date? With whom? Do I know her? Is she here?”

“You mean ‘have I slept with her?’” Bella teased with a playful poke at her lover’s trim stomach.

“Who slept with someone?” Casey set down his pint and handed the coffee cups to his friends before taking a seat. “Certainly not me,” he mumbled under his breath.

Claire picked up her coffee cup and took a sip. “Me either, Case.”

“Spill,” Bella encouraged, joined by Tara.

Claire rolled her eyes before laughing as she remembered the date. “She’s another graduate student in Invertebrate Biology. She’s Sloan’s research assistant.”

“Oh, with the boots,” Jules chimed in.

“Yes, with the boots. She was…” Claire searched for a way to describe the date. “Her favorite movie of all time? No scratch that. The best movie ever?” She waited a few seconds for dramatic effect. “The Wedding Singer.”

Bella smiled encouragingly. “Well, it’s a cute movie.”

“Right,” Claire said slowly, “but the best of all time? The best movie ever made?”

“So better than The Bicycle Thief?” Casey confirmed.

“Citizen Kane.”

“Casablanca.”

“The Godfather, Part II?”

Claire waved her hand at her friends as they all laughed. “My point exactly. I actually rephrased it to make sure that it wasn’t just her favorite movie but the best ever made. The best ever made!”

“Well it shouldn’t disqualify her,” Casey argued. “I’d date her.”

“You’d date anyone, Case,” Jules pointed out.

“Well, only anyone who would date me.” Everyone laughed at the young man’s self-deprecating comment. They all loved him in spite of, or perhaps because of his miserable love-life. Claire often said that his optimism and continued effort to find Ms. Right were her inspiration to do the same.

Jules stood up and picked up a few empty glasses. “Anyone else?” After getting orders she went to the bar.

“I think I’ll take this opportunity,” Bella said as she pointed toward the ladies room.

“So our love lives suck,” Claire concluded. “How about yours, Tara? Any news?”

Tara took a sip of her coffee. “No news, kids.” When they continued looking at her. “I’m just… I mean… I’m not mad at ‘her’” she held up her hands and used air quotes in an obvious quoting of Bella. “But I just don’t know. I mean if I wanted to call her, I mean. How would that conversation, you know, go? How would it start?”

“How about, ‘Hi, Willow’?” Casey suggested, patting Tara’s knee.

“Or, ‘I’ve missed you’?” Claire added.

Tara shook her head. “It’s been two years. Shouldn’t it start to … you know… be o-over, feel over?”

Casey tilted his head to show he was really thinking about Tara’s question. Before he could speak, Jules returned with the pints and set them down. Seeing that they were involved in something heavy, she sat down on the couch silently, and leaned forward. “Maybe not,” he finally said, “maybe it shouldn’t be over. I mean you and she were… lovers, friends, everything for all those years. Maybe you actually found what we’re all supposed to find and now you can’t find anything else even if you were looking.”

“Which you’re not,” Bella added, having returned and joined Jules on the couch.

“You’re both a nightmare and a dream, Tara,” Jules said. The others, including Tara all looked at her harshly. “I mean,” She continued, “that you found true love at a really young age. And it wasn’t some unrequited thing. It wasn’t you loving a teacher or a girl who never loved you back. It was someone as passionate and driven and fun as you. And when someone loves that hard, that passionately, it’s wonderful. But if something goes wrong, it goes wrong just as passionately.”

“Passionately,” Tara agreed with a slightly painful smile.

“But maybe that’s what it’s all about,” Claire offered. The others raised their eyebrows at her and then shrugged as if trying to get her to elaborate. “I mean. Ok, you wanted to be a writer. A poet. And you’re a damn good one. I mean really, better than we ever thought we’d know.”

“Thanks,” Tara whispered, touched by the sincerity of her friend’s tribute.

“And she wants… what? To be a genius? To design things? Figure out how something works? Create new formulas and theories?”

“I guess.”

“And right now you’re both doing that. I mean you have this pool of emotion to build on for your art and she’s obviously driven.” Claire sat back as if trying to think of what else she had to say about it.

“Driven? She’s a machine.” Casey shook his head at Tara. “I know you don’t check up on her, but she’s really well known. Dr. August goes on and on about her work. I mean not just hers but you know, Willow Rosenberg is pretty well known. Especially considering her age.”

“I’ll take your word for it,” Tara said, sipping at her coffee again.

“Hey, let’s cheer up the mood,” Bella said excitedly. Everyone looked at her waiting for her to begin. “Ok, new game: worst ice cream flavor and worst crush-in.”

“Cherry and cherry?” Everyone laughed at Casey’s suggestion. His hatred of cherry was well known. Some of his friends speculated that he was allergic and others reported some bad childhood experience. He wouldn’t say the cause but he even avoided cherry tomatoes because of the name.

“Coffee and marshmallow,” Jules suggested.

Bella looked disappointed at her lover’s suggestion. “No on is trying hard enough. How about blood sausage ice cream with chocolate chip crush-ins.”

“If we can make up ice cream flavors,” Claire laughed, “how about gravy ice cream with wasabi crush-ins?”

Everyone laughed with various groans and declarations of “gross” around the table. By the time the night ended, it didn’t matter any longer who suggested which flavor or just how gross they were. This close-knit group had discussed their love lives, studies, jobs, family, friends, and many other topics.
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Re: Menorah Tales - Update 05/24

Postby quirked_out » Wed May 24, 2006 7:46 pm

I beg on all that is good and holy that you never wait that long to update again, I nearly cried. I waited and waited and finally! Thank you!

Tara's thoughts of them were painfully accurate. They were children for a good deal of their relationship. Neither of them were truly ready to be adults.

Maybe now that they've become the women they were meant to be it would be easier for them to reconcile. It was painful for them to see the changes in each other that neither of them truly understood. They were still in an 'immature' (for lack of a better word) relationship. That relationship couldn't hold the women they were becoming.

But on the whole adult-job-things, go Tara. All published and proud, and Willow, we always knew she was a genius.

much appreciated,

-quirked
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Re: Menorah Tales - Update 05/24

Postby Willowtree252 » Wed May 24, 2006 7:58 pm

:pinky yes this story is so deep thay both pine for each other and can,t move on because thay are supose to be together but thay are having a hard time finding each other and thay are still growing thay will come together soon i hope can,t wait for next update this is so deep and moving :kitty ps :wtkiss soon please
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Re: Menorah Tales - Update 05/24

Postby mole » Wed May 24, 2006 10:11 pm

Debra, another fine chapter in the ongoing saga of Willow and Tara.

The flashback early on touched me for a couple of reasons.

“Books are valuable and precious.” Giles said seriously. He looked directly at Tara. “It’s not just the words within them which make them works of art. Their very workmanship is impressive.”


One, Giles' loving description of books as works of art in their own right, regardless of the words between the covers obvoiusly had a lasting affect on Tara. This small interaction points out just how important a figure Giles is in Tara's life. And two, on a more personal level, my grandmother instilled a love of books within me at a very young age. To this day, I'm intrigued with the way books are assembled, the feel of the covers, the strength of the binding, the smell of the pages. My condo is over-crowded with books because I can't bear to part with them.

But, enough about me...back to the feedback...

Tara's willow-diet, what a marvelous way to describe how we live with emotional pain and rationalize allowing ourselves to experience that pain. Tara gives herself just a minute a day, except during Hannukah, when she allows more time to reflect on what she's lost.

Wow, they've only spoken twice since the party? Geez, talk about stubborn. These two are too much alike for their own good.

Wonderful to hear that Tara is excelling both academically and professionally. I suspect her emotional pain and a need to channel it in some productive manner helped immensely.

I love her group of friends. So comforting to know that she's not holed up somewhere writing depressing love poetry about Willow (well, not ONLY depressing love poetry ;-) ). Despite his resemblence to Xander, Casey makes a good point:

“Maybe not,” he finally said, “maybe it shouldn’t be over. I mean you and she were… lovers, friends, everything for all those years. Maybe you actually found what we’re all supposed to find and now you can’t find anything else even if you were looking.”


If you have truly found "THE ONE" (if such a person even exists), how do you move on? How can it ever really be over? Perhaps there are just natural ebbs and flows to such a relationship, periods where both partners need to be apart in order to grow and come back together stronger than ever.

Jules also makes a good point (quite the insightful group of friends has Tara):

"that you found true love at a really young age. And it wasn’t some unrequited thing. It was someone as passionate and driven and fun as you. And when someone loves that hard, that passionately, it’s wonderful. But if something goes wrong, it goes wrong just as passionately.”


