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Fic: - The Sidestep Chronicle & Second Chronicle

Author Index - #s, A-M.
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Re: Fic: - The Sidestep Chronicle

Postby Tulipp » Tue Aug 06, 2002 7:26 am

Sorry for this THIRD post on a single chapter, but I have now read the entire thing for the third time, and I see new things in it every time. The way that the words "faith" and "fate" play out through this chapter are, to use DMW's words, beautiful and terrifying.



This line, to quote it one more time really hit me the third time through:



Quote:
She was going to surrender to fate and allow it to take her. Swallow her up whole and send her straight to hell where Daddy had always told her that she would go.
.



I am now thinking that this could mean so much more for Tara. Just how tired is she? Just how resigned to her fate is she? If fate is what I think it is, then this scares the hell out of me.

Edited by: Tulipp at: 8/6/02 6:27:36 am
Tulipp
 


Re:

Postby Katharyn » Tue Aug 06, 2002 11:36 am

Mollyig - Thanks*S* Tara was Faith's friend... as such she had to give her another chance... even if she was the Slayer. Its funny I always found the canon Faith fairly astute... from her own PoV. I tried to carry that over here.



Reactions to follow...



Tulipp - Never apologise for feedback. There was a sort of link between "Fate" and "Faith" I will admit - though only after I realised it after the first draft after which I strengthened that.



I am not sure what you think this means for Tara so I cannot really answer your concerns... though I can guess. E-mail me if you want more specific reassurances (in a teasing way!)



Katharyn

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Katharyn
 


Re: Oh, sweet goddess.

Postby EffieBlue » Tue Aug 06, 2002 6:55 pm

Excellent story.

I can't wait for the next update.



I was just wondering.....why didn't Tara warn Faith that Willow was there?

she must have seen her behind Faith

She must have known from her pendant that Willow was arriving.



I'm very curious.

_____________________
"I had a brilliant philosophy on life earlier.......but now I've forgotten what it was......." My Eldest daughter.

EffieBlue
 


Re: Fic: - The Sidestep Chronicle

Postby zero » Tue Aug 06, 2002 7:39 pm

Oooh. Now that was good! As always I'm impressed. Great stuff.

Just because noone understands you doesnt mean you're an artist!

zero
 


Re:

Postby Kalita » Tue Aug 06, 2002 8:00 pm

Kath, sorry if the avatar freaked you out. In all honesty, sheer coincidence - I'd made up this avatar last week, and switched to it yesterday when I got back from holidays.



Then you post your chapter, and I'm shaking my head over the sheer, well, fate of it all...

"Numfar... Do the dance of shame."

Kalita
 


Re: Oh, sweet goddess.

Postby Katharyn » Tue Aug 06, 2002 10:35 pm

Effieblue - Thanks. As for your question... Tara did know. Willow was her fate (though she is also Willows.) Tara couldn't do anything. If she had made a choice it would have been wrong regardless. Someone was going to die, Faith, Willow, herself... she would have accepted the choice of fate. Its tough to explain... see the next few chapters...



Zero - Thankyou... I aim to please.



Kalita - Just kidding, yeah it must be fate...



Part 69 in 12 hours or so.



Take care Kittens



Katharyn

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

Katharyn
 


Re: Fic: - The Sidestep Chronicle

Postby Tulipp » Wed Aug 07, 2002 6:53 am

"in 12 hours or so"...



These have to be some of my favorite words on Pens right now. Every time I see them, yes, but especially today.

"Something's bound to begin.
It's going to happen, happen sometime,
Maybe this time...."
--Kander and Ebb, "Cabaret"

Tulipp
 


Re:

Postby miss calendar » Wed Aug 07, 2002 4:33 pm

Oh my God, Kathryn ! I know I said I didn't fancy Faith's chances if she tried to kill Tara but it's one thing speculating and quite another seeing her actually killed by Willow. This was an amazing chapter, very powerful. The reason I'm late with feedback is I initially felt too stirred up to post.



