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New Fic - Neverland

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

Re: New Fic - Neverland

Postby branny72 » Sun Nov 03, 2013 11:01 pm

Another awesome update!! THANK YOU!! I can't wait for more!! :sigh
~ Branny72
I found younger-me still exists in the archives as SlayerTazz...
Mending Fences | The One Where Everyone Has a Go |Actions and Consequences | Meant To Be
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Re: New Fic - Neverland

Postby SylverMaki » Mon Nov 18, 2013 3:58 pm

Updates!!! :banana :banana :banana I can't believe I have missed 3 updates. Welcome back Heather, it has been a while and I'm so so glad to read the updates. I had to reread the entire story of course. I have such a bad long term memory. I remember feelings but not too many events. So it was a pleasure diving into this story yet again and floating in it for the past few days. The updates of course were amazing and it is great to see the past so fully now.

Why don't people know it is almost always someone eavesdropping probably the last person you want to hear. Hoy. Poor Tara and Willow, what a bad way to leave off from each other those years ago. And they are in a bad place right now in the future. Soooooo, please let them be happy soon. Please let it be fixed and lets see the coming out over and done. I can't wait for the crying that will definitely happen when they finally both know and say they love and adore each other.

I can't wait. So glad your back and hope to see a new update soon. Please Please.
Tell me friend, when did Saruman the wise abandon reason for madness --Gandalf the Grey
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Re: New Fic - Neverland

Postby thecursed&thegifted » Wed Nov 20, 2013 8:56 am

So I don't know how to tell you how amazing this is, it's beyond what I'm capable of expressing. But do me a favor and just let them get together, I'm dying, I read this all night thinking '104 pages, they have to have got together already' and it drove me nuts to find out that no, they are that stubborn.
Update as soon as you can and please don't play with my heart XD.
Because of Buffy I can be reduced to a sobbing mess with only two words.
But those words could also send me on a crazy rampage where I skin Joss Whedon alive and then flay his Body.
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Re: New Fic - Neverland

Postby EasierSaid » Sun Dec 01, 2013 4:31 pm

pipsberg Thanks very much. I don’t know about a roll, but the last few updates were kind of a set, so it was easier to write them in chunks concurrently and then post them in a more timely manner. And any time you want to write, let me know; happy to help in any way I can. :) Glad you liked the Buffy and Riley appearances. One of the challenges—and the bummers—about writing this story is that it is so Willow and Tara heavy. It’s always nice to have the other characters pop up because I miss them too. (Even Riley; go figure.) I think my favorite part about Riley in this last update is that I imagine him telling Buffy later about how he worried he interrupted something intense between Willow and Tara and Buffy looking at him like he had three heads. Glad you liked petty Tara as well. She had flashes of it on the show and it felt unrealistic to have her react any other way. Her feelings were hurt, and sometimes people who are hurt say and do dumb things. I far prefer her to be human with flaws and maybe miss her characterization a bit (though it pains me to say that because characterization is so, so important to me) than to have her be the archtype. (Nice Whitney reference, but I prefer the Chaka Khan original! ;) ) I’m glad you thought the conversation at the bar was fun despite the painful circumstances. I liked the mythical line, I could see Buffy saying it very clearly, so glad you liked it too. Glad you liked the last conversation - it was necessary. It just didn’t seem like they’d be able to keep hopeful thoughts three years later without it. Definitely back to the present now, though this update is more of a tablesetter/resetter. Hope you enjoy it and thanks very much. Love you.

JustSkipIt Wait, I'm supposed to text and/or call my wife to tell her I've updated? Okay, now I feel bad. It usually just comes up in the "how was your day" conversation. And honestly, I don't mind the no feedback dibs. I don't get it, and of course I’d rather get some feedback, but it doesn't bother me too much because I assume the person just got busy, and hey, at least it implies that they read or were going to read the update, and that's the most important thing. :)
Re: Buffy. I think she thinks Willow is out of sorts because of her non-call and Oz. Tara, because she's pissed her off re: Jill. It doesn't cross her mind at all that they would have a problem with each other because she assumes that because they spent all day together the day before that they had fun and like each other. (That there might be romantic tension is a total non-starter, because Willow is straight and in a relationship with Oz.) Re: the nun; I think that's just an on-going tease. Usually Tara would roll her eyes and pfft Buffy (like she did at the kitten club in the beginning of the story), but it was too sensitive a subject in front of Willow. I think Tara knows Buffy's heart is in the right place. And yes, Tara is reading Willow right, but is coming up with the wrong conclusions. The overheard phone conversation has thrown her off, and she's unable to reconcile everything that she's seeing/hearing. It's just happening too fast for her to piece together.
Re: Willow - interesting. For me, I don't see how she could have done anything other than what she did do, because, a) she's resolved not to cheat, b) she'd never break up with Oz - who is a friend as much as a boyfriend - over the phone and c) she has no idea that she's going to take three years to come out. She's pretty sure it'll be a couple of months, tops, if the feelings are still there and then when Tara comes to visit in August w/ Buffy (or alone) she'd be free to tell her how she felt. She has NO idea Tara feels the same way for her; if she did, I think things might have gone MUCH differently. There probably would have still been a truncated trip to Sunnydale, but the breakup with Oz would have been immediate, and Shelia and Ira probably wouldn’t have left graduation weekend without knowing that Willow was going to start dating a woman (maybe not “I’m gay,” but definitely more honest than she has been). But, she doesn't know, and Tara gives her no indication that she loves her. She describes her perfect woman as being Willow's exact opposite, and she doesn't correct Buffy when she busts out the "100% genuine lesbian" descriptor. So Willow is blind here.
And to go back to her timeline, this is how I see it: Willow went home early from Sunnydale completely discomposed. She tore down the fairy lights and pretty much had a nervous breakdown about who she was. She didn't have Tara's presence to reassure/tempt her so she just kind of spiraled, questioning her feelings, desires, etc. Then a few days later she had graduation. She had Oz there, acting very sweet, her parents telling her how proud they were of her, and she probably had her friend Bryan, whose dad probably didn't show up because he was gay, and she just fell back into the closet hard. Tara was thousands of miles away but she might as well be a million at this point. Then Buffy doesn't come to visit over the summer like she said she might because Joyce is diagnosed. Tara doesn't come out either, and doesn't mention to Buffy any intention/interest in visiting, so Willow feels spurned, like she put the ball in Tara's court and nothing came of it. I think the thought that Tara might be in love with her even remotely to the same intensity as she loves Tara never ever crosses her mind, and when Tara never mentions coming to visit (or getting her phone number, email address, etc) Willow takes it as a sign that maybe Tara wasn't all that interested in her, as even a friend.
And then Joyce dies and Willow misses the funeral and seeing Tara, and it just goes from there. The longer it goes, the further away Tara's affection feels. Willow starts equivocating; well, Tara's just a friendly person. Tara's ideal woman is in the back of her mind at all times, and Buffy's "100% genuine lesbian" comment has frozen her; she can't have Tara unless she comes out and she's just too afraid, because every time she tries to start that conversation with her mom she gets shut down hard and besides, she's not brunette, tan, artistic and she lives thousands of miles away. By the time she takes her job in SF, she's excited about being around Tara again but I think she secretly thinks that ship has sailed. It's only after the kitten club that she starts to really feel crushed by being closeted, and thinks well, maybe Tara could like me, and she starts to figure out in earnest how she can get out, and take a shot at Tara. It's like, this story - from the kitten club to this next update - is Willow the caterpillar in her cocoon, and she's just about to bust out into a big gay butterfly.
And interesting about the books, I'll have to look into them. I think Tara would rather chew glass than go to Pier 39; I can't imagine a worse place for someone like her to visit! (So yes, Tara is definitely up for showing the local's San Francisco.) I don’t know how edgy or cool the places are, but I’ve tried to pick places that my friends and I liked, and those places usually weren’t too tourist heavy (Park/Beach Chalet the exception, though locals frequent both.) Thanks Deb, very interesting thoughts. And yes, it feels good to be writing again! Hope you and yours are well too.

SGL Aw shucks - thank you, so much. I really appreciate the kind words. Very interesting that you relate with Willow in this one. Coming out is so challenging, there are so many things to overcome, internally and externally. No kissing in the next one, but definitely back to the “present” and some progress… allegedly. Hope you like the next update.

zampsa19752001 Thanks so much! Hope you like this next one.

lavenderangel Thank you so much. I agree about reading the feedback - I love seeing who everyone sides with; it’s really interesting, and everyone has such intriguing takes on every situation. Really makes me think and sometimes see things in a way I hadn’t considered before. And yes, I do think Neverland-Tara is closer to S6-Tara, at least, she knows better who she is than S4-Tara (she’s older, more established in life, with a strong friend network, etc.). I think the show relationship would have been vastly different if Tara had been more confident. I agree that the relationship here is healthier, even though it’s not a “real” relationship yet. I just can’t ever see Neverland-Willow hurting Tara they way S6-Willow did.
Very interesting about reading this story throughout your own coming out. I can totally see how you might go back and forth between the two girl’s journey. And yes, the story is a bit gut-punch heavy, ugh, sorry! Thanks again, and hope you enjoyed the last few updates.

Phantasyland Thanks so much - glad you’re sticking with it even though it’s painful at times. Enjoy the next part.

Kajun Ha, “Just Paint” indeed! No problem re: Oz, I’m sorry if I wasn’t clear enough. I do think that Willow feels like she is cheating on Tara in a way when she stays with Oz, though it’s such a construct of her own mind; no one, not Tara or anyone else, would hold her to it. By the time she gives her heart to Tara with a kiss she will have already been “hers” for years. Pretty crazy. I agree in a way about Tara; what she said was meant to inflict harm, but not necessarily harm Willow because she’s pretty sure Willow doesn’t care. (Logically, though I think in her heart she might hope it might bother Willow a bit.) I think if anything Tara will see it over time as being something that boomeranged and hurt herself, because it reminds her that she couldn’t really have Willow, anyway. When I imagine Tara’s eyes as she says that line, I just imagine a really insane mixture of frustration, anger, hurt and confusion. And when Willow recalls her perfect girl three years later Tara is legit blown away. No way she thinks she’s landed a blow to Willow’s heart. She’d be mortified/destroyed if she knew for sure she hurt Willow like that.
Re: Their conversation after the forgotten wallet; you’re right, Willow is definitely not inviting a stranger to her house. I don’t know if Tara believes what she’s hearing though, you know? I think it’s hard for her to reconcile the different Willows she’s seen over the last two days. And yes, parallels with the two - no kiss, paint. Tara’s predictable. ;) Glad you liked the title of the painting. I had something else but it really didn’t fit. This one… just fit. Cheesy, probably, but oh well! So glad to hear you liked the flashback, but yes, I’m eager to get back to the present and get things rolling. And no problem about the thanks - you guys work hard, you should get props as much as possible. Thanks again for the help, and thanks for the kind words, I really appreciate it! Hope you like the jump back to the present.

kimmy_s Thanks so much; sorry for break between the park stuff and this next update - busy family life and I really needed to recharge before diving back in. It was a little jarring to go from three years ago to them post-flinch! Hope you like the next bit!

fineartsmajor:) Thank you so much for the kind words, especially re: character. I try really hard to make sure this Willow and Tara are as recognizable as possible, not just a redhead/blonde lesbian pair with the same names, you know? I loved Willow and Tara on the show so much; I’m really selfishly writing them so that I get to still have them in my life. Thanks very much re: the ebb and flow. That is genuinely one of the nicest things to hear, especially after so long (and so many words/updates!). Very fun trapeze/pendulum analogy haha, it definitely feels like that! Thanks so much Andi, hope you like the next update!

BeMyDeputy The pipsberg alarm - honestly never thought that would be a thing, haha. Poor girl. Funny about updating right after heading to class. That used to happen to me all the time with tarawhipped stories. It felt like girl was always updating right before I had to head home on a long, wi-fi free (cause it was a long time ago and we’re old) commute. Was always the longest car/bus ride!
I would not blame you if you put together a timeline - this story is so huge and has gone on for so long, it’s easy to get lost in what’s happened when (I feel that way all the time). And yes, no more park, definitely back to the “present” in this next update.
I get you on the rereading. I’ve reread the same series of books both times I was pregnant, and I just finished reading Tullip’s Terra Firma for the /mumblemumble time. (And the last Real Me song is in this next update, so get ready to add it!) It’s just amazing that it’s my story people are rereading, you know? I still am blown away - even after all of these years - that other people out there in the world are reading something that I wrote. It just seems amazing to me, and that people like it? Crazy. And that people have read it multiple times. SHUT UP. I keep waiting for it all to sink in and for it to be old hat, but every time I post an update, and every time someone leaves me feedback… It’s like a brand new, awe-inspiring experience. (I secretly hope that feeling never goes away; it feels nice to constantly be humbled and amazed by this place!)
Yay about your trip to GGP! Sounds like you had a very full day! (And I think you’re talking about the Cliff House at Sutro Heights.) So glad you liked the casting pools. I spent a lot of time reading on the benches by the pools - definitely a hidden gem in the park. And very funny about passing on naming names. ;) I agree that talking about stuff you read is fun, I guess I just haven’t really done it w/ the wife re: fanfic. You know, beyond the “which one is that? oh yeah, that’s good.” But then, other than very rare rereads of some completed fic on the board I’m out of practice. I have such limited time it’s either read or write, and I’ve been trying to write as much as possible. When this story is done I’m going to have to go on a bit of a reading binge.
I agree about W/T being empathetic; it definitely leads to writing things in shortcut sometimes, but can also lead to some interesting internal conflicts that can drive the story. Double-edged sword. I didn’t write about the phone conversation (that’s been posted) in the present, but I definitely think she’s thought about it. I think it blows her away that Willow turned to a man who cheated on her for comfort, and that tells her a lot about Willow’s forgiving, loving nature. Re: the coming out problem space; yup. The fear of the unknown is the worst.
Re: Oz dialogue, I think the hardest part was not going monosyllabic. That’s not Oz, though that’s who he ends up being in a lot of fic. The stoic, single word reply is so prevalent, but he’s so much more than that. He’s very dry, very smart, very intuitive, though he chooses to ignore a lot. On the show it seemed like he didn’t offer his honest, non-smart ass opinion unless he was expressly asked, the situation was dire, or it was Willow he was talking to. I don’t know, I just kept reminding myself that he loves her, that a part of her loves him and more than anything they’re friends. I think that’s how they parted on the show and I think’s who they were. (JMHO.)
Agreed that Tara is hurt by what she overhears; it’s mixed her up and made everything seem off. Re: Willow’s coffee shop comedown - yup. She wants Tara so much that she’s worried she’ll cheat so she talks herself down and stuffs herself into that tiny box you mentioned. I LOVE Willow and Dawn’s relationship, so was happy to get a chance to mention it. Glad you liked Riley showing up, again, something from the show I wanted to touch back on. Re: the sentence you quoted… yes and no. Yes that I meant it, but I don’t know that I meant to deemphasize Buffy as much as it amused me that years later it would be “roommate and Buffy,” the roles flipped.
Glad you liked Willow asking about Jess. It is like Willow asking about Morgan (and Jill, and Anya…); she just can’t help herself, there’s only so much she can filter. And how off-limits is Tara? Absolutely balanced w/ Willow, though poor Willow, all she has to do to be made available is come out. Tara, on the other hand, has to change who she finds attractive (allegedly). Thanks re: the pillar - it was that line that actually kicked off that conversation for me, helped made it feel more natural. Glad you liked the rum line. That amused me, and I liked that it showed in short hand how close all three of those girls are. Re: Tara painting - I don’t think she can ruminate, not in the immediate aftermath of almost getting kissed by her dream girl.
And yes, don’t get spoiled by the super rapid updates, though I do hope to update a lot more frequently than I have over the last several years. (Which isn’t saying much, but you know…) And yes, write! That’s what got me writing this, other pokey fic writers. :) Thanks re: the kids thing, I’m blushing. I tell you, most days I don’t feel very awesome, so it’s flattering for you to say so.
Re: the P.S.’s. So glad you liked Riley, he was fun to write. People don’t say “pull a face” in the U.S.? What would be an Americanism alternative, “made a face?” (Seriously asking, very curious.) So funny; where did I pick that up then? And Americans don’t say film? Movie, instead? (Feeling pretty pretentious right now haha!) And mobile, that’s just a tech dork thing; people who were really into their phones in the late 90s/early 2000s never called their phones ‘cells’ because they were not just for making calls. (Ask anyone who had a Treo.) I think I thought it would be what Willow would say, so I went with it. (And I am a very casual tech-dork.) :)
And another vote for flawed Tara. I’m really surprised and happy that people seemed to like her; I was really nervous about her in the last update and spent A LOT of time editing, rewriting and refining to get it close to what I had in my head. I didn’t want her to be too harsh, but didn’t want her to be too doormatty either. And I didn’t want her to be too unrealistic with her feelings for Willow; when she heard what Willow said on the phone, I think nobody would have blamed her if she said, “well eff this.” But she didn’t, she kept her heart open even though she was hurting, and that led to speaking from said heart, even if it was hurt, pointed, etc. She’s definitely not trying to hurt Willow (if she knew she had cut her down she would have just died)… but sometimes even good people with good intentions say things that can hurt. I don’t think there’s anyone out there who doesn’t regret something they’ve said to someone they’ve loved. Add to that that they needed to walk away from this visit still hoping something could happen… Gah. It was really hard to write, so, yay for people thinking it worked! Thanks so much Kate, I really appreciate you sharing your thoughts. I hope you like the next bit!