This truly is both a gift and a curse, because the love is so precious, so rare, so powerful but, when it's gone, it leaves a much larger hole.

I know it will take time for Willow and Tara to reconnect and that the road will not be smooth, but here's hoping one of them has the guts to pick up the phone soon. Or maybe, Willow will show up at a poetry reading or Tara will attend a scientific conference in hopes of running into Willow? A Kitten can dream, right?

Thanks, as always, for such a wonderful read,
Michelle
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Re: Menorah Tales - Update 05/24

Postby Thianne » Thu May 25, 2006 5:24 am

“’One Shovelful of Dirt’ and ‘Pistachio.’”


i was thinking, can you write those? so we can read them?

How would that conversation, you know, go? How would it start?”

“How about, ‘Hi, Willow’?” Casey suggested, patting Tara’s knee.

“Or, ‘I’ve missed you’?” Claire added.


yep. a good ol' 'hi willow, i missed you, i think about you everyday, so what about coffee, food, kisses and gay love?' would be perfect. i think willow would get angry, but at least it would be a start.

“Books are valuable and precious.” Giles said seriously. He looked directly at Tara. “It’s not just the words within them which make them works of art. Their very workmanship is impressive.”


i agree completely. i actually learned how to...."build" one, just because i love them. i'm not really good at it, also because i don't have enough time to practice, but i love the fact that i know how to, you know?

anyway, i loved the update and i hope to see another soon, maybe with a phone call, a casual meeting, a surprise....? wait, i don't wanna know. just.....do your best and let us read it!
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Re: Menorah Tales - Update 05/24

Postby Candleshoe » Thu May 25, 2006 9:17 am

Ahh, I love this story, and I am so pleased to see an update. :party

Favourite line?
when someone loves that hard, that passionately, it’s wonderful. But if something goes wrong, it goes wrong just as passionately


So true...

Beautifully evocative and emotion-filled writing. And I think you were so right to go with a vagueness about London.

My lovely doggie thanks you for the name-check! Woof....
"Normal is not something to aspire to, it's something to get away from." - Jodie Foster
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Re: Menorah Tales - Update 05/24

Postby caz » Thu May 25, 2006 11:37 am

Woo Hoo - another one of my favourite's has been updated! :party

Hi Debra, I hope that you and yours are well.

This time we get to see how Tara is doing. I'm pleased that she has made a life for herself and is doing well with her writing. I like her friends - like Faith, they don't seem to have taken sides (even though they haven't met Willow).

You know, this silence could go on for ever if someone doesn't pick up the bloody phone and make the call. Debra, I don't care which one of them does it as long as it happens soon.

Looking forward to your next update. :bounce

Caz
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"I'm a bloodsucking fiend! Look at my outfit!" Willow - Doppelgangland
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Re: Menorah Tales - Update 05/24

Postby notl33t » Thu May 25, 2006 12:03 pm

Wow. This has been really great so far, I don't know how I've been missing it. I really enjoy your writing style and the way you make everything you write seem so plausible. Heck, Willow and Tara's fight remind me of fights I've had to fight with some of my exes. I don't know if your Willow and Tara ever getting back together now....but I'll still jump to check for updates on this!
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Re: Menorah Tales - Update 05/24

Postby justin » Fri May 26, 2006 9:51 am

That was a great update

A good website was as beautiful to her as a Hemingway first-edition.


Well isn't it? :kgeek

Two conversations. Two.


This means that Willow didn't make use of the phone card that Faith gave her, doesn't it? I'm starting to think I'm going to have to retrive my clue stick from the School Days thread and give them a good wacking with it :smash

I like the repartee between Tara and her friends, it was very realistic.

Claire's right about them getting a chance to do the things they wanted to. This means their relationship should be stronger when they get back together.

Though that's not going to happen if they don't talk to each other.

Or maybe they won't. Maybe they'll drift completely apart and don't get back together till some chance meeting. Perhaps at the top of the Empire State building?

Anyway looking forward to next years chapter.
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Re: Menorah Tales - Update 05/24

Postby WillowRTaraM1 » Sun May 28, 2006 12:33 pm

Yay! Excellent update Debra

I really loved the new cast of characters you introduced! Im so glad Tara has some friends in London. It dawned on me right as I was finishing reading who Olivia was :lol Casey reminds me of xander.. with his endearing teddy bearish charm. Is teddy bearish a word? Eh.. it is now :rofl

I can't wait to read about how Willow and Tara's conversation goes! You could take it so many different ways... Im curious which one itll be.

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Re: Menorah Tales - Update 05/24

Postby FineyMcFine » Sun May 28, 2006 3:53 pm

Wow, Debra, these two are taking the definition of "stubborn" to a whole new level. I understand how it can feel when no one wants to be the one to make the first move, but I guess I've never had the strength of will to keep up a silence for that long. Wow. The real question is, how on earth will they repair this rift once someone does make the first move, assuming that it happens eventually and is deliberate? I suppose you could go another route and have them meet up randomly many years in the future after this memory has ebbed quite a bit, but something tells me that's not on the menu.

Speaking of strength of will, Faith must be quite a strong character not to grab them both by the heads and bonk them together. Heh. I'm assuming that she still talks to both of them. On the other hand, intervening that way has never gone well for me, so maybe Faith knows how it would go.

I'm glad Tara has friends in London - I can't imagine how unbearably lonely it would be otherwise. I hope that Willow has friends as well and isn't becoming twisted or bitter from the separation. Update soon, okay? I can't take the angst. ;)
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Re: Menorah Tales - Update 05/24

Postby Kaia » Sun May 28, 2006 4:31 pm

Hi, Debra! :wave

Ouch. The last two updates have been painful to read. I can't help but be happy that Tara has found herself a net of supporting friends that are there for her in the good and the not-so-good times. The interactions were very solid even if I went through the chapter wishing one of them would succesfully compel Tara to call Willow.

Children. They’d been children. Children when they’d met, children when they’d become lovers, and children when they’d torn themselves apart.


And what are they now? With all the not naming the other and not calling and not wanting to know about the other...sounds pretty childish to me. Still. Well...I guess stubborn people are supposed to act like that, nevermind how irritanting it is...lol.

“Willow-thought diet.”


Ahh...Utopia.

You know? It really unnerves me that I don't see how they're gonna either end things properly (which doesn't really have a place here since it's Pens) or start making things better if they don't even talk to each other...Heck, they don't even pronounce each other's names...Damn. Sorry, I'm just a little frustrated.

Thanks again for a wonderful update. I hope you give us more soon. Maybe this time we can have them both in the same update?

Later!

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Re: Menorah Tales - Update 05/24

Postby tarawhipped » Sun May 28, 2006 7:58 pm

Sorry I've been so remiss in leaving feedback, Debra, but just so you know it's nothing personal, I've been neglecting pretty much everyone (I'm an equal opportunity jerk!). I have been anxiously awaiting every update, though (even more so now that the W/T separation is making me very unhappy). I remember chatting with you several months ago, and mentioning how sweet and cute this story was, and you saying something like "haha...wait til chapter" [insert # here...I'm thinking it was 8]. And I didn't say anything at the time, but I was thinking 'you got angst? Bring it on! I love the angst!'

*sigh* That was before I realized the angst would go on for more than oh...a paragraph. Silly me, forgetting that this is from the woman who managed to string out the School Days mistaken identity for...what was it? 47 chapters? ;)

And I know you'll get them back together, and it will be beautiful, and sigh-worthy, and earned. You write emotional intensity as well as anything I've read. I love Tara's thoughts that they were both children when they fell in love, etc. There was a naivete to their relationship, maybe because it was so accepted, and reciprocated. Not that love has to be hard, but they definitely had it pretty easy as far as supportive friends and family go. They took it for granted that they would always be together, and while I like that neither one gave up their own plans to follow the other to school, there's that naivete again that they seemingly didn't anticipate their relationship being stressed.

The last two chapters work so well together, which I didn't really think about at the time, but in rereading it stood out. Even though Willow's only in 9, and Tara in 10, there's a progression that makes sense for both of them. In 9, the hurt is too fresh, which is driven home so well by your omission of Tara's name. In 10, even though tara never says Willow's name, she obviously doesn't mind her friends using it. Maybe by next year they can not only say each other's names, they can actually talk. Maybe? Pretty please? Can't wait, whatever happens.

Oh yeah, and I love that you have Ira and Sheila keeping in touch with Tara. Very cool.