I love Faith and always wondered how things might have gone if she hadn't found herself called as The Other Chosen One, if she had a Watcher who gave her the kind of support she received from the Mayor. One thing I've liked in your fic is that you gave Faith a chance, making her an effective Slayer and allowing her to develop positive relationships with Tara, Jenny and Giles. I'd grown attached to your Faith but although I'm upset by her death it also feels right. Partly because this fic is so tightly plotted and partly because there is an integrity/logic to your characters and their actions, there was an inevitability to this death. You treated Faith and her death with respect, making it a shocking but defining moment in a superbly written story.



One theme that stood out for me was that of taking personal responsibility for one's choices/actions. It seems to me that Faith takes too little whereas Tara takes too much. Faith ultimately chooses to kill Tara but doesn't take full responsibility for her decision.

'' See what you've done to me girl friend? You made me into a killer.''

By giving Tara tests and last chances Faith convinces herself that Tara has joint responsibility for the decision. Really she is just creating a set of conditions that Tara has to fulfil if Faith is to let her live. She is taking on the roles of judge and executioner. When it comes down to it, no-one is forcing Faith to kill Tara, although it doesn't feel that way to her.



I like how you show Faith simultaneously psyching herself up to kill Tara and desperately trying to find away out of it. I also like how alongside Faith's stated reasons you make it clear she is also influenced by unconscious feelings and personal issues. Faith is aware of some of the contradictions but does not have the same kind of insight into herself that she demonstrates toward Tara. Still, Faith acknowledges that she's not just following orders, that if Tara gives the response she is after then, ' She would defend Tara to Giles and the Council could go screw themselves. '

And although she is angry about the ambush she sees it as one of those things bound to happen sometime. But she wants to talk to Giles and Jenny yet ignores Jenny when she calls after her. She wants to protect them but what does she think will happen if she does kill Tara?



Up until now Faith has delayed carrying out the order so it made me wonder why she is so determined to now. I think being nearly killed in the ambush was not the main cause, that rather it was a catalyst bringing to a head long-standing feelings of anger and betrayal. It must be hard knowing your best friend is in love with a demon who wants to kill you. Interesting that, ' the only thing that helped her orders make any sense was that the vampire was more important to Tara than people were. More important than Giles and Jenny........ more important than her good friend Faith too. '



Their friendship and working partnership clearly mean a great deal to Faith who is hurt knowing they are not as important to Tara as her relationship to Willow. I couldn't help wondering if deep down Faith might have liked another kind of partnership with Tara. Willow's final words to her, '' She's not your girl friend '' could be picking up on this.



Actually, this may be totally off the wall, but I also wondered whether because,

' Faith feared the knife and what killing a person with it, killing Tara would do to her ' she somehow felt driven to carry this out. It's almost as if she feels compelled toward a course of action where she stands to lose everything and everyone she holds dear. Killing Tara would have been Faith's worst nightmare and I'm very glad she died before she could do this.



In contrast , Tara really believes that, ' she had forced Faith to be a killer instead of a defender of life. ' She is so ready to take the blame for everything. It is so easy for her to believe she is evil and deseves to die. Paradoxically in doing this I think Tara is also not taking full responsibility for her choices and actions. It's typical of Tara that ' As for her own death, she cared only about the effect it would have on Willow, on her friend Jenny and yes on Faith herself. ' Yet if she weren't feeling so hopeless, instead of resigning herself to her death she would prevent Faith from killing her thus sparing everybody the pain.



It's sad that so often Tara's best impulses have resulted in choices that cause so much pain and guilt. Her wish to be of service to the community and protect others from vampires led to her alliance with the Mayor. Wanting Lilah as a friend involved her with Wolfram and Hart. The fated connection to Willow which should be a source of joy led to her relationship with a ruthless vampire. And now her willingness to sacrifice her life has instead resulted in the death of her best friend. I don't know how Tara will bear it.



Can't wait to see how this all plays out. Thanks again for this awesome fic.