SickSadGirl Thanks! I get wanting to shake Willow; I just keep reminding myself that she’s a good person caught up in an insane tornado of feelings. She must be so scared. I’m really glad you liked the look back at how things started for them, it was fun to write, though draining! You know, I didn’t plan this story at all. Over the years I wrote things that I thought I might use eventually and most of those chunks have become updates, but I don’t have a thought bubble or outline or anything. (Seriously, I just bought a writing app for the first time two weeks ago to organize a little bit; everything up till now have just been TextEdit files.) I’m just really, really lucky most of the parts have fit (though I see lots of things I would change if I were starting over, but that’s just me!). It really makes me feel like I’m discovering this story more than creating it, you know? Thanks for the RL well wishes, I really appreciate it, and hope you like the next update.

masterjendu !!!!!!!!! JEN !!!!!!!! I'll get to your feedback in a minute, but hooray for you and your wife! Oh, I'm so excited for you guys. What wonderful, wonderful news. Thank you for sharing - so cool! You know, it’s always so fun when I see names that I recognize from “ye olden days” pop up in the thread. I love to hear how you guys think the story is going, but I also just like to hear how you guys are doing, and I am so, so happy for you, truly. Yay for babies!
Ahem, okay, now that I’m done squeeing, thank you so much for the very kind words. I’m really glad you liked the look back, it felt really important to go back and set the foundation for what we’ve already seen and what we’re about to get to. I think one of the things I like best about this story is that they’re friendship is blossoming as well as their love affair, and that makes me happy. I like that they’re best friends in addition to lovers, and it’s those moments where they’re laughing and clicking that I enjoy writing the most. Thanks so much Jen, so happy for your news and hope you like the next part.

wayland And a vote for Tara behaving badly! Yes, she did, though I think it definitely fell in the foot-in-mouth category, that kind of thing you say and then later think, “why did I say THAT.” You’re right, her little petty remarks definitely did put them on more even footing. They do have two relationships, public and secret, and then I’d wager a third if you throw their burgeoning friendship into the mix. As for the ‘brunette, olive complexion, artistic’ bit - yes, very pointed, and I think it was pointed in a way to hurt herself, to sting and remind herself that pining after Willow was pointless anyway, might as well line everyone up behind the anti-Willow. That is hurt Willow… if she knew the degree it eventually would she’d be destroyed. When Willow brings it up later in the story she’s genuinely flabbergasted. It was a throw away that didn’t get thrown away and it is a massive clue to her in the present that what she assumed about their past wasn’t correct.
There definitely is anger when Tara leaves their conversation by the bathrooms; I think it’s with Willow over what she said on the phone, but mostly with herself for falling for a straight girl and then putting herself in a position to maybe be used or hurt. I think that’s a huge, fresh wound for her still at this point post-Jill, and she’s feeling pretty vulnerable coming off of the day in the park, the night in her room, the phone call, the interaction in the morning, the ‘type’ comments - I mean, that’s a lot for 36 hours!
Thanks re: the other characters - I have so much fun writing them, and imagining who they are, both in canon and in this world. Yes with Oz and Xander - definitely offering the same advice. I think it’s a huge hint at the challenge of being close with Willow, that the girl can wind herself up, and that it’s not uncommon to have to remind her to breathe (or have fun, in this case). Interesting about the reflections being from Tara. That’s probably correct. I think for Willow it was more impressions, feelings, where Tara can pinpoint events, etc because she was present, totally. Willow was just having a fun day, you know, haha. And Tara castigating herself, yes. I think she remembers the words because she *knows* it’s a fear/pet peeve of Willow’s, that being ditched is a big no-no and so when she thinks she’s done it, she feels bad because she should have known better.
I’m glad that you liked that final scene in the apartment. It was necessary; I can’t imagine that they’d still be carrying a hopeful torch 3 years later without it. Thanks so much Clare, I really enjoyed reading your thoughts. Enjoy the next bit!

Ayu Thank yoouuuuuuuuuu! And biggest mystery in modern history!? ;) No pressure, right. :D Thanks so much, hopefully this jump back into the post-flinch world will help, even if it’s a bit of a re-establishing things update before the boulder really gets rolling. Please enjoy the next update.

loislane1 Thank you so much, though hopefully that “painfully engrossed” will give way to “enjoyably engrossed” soon! Enjoy the next part.

ssc1980 First, before replying to your update feedback - OMG, yes to Hobson’s Choice! I actually went with a fictionalized version of Hobson’s Choice, because I wanted Willow to use the pillar line and there’s a pillar RIGHT by the bar at HC, lol. How did you know? I’m so impressed that you guessed! And thanks so much for the kind words re: the life things and return to writing - I’m so relieved and happy to be writing again, and to get back to this story and Pens has been a real blast. Thanks re: the update(s); definitely painful, but necessary for them to get to where they are now… which is on the edge of everything! Hope you like the next bit and thanks again. (Still giggling that you guessed Hobson’s!)

ethereal Holy cow! Three days! I can’t imagine reading this whole thing in three days - I get tired after one update, haha. And aw shucks, thank you so much for the very kind words, I’m truly humbled. Hope you like the next part and where the story goes from here.

WillowRulez Hey, always fun to see a familiar face. And thanks, though I feel sort of weird about being that girl who can write pain really well! ;) (I kid, I kid - very flattering, thank you so much.) I’m really glad you liked the flashback updates. Hope you like the next update.

branny72 Thank you! I hope you like the next update. :)

SylverMaki Hey girl! Good to see you, virtually speaking of course. And dancing bananas? So appreciated. Wowza to rereading the story, thank you. (And I feel you re: the bad long term memory, I feel like I lost that part of my brain when my second one was born.) You’re right, eavesdropping does not usually lead to good things. As for them being happy - very soon (relatively). We really are in the stretch run once we jump back into the present, so it’s coming… soon. Thanks so much. I really hope you like the next bit.

thecursed&thegifted Thank you so much, I’m truly flattered. And yes, getting together - board rule and happening relatively soon. (Soon being a relative term, of course, haha.) :) Hope you like the next bit and where the story goes from here.
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Re: New Fic - Neverland

Postby EasierSaid » Sun Dec 01, 2013 4:32 pm

Title: Neverland
Author: EasierSaid
Feedback: Yes, please.
Spoilers: None.
Setting: AU. There is no Hellmouth, there is no slayer and no magic of the wicca variety. Just our girls and the rest of the Buffy characters living and loving in that great city by the bay, San Francisco.
Rating: PG-13
Disclaimer: Please don't sue me Mutant Enemy.
Previously: Tara tried to kiss Willow, who flinched out of the way out of habit. Willow tried to explain as Tara fled. The next morning, Tara left their apartment for Marissa’s artist-in-residence studio to try and paint out her feelings; Willow is home, dealing with the aftermath of her flinch and preparing to come out to her mom that night.
Notes: No more park; back to the “present.” Song: Explosions in the Sky, “Your Hand In Mine.” (The one off of The Earth Is Not A Cold Dead Place, not the ones on the Friday Night Lights Soundtrack; big, nerdy distinction.) It’s the stretch run—let’s do this.


Thoughts in italics

PART 68

The previous year, Tara saw a woman get hit by a car. The blonde had just met up with Buffy outside of her office building; they were headed to a new restaurant nearby for dinner and drinks. Caught up in conversation they stopped at the corner of the intersection nearest Buffy’s office, the bright, flashing red hand warning them of an impending light change. A middle-aged woman—obviously rushing to her next engagement—bumped past them and strode into the intersection just seconds before a mid-sized sedan—also no doubt rushing its owner to his next engagement—took the left hand turn sharply and quickly. The sound was a dull thud, metal denting, and then a thump on the asphalt.

Tara was shocked. Shocked that she had witnessed the incident out of the corner of her eye, shocked that before she could even process what happened Buffy was in the street, checking on the injured woman, one hand instructing the driver to pull over, the other bringing her phone to her ear to call 911. Tara rushed to Buffy’s side, and the two women exhorted the injured woman to be still, to let them check her before she tried to move. The woman nodded, dazed, and after a long moment others from the sidewalk cautiously spilled into the street, directing traffic around them as Tara and Buffy helped the woman to her feet and to the curb.

The driver’s face was ashen as he stepped out of his car. He checked the hood first, his hand covering his open mouth as he saw the small dent, the hand dropping to his side as he saw the woman he hit moving gingerly to the side of the road. He rushed over, and then stopped a few feet away, closing his mouth suddenly before he paced away and took out his own phone, dialing some unknown person. “Jerk,” Buffy had muttered. “He’s probably afraid you’re going to sue him.” The dazed woman took no notice of the petite blonde’s words.

Tara sat with the woman until the police and ambulance arrived, held the woman’s trembling hand and tried to talk to her about anything and everything… But the woman was too dazed to hear her. The woman was undoubtably concussed, and Tara watched as her free hand absently and repeatedly checked her face for blood she thought she felt that wasn’t there.

Tara didn’t know why the memory came to her, her hair standing up on the back of her neck as three single notes from an electric guitar filled the room, the stereo’s speakers in Marissa’s Post Street studio surprisingly loud. Maybe it was because her hands trembled as she slowly walked backward from the table, the last song on Willow’s Real Me CD spreading like a fog to every corner of the room, or maybe because her eyes looked vacant yet desperate, searching for some unknown thing in the distance like the woman’s had that day. Tara certainly felt concussed; the redhead’s flinch had knocked her sideways, and she realized how badly she was limping through time since. She reached the wall opposite the bank of windows as she listened to two guitars playing together, like a dance, the sound from the street below completely obscured and erased by the music. She lightly bumped into the wall and then sank to the floor, her bottom resting on the cool hardwood, her knees pulled to her chest. The adrenaline of the morning was wearing off and she felt vulnerable as she listened to the song. She let the chill from the floor sink into her bones, dropped her head back to the wall and closed her eyes.

The song was gentle and dreamy, two electric guitars playing with each other, around each other, with a slight, reverberating echo that made the guitars’ notes float like high clouds on a hot summer day. She settled into it, consumed with the sound, and she was so immersed that she felt rather than heard the addition of an ominous drum beat from a low tom in the background. It went on for a short while, just enough to get used to the sound and then the song exploded around her, the low tom gone, replaced by a snapping, almost militarist march, the guitars insistent and hopeful. Her skin raised into goosebumps and she opened her eyes, swallowing hard, the emotion of the song starting to infiltrate her heart. The three instruments played together with a tender precision that nonetheless was tense.

She waited for the song’s words. Waited with baited breath, wondering what the lyrics would be this time, how they might destroy her, wreck her and then hopefully, hopefully build her up. How the words might make sense of Willow, explain everything she felt for the redhead, maybe explain what the redhead might feel for her like some sort of cypher. But the words never came. The music just continued building, relentlessly, layer upon layer, and Tara’s face screwed up, the anticipation twisting her. It was like her feelings for the redhead. Constantly building, constantly growing with no outlet, no release. And the waiting was killing her. Tears began to slip out of her eyes, sliding down her cheeks and dropping from her jaw onto her chest as the music continued to build.

And then the build dropped out and it was just the guitars again. Sweet, like sunshine, or the warm feeling of someone you love gently sweeping a stray hair away from your face as you smile to yourself about how perfect life is. She thought about Willow’s thin fingers as they trailed across her skin and shivered.

The peace was short-lived as the snapping drum returned, the music again building, and the pressure inside of the blonde began to expand, pushing against her skin, her body feeling too tight around her emotions. The feelings from this morning. The words she said the previous night. And she couldn’t bear waiting for some magic key encrypted in lyrics anymore. She couldn’t stop the tears from streaming down her face as the music swelled and crashed around her like a wave, breaking her. It broke her into a million pieces and she sobbed, her body jerking as the emotion inside of her fought to escape in one sucking gasp. She covered her mouth with her right hand, her left hand braced against the paint-splotched floor, her fingertips curling reflexively to keep her from collapsing. She cried with overwhelming sadness and overpowering joy. The music pulsed through her entire being, filling every extremity with a tingling feeling that made her want to burst out of her skin. It consumed her and made her heart beat fast in a way that only ever happened when she was with Willow.

And then the crescendo was gone, and once again it was just the guitars, beautiful, serene. Tara gently shook her head side to side. It was them. Grand and intimate, big moments, little moments and all the other moments in between. Their friendship. Her love.

Her feelings went out from her wildly as the song continued, enveloping her, challenging her. Huge arches of love and pain, joy and disappointment. If it were color, she’d have a halo, arcs of aurora, bright and bold. She was in love with Willow. And Willow? Tara nodded her head, imperceptibly at first, until the movement rocked her back and forth, her face wet with tears. Her body shook with the shuddering breath she let go, years of doubts ejected as the music crescendoed again. She shook her head, her emotions sitting outside of her, wrapped around her, her flesh raised in bumps and she sat numb as the song concluded, the sounds of the street filtering back in as the last of the guitar’s notes disappeared. A car’s honk. The back of a delivery truck slamming closed. It felt so stark. Crass. She swallowed hard and wiped her face on her sweater, looking around the studio with new eyes. She quickly removed her wet shoes and stood awkwardly, the cold hardwood seeping through her damp socks to her toes, then strode with purpose to the supply closet.

It took a minute, her hands shaking as she worked the small silver key into the lock, the sounds of the street traffic more fully filling up the space behind her where the song had been. She desperately needed a canvas. Tara pushed open the simple wood door and flicked on the wall switch, her eyes adjusting to the artificial glow as she oriented herself in the room. She gravitated toward the largest canvas she could find, tucked behind others in a simple wood rack. She pulled it free and cursed, annoyed as she looked down, the fabric of her clothes tangled and clinging to her. The cuffs of her pants were still wet, her feet still moist so she removed her socks and turned up her pants before cursing again. The canvas wasn't big enough. Not nearly big enough. She sighed with frustration before noticing something out of the corner of her eye, propped behind a tall, wooden supply shelf.