-Cam
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Re: Menorah Tales - Update 05/24

Postby watty » Mon May 29, 2006 4:47 am

Tara seems to have settled into her sadness. Makes it harder for her to get herself out of that deep hole that she is in emotionally, and to communicate with Willow. I expect the same is the case with Willow, on the other side of the Atlantic. Although they've only spoken twice, it seems to me that there has not been any moving on. The idea of "someone else, someone new" has probably not even entered their brain.

Children. They’d been children. Children when they’d met, children when they’d become lovers, and children when they’d torn themselves apart.

Perhaps Tara will give consideration that children are allowed to make mistakes, even though the mistakes were very hurtful; and perhaps she'll begin to forgive Willow a little.

She has friends around her. Good friends who understand her and rally round. There's a small mention of Willow that has me worried that she doesn't have the same:
“Driven? She’s a machine.” Casey shook his head at Tara. “I know you don’t check up on her, but she’s really well known. Dr. August goes on and on about her work. I mean not just hers but you know, Willow Rosenberg is pretty well known. Especially considering her age.”

My speculation is that Willow has thrown herself into her work and not much else.

It worries me about how they'd get back to the same place in order to start to patch things up, since I cannot imagine either of them taking the initiative to get in touch. It'll take either a chance encounter, some sort of important event (wedding, illness, death) or some elaborate scheming by their friends and family.

Can't wait for next year.
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Re: Menorah Tales - Update 05/24

Postby JustSkipIt » Mon May 29, 2006 4:59 am

I'll get to replies in a few days. Thanks for the great feedback. I have to admit that there's something really important in this chapter. And as each feedback has gone up, I've thought, "nope. Not mentioned there." But then I knew that Watty would catch it...
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Re: Menorah Tales - Update 05/24

Postby Artemis » Tue May 30, 2006 9:05 am

Okay, Willow hasn't called - as it's said in this chapter, passionate love fall apart passionately, which makes sense. Willow's turmoil would have to be strong to resist Faith's prompting - Faith doesn't admit defeat easily, after all. My guess is that Willow's unconsciously done the same as Tara, 'rationed' herself, to keep from thinking about Tara all the time. Only while Tara's the kind of person who can do that consciously, I expect Willow's done it more by accident - probably thought 'I need to take my mind of Tara, I'll just concentrate on work' or something, and then gotten so wrapped up in that that she doesn't realise she's distracting herself anymore.

It was nice to see Tara's life apart from Willow - her friends, her group, her work, what she's built on her own. That'd be good to see even if she and Willow were together - everyone needs their own space and lives, even when they're happy to be sharing life too. And it was very true what was said, that she and Willow got together as children, emotionally speaking. No doubt a big factor in them allowing their relationship to deteriorate was simply that neither of them could really imagine that it could fall apart. They've always been together, after all.
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Re: Menorah Tales - Update 05/24

Postby db » Tue May 30, 2006 11:39 am

How long can these two keep up this stubborness?

When do they get to decide: "you know what, I need to resolve this because it has been hanging over my head and making me miserable for two years"?!

two years,..

but Tara's still lighting her menorah.

Someone needs to get on the horn and apologize. Both of 'em need to do a lot of explaining and apologizing and saying "I never stopped loving you"... but right now I'm voting for Willow. Willow knows she was wrong. She admitted as much to Faith LAST YEAR. She knows she screwed up. She needs to bite the bullet and make that call.

Please let them get in touch before another year passes by.

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Re: Menorah Tales - Update 05/24

Postby Willowtree252 » Wed May 31, 2006 8:08 am

:pinky I don,t think a phone call is going to do it thay must see each other and this can be fixed i belive in true love but i am dying here
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Re: Menorah Tales - Update 05/24

Postby JustSkipIt » Wed May 31, 2006 6:32 pm

quirked_out – Ha ha. I think if you’re waiting for writers on this board to never wait very long nor that long to update, you’ll be pretty sad over the years. I think that was a month which felt like long but I’ve read updates 1, 2, even 6 or 7 months in the making. Anyway, I don’t try to be so long but life gets in the way and honestly, I just haven’t felt like writing very much.

I definitely think the girls were children both in their ages and in the way they acted. But as you say, now they’re becoming adults and perhaps they can work toward their adult relationship. And yes, both of them are definitely accomplishing a lot.

Thanks

[hr]

Dianneswillowtree – Tee hee for the pink elephants. I love them too. I’m not sure that I’d say they’re pining but they’re both very aware of their connection. To me, pining would be if they sat at home doing nothing else but they both have friends and are working/studying. Of course Tara spends a minute a day thinking of Willow but she’s not like laying in bed crying or anything. But I get your point.

I’m working on the next update but it will be a few weeks at least. Thanks so much.

[hr]

mole – Thank you so much. Yes, Giles has been an incredibly important figure in Tara’s life. Incredibly. Thank you so much for sharing your feelings for both your grandmother and books. That is really beautiful.

I’m glad you liked the idea of the Willow-thought diet. I read the book A Beautiful Mind on which the movie was based. Of course the book is better but one of the things that really touched me about his dealing with his illness once he realized it was that he basically put himself on a “diet.” He kind of identified the type of thoughts that were not “normal” and just refused to have them (to the extent that he could). And I know that thought is the precursor to word and word is the precourser to action so I think it’s important to control what we think. If I spend the day thinking “I can’t write,” I won’t write but if I think, “I will write 100 words today,” then I will. It’s incredibly powerful and Tara has discovered that.

I agree that they’re both very stubborn. They still haven’t spoken since last year.
I suspect her emotional pain and a need to channel it in some productive manner helped immensely.
I think your assessment is right on. I would imagine that she actually had to learn how to temper some of the raw emotion.

Lol: despite Casey = Xander. I’m glad you like her friends.
If you have truly found "THE ONE" (if such a person even exists), how do you move on? How can it ever really be over? Perhaps there are just natural ebbs and flows to such a relationship, periods where both partners need to be apart in order to grow and come back together stronger than ever.
Very well put.

All good guesses and dreams regarding their meeting up again. Well done.

Thank you.

[hr]

Thianne -
i was thinking, can you write those? so we can read them?
Boy is that not something anyone wants to see. Did you read Survivor: Ash Island? All the tree mail: that’s pretty much the extent of my poetic gift so I don’t think we want any poetry from me, particularly poetry that I then claim is published. But you have given me a laugh.

Lol: gay love. That’s one of my favorite W/T non-interactions. I should have worked it in here. Gee, points off for me but on for you.

That’s totally cool about learning how to build books. I have a friend who was a book binder but now she’s in real estate. Thanks so much.

[hr]

Candleshoe – Thanks re: favorite line. I agree. Glad my London vagueness agrees with you. Again, thanks for the research & doggie name. Tee hee.

[hr]

caz – Well thank you so much. All is well; thanks for asking. We had a good long weekend and now are right back into the week proper.

I think that Tara’s friends are definitely “on her side” but they haven’t been pressed for any side-taking since they don’t even know Willow. They just know and love their friend and know that she loves/loved Willow very deeply and was very hurt but the breakup.

You are right that someone has got to make a move. We’ll see how that goes.

Thanks.

[hr]

notl33t – Welcome. I’m so glad to see you here. I hope that their fight is realistic so thanks for the vote of confidence. Thanks so much.

[hr]

Justin – Lol: websites.

No. Willow indeed did not make any use of the phone card.
arting to think I'm going to have to retrive my clue stick from the School Days thread and give them a good wacking with it
Well, there’s a consideration but reading that fic landed you in the hospital if I remember so maybe I’ll take pity and make it quicker. After all, none of us are getting younger.

the repartee between Tara and her friends, it was very realistic.
Thanks so much. I don’t consider myself a Mary but I try… :grin I definitely agree that they will be more mature and stronger when/if (like there is mystery here on the KB) they get together again. Lol: Empire State Building.

Thanks.

[hr]

WillowRTaraM1 – Hello. I’m so glad that you liked Tara’s friends.
It dawned on me right as I was finishing reading who Olivia
I wondered if anyone would catch it but it’s not particularly obscure. I will say, I’ve never seen Olivia in a KB fic before though…

Sure: teddy bearish. Lol.

Thanks so much.

[hr]
SallyMcFine – Sally with the Lesbo Street Cred. So if I saw you on the street, I would be impressed with how much you know about…Lesbos and all things Lesbos?