Edited by: miss calendar at: 8/7/02 3:43:06 pm
miss calendar
 


Or so

Postby AutumnT » Wed Aug 07, 2002 5:10 pm

Quote:
Part 69 in 12 hours or so.
We're definitely into heavy "or so" at this point. ;)

Autumn

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Buffy Season 6: It grated, like something forced in where it doesn't belong.

AutumnT
 


Re: Fic: - The Sidestep Chronicle

Postby EffieBlue » Wed Aug 07, 2002 8:50 pm

Kathryn.



thank you for your reply.

I see exactly what you are saying.



I am very much looking forward to the next chapter of the story.



Thank you for replying and you are an excellent writer.



edited to spell Kathryn right cos it's 3 51 am here..and i'm tired...but i love this story

_____________________
"I had a brilliant philosophy on life earlier.......but now I've forgotten what it was......." My Eldest daughter.

Edited by: EffieBlue at: 8/7/02 7:53:44 pm
EffieBlue
 


Part 69 - why is everyone going "FNAR?"

Postby Katharyn » Wed Aug 07, 2002 10:53 pm

Hey Kittens, part 69 below. Yes that's right 69 before breakfast.

Tulipp & Autumn - I may have meant 24 hours... I mean I am on time now!

Effieblue - KathAryn... not your fault my parents could not spell.LOL

Miss Calendar - I was very worried about setting Faith up as likable then killing her... I glad thought that people have felt it fitted, that it felt right in some way.

Personal responsibility - well see part 69 below.

I find your thoughts very interesting here, and will have to consider them. The judge and executioner thing especially - I just saw Faith as being fair! As for the self-destructive desire to kill... well my take was that she did not want to do it.

As for how Tara will bear it... read on.

Part 69 below Kittens... Angst...

Katharyn
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Title: The Sidestep Chronicle – Consequences (Part 69)
Author: Katharyn Rosser
Feedback: Constructive criticism always welcome. katharynrosser@hotmail.com
Spoiler Warning: Pretty limited. The story occurs in an alternate universe though reference is made to events that occur in both realities.
Summary: Immediately after Faith’s death.
Disclaimer: I still don’t own any of the copyrights or anything else associated with BTVS. All rights lie with the production company, writers etc, etc. I am making zilch from this series of stories.
Rating: 15
Couples: VW/T, G/J
Notes: I know that I gloss over some procedure here… it is necessary for the story. But I do try to explain it…
Thanks To: Kerry and Jo once more who both went over this with the proverbial tooth comb. And for Louise… who said Yes. (Not THAT sort of yes… just a Yes.)


The Sidestep Chronicle

Consequences

By

Katharyn Rosser


“Willow.”

She spoke the vampire’s name as it happened. Tara couldn’t see Faith’s face anymore. In that one moment she couldn’t remember what it looked like either. Willow had... How could she ever look at that face again? Then she remembered what Faith looked like.

She remembered what Faith looked like at the instant she had realised what was happening…

Faith had been scared then. Tara had never seen that before… it didn’t seem like the Faith that she knew at all. Faith had known what was happening in that last moment.

The vampire’s eyes just followed Faith to the floor. The slump of the dead weight landed with a thud that would never be repeated. She didn’t even want to think about what Willow had just done.

But there was no escape from it.

She had to think about it. How could she ignore it? How could she get away from it? It was there, the evidence, at Willow’s feet. On the floor. And she was… she… wasn’t moving. She wasn’t ever going to move again was she? Faith was gone. Faith was dead and she was never coming back.

“Willow,” she repeated.

Willow had killed Faith. The Slayer wasn’t getting up. Faith, her friend, wasn’t ever going to get up. She wanted Faith to get up. She wanted Faith to get up and use that knife she had been holding. Anything, even that… was better than this. She had been ready, before, to accept what Faith believed she had to do… hadn’t this just proved that the Slayer had been right?

Willow had killed Faith. She knew why. Willow hated Faith – not the just the Slayer – Willow hated Faith as a person. For being close to her. For being her friend. For taking Willow’s Kitty away from her. Being the Slayer had been the least of Faith’s crimes in Willow’s eyes.