A canvas. A big one. A little beat up around the edges, but workable. She looked around the shelves, trying to figure out how the canvas was wedged behind the structure. In a flash she started to empty the shelves, putting paints and brushes to the side, stopping only to shuck the warm sweater she wore. She needed that canvas. The feelings were bigger than her, so she needed a canvas that was literally bigger than her. She figured it was probably five feet by seven feet, the rectangle larger than anything else she had used including the large painting above the fireplace. She had thought “The Day in the Park” was to be her largest work—big to hold big feelings—but what she was feeling now was bigger than that. It was the biggest mess of feelings she had ever felt and she needed it out of her, out of her and on to a canvas.

As soon as the shelves were empty she began to pull on the structure until she had enough clearance to access the canvas. With hot determination she yanked it free, careful not to damage it, and once free she awkwardly angled it out of the closet and into the main room. She partially dragged it to the wall opposite the studio’s entrance and gently leaned it against the bricks, careful not to bump the table holding the stereo nearby. She looked to the floor and grabbed a discarded rag that she had accidentally dragged into the room with her and went about dusting off the edges and front of the canvas, her fingers dragging across the surface as she inspected it. Rough, but gessoed, small dimples and dents but no obvious holes. It would work.

Professionally this work wouldn’t help her. She knew that as she finished inspecting the canvas. She needed four paintings with the same dimensions for the show in LA and as things stood now she had three in her studio at home. But she didn’t care. Didn’t care about the titles she was supposed to submit to the printer tomorrow, didn’t care about the contract she was in great danger of defaulting on. She just needed to paint.

She abandoned the tubes of paint she brought from home early, her hands squeezing so hard her knuckles turned white in an effort to free every last drop of color from their confines. Seven ounce tubes gave way to 32 ounce jars, the paint coming off in heavy, buttery strokes on palette knives and stiff brushes. She worked left to right, and by the time she made her way to the far side, the paint on the left had dried sufficiently so that she could start again, layers building as she added more and more to the canvas below.

And the whole time her mind buzzed. She had so many voices in her head, so many memories that appeared unbidden, their meaning reformed and changed in the light of the previous week’s events. Her thoughts felt alien to her, like everything familiar was suddenly peculiar, things she long assumed wrong, and she wasn’t sure she could trust the new thoughts that had appeared in their place. What if they were wrong too?

She needed to find some order, some structure to the emotions, the thoughts, that were smothering her. So she started from the beginning, asking herself: When did she first see Willow? The answer came quickly: Five years ago. No, she thought, shaking her head, her hand squeezing the last of the white paint she brought from home onto a glass palette. That’s when they met. She tried again. Three years ago. No, she thought, again shaking her head, frustration rising inside of her as she used a brush to mix the white with Prussian Blue. That was when she fell in love with the redhead. No, the Willow she tried to kiss. The one that felt something for her. When did she first see that Willow? Tara exhaled sharply. The morning after the kitten club. A deep furrow appeared in the blonde’s brow, her stomach churning as she remembered that morning. How Willow had darted into the room, her body rigid, her movements economical and exact as she packed her computer away in a bag full of clothes. How she had averted her bright green eyes, how her face alternated between a light blush and an almost sickly white. How upset she had been, confusion and anger rolling off of her in waves. Willow had snapped at her that morning, her voice edgy and sharp. Is that when she realized? A first glimpse that maybe she was attracted to the blonde, the thought scaring the girl and turning her inward?

”I just can't be here.” Tara would remember Willow’s words, that moment, for the rest of her life. The embarrassed, tight look on the redhead’s face. Her words had torn at her. Tara had assumed at the time that Willow was fleeing from her because of something she did wrong… But what if it was because of something she did… right? She remembered the beaming smile on Willow’s lips at the kitten club when she handed the redhead that little pink stick with two green olives. The series of smiles the redhead gifted her with as they talked over the club’s loud music. How she had seemed to smile a different, gentler smile when she had said the words, “My Tara.” The blonde’s brow crinkled as she remembered something else Willow had said that morning. That she had a lot of “stuff” she needed to figure out. What kind of “stuff?”

Tara shuddered out a sigh as she moved back to the canvas, her mind still spinning. Willow had spent that weekend with Xander, a weekend the blonde had supposed at the time to be yet another attempt by the redhead to urge the dark haired man into loving her. But what if it had been something else entirely? A weekend of comfort with an old friend. Did Xander know? Is that why she rushed down there three weeks ago, because she needed–

Tara exhaled sharply, dropping her eyes as she swallowed back fear at what she was about to think. She composed herself and took a deep breath, bringing her eyes back up to the work in front of her. Did Willow visit Xander to come out to him?

It fit. The redhead was so awkward and out of sorts that morning, avoiding her gaze, her words. But when she came home, back from Sunnydale, it was like something had changed. Maybe that's when she realized it? That night at the club had been the first time Tara had felt like they were flirting, intentionally, since that day in the park. There had been flashes during their time living together, but that night at the club was definitely different. It's like it led to everything else, every touch, every invitation from the redhead to spend more and more and more time together. Did Willow drive down to see Xander and come out to him, and all those phone calls to him since were just touchstones as she navigated tricky waters? This is dangerous, Tara’s subconscious screamed. She had just started down a path that she wasn’t sure she should follow, but there was something at the end, something so beautiful if it was there… She had no choice but to follow it.

She remembered the first time she saw Willow after her return from Sunnydale. The girl’s beautiful red hair splayed across the coffee table, the redhead sleeping. Tara’s heart had been so bruised that weekend, and she remembered clearly how she felt as she warred with herself about waking the girl so she wouldn’t get a kink in her neck. But what about Willow? How had she felt? The blonde struggled to remember that night as she turned back to her paints, her fingers skimming over the tubes until she found the Rose Dore. And she remembered the bright smile on the drowsy girl’s face, the happy notes in her voice as she started to talk about her weekend once she woke. Willow had wanted to talk even though it was the middle of the night, but Tara had cut her off. What was it she wanted to say? The artist squeezed the paint onto her palette and then moved back to the canvas, and as she raised her hand, some flicker of the memory solidified. Willow had been playing with a small box as she spoke. The bracelet. Tara swallowed hard, her hand faltering as she moved the palette knife across the canvas, the sound rasping as it skipped across the surface. Willow had been about to give her the glass bead bracelet.

Tara wondered how she hadn’t seen it before. Because you were too brokenhearted about Xander, the girl thought, too busy with the show. She sighed, forgiving herself for not noticing earlier. She wondered why it took so long for Willow to give her the bracelet if she had had it that night. Did the redhead have second thoughts? Worry that the gift would be too intimate? She tried to imagine Willow’s feelings, and her heart sped up, the same way it always did when she did something for the girl. Made a dinner she knew the redhead liked. Turned up the thermostat for the often chilly girl in the morning. Cracked a dumb joke, just to try and make her smile. All those small gestures Tara did every day for Willow because she loved her, wanted to make her happy. Was the bracelet like that for Willow? A slightly grander gesture of her affection that went far beyond her usual, Tiny Jewish Santa MO?

”I saw something this weekend and thought of you.” Tara’s brow crinkled as she remembered the morning Willow gave her the bracelet. How the redhead had stood close, her eyes downcast as she spoke, looking at the box she gently cradled in her hands. How when she looked up, her bright green eyes shone even though her voice sounded nervous. She had said the blonde had to have it. The blonde shuddered as she slowly exhaled. It had probably taken Willow days to work up the courage to give her the box, and then she didn’t even get to see her open it. Tara closed her eyes, remembering resting it on the easel in her studio, unopened as she sparred on the phone with a shipping representative, Willow leaving for work in the other room. Tara felt incredibly guilty. She should have waited. But if she had… She sighed, her hand moving across the surface of the canvas, brush in hand. If she had, she wouldn’t have worn it that night. And she wouldn’t have seen Willow’s smile when she showed it off at the gallery, wouldn’t have seen the even bigger smile on the redhead’s face when she complimented and thanked her for it later during the show.

The blonde worked for a while, the thoughts settling into her. After a while she opened herself up to more thoughts. Of Willow with her date at the pre-gallery party, how relieved she seemed as she later described being rid of him. Of their handshake and the bright, blushing smile the redhead had offered as her hand lingered in the embrace. Of the look of pride and reverence when Tara revealed the name of ‘Fillmore.’ Tara’s brow quirked. Willow had visited the gallery another day, alone. The blonde remembered how she felt when she saw the redhead standing in front of her work in the middle of the day, and something about the memory tugged at her heart. Willow had asked over lunch in Marissa’s office if the blonde had been involved with Anya. Had asked about Jill. It was when she told the redhead that she didn’t mess around with straight girls. The blonde’s brow furrowed as the feelings from that afternoon came back to her, seeped into her, fresh as when she first felt them. She remembered being so confused; why did Willow care, about Anya, about Jill? The blonde breathed out slowly now, the answer plain. Because Willow cared. Willow cared about her, cared about her love life in a way that was awkward and odd for a new friend but perfectly natural for someone who–

Tara closed her eyes, her mind slammed with a thousand impressions of the redhead. The smile when Willow showed her the tube of lipstick she bought for Morgan’s party. The feel of the girl’s hand on her forearm, gently pulling her closer when she almost balked at painting the color of her eyes. The bagel from Katz. The vulnerable look in her eyes as she asked if they were friends in the moonlight on the stairs. The blush on her freckled face when Tara asked why she was visiting the gallery during her lunch hour. The worried look as she inspected the blonde’s pin-pricked finger. The twinkle in her eye as she asked if Tara thought her writing on the laundromat window was adorable. The smell of Willow’s skin as she held her gently after the Fillmore show. The caress of her knee after the redhead gently swatted her as they sat together on her bed. The look in her green eyes, urgent and warm as they stood inches apart on the landing after fog gazing. Those, and so many more, ran the blonde over.

Tara turned away from the canvas and paced, her body walking away in an attempt to flee from the emotions she was feeling, from the emotions that were manifesting on the large rectangle at the opposite end of the room. The emotions followed her though, pawing at her, tickling the hairs on the back of her neck and causing her to roll her shoulders and neck in a way to slough them off. But it was no use; the emotions were tenacious and grabbed her, forcing another thought into the mind she desperately wanted to clear. Willow had kept her career a secret to protect her feelings. Tara swallowed hard as she paced again, her body electric. It was after that night that she first thought that Willow might like her. Like, like her like her. That she might have a crush on her. But she dismissed it, explained it away as the act of a good person, a strain of her generous nature because how could Willow like her when she loved Xander? Tara clenched her jaw. She had closed herself off to the idea even though it made sense, even though that what Willow did—making the conscious choice, every single day for months—to protect her seemed so above and beyond what a mere acquaintance would do.

The memory of that night washed over her. Of Willow pressed into the kitchen counter opposite her, fear in her eyes. She looked so small, her cheeks flushed red as she waited for the blonde’s reaction. She was afraid of what Tara was going to say, what she would do. Afraid that she’d cry, like at the park. Or snap at her, like Buffy. Or maybe even not even care, like Xander. Tara’s heart broke as she remembered that moment, and then swelled as she again felt pride in loving someone so caring.

The blonde returned to her work and sighed with frustration as she dug into jars of Marissa’s paints, the empty tubes she brought from home twisted and malformed in little piles around their carrying case. She pilled her glass palette high with a thick rainbow of paint then turned back to the canvas and worked.

She couldn’t be too hard on herself, she knew that. How could she have possibly thought anything other than that Willow loved Xander given the circumstances? It was a perfectly reasonable deduction to make based on years and years of evidence. Willow even said she loved Xander at dinner when they went for Thai. She smiled sadly as she remembered the sight of Willow’s tongue gleefully pressing against her lips as she smiled, pride in her voice as she told her about her rat cam. But no, Tara thought suddenly, shaking her head as she realized something. She had said it, the blonde, she told Willow that the redhead loved Xander and the girl had simply confirmed it to be true. Tara quickly replayed the conversation, a difficult task because her mind had been spinning that night, yet one detail stood out. ”It's his life.” Willow had shrugged her shoulders when she said it, like his decision didn't effect her, not really, because he was him. Singular. Not part of a them, a couple. Willow wanted more from him, she confirmed that, too, but what if more was just a friendship that didn't rely on her using cell phone minutes? It didn't have to mean what Tara and Buffy had assumed for years.

And a series of unpleasant memories assaulted Tara. Late night conversations with Buffy, the petite blonde’s voice tight and angry as she spoke about her confusion over Willow’s unrequited love for Xander. The defeated, frustrated tone in Buffy’s voice when she spoke with the redhead about the dark-haired man. Fights she overheard between Buffy and Xander, the accusations, the denials. The blonde’s own intense dislike for Xander, long a part of her soul, now feeling like lead in her stomach. She felt incredibly guilty.

She shook her head, adding a layer of Davy’s Gray to the canvas. Willow had a shirt the same color, and Tara loved it because when Willow’s hair sat on her shoulders the tips looked like flames on charcoal. The blonde opened herself up to memories of the girl’s expressive face, her green eyes sparkling, or her freckled forehead furrowed with deep lines. Vixen lips. Tara sighed, looking down at her feet briefly before looking back up at the canvas. She remembered the look on Willow’s face when they entered Morgan’s party. Such a lovely smile, her lips curling up under her round cheeks, eyes twinkling. Then there was the flushed look of shock when the redhead had touched her bare back, her apology stammered, her eyes dark and wide. And then everything else…after… How the night had changed, as if on a dime, leading to the redhead’s crushed voice spoken into the night as she paced along a dark sidewalk. What had changed? Morgan, Tara admitted, her head momentarily bowed. The brunette’s arrival; it seemed so clear now. That’s when Willow started texting Xander, when it seemed like their time together had gotten so badly derailed. She paused her movements before the canvas and placed her hand over her heart, exhaling as she remembered the pain in Willow’s voice as she spoke about being in love on the sidewalk. It broke the blonde’s heart in a way that seemed to be a complete 180 from how it had broken when she heard it the first time. That Willow had been talking about her…

It was almost too painful to remember. The sound, that thick, wet sound of Willow’s voice catching, choking around her words as she spit them angrily into the phone. Tara remembered being nailed to her spot on the sidewalk, unable to move as the pain in the redhead’s voice sliced through her. She had never seen Willow that way before, her thin arms wrapped around herself, her lips quivering, her head shaking. She looked so vulnerable. Broken. "I can't stand feeling this way.” Tara sharply inhaled as she remembered Willow’s voice, the words—that she could empathize so completely today… Tara’s mind drifted and she remembered leaving the party, Willow closed off, huddled and small in the back of the cab as they rode home in silence, a million miles between them in the backseat. Of the too-loud song the girl had put on when they got home to try and obscure the sobs the blonde could still so plainly hear down the hall. How red-rimmed Willow’s eyes were as she opened the door and declined Tara’s offer of comfort.

Tara swallowed hard and doubled back to the paints. She took on blues and yellows, then started to furiously apply them to the canvas. She remembered the wounded look on Willow’s face as they ate cake the next night, her naturally sparkling personality dampened and depressed. How befuddled she was by Tara’s trellis explanation, how curious and insistent she had been about Tara’s desire to date Morgan. Because she remembered my ‘perfect girl’ description… Tara shook her head. How long had those throw away words hurt her? The blonde pursed her lips tightly and doubled her efforts, paint splattering off of the canvas onto her shirt, her pants. Tara had thought at the time that the conversation was a pleasant, if oddly personal, distraction from the real problem—Xander—however in retrospect it was a temporary salve for Willow’s singed heart, because Willow was jealous of Morgan and she was hurt that Tara was thinking of starting a relationship with the brunette.