I’d totally agree about their being too stubborn. I think at first, it didn’t seem stubborn so much as not wanting to make the first move and then it seemed like it was too long. Does that make sense? And of course Tara leaving the country made Willow think that Tara was declaring it “over” and made Tara move on (somewhat). But yes, stubborn. My son is very stubborn and my wife is always saying to him, “How did you get so stubborn?” or “You’re so stubborn. I wonder where you get that?” and then we both laugh because she is like the definition of stubborn. They’re so alike in so many ways. Tee hee.

ose you could go another route and have them meet up randomly many years in the future after this memory has ebbed quite a bit, but something tells me that's not on the menu.
But then you never know:

[blockquote]Willow moved slowly for slowly was the only way she could move now. Her walker allowed her as much mobility as many of her friends but the aches and pains in her hips were something she had to live with on a daily basis. She approached the small dresser and gently touched her most valuable possession—not her two Nobel Prizes in Physics nor the original patent for an anti-gravity boot or even the picture of her emerging from her first trip in the space shuttle—a faded and wrinkled picture of her first love, the blue eyes still shining from the paper.

But she didn’t have time for memories. Tuesday was borscht day and her bridge foursome would be waiting in the day room. She patted her hair and proceeded from her room feeling wistful.

Fifteen minutes later she took her usual seat at the card table to wait on her companions. She was always first and she liked it that way. Esther arrived next and sat down with a obvious grimace. “That Ruth. She’s always running late. Today she’s showing her new roommate around. Says she’s bringing her to our game because Claire’s granddaughter is visiting. I tried to tell her that we don’t let just any one play. This is a highly competitive…”

Willow never liked listening to Esther’s never-ending litany of the wrongs of those around her and today was no exception, especially when she saw Ruth and her new roommate enter. The newcomer was quite shy as shown by the way her gray hair hung over her eyes as she entered the room. When she looked up and those brilliant blue eyes locked with Willow’s…

[/blockquote]

Lol Faith and bonking. That would be fun to see wouldn’t it? Yes, she is still friends with both. More on that later. Both are doing fine friends wise—you have my word.

Thanks always.

[hr]

Kaia – Hello there! Sorry they’ve been painful. I guess the good thing is that they’re not fighting but they’re also not together. I get that about liking Tara’s friends but wishing they would push her harder. I’m not sure that the not saying the other’s name is a childish thing as much as kind of trying to ration out the pain and I think the not asking questions is the same thing. Basically, they don’t want to hear that they’ve been replaced. Lol=stubborn people.

Sorry for the frustration but I’m glad you’re reading too. I’m working on the next update and have a few pages of it written. It’s going to be considerably longer than the last two. I’ll say that.

Thanks.
[hr]

tarawhipped – Well I’m doing a little, “Cam’s posting in my thread” dance now. Ok, there’s no elvis dancing emoticon so :pinky :pinky :pinky (now imagine the elephants are either Elvis or me).

Anyway, I totally know it’s not personal. People get busy and I’m the same way. I try really hard to get feedback posted but sometimes it’s a choice between real life and posting fb or reading stories and posting fb or writing and posting fb and fb comes second. So I definitely get it and appreciate your stopping in now. BTW, you’re fic is on my Lists so if you have something better than write feedback to do, that’s ok.

And yes, I’ve remembered that chat convo and wondered if you were still reading and had noticed the #8.

*sigh* That was before I realized the angst would go on for more than oh...a paragraph. Silly me, forgetting that this is from the woman who managed to string out the School Days mistaken identity for...what was it? 47 chapters?
Hmmm. 47 chapters. Gee that does sound fun…

You write emotional intensity as well as anything I've read.
Thank you.

I can totally see what you’re saying about their naiveté. I think that’s a good word for their problem. They just thought it would always be natural and easy. It never occurred to them that they would have to work at their relationship. Thanks for your observations about the progression of the chapters. It was definitely intentional so I appreciate the comments.

Thanks so much. [hr]

watty – Hey there. I’m always thrilled to see fb from you (and since you’re excellent at always providing it, I’m frequently thrilled). Tee hee.

Hmmm. Tara’s sadness. I think she’s probably sad but not necessarily depressed. Like she knows something is missing from her life and knows what it is but she’s not so much in a hole to use your term. Definitely there hasn’t been any moving on.

Perhaps Tara will give consideration that children are allowed to make mistakes, even though the mistakes were very hurtful; and perhaps she'll begin to forgive Willow a little.
Excellent point and I definitely think that it’s true. I mean if you think about it, their mistakes were the mistakes of lifestyle and growing older. I don’t know if that makes sense.

My speculation is that Willow has thrown herself into her work and not much else.
A good guess. We’ll see how that is going in the next update.

I can understand your worry but I can promise that they will have/find/make the occasion to meet up again. How that happens, I’m not saying. Tee hee.

Ok, I’m still waiting for you to notice something very interesting/maddening about this update. Given that no one has noticed, I’ll drop a hint: do you notice anything that makes you think Tara is more “at fault” than it seemed earlier?

Thanks

[hr]
JustSkipIt – Hi me.

[hr]
Artemis – Nope, no calls in either direction.
Willow's turmoil would have to be strong to resist Faith's prompting - Faith doesn't admit defeat easily, after all.
I would actually expect that in this case Faith would sort of toss it out there and leave it for Willow to decide. Of course if she does that every month, that’s a lot of non-picked up suggestions.

I could definitely see both of them doing the rationing the thoughts and Willow doing it through her work. I totally agree about Tara’s need for her friends. We got to see Willow in a social element in part 8 so it’s nice to see it here for Tara.

Thanks.

[hr]
db – I don’t know what your handle stands for but since I’m a programmer, you’re now a database to me. Tee hee.

We’ll see how long the stubbornness can last. Tara is definitely still lighting the menorah. She knows what she feels.
Both of 'em need to do a lot of explaining and apologizing and saying "I never stopped loving you"... but right now I'm voting for Willow. Willow knows she was wrong. She admitted as much to Faith LAST YEAR. She knows she screwed up. She needs to bite the bullet and make that call.
So right and I like your logic about Willow needing to be the one to make the effort.

We’ll see what the next year brings.

[hr]
Dianneswillowtree – My dedicated fan. Hi. Thanks so much.
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Re: Menorah Tales - Update 05/24

Postby Willowtree252 » Wed May 31, 2006 7:44 pm

:pinky I will wait as long as it takes because it is always a reward !!!!!!what we are missing is it about the books and how willow loved them? I trust you with my heart . I know you will not break it much longer I will have :wtkiss hopeful sooner than later :kitty :kitty :kitty :kitty :kitty
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Re: Menorah Tales - Update 05/24

Postby db » Wed May 31, 2006 10:30 pm

db – I don’t know what your handle stands for but since I’m a programmer, you’re now a database to me. Tee hee.


Sorry to disappoint (although I did help write the specs for a database once). It stands for doodlebug.

db/doodlebug.

It was my third grade nickname because I am an incessant doodler & always reversed those letters (they are also my initials).

... but I'll answer to just about anything starting with d (except mean stuff) :)

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Re: Menorah Tales - Update 05/24

Postby mole » Thu Jun 01, 2006 4:54 am

JustSkipIt wrote:The newcomer was quite shy as shown by the way her gray hair hung over her eyes as she entered the room. When she looked up and those brilliant blue eyes locked with Willow’s…


Oh sure, tease us why don't you:) As much fun reading this story would bring, you're not going to keep them apart THAT long, are you?

Michelle
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Re: Menorah Tales - Update 05/24

Postby Kaia » Thu Jun 01, 2006 4:23 pm

Heya again, Debra.

I think I've read chapter 10,000 times (jk, only 3...te he!). And I know I already left fb but I just wanted say I forgot to mention a line that really made me go ARGHHH!!!

Tara remembered her own cold tone as she retorted that it hardly seemed a priority. Willow’s pained silence was followed by a tearful “good luck” and a dial tone.


I mean, come on. Who could blame Willow for hanging up (or for not calling again, for all that matters) after hearing that making things better is hardly a priority?? It really made my blood boil, I was so angry at Tara at the moment...

Come to think about it, I find myself reacting (sometimes violently, in a completely non-physical way) to a lot of the emotions you portrait in your updates...kudos! to you for that.

Later!

K.
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Re: Menorah Tales - Update 05/24

Postby Darth Pacula » Sat Jun 03, 2006 11:16 pm

G'day, Debra.

Sorry for the delayed nature of this feedback. Reality has a way of running away with all of your spare time, doesn't it?

But that's beside the point; lets get down to the much more important issue of leaving feedback for the latest chapter of your latest masterpiece. And that's not just arse-kissing. Well ... not completely anyway. :grin

So, we hit the two year mark of the rift between Willow and Tara. Two years? Two freakin' years, and they've only spoken twice? Argh! Talk about avoiding your problems!

One fight, which seemed to snowball from small, but bitterly nurtured seeds of dissatisfaction until it was an avalanche of angst that buried everything in it's wake. One fight, and do they try to talk things over, or even scream and shout at each other?