And then there was the chance that Willow had been protecting her… Defending her playtime with Kitty.

Her lover had hated Faith anyway. Now there was no Faith left to hate was there? But Willow would probably still manage it. Willow was filled with hate. Willow was a demon… it was natural for her to hate.

What’s my excuse for how I feel about myself? No demon here.

Tara knew she had no excuse. She had let Willow kill Faith. Why had she done that? She could have said something. Anything. She could have said something to Willow, stopped her during her slow, silent, advance. She could have warned Faith even before Willow entered the room. The pendant… Goddess she had known Willow was approaching long before she had arrived…

But she hadn’t been able to choose between either of them… or her own life.

She had killed Faith. By giving up and surrendering to fate, she had condemned Faith to death. By doing nothing… By not choosing between Faith and Willow.

Friend and lover.

Living and dead.

Good and evil.

Look what she had chosen simply by her lack of a choice. Not even saving herself had been a choice that she could have made.

By default she had chosen Willow.

Willow, who had simply been doing what vampires did. They killed. Willow killed. Every night. And now Willow had killed Faith. She had killed Faith.

She could have said something. Something to Willow that would have stopped the vampire from coming towards them. If she had done that, what then? Willow was unpredictable – she might have tried to fight the Slayer anyway. Especially as Faith held a knife to her Kitty. Willow… Willow wouldn’t have reacted well to that.

Willow hadn’t reacted well had she? No… Willow would still have attacked the Slayer and then she would have been killed by Faith. Tara didn’t doubt the outcome of that confrontation. Faith was almost as fast as Willow and a much better fighter than the vampire had ever needed to be. Stronger, more determined and most importantly a person who was righteous.

A person fighting evil.

Not a person sleeping with it. In love with it.

If… what if she had warned Faith about Willow?

She had been prepared for Faith to kill her. She had accepted that was what she might well deserve, even that her own death might make the world a better place. When Willow had arrived she had realised that Faith might detect the vampire and known that the confrontation might become a battle for her soul. The Slayer would be the one trying to kill her… to restore her soul to her. The demon would be the one trying keep her alive and preserve what Tara knew she had become. Almost as monstrous as the demon she had always been taught that she would by now.

Faith’s dead body was the manifestation of that monster. She thought it had passed her by, but she had really turned even before her birthday. Perhaps even at the moment when admitted to herself that she had fallen in love Willow.

No… not quite. It was when she fell in love with the vampire that Willow was now. She had originally fallen in love with a dream and that had been okay. It was the reality that had doomed her.

Faith was dead.

Faith was dead and even now she still felt for Willow… that was what love was. It couldn’t just be switched on and off. Even when other feelings intruded. Feelings about that other person. Feelings about yourself.

Willow had been almost completely silent as she had approached. No one could detect the vampire if she didn’t want to be detected. No one except for Tara herself. There was the pendant and well… Tara could feel her. She could always feel her. And she didn’t want to stop feeling her now – even after this. Somehow, despite what she was, Willow was a part of her. And Tara didn’t want to lose that. She would have lost it… if Faith had been warned, there might still have been a death, but no body lying on the floor of her apartment.

How was she supposed to have chosen between her friend and her lover? And by not choosing…

No warning would have stopped Willow from attacking Faith; from seizing the opportunity she had wanted for so long.

One of them would have died. She had to believe that would have been Willow. In a ‘fair’ fight Faith would have killed her. She would have left Tara empty by doing that… and then Faith would have killed her too – which might have made it better.

The outcomes turned over and over in her head. She had chosen Willow’s survival, but it had not brought her any relief. Would that have come with Willow’s death? Or would the relief she sought come only with her own death?