Tara sighed, every mention of Morgan, every moment spent with her in front of the redhead roaring through her mind. Willow had thought she had lied about Morgan calling while they were out, had called her on it when they sat in blackout in front of the fire. Tara’s brow furrowed, her hand slowing as she remembered that dark afternoon, the tone of Willow’s voice, the look on her face as she pushed through her obvious discomfort in discussing Tara’s omission. Their relationship had changed that day. That seemed to be another shift for them. Was it knowing Morgan was out of the picture that had changed things, that made Willow more bold? Or was it the secrets they had revealed, the trust they had shared… The blonde swallowed hard, remembering the outline of Willow’s body as she stood in front of the fire. The color of her hair, sparkling with gold and copper highlights. The feel of the redhead’s body as she abandoned her seat by the fire and sat near the couch, heat emanating off of her. The overwhelming love Tara felt for her in that moment when Willow listened with kindness as she spoke of her inexperience and Jill’s indifference.

Tara shook away the memory and looked at the work in front of her. She frowned. The painting wasn’t what she wanted, the colors wrong, the texture off. She took to Marissa’s paints again and started mixing, coming up with a green that resembled the old chalkboards of her childhood. She painted a layer on top of what she had already done and then set to adding color to that.

After a while, she felt an itch at the back of her brain. She tried to ignore it, but it eventually drove her to literal distraction and she stopped painting, stepping back and thinking. Willow had said on their walk to Anya's store that she had been dealing with "life things." Well what bigger “life thing” was there than coming out? Tara thought about that as she started to work again, the paint sitting thick on the canvas. Willow seemed afraid of seeing her mom, of seeing Buffy—people she loved. She was anxious in a way that went far beyond her usual fidgety nature. Tara had thought it strange Willow didn’t invite her mom to their apartment, but now it sort of made sense. And Buffy… Hadn’t Willow all but avoided her best friend for the last few weeks? The fear, the avoidance—it all made sense if Willow was working up the courage to say something that she thought might disappoint them, though Tara for the life of her couldn’t understand why Willow would think Buffy would be anything other than supportive. She sighed. Supportive. Of Willow loving– Of being with–

Tara shook her head. How she had managed to make it to yesterday night before trying to kiss Willow she’d never know. She had, after all, wanted to kiss her a thousand times before then. The soft touches alone at the Fillmore this week had almost broken her, and the feel of Willow in her arms after the show, her soft skin brushing against her cheek as they pulled apart, was up to that point the greatest test her willpower had ever known. Tara breathed out slowly, her cheeks flush at the thought of her lips on Willow’s neck, the soft kiss she had talked herself out of as they paused from her silly story about Jaque and Lar. Of the happy kiss she had wanted to plant on the redhead as they exited Magnolia’s, of the one she had avoided as they sat across from each other sipping cider under a blanket of fog. The fog. Tara closed her eyes and remembered the feel of the girl in her arms as they laid together on the roof. She had never done that before, just held another woman as they drifted off to sleep, and the feeling… She sighed dreamily. They fit. Add to that feeling the fact that Willow trusted her enough to come back to her embrace after briefly sitting up and asking her a question, that Willow trusted her enough to fall asleep as she laid encircled in her arms…

Tara reveled in the memory of Willow’s breath on her cheek, how it caressed her neck, simultaneously sending shivers through her body and soothing her as they fell asleep together. She loved the feel of the redhead’s body slacking and growing heavy against her own, loved the beautiful, beautiful befuddled look on her face as she woke from sleep a mere foot away, errant rain drops dropping heavy around them. And the feel of the redhead’s damp fingers on her face, pushing her matted blonde hair from her eyes. Gentle. Burning. Tara pursed her lips and swallowed hard. Oh god, how she wanted her, their eyes never breaking from each other as they drifted together in that moment. The blonde remembered the moment she decided to kiss Willow. The little flick of Willow’s tongue as she licked her lips, her bright green eyes questioning, pleading. Tara felt her heart start to beat harder, felt her face flush.

But Willow flinched.

The blonde sighed heavily. She looked up at the painting in front of her through watery eyes and her face twisted in displeasure. She hated it. She absolutely hated it. Why weren’t things working? She took a large palette knife and started to angrily scrape the paint from the surface. Small sections of paint came free leaving jagged layers of color behind, but it wasn’t enough. Her chest heaved, her face red as she grew more and more upset, the painting seeming to mock her for her wasted time and energy. Then she remembered seeing a large rectangular glass palette in the supply closet. She rushed into the supply room and came back with it and started to use it’s edge to scrape at the paint. She leveraged her whole body, pulling and pushing the two surfaces against each other, her fingers white as she held onto the thin edges.

Hot tears spilled from her eyes. Why had Willow moved away? If she had feelings for her, why, why didn’t she kiss her back? Tara scraped again, her breathing coming fast as she worked. Because she’s scared? Not ready? Because she told the redhead that she was unavailable when she said she didn’t mess around with straight girls, confusing her? Or all of the above? Tara thought ruefully. She told Willow that she would be patient. Not even six hours before she tried to kiss her, she had told the girl she would wait and she didn’t. She pressured the redhead when she obviously wasn’t ready for what Tara wanted from her. I mean, w-we’re basically d-dating without ever acknowledging it. The blonde squeezed her eyes shut. She told Willow she’d wait and then, then…

Her shoulders slumped. To kiss Willow, to feel her, to show her how much she loved her… She had let her guard down to try and was rebuffed in the most painful of ways. Tara felt like a fool. And the worst part was she didn't know why. Was it because she tried to kissed a “straight” girl? Or because she ran when Willow tried to explain? Was it because this story she told herself today, of Willow’s feelings for her, might be a fantasy? Or because she dove head first, without the rational part of her mind slowing herself down in the least, into a relationship that was firmly entrenched in a closet so dark and so deep that she had become bewildered by how she was expected to behave in it. She knew she wanted Willow with everything thing she had, but the fear of what Willow wanted, of what Willow would be capable of giving her, crushed her.

She stepped back from the painting and paced away, gently dropping the large rectangle of glass on a balled up canvas cloth by the supply closet door. She was hyperventilating. She needed to calm down. She took deep breaths and felt her body start to return to some sort of equilibrium. She wiped at her eyes, smudging paint onto her cheeks and turned, gasping at what she saw.

The painting. It was… It was… Beautiful, she thought, confused. And, it was completely different than anything else she’d done before. She usually used paint in high, choppy layers to create impressions of events or feelings, but this was… She shook her head, unable to fully process what it was. The layers were stripped away, the colors blurred together and distressed. There was no pattern, the lines she left as she scraped went in every direction, and the paint was left swirled together, clashing, peeled away, greens revealing reds, blues overlaid with yellows. It was dynamic. Vibrant. Raw. How had she done this?

And as she stared, dumb, her mouth hanging open, she realized that while the painting over the fireplace was all of the feelings she had for the redhead, all the love, all the confusion… This? This was everything Willow felt for her. Tara knew the redhead had feelings for her. She knew it. In her bones she knew it but the flinch, the step back… Tara shook her head. Willow loved her. Even if she never admitted it. Married a man, married Xander; Willow loved her. And this painting was what they could be together if they stripped everything else away. It was Sunday morning pancakes. Stargazing on the roof. Long walks down verdant paths and everything, everything she ever wanted to do in life with a partner. With Willow.

After a long while Tara tore her eyes from the work and looked out the window. It felt like coming up for air after holding her breath for an eternity and she was shocked to see a wall of gray, the rain still there, the sky still gloomy. She noted for what felt like the fifth time that week that it looked like 4 pm outside. Just on the edge of dusk, the day dark and tired.

And she suddenly panicked.

She looked at her wrist to find it empty, her watch on her dresser at home. In a rush she moved to her bag and opened it, her hands shaking, her fingers fumbling as she found her cell phone resting on top of a pair of yoga pants. She powered it on and waited, the feeling in her stomach sinking and sinking until the time appeared on its face. She was slammed by a wave of guilt. 4:03. She'd never make it home before Willow left to see her mom. Not with the amount of work she'd need to do to get the studio put back together.

And she couldn't leave. She looked to the pile of empty paint tubes and jars, the number of palettes, knives and brushes that needed to be cleaned and her huge painting that was hours, maybe days from being dry… Marissa's reputation, her carefully crafted reputation, relied on things like Aaron Bellows using her space. It helped her network, improved her profile and if Tara violated the gallery owner's trust by leaving now... She shook her head at the enormity of it all. She absently checked her phone again and started; there was a message. Her hands started to shake anew. Willow. She again fumbled as she navigated to the play back screen and then eagerly pressed the device to her ear. “Hey, Tara, it’s Morgan.”

The blonde took a deep breath, not hearing the rest of the message as her hand fell away from her face. Morgan. From Wednesday, the call she didn’t take when she was out to dinner with Willow. The blonde squeezed her eyes shut tight and when she opened them her lashes were tinged with unshed tears. Did she really think Willow would call? It would have been a first. And what would she say? Why did you leave? Why didn’t you come home? Tara exhaled. She was so embarrassed. And angry. And scared. She sank to the floor for the second time that day and hugged her knees to her chest.

**************************************************************

Willow sat up from her cocoon on her mattress and simultaneously pushed her messy hair and comforter from her face with a huff. It was 3:58 in the afternoon; time to start getting ready to see her mom. She had stayed in bed most of the day, sleeping in fits and starts, dreaming the same thing every single time. A flinch, her body rocking away, and the sight of Tara’s pain washed across her beautiful features.

She avoided downstairs as best as she could. The one time she ventured down for something to eat for lunch she had felt her chest constricting; the note—slightly creased from where she had grasped it tightly in her hand—taunted her from its resting place on the kitchen counter. The note broke her heart. She had driven Tara from her home, from her safe space. In all the time she had lived with the blonde she had never known her to paint any where except her studio. And now today, she was gone. Willow was so ashamed.

She sighed as she stood from her bed, the apartment seeming colder than usual. She didn’t deserve the note’s valediction. ‘Love.’ She flinched. She wasn’t quick enough to tell Tara that she was sorry. She drove her from her home, and still, the blonde signed the note, ‘Love,’ telling her that in some way—some, small way—it was okay. But it wasn’t okay. It was as far from okay as things could be. Willow shivered and hugged herself closely as she walked to her closet and grabbed two towels. Tara wasn’t mad at her, or at least, the note didn’t convey any anger, and she definitely deserved anger. For leading the gentle, shy girl on, for putting her in that horrible, horrible position on the landing. Of course Tara would try to kiss her. Willow’s brow furrowed as she shuffled across the hall and into the bathroom. She had held the blonde close, tenderly swept hair from her face. Had looked at her with what she knew must have been yearning, hadn’t moved at all as Tara’s intentions first became clear.

Willow started the water and unceremoniously undressed. She put her hand under the stream, and satisfied with the warm temperature, stepped inside. She stood under the stream and let the water cover her, caress her. She sighed as the steam filled her lungs, a little of the day’s tension loosening from her shoulders. She had no idea what the blonde was feeling. Tara didn’t want to see her, that much was obvious. If she did, she would have waited until Willow was awake to leave, would have stayed in her studio today to paint. But she didn’t wait, she didn’t stay. She was probably embarrassed, perhaps even humiliated. Willow tried to imagine how she would feel in the same situation, if Tara had been the one to drop her head and rock away, a tight smile on her face. She would have been destroyed.

She swallowed around the shame and guilt sitting in her throat. She was a whirlwind of feelings, and she still had to see her mom. She was still nervous, still afraid, of the conversation she was about to have with her mom, but what happened with Tara had given her a kind of wounded confidence that she didn’t fully understand. Because though tonight’s conversation with her mom would probably hurt, it couldn’t possibly hurt more than the look on Tara’s face after she flinched. How could it? Over the last two weeks she had let Tara in, let her get to know the real her, and the blonde had fallen in love with her. Being closeted was hurting them both. It needed to change.

Willow sighed and automatically reached for her bottle of body wash before stopping, her hand extended. After a brief consideration she moved lower and picked up Tara’s bar of vanilla-scented soap. Three weeks ago she had accidentally used the soap and it had driven her mad, her shame at being closeted, her hurt at an unrequited love, crushing her as Tara’s scent enveloped her. But now… She lathered up her hands and then rubbed the suds over her skin, the scent comforting her. She’d wrap herself in Tara, the scent a reminder that no matter what her mother said, Tara was the one that mattered.

The redhead rinsed off, washing her hair quickly and then cut the water, the steam lingering, clouding her vision of herself in the mirror as she stepped out onto the soft bath mat. She quickly dried herself and then wrapped her hair in a towel. She collected her clothes and made her way back into her room. After discarding her clothes into the hamper, she stood still and looked around her room. The room she had recently decorated, Tara’s two paintings standing out, the calendar from her mom a reminder of how long it took her to settle in. Something caught her eye on the corner of her desk and she slowly made her way over, the warmth from the shower still keeping her skin rosy and warm. It was the poster from the Black Keys show. Willow sighed as she looked over the poster from the Fillmore on her desk. A drop of water had fallen on one corner despite Tara's best efforts to protect it from the rain, and the ink had run slightly, the black turning a watery gray. It looked like a tear-stain. She rubbed her thumb over the mark. It was so backwards. You get to know someone first, and then dig down to when you love them, only what she had with Tara? This was love and then digging out. She felt like she’d been buried for years. Suffocating.

She took a deep breath and exhaled, her eye catching the clock. 4:43. She made her way to her closet and picked out jeans and a long-sleeved shirt she knew her mom liked. She dressed quietly, methodically, her hand moving slowly as she dried her hair with her towel and brushed her tangled hair straight. She blew her hair dry and applied a minimal amount of make up before settling into her chair and checking her email. Her eye again caught the clock. 5:12. No more stalling; the rain outside would no doubt make traffic heavy downtown. She headed downstairs with heavy steps, her body feeling like it weighed double what it actually did. She flicked the lights on in the great room and made her way to the kitchen counter, her eyes quickly searching out and settling on Tara’s note.

She didn’t want to read it again but she forced herself to, and found that it still hurt and confused as much as the first time she read it. She closed her eyes, feeling the shame and anger overtake her again. She took a deep breath. She had to stay calm, couldn’t cry again, not this close to leaving to see her mom. She opened her eyes and focused again on the note, and narrowed her field of vision until it was just two words. ’Love, Tara.’ Xander said that this, this feeling of unbelievable sadness and regret she felt at her flinch, at her inability to just stop Tara and explain, was just an apology away from being nothing. And then, then they could be together. Because that was what was important. That Tara loved her. That Tara wanted her, so much so that she broke her most fundamental rule of not messing around with straight girls to try and kiss her. She broke that rule because it had finally broken her, the closeness, the bond that they shared and when she looked into Willow’s eyes, as the redhead stroked her matted hair from her face, she no doubt saw—if only for a moment—how much Willow loved her, too.

Willow felt her confidence grow as Xander’s words finally took root in her heart. Because Tara wanting to kiss her, wanting her, that was what was important. Not that Tara had left, though that was gut wrenching and awful, but that she loved her. And whenever she came home, be it later tonight or in the next five minutes as she pulled out of the garage, Willow would tell her how much she meant to her. How desperately and fervently she loved her. She’d tell Tara everything and hopefully it would lift whatever dark cloud had descended on their lives. Willow knew she’d feel awful about that flinch for the rest of her life, would strive to make it up to the blonde for the rest of her life… But for now, she held on to the two words on that note, ‘Love, Tara,’ like the lifeline that they were.

Willow took a piece of paper from near the phone and with quick strokes wrote that she was going to see her mom. She set no expectation of when she would return, because she didn’t know. And when it was time to sign it, she followed Tara’s lead, and mirrored the blonde’s valediction. She took a deep breath and exhaled slowly as she stepped away from the counter. It was real. She was going to see her mom. She was going to come out. And then… And then. She took another deep breath and again exhaled slowly. She looked around the apartment, swallowing hard and then screwed up her courage, grabbing her keys and coat before exiting into the quickly darkening evening.

**************************************************************

Marissa noticed the studio’s light as she walked toward the gallery from her happy hour meeting. She couldn’t imagine that Tara would have forgotten and left it on, but then, she couldn’t imagine that the blonde would still be painting at this hour, not when she started so early in the day.