No, they run away from their problems, they take the path of least resistance. They don't talk, and the rift widens and widens, and all the while they're both too afraid to be the one to take the first step.

One year turns into two, and they still have only talked twice. Twice! Neither one can move on (nor should they!), and neither one even appears to have tried to do so. How could they? They never really seemed to have the break-up itself. They had the fight, then jumped a step right to being broken-up. Unless we've missed something, they never had the confrontation, the conflict, the event.

This is kind of annoying me now. They're in love; real, true, epic love, right? I can understand how the little things can seem to accumulate, to build up over time until they bury you alive and even the idea of digging yourself out seems incomprehensible. I understand that.

But this is true love, dammit. You don't let that go. You don't give up, not like this. You don't throw it away in an instant, a momentary whim born of childish pique. You hold on, you dig in your fingernails, you make them pry off your cold, dead fingers. You never, ever give up.

Or you end up with what both Willow and Tara seem to have; a half-empty existence, where everything seems wan and insubstantial, and not really there. An existence where you can still feel the full spectrum of human emotion, but where something is always lacking.

And blimey, would you look at all that? Didn't really mean to go off like that, but ... that's what I feel. C'est la vie.

Right'o then, something more feedback-y in nature then. I liked Tara's musing on the unde-appreciated beauty of books. I love books, even if I read them more like Willow. It's a rare day that goes by when I don't read something.

There was a little piece of information here, seemingly inconsequential. It might mean nothing at all, but it seems to me that Giles was a part of their lives for much longer than in cannon. You made mention of him in both Middle and High School, right? Translating that into the equivalent in the Australian School system, that's ... what ... 6th, 7th grade? okay then, potentially 6-8. That would imply to me that Giles was a part of their lives even before Faith was likely to have become the Slayer. :hmm

I'm a bit conflicted about the age issue as it applies to when they got together. Sure, when you're young emotions seem more powerful (or so I've heard); every crush is a perfect love, every argument a knife twisting in your heart. But does that negate what they have, what they feel? Does their age make it less real, less true?

Bollocks to that!

It's good to know that Tara has been making a life for herself though. She shouldn't just hole up and pine for what was (and will be again, for lo, is this not Pens?). It's good that she finally got out and found herself some friends.

The back and forth between Tara and her friends was fun to read. Very reminiscent of scooby-age.

And after all that, I seem to have run out of stuff to comment on. Bring on the next year!

Cheers,
Paul.
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Re: Menorah Tales - Update 05/24

Postby FineyMcFine » Sun Jun 04, 2006 6:47 am

I had to get some remedial help from Debra to figure this out, but something else in this chapter appears to be that Tara knew about her offer to study abroad and had possibly even accepted it before she went to visit Willow.

The blonde remembered the day she’d gone to visit Giles at the library and discuss her option to study in England for a year. She found him in his office eating a cold turkey sandwich and cursing Thanksgiving leftovers. His reaction to her request for counsel was nearly as excited as she’d ever seen him as he described his favorite collections in the British Museum. He offered invaluable advice in finding a place to live and learning her way around the city. And she’d been at the Sunnydale High School Library for two hours before he casually asked if Willow was excited about her opportunity. When she didn’t respond, he’d simply muttered, “Oh. I see. Well then,” polished his glasses, and continued discussing her specific interests for her year abroad.

Her year abroad.

Her planned year abroad.


When I first read this, I had assumed this was after their fight. But in rereading it and figuring out where Chanukah falls, it's actually before their fight.

Now, why would Tara keep this news from Willow? I can think of a few reasons. First, maybe she already suspects Willow of cheating on her, at least subconsciously, and wants to punish her. Or maybe she really wants to do this but is having a hard time thinking about how far away it is and how much she'll miss Willow, so she creates a fight and a breakup so she won't have to deal with the reality of an overseas relationship. Or maybe it's a combination of the two. Anyway, very subtle, Debra, with the timeline thing.
Last edited by FineyMcFine on Mon Jun 05, 2006 6:25 am, edited 2 times in total.
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Re: Menorah Tales - Update 05/24

Postby Darth Pacula » Mon Jun 05, 2006 1:27 am

Whoa! That is subtle! So subtle in fact that it sailed directly over my head until Sally so helpfully pointed it out.

:hmm That's very interesting. And Kudo's to you, Debra, for coming up with such subtlety.

Cheers,
Paul.
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Re: Menorah Tales - Update 05/24

Postby JustSkipIt » Tue Jun 06, 2006 2:08 pm

More replies. I’m making good progress on the next update. Thanks for your patience.

Dianneswillowtree – Thanks for your patience. You can see that Sally has uncovered the mystery of what everyone is missing. (Thanks, Sally). Thanks.

[hr]

db – doodlebug! Awesome. I called my son doodle or doodler for a few months before it became really important to use his name so he would learn it.

[hr]

mole – No. I promise I won’t keep them apart that long. I’m glad it amused.

[hr]

Kaia -
I mean, come on. Who could blame Willow for hanging up (or for not calling again, for all that matters) after hearing that making things better is hardly a priority?? It really made my blood boil, I was so angry at Tara at the moment...
I agree with you but I’m not sure that I read that the same way you do. It could be that Tara is saying that it’s not her priority or that she doesn’t believe that it’s Willow’s priority. Either way, you’re right that hanging up seems like an ok response to it.

You’re very welcome and thanks for the non-physically violent impulses. I’ll take it as compliment.

Thanks.
[hr]

Darth Pacula – Believe me that I totally get it about reality and it’s way of creeping in all the time. Yep, 2 years for the stubborn girls.
They never really seemed to have the break-up itself. They had the fight, then jumped a step right to being broken-up. Unless we've missed something, they never had the confrontation, the conflict, the event.
I love this. You’re so totally right. They really never did have a break-up. It’s more a conflict and drifting away so they both lack completion. Great pick up.

I’m not sure that either of them has a “half-empty existence” as much as they just have NO romantic lives at all. The other parts of their lives are very fulfilling but romantically, they’re totally stifled. Anyway, thanks for your emotion.
it seems to me that Giles was a part of their lives for much longer than in cannon. You made mention of him in both Middle and High School, right? Translating that into the equivalent in the Australian School system, that's ... what ... 6th, 7th grade? okay then, potentially 6-8. That would imply to me that Giles was a part of their lives even before Faith was likely to have become the Slayer. Hmm
Yes. He was part of their lives before she was called and was a very important part of their lives.

Does their age make it less real, less true?

Bollocks to that!
No to the question or yes to the bollocks. In other words, age doesn’t make it invalid in any way. Their love is true and passionate and real in spite of their age.

Glad you liked the Scooby-like friend convo. Thanks so much.

Sally-time-onyour hands -
Tara knew about her offer to study abroad and had possibly even accepted it before she went to visit Willow.
Like I said, I really thought Watty would get it without the hints but that’s ok. I kind of buried it. I considered having it come up at the time of the fight but felt like it pushed the “who’s fault?” question into Tara’s court too far. Now we know that she’s got lots of blame herself but it wasn’t in the fight.
When I first read this, I had assumed this was after their fight. But in rereading it and figuring out where Chanukah falls, it's actually before their fight.
Technically Chanukah varies from year to year because it’s on the Hebrew, not the Julian calendar. A few years ago it was the day after Thanksgiving. But we know that the year of the breakup it was after finals so that would be middle of December or so…

Your speculations are all very good on the why for Tara. I’m not saying but please make up as many theories as you want…

Thanks.

[hr]
Darth Pacula – Yep, subtle. Thanks.
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Re: Menorah Tales - Update 05/24

Postby Useful_Oxymoron » Tue Jun 06, 2006 3:02 pm

Children. They’d been children. Children when they’d met, children when they’d become lovers, and children when they’d torn themselves apart.

And still, Willow was the only woman she’d ever imagined a life with. She allowed herself a minute every night. One minute to imagine falling asleep to the sound of Willow’s voice telling a childish anecdote, to her hand holding Tara’s fingers in her own, to the scent of her hair and the softness of her skin.

Her Willow-diet.


Wow, this was beautiful. It's nice to see Tara working on something of her own, but I'm glad that Willow and Tara have at least not officially broken up yet. Speaking from experience, I know how hard it is to keep up a relationships when you're in different schools. My then gf and I couldn't manage, and holland isn't even 150 miles across. Growing apart is the biggest danger to any relationship, and it's such insidious thing... usually when you find out what's happening, it's already too late.