Curiosity got the better of her, so she used her keys to open the studio’s street door and quickly alighted the narrow stairs to the main space. Marissa entered the studio and gasped. She pulled her eyes from the massive work across the room long enough to look over to see Tara sitting small on the floor to her right, her legs pulled to her chest, her blue eyes red-rimmed and puffy staring at the painting. The frizzy haired woman took a quick step toward the artist.

"Tara, are you oka–"

"I have the titles," Tara croaked, stopping the gallery owner short. "For the show,” she needlessly elaborated as she looked over to her friend. “I c-can put them in in the morning."

Marissa nodded, frozen to her spot. She looked back to the work and then to Tara. "It's beautiful."

Tara nodded as she looked away, new tears starting to pool in her eyes.

The gallery owner evaluated her friend. She looked like she had no where to go. “Tara," she started softly, smiling gently as the artist’s eyes looked up and met her gaze. "Do you want to come back to our place? For dinner, nothing fancy." She sighed as the blonde’s brow quirked. "Maybe you can talk about what's bothering you." Even as she said the words, Marissa knew what was bothering the blonde.

Tara nodded slowly. “Okay.” After a long moment spent composing herself, she spoke. "I need to wash up."

"Okay." Marissa nodded. "I'll wait."

Tara nodded again and moved to the small bathroom in the corner, grabbing her bag as she went. Marissa turned back to the large work and marveled. It was a masterpiece. She didn't throw the word around, she really meant it. Bound for a museum or private collection one day, to sit amongst Kellys and de Koonings. It was the work over the fireplace times a thousand. If Tara intended to sell this in LA Marissa would do everything in her power to make sure it not only went to a prestigious collector likely to one day show at a museum, but that Tara would find herself richly rewarded far above what was expected for an artist at her level of recognition. Marissa almost cried with wonder that she was present the day it was created. She stepped forward, careful not to crowd the work. She could see it was still wet in some places. She turned her head slightly as the water in the small bathroom went on, and she wondered, as she turned back to the painting, if Willow would ever know that she was the inspiration for a master work.
Last edited by EasierSaid on Sun Dec 01, 2013 11:49 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: New Fic - Neverland

Postby MochaVamp » Sun Dec 01, 2013 5:01 pm

dibs
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Re: New Fic - Neverland

Postby SylverMaki » Sun Dec 01, 2013 7:27 pm

Yay, keep it coming! This was the best beautiful thing ever :clap :bow . It is good to virtually see you again too. :) Loved the update. The ending was wonderful made me feel very happy. I can't wait for the resolution. Soon please, please. Love you hope all is well in your life and leaves time for more updates! More please. :eatme :eatme
Tell me friend, when did Saruman the wise abandon reason for madness --Gandalf the Grey
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Re: New Fic - Neverland

Postby wimpy0729 » Mon Dec 02, 2013 6:08 am

Hi there! That was...simply amazing. Tara going over everything in her mind -- the words, what she thought they meant at the time and turning them around to figure out what was really going on. WOW. It absolutely blew me away. Then the whole description of her going through the motions of painting, what she was feeling, changing it over and over, and then to find all of it in the end was beautiful. I loved how she realized that this was all the combination of what Willow had been going through all this time. I don't blame her for crying because it brought tears to my eyes too. What an incredible moment, and even Marrissa was flabbergasted by it. And I hope and pray that very, very soon their relationship will get to be just like that painting -- a masterpiece.

And poor Willow, reliving "the flinch" over and over, like all of us have been doing for months and months. That horrible "flinch heard round the world". I'm so glad she's hanging on to those two little words at the end of the note and I smiled when she ended hers the same way. I'm finally seeing a light at the end of the tunnel, and this time it isn't a train. I really can't wait for this day to be over, for her to come out to her mom, and hopefully she gets to do the apology thing with Tara real soon, and they can finally get with the kisses and gay love.

OMG I just had a terrible thought. If it took over 100 chapters before we even get their first kiss, how many are you going to make us wait for them to get to the lovin? Arrgggghhh

Thanks so much for the update. I'm so sorry I didn't get around to leaving FB on the last chapter but RL really kicked me in the ass lately. I wasn't going to let that happen this time though, no sirree. So thanks again for making time to give us this wonderful update. As always, I loved, loved, loved it! Can't wait to see what happens next, especially since we're back in present time!


Love and hugs to you and the ol' ball and chain. lol


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Re: New Fic - Neverland

Postby branny72 » Mon Dec 02, 2013 6:21 am

:applause UPDATE!! YAY!!! Another awesome update. Thank you!! Someone needs to lock Willow and Tara in a room and make them kiss it out! :wtkiss
~ Branny72
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Re: New Fic - Neverland

Postby zampsa19752001 » Mon Dec 02, 2013 6:58 am

Extra Big Yay for Awesome Update-y Goodness...

I'm really glad that Tara is finally figuring out what Willow feels and how their actions have affected their relationship... Big yay for Willow leaving to go to tell her mom about her being gay... Can't wait for Willow telling Buffy and finally setting the records "straight", and maybe allowing Buffy and Xander resume their friendship...
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Re: New Fic - Neverland

Postby Wills redemption » Mon Dec 02, 2013 11:55 am

Oh wow, wow, wow, another update!!! I'm sitting at home with a laryngitis forbidden to talk (silent lawyer no good lawyer, although many people might think otherwise, LOL) and stumbling over this really made my day. This update in which Tara creates a masterpiece is a masterpiece of it's own. Really. From your description of the last song and Tara's reactions to it to the evaluation of Tara's epiphany. Finally she understands Willow's behaviour after the veil of her false belief ("Willow loves Xander") has been totally and hopefully forever been lifted from her eyes! The knowledge that Willow doesn't love her since the visit to the kitten club 3 weeks ago, but since the day in the park 3 years ago will probably still be a total shock for her (as much as learning the same from Tara will be for Willow). But I hope they won't let the joy of finally being united as a couple be lessened by regrets about the somehow wasted 3 years. Because what are 3 years when they have 50 or more years in the future together, right?
Now I just hope Willow's coming out towards her mom will be less troublesome than I fear. I just pray Willow won't lose the newfound confidence that Tara loves her, wearing the substitute of Tara's scent like an armour of sorts. And hopefully Sheila surprises us all by not totally freaking out...

By the way, last week I've started to read the whole story again. I fear I've never told you before that I ABSOLUTELY LOVE it! During the last long hiatus I really feared you wouldn't continue it, although you always told otherwise. So THANK YOU, THANK YOU that you did and that you gave us all the great updates in such a short time! Now we're spoiled of course and hoping for more as soon as possible... Any chance for the best christmas present ever: Willow and Tara declaring their love towards the other and kissing each other senseless? Please dear Santa EasierSaid, make it happen, I've been nice this year! (Okay, I fear I'm making a total fool out of myself right now...maybe a side effect from the antibiotics? No, who am I kidding?).
Before I end this let me once again say how much I love this fic! :bigkiss :bigkiss :bigkiss
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Re: New Fic - Neverland

Postby Phantasyland » Mon Dec 02, 2013 11:59 am

Wow! Good things ARE worth waiting for! :applause

It is always a special occasion when Neverland is updated, but this was simply, WOW!

Especially the first scene with Tara and the music. Keep up the good work - I'm speechless!

-s :bigkiss
-s the Escapist
*****************
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now I'm just
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Re: New Fic - Neverland

Postby Kajun » Mon Dec 02, 2013 4:08 pm

Heather, Is it Christmas already? Whoo-HOHOHO!! I just knew the last song would be a tune I’ve never heard before. Hey, why should it be any different than all the others in your song-list? LOL

Must read this a few more times so I’ll be back soonish with fb, I hope..

:) LOVE IT!
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Re: New Fic - Neverland

Postby jayelle13 » Mon Dec 02, 2013 4:22 pm

okay wow. dude
I just found this on Saturday (new to buffyverse, I was only, like, 4 when Willow and Tara got together) and it is so exciting! I don't know how people who have been reading for years can stand it! It's an awesome story and I read it in one sitting because I have this problem when I like something, I REALLY like it. There is no inbetween.
Can't wait for the next update :)
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Re: New Fic - Neverland

Postby SGL » Tue Dec 03, 2013 1:29 am

So beautiful... it is really marvelous how you incorporate music in the story. Usually when writers do that I feel like it is out of place, like the music doesn't match what I'm reading. Nonetheless, with Neverland the music and the story are so in-sync I cant imagine the story without it. Takes the reading experience to another level, if that makes any sense to you. I really love this update, thank you so much for updating feels like an early Christmas present! :banana . Can't wait to see how the coming out goes. I feel for Willow, coming out is bad as it is but to have that feeling that the person you're coming out to is going to react badly that's just awful; specially when that person is your mom.
:kiss1 Again thanks for the update! and hope you have a great time these Holidays.
PD: Right next to Mary Shelly's Frankenstein, this is my second favorite piece of literature (if you ever write a book let us know I had buy it in a heartbeat)

Sincerely, Simuy.
Love isn't brain,children. Is blood. Blood screaming inside you to work its will.I may be love's bitch but at least I'm man enough to admit it. Spike
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Re: New Fic - Neverland

Postby truck_driving_magic_mama » Tue Dec 03, 2013 5:42 am

Words cannot describe how inspiring this is. it lifts my spirits every time, and that says a lot, coming from my little cynical heart.
Waiting eagerly for more.
one day I'll write my thesis on this stuff. For now, I have only written a little paper on it. :) (My T.A said it's the longest fanfiction he had ever heard of, and it's one of his areas of expertise. WIN!)
Either way, academics aside, thank you for this. it fills my jaded heart with wonder.
I'm adding a poem i love that for me connects emotionally to this chapter. Hope you'll like it. :)



Flying Inside Your Own Body

Your lungs fill & spread themselves,
wings of pink blood, and your bones
empty themselves and become hollow.
When you breathe in you’ll lift like a balloon
and your heart is light too & huge,
beating with pure joy, pure helium.
The sun’s white winds blow through you,
there’s nothing above you,
you see the earth now as an oval jewel,
radiant & seablue with love.
It’s only in dreams you can do this.
Waking, your heart is a shaken fist,
a fine dust clogs the air you breathe in;
the sun’s a hot copper weight pressing straight
down on the think pink rind of your skull.
It’s always the moment just before gunshot.
You try & try to rise but you cannot.


Margaret Atwood
Melissa

Missing me one place search another,
I stop some where waiting for you
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Re: New Fic - Neverland

Postby lavenderangel » Tue Dec 03, 2013 6:59 pm

I read this over coffee at 7AM, and it has stuck with me all day. That is what I love about your writing, it really lingers. Also, I cannot believe 68 chapters have barely spanned across 3 weeks. For your sake, I hope you have that timeline discussed upthread, because I had forgotten about half the events Tara was referencing.

So much of this story has been a series of misunderstandings, and I'm so, so, so glad Tara is finally putting it together. Her ability to empathize is extraordinary. If I had just been rejected, I would have a hard time mustering even a tenth of the understanding she displayed. The way she alternated between hope and despair was so palpable ,and I just wanted to hug my computer screen and tell her that it was okay, she was right, and that for once, she needed to forget being respectful of her boss, go home and touch base with Willow.

Can you see why I didn't leave feedback 12 hours ago? It would have been one run-on sentence. Meanwhile, poor Willow. I have been where she is very recently, this strange mixture of devastated confidence. Whatever happens with her mom, Willow knows it will be over in a couple of hours. Her using Tara's body wash was an awesome, awesome touch - I have done that as well! The lengths to which I am self identifying with your fic is honestly a bit frightening! ;)

I'm not sure this feedback was exactly coherent, but I hope it came across that I love how you write these girls. Over winter break, I think a reread is definitely in order. Thank you, again, for the care and dedication you are giving this project, especially after all these years.
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Re: New Fic - Neverland

Postby kimmy_s » Wed Dec 04, 2013 5:08 am

Hey Heather
Wow, amazing update. Loved the way you described the painting I could picture it in my head. Can't wait for the coming out scene to Sheila will be interesting to see her reaction will be. Now they are both a but clued up as to how each other feels will be nice to see how they react to seeing each other since the failed kiss.
Kim
"I don't want our first time to be a quickie. I want it to be, a longie." The redhead looked at the blonde and smiled sweetly. "I want all of you." ~ Willow to Tara in Neverland by EasierSaid
The most anticipated Chapter in the history of fanfiction everywhere!
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Re: New Fic - Neverland

Postby DaddyCatALSO » Wed Dec 04, 2013 3:12 pm

I've said all along, this next scene will likely be tough for you to write - good luck.

I know you've assured me it will be okay, but Tara said here her show exhibits have to be the same size; this isn't, and I can't imagine she'd want to sell "Flinch" or whatever it's called, so, what will be her fourth showpiece? Sorry, can't stop worrying. (And don't acrylics dry in minutes?)

I feel jealous of Tara; I've written veyr little over the course of my life and one mkian reason, I think lately, is I've never been able to use it therapeutically, like she does here in a truly magnificent description!

Willow's describing the process of "digigng out;" the ismilarity isn't that greta, but I was remidned of a short completley fictional piece I wrote soem years before I started doing fic;in the immediate minutes after his IGE, my narrator thinks "I had never felt more naked." I was tempted to self-cannibalize when I wrote my first-time fic for W&T, but it didn't fit too well.
Snapshots:http://thekittenboard.com/board/viewtopic.php?f=5&t=10210 a Love Story
____________________________________________________________
Kim: (breaks off the kissing) I l... (Sue stops her with a hand)
Sue: We don't talk about things like that right after, you know that, no saying those things in The Moment.
Kim: (moves the hand aside) Screw The Moment. I *love* you.
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Re: New Fic - Neverland

Postby bluepaintbox » Wed Dec 04, 2013 7:37 pm

I don't remember if I've left a comment or comments in the past. It's not that I don't appreciate this story, I really do. I love the dedication over the years, from you & the readers. I just really felt the need to let you know how beautiful, how marvelous I found this chapter. It kind of feels like I feel now about my life now & my realization when this heavy, heavy steel plate of depression was lifted, even if it was inches, that there's hope. I just wanted to thank you.
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Re: New Fic - Neverland

Postby ssc1980 » Wed Dec 04, 2013 8:02 pm

Haha yay, I was right! Hobson's Choice is pretty much the only bar on Haight that I like, so when you described the red walls, big oak bar, and the mirror, I thought, 'Hmmm that sounds familiar...'

Anyway, hooray for another fantastic update! I feel like everything is really starting to accelerate and I can't wait to see where is goes.
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Re: New Fic - Neverland

Postby psyro » Thu Dec 05, 2013 4:04 am

I've been reading this fic since the beginning however, I've never left any feedback (Part of it is because, I've never been registered and I've been lurking here for a decade now.. English isn't my mother tongue and I was always self-conscious about my bad grammar and all).

But at this point, I feel like I have to finally come out and leave a comment. I started reading this when I was around 14years old, and I probably read it 4-5times now, every time a new update would come up, I would re-read everything to get in the mood again. I can't believe it's been around for almost ten years now ! I feel like I've grown with it, I can totally relate to everything that's going on in Willow's mind, the coming out process is never easy, I've been through it and now I can also relate to everything that's going on in Tara's mind. I've fallen in love, been hurt a little like Tara and hurt people like Willow. And now I'm in a happy and healthy relationship. I don't usually share my private life, but it feels like I have to, to really express what this fic means to me.

Now that we are so close to them finally sharing everything they left unsaid over the years I feel all happy. I love the way you write their thoughts process, I'm a fan of falling in love stories. I want to say thank you for writing such a great story and for keeping writing it for so long. It's now a part of my childhood and it feels great to know there will be an end to it.

It's weird to see how a fanfic can impact on people's life, but I guess that's the magic of fandom and of this incredible show. Thanks again for this new update, it feels like Christmas already. And even if I have to wait years again to read the end, I will wait because it's worth it :)

For this particular update, I have to say, I love the way Tara uses all these emotions to create Art. I wish I could see the painting, just reading about it, it feels like such an incredible piece. And as I read the part where she's all sad sitting on the ground, I wished I could just go over there and give her a big hug and tell her everything's going to be alright ! I don't think she can't take more pain, one way or another, next time they see each other, they will have to spill everything.
psyro
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Re: New Fic - Neverland

Postby EasierSaid » Sat Dec 07, 2013 8:14 am

MochaVamp Hope you enjoyed the update!

SylverMaki Thank you so much. I’m really glad that you liked the update and that the ending was to your liking! Thanks for the real life well wishes; hope you enjoy the next bit!

wimpy0729 First, I feel the need to defend myself because over a 100 chapters - pffft! I might be a wordy windbag but I’ll have you know that that last update was ONLY part 68! :P And second, thank you so much for the super duper kind words. I’m truly humbled and I really appreciate them. I’m really glad you liked Tara’s thoughts. I was actually worried about that, that it would be too hokey or too detailed, but it felt right and to be honest, I sort of needed it to get back into the mindset after the day in the park diversion. Their love then was so new and raw, whereas now it’s weary and deep—it was really challenging to switch gears so completely. Seeing the story through Tara’s eyes really helped me, and hopefully it helped her too! :) I’m glad too that her painting style translated. I was really surprised how it came together - I didn’t start the update intending for her to do something new with her art (I actually thought it would be a ‘Day in the Park’ twin) but I think what I ended up with worked. And yes, Willow with the flinch - she really spent the day beating herself up, but at least she left on a hopeful note (no pun intended). And no worries about the lack of fb, I’m just really happy that you’re reading! (And so sorry about real life and the ass kicking - hopefully things are better?) Thanks so much Wimpster - hope you like the next update.

branny72 Thank you very much, though, I don’t think anyone would need to make them kiss if they were locked in a room together! ;)

zampsa19752001 Thanks! Yes, Tara definitely got a huge dose of clue-by-four in this update - her eyes are wide open! And Willow is off to visit her mom - more on that in this next update. Hope you like where things go next, and thanks for reading.

Wills redemption Booo to laryngitis! I hope you’re feeling better. Thank you for the very, very kind words - I’m seriously humbled. Tara has definitely clued in about Willow’s feelings and possible motives, though there are definitely more things to learn—like knowing that Willow’s feelings go a wee bit further back than just the kitten club. It’ll definitely be interesting to see how that revelation affects them - I mean, it would be hard to not “what if” things or have regrets, right? Willow’s coming out - that’s this next update. Can’t say it’s going to be easy, but at least Willow is facing her fears and doing what needs to be done. And wow to rereading. I’m seriously so impressed with anybody who reads this huge story more than once; it is a long-haul! And no fear - you just did tell me! I really appreciate it. And I seriously couldn’t abandon this story; I need to finish it, more than you guys want it finished, I’m sure! I look ahead to some of the things I’ve already written and I’m just so eager to get there. There actually is a series of books by the author Jasper Fforde and they describe what life is like for characters that live in books/stories that are unfinished and it’s just… so sad. I imagine Willow and Tara, desperately in love and STUCK apart, replaying their unrequited love affair every time someone reads the story and that just kills me lol. Motivation! We need to get these crazy kids together, for their sake, for your guys’ sake, for my sake. I don’t know about Christmas, but I don’t think it’ll be too much longer. (I mean, relatively, and real life cooperating, of course.) Thanks so much - I hope you like the next bit.

Phantasyland Thank you so much. I was really worried about the music part - that is not an easy song to describe, and it was an important moment for Tara; I didn’t want to mess it up. I hope you like the next bit and thanks again.

Kajun Not Christmas, though, funny because I was actually trying to get this posted before Thanksgiving (but alas, the flu and family obligations got me). Too funny about the song. I don’t know that many people would recognize it—at over 8 minutes long it’s not really radio material, though I do think it’s been used in a few movies/commercials. It’s one of my favorite songs by one of my favorite bands. Was very happy to use it here. Thanks so much (and sorry to post again before you came back!)—hope you like the next part.

jayelle13 Slow clap for making me feel old, haha. You were four when they got together?! Oy. And, kind of cool that you’ve had them together your whole life. That’s kind of neat. Thank you so much though for the kind words, I really appreciate the feedback and am very flattered. I hope you like the next update and thanks again.

SGL Thanks very much. As I told Phantasyland earlier, I was really worried about writing this song. It is so incredibly epic and moving; it was hard to describe the music and Tara’s reaction to it because the song is so long and intricate. I’m glad that you thought I pulled it off, and that you think that music hasn’t been distracting in this story. I’ve really enjoyed including it. :) I’m really glad also that you liked the last update. Willow is coming out in this next update and I’m not going to lie, it’s going to be rough. But, it needs to be done, and as stupid as this sounds, I’m proud of her for doing it. And wow about this being your second favorite work (I can’t bring myself to call it literature, though I am insanely flattered and humbled that you did!). Wow and wow. Thank you so much. I really hope you like the next bit.

truck_driving_magic_mama Thank you so much for the very kind words. I’m glad this story warms your cynical heart! (Cause even cynical hearts need a little sunshine sometimes.) And you wrote a paper about this story?! Wow. What was it about? (And your TA is an expert in fanfiction? That is crazy. What is the field of study?) My mind is totally blown, and I’m feeling extremely humble and flattered at the moment. Thank you. And thank you for the poem - powerful stuff. Atwood is one of my wife’s favorite writers, so I really appreciate you sharing. (I’m not as familiar with her stuff, though I’m striving to read more.) Thanks again, and please enjoy the next update.

lavenderangel Ah, reading fic over coffee in the morning - I miss those days. Now, I’m lucky if I even get to drink my coffee when it’s warm as I scarf down breakfast and make sure everyone else eats too before we tear out of the house. Thank you for the super kind words. If it helps, I can’t believe I’ve written 68 chapters that cover 3 weeks time (time traveling park excursion excluded). I really did think this story would be 6 or 7 updates, tops, when I started. Silly me! You know, funny that you mentioned the timeline; I actually bought a writing app for the first time a couple of weeks ago to get organized because I finally thought, “what the hell are you doing, you’ve written something like 200,000 words in TextEdit.” Before if I needed to look over a previous event for reference I needed to guess which update/part I thought it was in… led to some really interesting results haha. I actually worried about the update’s density with all of the references because I thought it was too detailed and dorky, but it was really necessary for me to get back into where they were emotionally, and, I do think Tara needed to see things in a different light. I agree about Tara’s ability to empathize. I think that’s her “superpower;” the key though is making it realistic. I mean, at what point would even the most generous, empathetic person be like, screw this? I think if she hadn’t sort of figured out where Willow was coming from in this update she’d be done. But now that she sees things in a new light… she’s all in. I totally get wanting Tara to go home. Hopefully what happens with that will work for you. And yes, meanwhile poor Willow. Coming out is the next update - going to be rough, but totally needs to be done. Hope you like the next update and wow to planning on rereading. Thanks again.

kimmy_s Thanks so much. I’m really glad you liked the description of the painting. I was worried that it wouldn’t translate, but it seems like people enjoyed it. If you’re interested in seeing what I had in mind with her work, just Google Gerhard Richter’s abstracts. I imagine Tara’s looking similar, but more wild, with more paint layered high and choppy in sections. Willow’s coming out is this next update; rough, but necessary. It will definitely be interesting when Willow and Tara see each other again. I mean, they’ve pretty much accepted that they are in love, they just don’t know what that means regarding a relationship. Very eager to get to that update! Thanks again Kim, hope you like the next update.

DaddyCatALSO Thanks for the good luck wishes - I actually wrote the bulk of the next update years ago, so it was mostly just a case of editing for tone this week. Sheila is not easy to write! She was so enigmatic on the show, really had to work to find a tone that seemed to fit what little glimpses we got of her. And yes, Tara’s show - it definitely seems like she’s painted herself into a corner (har har har). When she tells Marissa that she has the titles ready; I mean, she obviously has a plan for how to cover herself and not default. Will be interesting to see if she’ll go through with it. (And yes, acrylics do dry quickly; she used oils for the painting in the last update so going to be a while until it’s all the way dry.) I totally hear you about being jealous of Tara’s ability to use her art as therapy. I feel the same way. I’m definitely someone who has to be in the mood to write, and I have an awful time writing when my emotions are mixed up. (When I was pregnant writing was a complete no go - just too all over the place and unable to focus.) I’d love it if I could sit down and write to work through my emotions! Maybe it’s just a difference in the mediums; painting is definitely visceral and immediate while I find that writing is way more exact. I mean, I spent an entire day last week niggling over a single word I didn’t like in the last update. That’s crazy. And, I often feel like writing creates emotions that I wasn’t feeling before. So I’ll be feeling creative and sit down and then I’m overwhelmed by the characters’ emotions, and that’s sometimes very hard. Very interesting about the feeling naked line - truth. Willow really is seeing herself and her journey from an interesting perspective as she gets ready to step into a new stage of her life. Thanks again; I hope you like the next update.

bluepaintbox Thank you so much; I appreciate that you left a comment. :) I love the dedication of the readers too - I can’t believe how many people are still interested in this story. You know, when I posted my first update this year after that last really long break I thought, maybe three people would comment? I’m blown away by this place every single day, so awesome this community is still so vibrant and strong. I mean, there are no words to describe how immensely grateful I am that people still enjoy this story. I’m so glad that you liked this last update. And thank you for sharing how it related to your life - I really appreciate it. I agree with your description of what it feels like once depression starts to lift; even just a tiny sliver of hope feels so massive. I think Tara, when she comes out of the emotional fog that she’s in right now, is going to be really blown away by the fact that yes, Willow is in love with her. I mean, that’s just amazing. Thank you again. I hope you like the next update.

ssc1980 Whaaaat, Trophy Room isn’t your jam? :) I love Hobson’s Choice, so many fun nights there. (Or, so I’ve been told by amused friends. ;) ) Was actually really fun to fictionalize. Thank you re: the last update. Things are definitely accelerating - hope you like where things go from here.

psyro Wow. First, congratulations on de-lurking. That’s huge, and I’m flattered that you did so because of this story. I hope you stick around; there are so many other great stories and writers on the board, I’m sure they’d love to hear from you too! :) And, I’m so impressed by a) anyone who leaves feedback, because it’s often not easy to express how people’s writing makes you feel but especially b) those of you guys who speak English as a second (or third or fourth) language. My command of my second language is so, so pathetically awful compared to you guys; seriously, if you hadn’t said English wasn’t your mother tongue I’d have no idea. So, kudos!
Another young ’un! 14 when you started - that blows me away. I’m glad you find the story relatable; thank you for sharing how it fit with your own experiences. You’re right, coming out is never easy (as you’ll see in the next update), but it is such an important process to go through. I’m proud of everyone who has the courage to do it. Sorry that you’ve felt hurt; unfortunately, I think most of us have, too. But hooray for being in a happy, healthy relationship! Those are the bee’s knees. :) I’m glad you’re happy that they’re getting closer to being together; me too. And thank you for saying that you’d wait years - that is just so flattering. Hopefully it won’t take even close to that long! Thank you re: the last update. I mentioned above that if you want to see what I had in mind for Tara’s art, Google Gerhard Richter’s abstracts, and then imagine them being a little more wild, less refined, with paint higher and choppier in places. And yeah, I wish I could give sitting-on-the-ground Tara a hug too. I think she needs one. Hope you like where things go from here, and thanks so much for the very kind words.
EasierSaid
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Re: New Fic - Neverland

Postby EasierSaid » Sat Dec 07, 2013 8:15 am

Title: Neverland
Author: EasierSaid
Feedback: Yes, please.
Spoilers: None.
Setting: AU. There is no Hellmouth, there is no slayer and no magic of the wicca variety. Just our girls and the rest of the Buffy characters living and loving in that great city by the bay, San Francisco.
Rating: PG-13
Disclaimer: Please don't sue me Mutant Enemy.
Notes: MAJOR angst warning—coming out trigger. Totally understand if anyone wants to skip this one. Lines from ‘Gingerbread.’


Thoughts in italics

PART 69

Willow stood in the long hallway outside of her mother’s hotel room, her eyes anxiously trained on the numbers on the door. She smoothed her hands down the front of her clothes, exhaling, her heart hammering in her chest. Her hair was slightly damp despite her best efforts to keep dry and presentable, the air outside holding mist so fine that she couldn't see it falling though the streets were slick with wet. She had timed everything perfectly, and had arrived at the hotel exactly when her mom expected her. She took a deep breath and slowly exhaled. She could do this. She reminded herself that she had answers for the questions her mother would likely throw at her, reminded herself that even if her mom was angry, or disappointed, or didn’t say anything at all, she’d be okay. Because she’d be out. And she’d be free. And the next time she saw Tara she’d be able to be honest with her in a way that she had wanted to be for years. She took another deep breath and knocked on the door.

Sheila opened the door, a wide, warm smile on her face. “Willow, you’re right on time.”

“I try,” Willow said, forcing a nervous smile to her lips as she stepped into the hotel room and her mother’s embrace. She closed her eyes, savoring the contact, not knowing if it’d be the last hug or the first of the evening.

“I’m sorry, I’m not quite as ready,” her mom said as she stepped out of the embrace and lead her daughter more fully inside. The heavy door closed behind them with a loud click.

“That’s okay,” Willow said, twisting her fingers before her as she took a few steps away from the door and then stopped. She noticed her mother’s open suitcase on the spare bed, noticed a pile of tickets and other miscellany on the TV stand. She took another deep breath.

“Did you find us a place to eat?” Sheila asked.

“I did,” Willow said, turning to face her mother. She felt like her heart was in her throat, and she couldn’t help but feel guilty; her mom was so relaxed, so happy. She had no idea what was coming. “There’s an Italian place not far from here, I thought if it stopped raining we could walk,” she said, attempting to keep her voice calm. Normal.

“Sounds lovely,” her mother said as she moved past her daughter and strode to the other side of the room. “I just need to find my shoes–“

“Mom,” Willow said, taking a small step forward and interrupting the taller woman.

“Yes,” Sheila said, looking up surprised.

“I thought, maybe, before we went out we could talk, about something.”

“Oh?”

Willow nodded, her stomach flipping. “There’s something that I’ve wanted to talk to you about for a while,” she said softly, her face quirking and then smoothing, her fingers twisting before her.

The older woman’s head cocked to the side. “Well why haven’t you?” Sheila asked.

“Timing,” Willow said. But that wasn’t true, not entirely. Wasn’t she here to be honest? She frowned, her forehead knitting. “A-And.” She took a deep breath. “I was afraid.”

“Of what, me?” Sheila asked, surprised, a smile on her lips.

“It’s kind of a big deal, and I just, wasn’t sure how to tell you.” Willow swallowed hard and caught her mother’s eye. She saw the look on her mother’s face turn serious.

“I see,” the taller woman said, her voice quiet.

Willow nodded her head, taking a quick deep breath. “You see,” she started, her stomach in her throat. “I’m sorta, kind of, gay.”

Sheila’s brow furrowed. “Kind of–“

“I’m gay, mom,” Willow said, clarifying.

Sheila nodded her head, her gaze wandering as she processed the information. She was quiet for a long moment before looking up, her face concerned. "Is this a political statement?”

"What?" Willow asked, truly confused by the question.

"Because if it is there are so many other ways to show solidarity with–“

"No, mom, it's not. It's–“ Willow stopped, her mind spinning as she tried to imagine how announcing she was gay could possibly be seen as a political statement. What would that even be? ‘Sorry you don’t have any rights, think I won’t have any either, you know, for moral support?’ She shook her head. “It’s definitely not a political statement.”