Can't wait for the next update!
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Re: Menorah Tales - Update 05/24

Postby Wolfy_willow » Wed Jun 07, 2006 7:48 am

:wtkiss

I got to part 8 and i loved every moment. but you cannot keep it there you have to finish or i will just die, you know this right?? :pray Finsh please please please.

<3 Wolfy Willow
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Re: Menorah Tales - Update 06/08

Postby JustSkipIt » Thu Jun 08, 2006 4:58 am

Feedback: I had it and lost it. I’ll catch up later if you don’t mind?



Title – Menorah Tales – Part 11

Author – JustSkipIt

Pairing – T/W

Feedback – Yes, please

Spoilers – None

Rating – G- PG

Disclaimer – Joss Whedon and Mutant Enemy own Willow and Tara and the Buffyverse.



About a Year Later

Willow took a slow sip of her mocha and looked around the small coffee shop in the corner of the bookstore. She’d been to a lot of bookstores and was very impressed. G’s Books as the large banner over the door and signs all around the place proclaimed had the small shop feel to it in spite of its impressive selection. She spent her first hours here browsing the Physics and then Engineering sections and found them to be pretty well stocked. They appeared to only have scientific works in English but the clerk who came by to ask if she could help assured Willow that they could order any book that was still in print. Her foray into fiction had brought up fond memories of her attempts (one successful, one cut short) to read the entire middle school and then high school libraries. Of course she would have finished the Sunnydale High School library if she hadn’t left school early to attend college.

Yesterday was her first visit to G’s Books but she already felt like the store itself was an old friend. Much of the light was natural and the few fluorescents were mild. The wood paneling was elegant but not dark so that the space felt large. The owners had obviously caved to market pressure to put in a small coffee shop where Willow now sat and nervously twisted her shirt hem. Exhaling deeply she forced herself to concentrate on her book and worry about later, well, later.

Concentrating on the small volume in her hands was a challenge in itself. Every page, every poem seemed to evoke a universe of memories. The few verses which didn’t march through her memory gave her a different appreciation of the work. A few of the poems, “The Librarian” and “Slow Dancing” made her smile with their subtle humor. Others, “A Shovelful of Dirt” and “Words Once Spoken” literally brought tears to her eyes. She could feel the pain as if it were happening all over again while still admiring the perfection of the art. Willow wondered if other people reading these works would feel they knew Tara as she did. As she used to.

As she wanted to again.

[blockquote]Faith answered the phone loudly on the third ring. “This better be about an apocalypse.” When Willow didn’t speak, Faith prompted her. “Red?”

“Yeah.”

Faith breathed deeply and Willow could hear her shifting the phone and moving around in her bed. “Do you know it’s 2:45 in the morning?”

“Yeah.” Willow ran her forearm across her nose and sniffled.

“Ok. You’re calling me in the middle of the night. I’m guessing that it’s not that you and Tara are lying in bed and you wanted me to be the first to hear that you’re getting married?”

Willow smirked even though Faith couldn’t possibly see her. “Good guess, Faith.”

“So?”

“Where is she, Faith?” Willow set her jaw. “I know that I never asked before but I have to know. Where is she? Is she seeing anyone? Does she still think about me?”

Faith took a deep breath. “I love you, Red.” She waited a few more seconds. “Are you safe?”

“Huh? Safe? Yeah. I’m SafeyMcSafe,” she laughed.

Faith let out a similarly relieved laugh. “Ok. It’s the middle of the night and our minds and hearts don’t always work the same in the dark. Call me tomorrow and I’ll give you the 4-1-1 on her.”

Willow pouted for a few seconds. “Everything?”

“Everything, Willow. Now go to sleep.”

“Ok. Good night, Faithy McFaith.” Willow giggled.

“Good night, Willow McWill.”
[/blockquote]

Faith was as good as her word when Willow called the next morning at 8:02, not that Willow had doubted it as she lay awake for the next five hours. But she felt it was finally time to find Tara. Yes she could have done a search for the blonde on the Net but she wanted to know some other details. As Willow’s career progressed, her options laid out in front of her, she’d found it increasingly obvious that she couldn’t make any decisions until she knew what her chances were, if there was any chance with Tara.

And now, Ms. Plan-Everything, Ms. Options-Confirmed and Fire-Exits located, sat in the coffee shop of a San Jose bookstore, counting the minutes until 7:00. The book was, simply put, brilliant. Willow had known for years how incredibly talented Tara was. Even when they were kids, her writing was amazingly powerful. But this… It was obvious that somewhere in the last three or four years, Tara had honed her writing skill. Willow lacked the vocabulary to property discuss or even understand the passion and expression of Tara’s art. What she could understand was that Tara had found a way to whittle the point of her feelings to the exact word or expression which could cause the reader to feel it in her heart and soul.

She had read every poem at least four times. The blurb on the back cover was vague and highly complementary hinting at young genius, precocious talent, and emotional pain and loss. The small picture showed Tara in ¾ profile—a clear black and white photo that nearly made Willow’s mouth water. She found herself stroking her fingertips over the blonde’s eyelids, nose, and jaw line for minutes at a time. She remembered and forced herself (unsuccessfully) to not think about the times she’d done just that for real. It had been a guilty pleasure, then an obsession, and finally an inside joke between the two girls as Willow traced and traced her lover’s features. “Sculpting” they both called it—Willow’s lack of artistic talent fuelling the irony.

Even though the pamphlet announcing the reading clearly said that Tara worked at the store, Willow hadn’t caught a glimpse of her ex-lover today nor yesterday. She hadn’t felt that she could ask someone when the blonde would be in so she spent most of the day browsing, reading, and drinking coffee or mochas with the fantastic honey-sweetened muffins in the shop. She looked again at her watch to see that it was only 35 minutes until the reading. Although she’d planned very little about this visit—this ambush her mind kept accusing her—she did know that she wanted to join the reading just as it was about to start or just after it started and sit in the back. The last thing she wanted was to pull Tara’s focus or throw off her delivery.

And what did she want? What did she think was possible? Would Tara smile, laugh, pull her into a tight embrace? Faith had sworn that Tara wasn’t seeing anyone but did that mean that she would want to even talk to Willow? She’d been so so hurt, the last time they spoke.

And these poems. She knew the story behind “Words Once Spoken” or at least her story. She didn’t know Tara’s side until she’d read it. And there were other works here too that hinted at the darkness following their breakup. She smiled as she thought of a few poems that hinted at better times too. A very small part of her wanted to feel used to see their most intimate moments so clearly expressed on the page but the larger part wanted to stand on a table and point across the room shouting, “I did that! That’s the woman I loved and I made her feel that way!” The woman you still love, her internal critic shouted back. The woman you should have followed across the ocean, should have followed out of the party, should have followed anywhere…

She wondered what she would say when they were alone. In a dream she’d seen it go so smoothly when she was honest and a little desperate:

[blockquote]Things fall apart. They fall apart so hard. You can't ever put them back the way they were. You know, it takes time. You can't just ... have coffee and expect… There's just so much to work through. Trust has to be built again, on both sides … You have to learn if ... if we're even the same people we were, if you can fit in each other's lives. It's a long... important process, and ... can we just skip it? Can-can you just be kissing me now? [/blockquote]

But this wasn’t a dream. It was reality and reality meant that there were things to work through.

Did Tara want to work through anything? Would she be happy to see Willow or turn her back on the redhead?

6:48. Willow didn’t know whether she wanted time to speed up or slow down. She stowed her book in her bag and made a trip to the bathroom, taking extra time to check her hair, her face, her appearance. She looked under the stalls to confirm that she was alone and faced the mirror. “Hi, Tara…” Her courage failed her. What would she say?

When she emerged from the bathroom it was a few minutes before seven. She nearly crept toward the reading area. The store had apparently done some rearranging for this event as a few bookcases were pushed closer together than would be useful. Forty to fifty chairs were lined up in front of a few facing chairs and a small table which held a bottle of water. Willow stood next to a bookcase and appraised the crowd—45 or so audience members—who seemed to all hold copies of the book. Most were young women and her gaydar was getting such heavy signals she felt like she needed to shut it off for the evening.

Even though Faith had sworn, had promised that Tara wasn’t seeing anyone, Willow couldn’t help but wonder. What if one of these girls were Tara’s girlfriend? Her-Willow could hardly even think the word-lover? Maybe Tara was seeing someone and hadn’t told Faith about it. It wasn’t impossible.