“Oh. Well,” Sheila said, her gaze again wandering before she sighed and shrugged her shoulders. “How long have you felt like this?" She asked, her voice indulgent despite an obvious disinterest in discussing the subject matter.

"I've known for three years,” Willow said, twisting her fingers nervously.

Sheila rolled her eyes. “Willow, really.”

“I know,” the redhead said apologetically, stepping forward, her hands moving in circles in front of her, “that that’s a long time to not have talked about this before but I–“

“To carry this kind of experimentation beyond your college years,” Sheila tsked, shaking her head.

The redhead’s brow quirked. “Experimenta–“

“Not that it’s exactly untypical for women in your age group to experiment,“ the taller woman lectured.

“Mom,” Willow said, realizing from the tone of her mother’s voice where this was going.

“In fact, I read an interesting paper recently on the rise of bisexual–“

“I’m not bisexual, mom,” Willow interrupted. Her mom looked at her, startled at being cut off. “A-And, I’m not an age group,” the redhead said though a respectful smile. “I’m me. Willow group. And I’m gay.”

“I see,” Sheila said, nodding her head, chastened.

Willow’s face quirked. “I tried to tell you–"

"No,” the older woman said, shaking her head, her face more drawn than before.

"I did," Willow corrected, her voice steady. "But you wouldn't listen."

“No,” Sheila said forcefully, surprising the redhead. The taller woman exhaled, frustrated. She looked at her daughter. "You are a grown woman, Willow, if you had something to say you should have just said it."

The redhead swallowed hard. Her mom's tone of voice stilled her and she knew the woman was right. "I was scared." She looked to her mother for sympathy, but the woman’s gaze was clinical and detached. "I want you to be proud of me, to support me–"

"I don't support this," her mother interrupted calmly, shaking her head and shrugging her shoulders.

"And I didn’t think you would,” Willow's face twisted, her voice constricting. "So I didn't say anything even though it killed me to keep this from you, because I love you and I don't want you to hate me."

“Oh don’t be so dramatic Willow, I don't hate you," her mother said with a tired, dismissive sigh.

“You don’t?” Willow asked, her voice small, a sliver of hope in her voice.

Sheila shook her head, obviously trying to find words to express what was spinning through her mind. “I just hope you know that you don’t need to act out like this to feel different or special, or to fit in in a new environment.”

Again Willow was confused by her mother’s line of thinking. “I’m not acting out,” she said, shaking her head. “And I’m definitely not trying to fit in with anyone. This is just, who I am.”

“Perhaps–“

“Mom,” Willow said, again stepping forward, catching her mother’s eye. “I’m gay.”

Sheila was quiet for a long moment before letting loose a nearly silent sigh.

Willow felt for her mother. The taller woman’s frame was tense, her shoulders bowed and the lines around the edges of her frowning mouth made her look older than she was. “I’m sorry if this is surprising, or–“

“It’s more than surprising, Willow,” Sheila said, holding up her hand. She paced away. “It’s…”

“Unexpected?” Willow asked, twisting her fingers in front of her.

Sheila just shook her head, collecting her thoughts. "How many–" Again the older woman cut herself off. She took a deep breath and closed her eyes. "How many, women..." She didn't open her eyes as she ground out the words.

Willow swallowed hard; she had dreaded this question. "None." Sheila opened her eyes and their gaze locked. "I haven't dated anyone,” Willow said shaking her head, her voice innocent, her eyes wide. The redhead thought back to Friday and guilt washed over her. It was a technicality, she told herself. Tara didn’t even know.

"Then how do you know?" Sheila asked, her brow knit in confusion.

“I just, do,” Willow answered simply.

“Willow–“

"I haven’t dated anyone because I didn't want to lie to you–"

“Really–“

"—About who I was,” Willow finished, plowing through her mother’s interruption. “I needed to be out first. It wouldn't be fair to you, and it wouldn't be fair to the person I dated.”

"But how do you know?” Sheila repeated slowly, doubt dripping from each word.

"I just do,” Willow answered.

"Willow," Sheila sighed. "I know dating has been hard for you, that it's been hard for you to meet the right man–"

"I don't want to meet the right man," Willow interrupted, struggling to keep the exasperation she felt from flooding her voice. "Because there is no 'right man' for me, mom. I'm attracted to women. I feel–"

"Stop," Sheila commanded, a weary sigh escaping her lips. "Just stop. I don't want to hear it."

"But you have to," Willow said, forcing herself to confront her mother’s fears.

"No, I don't," Sheila said.

Willow frowned. “You don't just get to ignore this because it doesn't fit into your picture of who I am."

"And who is that, Willow?" Her mom challenged. "Who are you?"

"I'm Willow," the redhead replied, trying with all of her might to keep her voice even. “The same old me that I've always been." It was like a mantra, she had practiced this so many times over the years. “Nothing’s changed.”

Sheila pursed her lips and nodded. “This is who you've always been.”

“Yes,” Willow replied, her voice small.

Sheila shook her head. “All those conversations about meeting men, your future husband–"

“Your conversations,” Willow amended. “You always brought it up. I just, didn’t know how to tell you that they were pointless.”

“Pointless,” the older woman repeated.

"I wanted to tell you sooner–“

"Did you even date Daniel?" Sheila asked, her brow twisted.

Willow was thrown. "Of course I dated Oz."

"And you," Sheila took a deep breath. "You were intimate with him?"

"Yes, I–" A deep blush covered Willow's face and she crossed her arms around her waist. She wished she had removed her suddenly too-warm jacket when she came into the room. "I don't feel comfortable talking about this with you."

"Well I don't feel comfortable talking about any of this," Sheila said, her tone frustrated. "But if you have limited experience with men Willow, if it wasn't, satisfying–"

“I’m attracted to women," Willow ground out, her face the same color as her hair. That her mother would want to dissect her sex life with Oz– "It doesn't have anything to do with Oz, what we had was..." She sighed, trying to regain her composure and get back on topic. "I loved Oz, very much, but it's not the same. I couldn't be in love with him or, have a future with him, because I’m gay."

“But you’re so young, you’ve barely given men a chance."

"That's not true,” Willow said, shaking her head. “And that's not how it works."

"If you would just go out on dates–"

"Did you choose to be straight?" Willow said, frustration bubbling up in her voice. "Because being gay isn't something I'm choosing because I'm lonely."

“Well is there someone then?” Sheila challenged. “A, woman, someone?”

Willow felt her stomach clench. It was the one time in this whole honest conversation that she was going to allow herself to outright lie, because if she didn't, if she mentioned Tara her mom would not let it go, and she didn’t want her mom to blame Tara for any of her feelings about Willow’s coming out. The redhead shook her head. "No."

Sheila paced away, shaking her head. “I just don’t understand when you developed this aversion to men…”

Willow shook her head. “I don’t have an–”

"Did Daniel do this?"

"No, mom,” Willow sighed, frustrated. “He didn't 'do' anything." Sheila continued to pace, shaking her head. "Mom," Willow said as she watched her mother pace, the redhead's voice gentle. "I'm still me." The older woman sighed. "I'm not different. I'm just, going to be happier."

"You can't say that,” Sheila said absently, wagging her finger.

"That I'll be happier–?"

"That you won't change," Sheila said. She stopped and stared at her daughter. "Are you going to cut your hair?"

"What?" Willow asked, thrown as she brought a hand up and unconsciously stroked her red locks. She hadn’t anticipated the question.

"Are you going to dress differently?"

Willow almost laughed, but just shook her head at the fear in her mother's eyes. "No. I mean, I might buy some new clothes sometime–"

"This isn't a joke, Willow," her mother said, the stress in her voice cutting.

“I'm not joking– Mom," the redhead started to take a step forward but stopped when her mother stepped away.

Sheila closed her eyes and dropped her head. She opened her eyes again and shook her head, seemingly dazed. "What am I going to tell my friends…” she said to herself.

And Willow couldn’t stop the anger from seizing her chest. "Your friends?" She seethed as her mother seemed to ignore her. "You're worried about what your friends are going to think? Who cares!”

"I care, Willow," her mother snapped, the stress of the conversation starting to show on the tight muscles in her face.
“I care. It might not mean anything to you but my friends are important to me and I care what they think of me.”

The redhead dipped her head, allowing her mother that. Didn't she care what Xander thought about her? Buffy? She looked back up at her mother, the older woman's mind obviously racing. "Maybe they'll be happy that your daughter is happy."

There was a long silence before Sheila loudly exhaled. "This is going to break your father's heart." Willow's brow furrowed and she flushed red. So her dad would be disappointed. "You have no idea how much he is looking forward to having a son-in-law."

Willow's face twisted into a tight frown, embarrassment sending her heart racing. "Actually, I don't, because dad’s never said anything to me ever about my love life. I don’t think he even knows I’ve had one.”

"Willow," her mother said in a warning tone.

"I mean, if it's not about work or the weather or some, stupid, trivial topic,” Willow said, her words bumping into each other as she quickly spoke, “I have no idea what he thinks." She felt herself starting to panic, her worst fears about her dad’s feelings on her coming out seemingly confirmed.

"You cannot tell him about this," Sheila said sternly. "He has a very important semester with a lot of expectations and he cannot deal with this right now."

"Deal?" Willow said, the hurt bleeding through her words. "I'm something to deal with?"

"He is too busy to have to worry about this right now."

Willow was taken aback. She knew her mom was disappointed, but to not include her father… “He's too busy to worry about his daughter?” The redhead asked, her brow furrowed. “To know that I’m finally happy?”

"He is too busy to have to deal with this right now." Sheila's tone indicated that the line of conversation was over. "If you still feel this way in a few months time, then you can tell him."

"I am," Willow said, tears starting to fill her eyes, her voice catching, emotional. "I am going to 'feel this way' because I'm gay. This is who I am, I'm not going to change–"

"We'll see," Sheila interjected.

"No," Willow said, her frustration finally exploding, her voice rising. "I hate when you do that. You just, dismiss me like my feelings aren't valid but they are! I’m me, I’m not, an age group, o-or someone you’ve read about or one of your friends, I’m me, and I'm gay, mom. Gay, as in lover of women–"

"Willow, stop," her mother snapped. "You're embarrassing yourself."

"No, I'm embarrassing you," the redhead retorted. "I mean, isn't that what this is all about, me, being an embarrassment? Because I don't fit into your little narrative, the little story you tell friends over dinner and cocktails?”

"That is not fair," Sheila said.

"Fair?" Willow retorted, tears spilling onto her cheeks. "How's this for fair: I have to choose between being happy and pleasing my parents. How's that for fair."

"That is ridiculous," Sheila snapped.

"No–"

"You are a grown woman, Willow," the older woman again reiterated, her stern voice striking Willow silent. "You don't make any decisions in your life because of your father or me. You are your own person with your own life and what you do with it is not for us to decide.”

"No?" Willow replied, her head bobbing up and down, her hurt voice wavering. "Because I'm pretty sure I went to MIT because that's where you wanted me to go."

"If that's why you went to MIT then I feel sorry for you," Sheila said evenly. "Because we have never pressured you to make any decision about your life. You chose MIT. Were we happy? Yes. Proud? Of course we were, but that was your choice. This is your life, Willow. You live it. You are an adult. And do not try to blame us–"

"I'm not blaming you," Willow interjected. She paused and wiped the tears from her cheeks with her jacket sleeves. "I just, I want you to understand how much I want you to approve of me. Of my life.”

“Well I don't approve," Sheila said, shaking her head. "I don't approve of this, of your choice."

"It's not a choice!" Willow said, exasperated. "I didn't choose this, god, do you think anyone in their right mind would choose this? To choose to have their parents hate them–"

"I don't hate you," Sheila again ground out.

“Then what?” The redhead asked.

"I don't know you,” Sheila said, and the redhead felt a chill run across her skin.

"You don't know me?" Willow asked after a long moment of silence. "What does that mean?"

"It means, I don't know you," Sheila said, looking right at her. "I look at you, and you look like my little girl–" The woman cut herself off, emotion catching in her throat. Willow's lip trembled. "But I look at you and you're not her. You're not the little girl I raised."

"I am," Willow pleaded. "Nothing's changed. I'm still me only, me is gay." Sheila shook her head. "Mom."

"You have no idea, Willow,” the older woman said, still shaking her head. “Unless you're a mother– You have no idea."

"Mom–"

"When you were a baby, your father and I used to lie in bed with you and dream about what your life would be,” Sheila said, looking directly at her daughter. “I never dreamed this."

"But 'this' isn't bad," Willow said, her voice confused and desperate. "Don't you want me to be happy? To fall in love?"

"You have no idea how hard your life is going to be if you do this."

"Mom,“ Willow said.

"Everything is going to be difficult, Willow,” she explained. “You are going to have to fight for everything. My friends that are gay; it is so hard for them. So hard. Everything that you should be able to do without a thought is going to be a struggle–"

"I know," Willow replied. "I know it might not be puppies and lollipops but, this is who I am."

“And it breaks my heart to think that people are going to hate my daughter without knowing her,” Sheila continued, not fully listening to what Willow had just said.

"Hello, people hate me already—Jewish!"

"It's not the same,” Sheila frowned.

"Irrational hatred over something that I am that doesn't hurt anyone else?” Willow rhetorically asked. “Sounds the same to me.”

"It is not the same, Willow." Sheila clenched her eyes shut before looking at her daughter sadly. "Don't you want children?"

"Yes," the redhead answered immediately. She knew her mother was going to ask that question.

"Don't you want them to know their father?"

Willow took a deep breath. She knew better than to be baited into the pitfalls she had fallen into before. She appealed to the older woman’s logical side. “Studies show that children raised by two loving adul–"

"Wouldn't you be sad if you didn't know your father?" Sheila interjected, side-stepping Willow’s call to reason.

"Mom," Willow said, her voice tired.

"And what about your, 'partner'? Isn't she going to miss out on having had children?"

"No, because–" Willow cut herself off. "I might not be the one to give birth–"

Sheila looked aghast. "Then they won't be your children."

"Yes, they will,” Willow said sharply. Sheila paced away, shaking her head and the redhead deflated. "This isn't even, I mean, this is sort of putting the cart before the–"

"I can't believe I came here for this," Sheila muttered quietly, pain lacing her words.

Willow frowned as she watched her mom retreat into herself. She knew from experience that her mom was overthinking things, drifting off into her own mind and that there would be no way of reaching her soon if the topic didn’t return to safer waters. After long minutes of silence, Willow worked up the courage to speak. "Why don't we just go to dinner and talk more later."

"No," Sheila replied absently. "I don't want to go to dinner."

"Okay," the redhead said contritely. She waited quietly for her mother to speak, to offer her own plan of action, but the older woman was lost in her own thoughts. Willow tried again. "Do you, do you want to order in–"

"I don't want to talk anymore,” Sheila said wearily over her shoulder, waving her hand. “I think I'm just going to watch the news and go to bed."

Willow stood shocked. "Mom–"

"I'm sorry Willow,” the older woman said, turning to face her daughter. “I know that you are expecting something from me but this is how I feel and I’m done talking.”

"Mom–"

"I'm not going to talk about this anymore tonight and that's final."

It was the sharp, scared look on her mother’s face that silenced her more than the harsh tone in her voice. “Okay," Willow said contritely.

The two women stood awkwardly across from each other for a long moment before Sheila spoke. “I look at you and it's like…” The older woman pursed her lips, tears filling her eyes. "You look like my daughter, but you're not her, and I just feel so, so sad."

Willow started to panic as another cold chill ran through her. She smiled nervously. "Mom–"

"I feel like you've died, Willow,” the woman said, putting a hand over her heart, her chin wavering. “That's what it feels like right now. Like someone has called me and told me that my only child has died and I need time to let my Willow, my little girl, go.”

Willow was shocked silent. She just nodded, her entire body numb. She thought her mom would be disappointed. Thought that they would fight, maybe agree to disagree… But this? Never this. “I’ll go, then.”