Tara stood to the side of the stage area. Really there was no stage; it was just the chair and table and water bottle in a cleared area facing the audience. She was speaking to two other women quietly. Her hair was darker than Willow had ever seen it. Willow remembered when Tara was young, how she would put lemon juice in her hair before going out in the sun to lighten it. Apparently she had given up on that habit. Now her hair was almost light brown, the length past her shoulders. It was pulled back by a pewter hair clasp that Willow recognized as belonging to Tara’s mother. That clasp was the only part of Tara’s outfit the redhead had seen before. Tara wore a long-sleeve blouse of a brilliant royal blue and a khaki skirt with embroidery along the hemline. On her feet were a pair of brown sandals and her ears were adorned with a pair of small silver earrings with some sort of bauble hanging down an inch or so. Much as the fantasy appealed to the redhead, Willow was pretty certain that walking up and stroking the earrings was not going to be a successful approach.

The conversation between Tara and the other two women broke up and one of them stepped to the podium. Willow quickly slid into a seat on the aisle in the second row from the back. The girl next to her shifted her backpack to rest it against the other leg of her chair and gave the redhead a slow look up and down.

“Hello everyone. Thank you for coming.” The woman at the podium had a nice speaking voice that resonated through the close space. “I am Gay Treanert, the owner of G’s books. I have the very special honor tonight of introducing a poet, writer, and friend-- Tara Maclay.” Willow joined in the applause at the mention of Tara’s name.

“Before Tara takes the podium to read a few of her very powerful poems,” Gay explained, “Please know that she will be reading for about 30-40 minutes. Then she will be signing copies of this her first publication which is available at the display near the registers.”

For a few minutes Gay read from the initial reviews for Tara’s freshman effort. Willow attempted to concentrate on the woman’s words but she’d read them herself earlier in the day and really could only concentrate on watching Tara. The blonde looked a little nervous but not nearly what the girl Willow once knew would have been. In fact, Tara looked downright calm compared to the butterflies swarming around Willow’s GI tract. So far it was obvious that Tara hadn’t noticed her ex-girlfriend in the crowd and Willow didn’t know what would happen when she did. She was starting to really question her plan to just show up. What if it completely threw Tara off in her reading? She didn’t want to ruin Tara’s big day.

When Gay completed her introduction and announced “our own Tara Maclay,” Tara walked slowly over to the podium, stopping to accept a hug from the store’s owner on the way. The applause was louder than before and it seemed to Willow that Tara stood a little straighter and walked taller as she heard the sound. She sipped from her water bottle before turning to face the audience.

“Thank you for coming tonight,” she began as she let her eyes drift over the audience. She seemed to hold eye contact with most of the audience members for a moment or two and Willow wondered if it were an intentional act meant to involve her listeners on an emotional level. She also felt her heart-rate speed up when she realized that Tara would be scanning the entire crowd. She would see Willow and then what? What would she think?

Willow noticed immediately the change in Tara’s voice. It seemed slightly deeper, less childlike than she remembered it. More unfamiliar was the accent. Although she could still detect Tara’s California accent, it now seemed to be mixed with a touch of an English accent. Apparently her time in England had colored, or coloured she laughed to herself, Tara’s voice.

Willow glanced at her hands, twisting the flyer announcing Tara’s reading into a small and smaller ball in her lap before returning her gaze to the woman at the podium. Tara’s mouth dropped open slightly as she spotted Willow. Their eyes locked but only for a second before she continued scanning the crowd. In that second, Willow couldn’t tell Tara’s response to her presence. Was she mad? Confused? Excited? She didn’t know.

“I would like to read a few of the poems from this book and then I have a few new ones to share with you,” Tara began.

Willow leaned forward in her chair as Tara looked at the papers in her hand. Apparently she had brought some speaking and reading notes. Having never been to a poetry reading, Willow wondered idly how one would decide which works to read and in what order. How had Tara learned this skill? When?

The blonde began with a fun poem called “Pistachio.” It seemed to be simply enough about a random afternoon trip to get ice cream. It was impossible to determine whether the speaker was a child or adult but the passion for the treat was unmistakable. When she finished, the laughing, happy crowd, applauded.

“It’s hard to decide which poems to read,” she confessed to the audience.

“That Curve of your Hip,” a woman sitting a few chairs to Willow’s right shouted playfully.

Tara laughed a little nervously and smiled at the audience. “Someone always wants to hear that one. I wonder why.” The crowd chuckled along with her.

“I guess I can accommodate a request.” She winked as she said it and then launched into a very steady reading of the work. Willow could feel the blush rising in her cheeks and noted that Tara had glanced her way two or three times throughout the reading. She wondered how Tara could say those words without feeling embarrassed. The girl she once knew was shy about holding hands in public. She finished the poem to greater applause than the previous work.

Tara didn’t pause before introducing her next reading. “When I was fifteen, my mother passed away.” A silence fell over the crowd as she spoke and Willow began to wonder if the blonde were weaving some sort of spell. Not a true spell, an enchantment, but she seemed to be fully controlling the emotional construct of the group. She’d taken them to funny and nostalgic to extremely sexy and now was going for heart-wrenching honesty. Throughout her reading of “One Shovelful of Dirt” Willow swore she could hear a pin drop in the room. Even though she had read the poem more times than she could count today, she felt hot tears in her eyes and falling down her cheeks. From the sniffles when Tara finished the reading, she knew that she wasn’t the only person so affected by Tara’s art.

The remainder of the reading passed quickly, more quickly than Willow could have imagined. When Tara finished, thanking the audience profusely, Willow let out a long breath. The crowd began to mill forward as Tara took a seat behind the small desk with a pen. A few audience members drifted off but nearly all of them brought their copies of the book and asked her to sign them. Willow waited and watched, noticing the casual and comfortable way Tara spoke with each visitor. While some only stayed a few seconds, other women visited for minutes and Willow felt jealous in spite of herself at the way Tara laughed with them.

Finally seeing that the crowd was thinning out, Willow steeled herself for the meeting. By the time she reached the front of the room, Tara had already stood up from the table. Gay and the other woman had joined her and were hugging her and shaking her hand. The redhead waited as Tara spotted her out of the corner of her eye but before Tara could speak, Gay also spotted her. “Look, Tara, another fan.” She chuckled and winked at the redhead. “She must be a fan. She’s been here nearly all day.”

Tara tilted her head for a moment as if trying to understand what Gay was saying. “You’ve b-b-been here all d-d-day?”

Willow glanced over to note the shocked look on Gay’s face. She hadn’t heard Tara stutter throughout the reading and had assumed that the girl had outgrown or trained herself out of it. But apparently the stutter wasn’t completely gone.

“Your book is brilliant, Tara.” She looked at her feet and inhaled again. “Just. I mean…”

“You… you came?”

Willow shrugged and reached forward to touch Tara’s hand before realizing the folly of the motion. “It’s your first book.”

Gay looked back and forth between the two girls as if trying to understand what was going on. Seeing that no explanation was immediately forthcoming she extended her hand. “I’m Gay Treanert.”

Willow looked at the hand in front of her and took it in her own. “Willow Rosenberg. Very pleased to meet you.”

“The Curve of Your Hip,” Gay said with a teasing smile as she came to the obvious conclusion.

Willow blushed and looked down at her feet. It was one thing to have that poem “out there” but to have someone put two and two together and realize that it was about her, about her and Tara was just, well, kind of embarrassing. At least she hadn’t mentioned “Words Once Spoken.” “I’m not trying to embarrass you, Willow,” Gay said. “Look, some of us are taking Tara out tonight to celebrate the book. Why don’t you come?”

Willow glanced up at Tara to see the blonde’s eyes bug out slightly as if she couldn’t believe that her friend had just invited her ex-lover out with them. It seemed that Tara didn’t want her there. Maybe this was a mistake. She just didn’t know. “Can you give us a second?” Willow asked Gay.

The shop owner smiled warmly at the two women. “Sure.” She turned to Tara. “You were fantastic, sweetie. We’ve got reservations at the usual place at 8:30.” Tara nodded and Gay gave her a quick hug before gliding away to visit with some customers.

“Look, Tara,” Willow said in a rush, “I’m … I mean I would love to talk but, I mean, I I I’m going to be here for a few days so if you want to just, you know, visit with your friends tonight. You know, celebrate? I totally and completely and did I say totally understand.”

Tara bit at her bottom lip for a moment and Willow glanced at the blonde’s hands. They held a copy of the pamphlet advertising her reading and the redhead noted that it was in approximately the same shape as the one she had held throughout. “W… W-why don’t you come? I mean if you would like?”

Willow lifted her eyebrow. “Are you sure?”

Tara’s voice sounded a little hesitant. “Yes.” Then she smiled a twinkle in her eye and spoke more authoritatively. “Yes.” She waved her hand to indicate that they should go ahead to the restaurant and Willow fell into step beside her. “Besides, I’ve been getting teased about the Curve poems for years. Tonight you can see what it’s like.”

Willow turned her head, seeing the teasing look on Tara’s face and the way she held her teeth at the tip of her lips. It was a new expression and one that she immediately decided she liked. Although she didn’t know how Tara felt about their relationship, what relationship? or even how she felt about Willow being here, the blonde’s teasing made her relax slightly.

A half an hour and many directions and confused looks on her part later, Willow stood in the foyer of a small restaurant. She was just about to approach the hostess and ask if Tara and her friends were here when Gay, another woman, and a young girl came in the door behind her. “Willow,” Gay greeted her warmly, “this is my partner Joanne and this is our daughter, Grace.” She turned to her partner and explained, “This is Tara’s friend Willow. She came to the reading tonight and I invited her to join us.”

“Nice to meet you,” both Joanne and Grace said. Willow shook Joanne’s hand before stooping down in front of the girl she estimated to be about ten. “Nice to meet you, Grace.” She extended her hand and Grace shook it.

“You’re Tara’s friend?”

Willow smiled at the little girl. “We haven’t seen each other lately but I think we’re friends.”

Grace smiled back. “Then you’re my friend too. Do you want to sit by me?”

Willow stood up and extended her hand to take Grace’s. “Since I don’t really know anyone that would be nice. Thanks for asking.”

Before they started walking Grace turned to her moms. “I’m going to sit with Willow and keep her company, ok?”

Both women smiled at their daughter and at each other. “That sounds very nice, baby girl.”

Grace pulled Willow along until they reached a table which had Tara at the head and six or seven other women sitting near her. The redhead smiled at Tara who smiled back but continued her conversation with the girl sitting next to her. “Here are two seats,” Grace said with excitement as she touched two chairs near the other end of the table.

Willow sat by the girl and opened her menu. Then she leaned toward Grace. “What is good here?

Willow followed Grace’s dining advice and they both munched on the chips as they waited for their dinner. Joanne came over to say hello again and check that Grace wasn’t “bugging” the redhead but Willow assured her that she was enjoying it. The hostess had given the third-grader a paper and crayons which Grace found insulting but Willow pulled a few different colored pens from her bag and extended them.

Willow found that the evening passed quickly. She was having fun with Grace, drawing boxes and buildings in perspective while Grace suggested unusual additions like puppies on windowsills and trees growing on the balustrades. After a while, Willow handed Grace the pens and the young girl drew for her while Willow made colorful suggestions. Each time she looked up, she noted that Tara was involved in a conversation but she was relieved to see that when she caught the blonde’s eye, Tara smiled at both Willow and Grace. Seeing that Willow was looking at Tara, Grace informed the redhead, “I’m going to marry her when I grow up.”

Willow smiled at the young girl and restrained a chuckle. “That’s what I always thought too.”

Grace knitted her eyebrows together and pursed her lips. “I don’t think we can both marry her.”

Willow pursed her lips back and nodded her head. “I think you’re right. What do you think we should do about it?”

Grace considered the question seriously. “Do you know how to play Rock, Paper, Scissors?”

Willow rolled her eyes. “I was only Sunnydale Junior High eighth grade Rock, Paper, Scissors champion.”

Before they could throw their first plays in what they’d agreed would be a best-of-fifteen series, Willow felt Tara tap her shoulder and then saw the blonde kneel down by her chair. “Hi.”

Grace leaned forward quickly and hugged Tara tightly. “Tara, you wrote a book. That’s so good!”

Tara settled back onto her heels. “Thanks you and thank you for the flowers. Your mom said you picked them out.”

Grace bounced in her seat slightly. “I know you like daisies.”

“I do,” Tara agreed and looked at the drawing covered paper on the table. “Have you been keeping Willow entertained for me?”

“I have,” Grace told her proudly.

“Well I really appreciate it because she doesn’t know anyone else here.” The blonde lightly touched Willow’s knee as she spoke.

“We’ve been having a great time,” Willow said with a smile at Tara and a wink at Grace. “In fact we were just about to have a little Rock, Paper, Scissors contest.”

Tara laughed. “Did you tell her you were Sunnydale Junior High School champion in eighth grade?”

“Of course.” Willow nodded at Grace. “I don’t want her to lodge a protest after I win this contest.”

“You’re not going to win,” Grace said with a very serious look on her small face.

Willow laughed. “What are you two playing for?” Tara asked innocently.

“We can’t tell you but it’s very important,” Willow said.

“Yeah,” Grace agreed with a giggle.

Tara looked back and forth between the two girls. “Something tells me I should be concerned.” When Grace giggled more she smiled at the girl and winked. She touched Willow on the knee again. “We won’t be here that much longer.”

“Ok,” Willow said glancing at the floor.

“Do you … want to come over and have a cup of t-tea or something after we leave?” Tara offered.

Willow’s eyes shot back up and she smiled broadly. “Yes. Yes. Definitely. That would be nice and did I say yes already?”

“Ok, I’m going go back to my seat. You two stay out of trouble ok?” Tara said leaning over to give Grace a kiss on the cheek.

Willow watched Tara return to her seat and then looked back at Grace. “Ok, our tournament…” Willow counted to three and they both shot their fingers. The redhead won the first but was easily able to intentionally lose since she realized very quickly that Grace always shot the option that would have beaten Willow’s last offering.

When they finished their competition, Joanne came over to interrupt them. “Gracie, we need to go home and get you ready for bed.” She turned to Willow. “I hope you had a good evening.”

Willow smiled at both mother and daughter. “I had a great time.” Grace slid from her seat and gave Willow a hug which the redhead returned before standing up to shake Joanne’s hand.

As Grace ran over to tell Tara goodbye again Joanne leaned forward to whisper. “You’re Tara’s Willow?”

Willow glanced over at her ex-girlfriend who was standing to say goodbye to Grace, Gay, and some other friends. “I’d say that depends on Tara,” she confessed.

Joanne grinned at the redhead’s answer. “Then good luck, Willow Rosenberg,” Joanne said leaning forward to give the girl a hug.

After Joanne, Gay, and Grace left, Willow excused herself to visit the restroom. When she returned, she saw that Tara was the only person still at the table. The blonde stood up to meet her coming across the floor. “Do you w-want to follow me?”

Anywhere, Willow thought but what she said was, “Sure. That would be great.”

Tara gave her directions and at Willow’s urging they exchanged cell phone numbers also in case they became separated in the darkness and traffic.

Twenty minutes later Willow exited her car and followed Tara up the walk to a small duplex. She looked at the facing of the building, admiring it and stopped to smell the potted flowers on the porch. “This seems nice.”

“Thanks, Willow,” Tara said as she opened the door. “I’ve been here for about six months and I was very lucky to find it.”

Willow stepped through the door behind her ex-lover and looked hungrily around the apartment. Having been away from Tara for so long, she felt almost like anything she could see, any information she could glean would make her feel closer to the woman. Her visual perusal of the room was interrupted by Tara’s voice. “I need to visit the restroom.” She blushed as she continued, “I didn’t at the restaurant.”

“Of course,” Willow smiled. Left alone she continued to look around the room. On the dining room table stood three vases of flowers. She smelled them each in turn.

Her investigation was interrupted by Tara’s voice as the blonde returned. “The roses are from Faith and Giles; the tulips from friends in England; and, the carnations are from your parents.” Willow smiled and nodded and Tara held up the daisies Grace had given her. “Speaking of which, I should get these into water.”

Willow turned her back to the flowers as she watched Tara walk through a door, obviously into the kitchen. As her eyes followed the blonde, she noticed a small shelf on the wall. She stepped toward the shelf, recognizing with a smile a familiar object. She picked it up gently noticing again the nice workmanship on the Willow tree and the fact that there was wax on half of it.

Tara returned a minute or two later with a new vase and set it the coffee table. “I started a pot of water for tea.”

“When did you light the menorah?” Willow asked as she reset it on the shelf.

Tara smiled. “Just before I came to the shop.”

Willow reached into her bag, unsure how to bridge the uneasy silence. “I realized you never wrote anything in my book for me.” She extended it toward the blonde.

Tara approached with a knowing smirk on her face. “Yes, I did, Willow.”

“I’m not here to fight but I think I would have noticed if you had written in it. I’ve had it all day,” Willow said with a puzzled look on her face.

Tara smiled widely as she took the book from her ex-lover. “You never would read the title pages, Willow.” She held out the book so that Willow could see the dedication:

[blockquote]For Willow and every one of our Stars[/blockquote]
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JustSkipIt
32. Kisses and Gay Love
 
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