“I think that’s best,” Sheila said calmly.

Willow paused and then looked at the woman who raised her. “Can I give you a hug?”

Sheila sadly shook her head. “No.”

Willow nodded her head. She felt dizzy. “I’m sorry.”

“Me too,” the older woman said, her words carrying a finality that left the redhead speechless.

Willow again nodded. She needed to leave, but she felt leaden and immovable. She swallowed hard and put all of her energy into turning her body. First the left foot, then the right until she was at the door. She twisted the handle and pulled, the heavy hotel door opening, and she slipped quietly into the empty hallway.

The door closed behind her with a loud click and she walked, down the long hallway toward the elevators, her feet nearly silent on the hotel’s plush carpet, her face a perplexed mask. She entered the elevator and pushed the lobby button automatically and stared at her reflection in the steel doors vacantly as she returned to the ground floor. She exited the elevator like a robot and made her way out of the hotel and onto the sidewalk, the bustling weekend evening crowd carrying her across the street twice to the parking garage.

She fumbled with the parking garage card when she tried to pay, her fingers hitting the buttons on the machine incorrectly twice before her card was returned with a loud stamp. Her breath came a little harder as she rode the elevator up to her car, heavier still as she walked with echoing footfalls to her car, and she found herself hyperventilating as she entered her car and sat, her eyes darting as she gripped the steering wheel. The entire 30 minute conversation with her mother tore through her mind. The look on her mother’s face. Her clipped statements and confusing questions. Willow shook her head, her knuckles white. She had done it. She had come out, had left her mother with no doubts as to her sincerity and seriousness. She swallowed down the panic, her body in shock.

Long minutes passed. She didn’t know where to go. Would Tara even be home? Or would it be like weeks ago, when the blonde stayed out well after midnight? The reality of that time hit Willow like a thousand bricks; the blonde had been avoiding her, probably because she had feelings for her, a “straight” girl. The redhead cursed herself. Her breath started to return to normal and once she was able to see straight, she started her car and drove down the circular ramp until she exited to the street. She cut up to Market and drove, her body clicking into automatic pilot, following the route she always took when heading home from work on days when she skipped taking public transportation. She pulled into the short driveway outside her apartment, her eyes drifting up as she killed the car’s motor. The apartment was dark. Tara wasn’t home.

And at the sight of the large, dark windows, Willow began to cry, her lips trembling until she finally started sobbing, her entire body shaking. For several long minutes she cried, tears of shame and frustration, fear and anger. The things her mother said… She clenched her teeth and wailed, the awful sound bouncing back to her in the car’s small confines. She felt so lost. She shook her head as the tears eventually ebbed, touched her tongue to her teeth, her face twisted and pained, and concentrated on breathing in an attempt to stop the overwhelming sadness she felt from smothering her. And after a while, a little of it receded, enough for her to take a deep breath, and then another, and feel her heart return to a more normal pace.

She looked to her phone through blurry eyes. 7:34. And suddenly, the mere sight of her phone made her feel sick. Because it had been a little over 30 minutes since she saw her mom, and the older woman hadn’t called to apologize, to entreat her back to the hotel, to a late dinner where they could talk more, find some common ground. Willow knew she’d call Xander and he’d try to make her feel better, but how could he? With what her mother had just said, what could he possibly say? And maybe later Buffy would call, and the redhead could lie about why she sounded so crushed, or tell the truth and have the petite blonde hate her. And Tara. The redhead’s shoulders sagged. Because Tara would never call her. Never had, and certainly never would tonight, not after her flinch. Not after avoiding her all day.

After a long while she composed herself. Wiped her face on her jacket sleeves, blew her nose on an old Starbucks napkin she found wedged between the driver’s seat and the car’s center console. If she was lucky, Tara would return home soon and they’d talk, and tomorrow she’d go see Buffy and whatever was meant to happen with that, would, and then she’d be free to live her life and all that came with it honestly. She took a deep breath and then reached over and powered off her phone. She didn’t want to talk to Xander. She didn’t want to talk to Buffy, and she didn’t want to wait for the calls from her mom and Tara that she knew weren’t going to come. She wiped her face and went though the motions of parking her car. That done, she took her keys and entered her dark apartment.
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Re: New Fic - Neverland

Postby JustSkipIt » Sat Dec 07, 2013 8:33 am

Dibs

Heather,
So a few things. The first one is that I logged in right after you made update and dibsed it real quick. Then a few hours later I went back to read the update (which was spectacular). When I got to the end, someone else had dibs and then someone else and someone else, which was really confusing. Or it was confusing until I realized that I was an update behind! I had not read or seen update 68 (or your response from 67). So that means I got to read two updates in close succession which was pretty awesome.

Re: your response to feedback. Thank you so much for laying it out. Yes, it makes much more sense and absolves Willow (somewhat) for leaving Tara hanging for so long. The way you break it down, I can see it being reasonable. I think that part of my uncomfortableness is that I am a person who does not like to have things hanging. I mean… if my wife and I have a fight or whatever, I have a hard time not discussing it during the day while I’m at work the next day rather than waiting until I get home from work. It’s that uncomfortable to me to have unfinished business. So I think for me to read Willow’s plan is just… as they say in Bellwether – Itch. Anyway, I can’t say how much I appreciate the effort you put into a response. Wow.

Chapter 68 – Jesus God. What a great opening line and few paragraphs. Way to grab the reader and yank her into your narrative right now. I love the way Tara’s perception of the music so mirrors her relationship with Willow (from her side that is). There is the closeness and building passion and occasional metaphorical slaps (years ago the phone call with Oz, mentions of Xander, and most importantly the flinch) and it all seems mirrored in the music. And from music to art. Her artistry is building within her – completely uncontrollable (and let me say how lucky she is to have access to the space and supplies).

But the best part of this update? Tara getting it all right. Ok, there are a few specifics that she is not right on but besides that she gets it all right. She starts from a supposition – what if Willow loves me but wants to come out first? You know what it makes me think of? Do you ever do Sodoku? If you do Sodoku, there usually comes a point in each puzzle (at least an advanced puzzle) that it is not possible to mathematically eliminate any further numbers. At that point, you have to make a guess and then go from there. “If a 3 goes here, then what…” But you might guess a different thing “If an 8 goes over here, then what?” Either way you play out the game given the number that you decide to fill in. It’s like Tara did that with her hypothesis and then she works forward through memory building her evidence. Could she be wrong? Yes. She’s not but she could be. Sometimes we as humans have a theory and then we force 13 right things and 6 wrong things into that theory and say that it fits. But in this case she has a theory and she fits 23 right things into it. So it makes sense that her greatest artistry will come from this time of complete truth – of getting it right.

And how … Tara’s painting is over the fireplace and this is Willow’s painting. How perfect.
Poor Willow. I love that as shitty as she feels. As broken and scared and everything else she writes the note and signs it Love. Well done, Willow!

Marissa – She is sort of perfect here. No… what happened? Why are you sitting on the floor. Just the painting is beautiful and come have dinner. Tara says she has the titles but isn’t she still one painting short for the show? And I love that Marissa knows that it’s all about Willow. That must be one powerful painting. BTW – I’ve always thought that Michelle was the one convinced about Willow and Tara but I guess Marissa is right there too. And I love that we get her semi-objective perspective on the quality of the painting.

I’m also wondering how that conversation will go. Will Tara really tell M&M the truth and if so are they both going to go “yeah. You’re not crazy. She’s totally gay for you”?

Part 69 – Here is my favorite thing about this update. It’s hard for Willow and she’s been working up to this and obviously it’s arggghhh. But she does this really well. After the first “sorta kind of gay” she totally owns it. She says she is gay. She repeats she is gay. She doesn’t give Sheila any wiggle room. She doesn’t say “I just feel like” or “for now” or I just fell in love with a woman (which is not to say that any of those aren’t valid things to say). She just owns it.
Seriously. I can’t think of anything she could do better with Sheila.

Sheila – at least I’ll give her points for saying she doesn’t want someone to hate Willow just because she is gay but I also don’t think she realizes that right now she is hurting Willow more than those hypothetical strangers can/will. Other than that. Well… you’re a mother and I’m a mother and I know that I’ve asked myself what could make me stop loving my children? And literally nothing. Like if they became bank robbers or serial killers or really loved Tori Amos or something. And literally nothing. So Shelia sucks. And to say that the kids wouldn’t be Willow’s if her partner gave birth is just stupid and insensitive of her. When Rachel was pregnant with Asher I asked my mother once if she would have a harder time with my kids because I didn’t give birth to them and she just said “Do you think I love ‘N’ less than I love you?” (backstory – my oldest sister is adopted and the other three of us are biological children of our parents) I was like “Hell, no.” and she said “Then don’t ever ask me that again.”

So Sheila sucks. I have to admit that I’m 46 and I’ve been out for nearly 30 years and I live in a pretty darned liberal city and my family are all liberal Jews. So it’s been a long time since myself or anyone I even know how had a reaction like that. But I’m also aware that it still happens and probably worse too. Which sucks. Bottom line for Sheila is that she can have her ... whatever this is. Idea of what should be I guess? Her surprise? Or she can have her relationship with her daughter. Really her choice. She needs to talk to some friends. She needs to talk to G-d. She needs to talk to her Rabbi. And she needs to talk to Willow. And she’ll do all that or she won’t and I hope for her sake that she does or she will lose her daughter.

Poor Willow. And yet… she’s still plan Willow. She’s still planning the talk with Buffy tomorrow. And quite honestly I hope that goes as well as this went badly. I hope that Buffy is all cheerleader rah rah rah Buffy. I mean yeah, she’ll be confused but I’m still wondering if she won’t be more hurt that a. 3 years! And b. Xander knew first!

Wow. So I hope I’ve written fb that is worthy of your writing and the two updates since I somehow missed one. I (of course) can’t wait for more. Best wishes to the wife and kids. How are they? Growing much to fast is my guess (your kids, not wife). I hope y’all have wonderful holidays.
Last edited by JustSkipIt on Wed Dec 11, 2013 8:03 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: New Fic - Neverland

Postby wayland » Sat Dec 07, 2013 9:26 am

Heather,

ETA This feedback is for the previous chapter, 68. I wasn't expecting you to update quite so quickly! Now that we're coming towards the climax of the story I find myself in two minds. I really want to read the ending, of course, but I'm not at all sure I want it to finish . . .

What an absolutely amazing chapter.

I suppose I was expecting some kind of transition update, and I wondered how you would deal with the difficulty of keeping Tara and Willow apart until after her meeting with her mother. I was right about the prosaic details – Tara painting and losing track of time until it was too late to get home before Willow left – but I definitely wasn’t expecting what you made of it.

Tara experiences so many contradictory emotions in such a short space of time, anger, guilt, joy, elation, despair. She’s overwrought and sleepless and yet when I was trying to describe the scene to myself, the word that came to mind was exhilarating.

I especially loved the way all those emotions are poured into a work of art. It’s such a romantic idea and yet so apt for her character.

I admire the way you again used music as part of the narrative. I listened to the track before reading the chapter and of course, I was waiting and waiting for the lyrics. (I wonder if ebooks in the future will contain links to music mentioned in the story? Maybe they already do.)

The scene works also well as a recap of recent events, after the flashback to the park, but it doesn’t feel contrived because I can’t imagine Tara doing anything else in that situation but obsessively going over and over every moment she ever spent with Willow.

I liked the change in tone that comes with Willow’s POV. She strikes me as quite stoic in this scene, holding on to a lifebelt and grimly swimming on.

Despite their respective emotional turmoil, both Willow and Tara remain recognisably themselves. Tara has not transformed into someone self-obsessed enough to trash Marissa’s reputation by leaving her studio a wreck. Willow is shell shocked, but she still automatically picks out a shirt that she knows her mother likes. These little details contrast brilliantly with the high drama to make the story all the more believable.
Last edited by wayland on Sat Dec 07, 2013 4:50 pm, edited 2 times in total.
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Re: New Fic - Neverland

Postby zampsa19752001 » Sat Dec 07, 2013 10:04 am

Yay for excellent update-y goodness... Willow is in serious need of Tara-cuddles, I really hope she gets them very very soon...
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Re: New Fic - Neverland

Postby SGL » Sat Dec 07, 2013 7:57 pm

Poor Willow >~< so much heartache. Thank you for the update! I so did not expect you would update so soon. It was certainly a pleasant surprise. I'm glad Willow is out to her mom even when it didnt go too swell. I just hope things get better for our girls soon.

Sorry for the short fb but :buried finals are this week X-/ (I sorta, kinda shouldn't be here in the first place lol XD)
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Re: New Fic - Neverland

Postby HanShotFirst » Sat Dec 07, 2013 8:46 pm

Heather,

Despite the painful nature of this update, I feel blessed to have read it.
I spent a long time dealing with requited love and know the crushing devistation it can bring to your daily life. Tara getting lost in that song, willow's song, and not stopping until she was sure of every moment...even when she was collapsed against the wall sobbing. It fits so well with tara. She's not one to let herself skip over important things just because they hurt. I loved that entire scene of her painting and every emotion you painted for us. I swear I could almost see the brilliant painting that cane as a result of their crazy, painful, amazing love.

Willow coming out to her mom...I definitely cried. That scene had a lot of exact quotes from my coming out experience as well as many others I'm sure. I swear there's a mental checklist that parents go through when their child comes out. Did I... did someone.... are you sure you just haven't... you're too young.. ect × 10. I feel for everyone who has gone through that too. My partner (the previously unrequited love) and I are finally getting married after being together 5 years. After all that time I'm still very prepared for telling my parents to be like coming out again 10 years later. Willows experience with her mom, even if it was a negative one, I feel prepared me in some way. If she can survive that, I know I can survive telling my parents because at least ill have my partner. Thats what matters. Thank you so so much for this story.
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Re: New Fic - Neverland

Postby wayland » Sun Dec 08, 2013 6:40 am

Heather,

To paraphrase Willow, I expected it to be bad, but not quite that bad.

I thought you wrote the scene very well, it left me feeling queasy.

Sheila could have rejected Willow with rage and hate speech, but of course she wouldn’t do that – it would clash too badly with the way she likes to see herself. Instead she uses ostensibly civilised language throughout and that makes the whole scene more disturbing.

Her attack on Willow is actually quite systematic, (which suggests that her daughter’s announcement is not quite the shock she implies it to be).

First she tries to undermine her; to make Willow doubt her understanding of herself. Willow has rehearsed for this and stands up to her. Sheila tries another tactic. Having bullied Willow all her life by withholding her approval, she shames Willow for wanting that approval, ‘You are a grown woman.’ This attack is more successful. She continues to exploit Willow’s desire to please her by presenting herself as a victim and Willow the transgressor. She then takes the focus off herself by extending her range to other ‘victims’ of Willow’s selfishness – other people Willow loves or might love - her father, her future partner and future children. She concludes with quite naked emotional blackmail, ‘I feel like you’ve died, Willow.’

Willow, the actual victim of this outrageous cruelty, apologises. Sheila is a clever woman who knows exactly how to reduce Willow to a mess of self-doubt and insecurity. This time it won’t achieve the result she wants, but the damage to Willow won’t be easily undone.


I hope that you can somehow write a space between this ugliness and Tara and Willow getting together. Willow has succeeded in facing her mother, but it’s left her devastated. I hope that she can at least start to recover on her own, or perhaps with the support of Xander or Buffy. Of course if Tara comes home now she can comfort Willow and help her come to terms with her mother’s rejection, but all along, Willow wanted to come to her as an equal partner, not as some junior lesbian to Tara’s ‘big gay Yoda’. It just seems a shame if their first truly honest conversation comes when Willow is still reeling in shock from Sheila’s actions.

I’m very intrigued to see what happens next. I can’t think of a chapter in this story that hasn’t surprised me in some way and caught my imagination. Thank you Heather.

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