Would warning Faith have been enough to save both their lives? Would that have been what Faith had wanted from her? A sign that she was on the right side… a reason not to do what she had come here for? By revealing Willow, saving Faith, she could have preserved her own life too. At the cost of one of theirs…

But she had no right to even her own life – let alone either of theirs. Especially not now… not after this. She had betrayed the people that she had been trying to protect by being with Willow. She had betrayed the memory of everyone she had failed to protect. Those Willow had killed since they had met… even her long dead family. What would her mother have thought of the body on the floor?

And now… now she had betrayed her friend… for a demon. It might be love… but that didn’t make it right. Had she done this to save Willow from Faith?

Was that why she had stayed silent?

She had killed her friend.

And now Faith was dead.

She wasn’t getting up and Tara couldn’t look at the body. Faith’s body. On her floor. Where Willow had killed her. She couldn’t look but it filled her vision anyway. When she closed her eyes and when she looked away, the image of Faith stayed with her on the back of her eyelids.

They had killed Faith. She had allowed Faith to be killed. She had killed Faith.

Finally the vampire looked at her after those long seconds. Better looking at Willow than at Faith. Much, much better. If she didn’t look at Faith then… she would still be there. They had killed Faith. And Willow… Willow’s face was…

Willow was happy.

No, Willow wasn’t happy. She couldn’t remember seeing Willow ‘happy’ anywhere except in her dreams. Instead Willow was gleeful. She was triumphant. The vampire was having fun. Willow had enjoyed killing Faith. Tara had allowed her fate to dominate her, and Faith, and Willow was her fate for better or for worse. Fate had taken a hand.

But Willow had enjoyed it.

What was there to enjoy here?

For better or for worse? It surely didn’t get worse than this. There was nothing about Willow that was better as Tara saw her now. Nothing at all. She loved the vampire, or at least the Willowish part of her, and maybe there was something there in return. Maybe she could believe the vampire’s words. But…

Willow had saved her life and she had enjoyed doing so. But not because she enjoyed saving a life, her life… it was the taking of life that she had enjoyed, the Slayer’s life. How often had Tara pleaded with Willow not to talk about that?

Willow had killed her Kitty’s friend and she’d had fun doing it.

Why had Willow done it?

Faith was dead. They had killed her. Why had Willow done it? What had been in her unbeating heart at that moment?

Nothing – Tara was sure that Willow didn’t think with her heart.

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

The sound of bone snapping was still in Willow’s head as the Kitty spoke her name. More than once she heard it said before she even bothered to look up. Slayers were so rare and this was a moment to be savoured. Treasured. This was a moment that should become a legend.

The moment that she killed the Slayer. Mmmmmn.

And Luke in the same night…

It was a moment she would be able look back on, one that would never be boring. Never. Just like the Kitty. This was special.

There would always be another Slayer, but there would never be another Faith. This Slayer was dead. She had killed the Slayer. Faith was gone… and she had been a Slayer. Possibly only taking the lawyer’s head in her hands like that would have been sweeter. Certainly the thought of dealing with Lilah was the only thing that came close to making her feel this tingly.

The only thing other than the Kitty. The Kitty always made her feel tingly.

She wanted to play… She wanted to play now.

And she hadn’t even tasted the blood yet.

She was ready, the Kitty was there and the Slayer’s blood was… fresh. It would still be warm. It would have been better to bite whilst Faith was still alive – for the freshness and the fear. She would have loved to make the Slayer afraid. Perhaps there would have been a split second of that as she’d felt her head reach an angle that the neck could no longer support.

It had to have hurt… but only briefly.

And with pain came fear. Fear was just a chemical reaction… if the Slayer’s body had reacted soon enough then there might still be a tang of the fear in the blood. The heart had stopped pumping it around the organs that might have taken those chemicals away. So said the old Willow, though she knew that the fuzzy one had never had to consider it in those terms. There was a chance that she’d still be able to taste the fear – and that was good. The important thing was that the Kitty was here and so was the Slayer’s blood. She had wanted this since the Slayer came to town… the blood had properties. It had fun playtime properties.

Even without the fear.

She was sure that she wasn’t going to be able to get the Kitty to try the blood… and there would probably have been no reaction to it anyway from someone who was not a vampire. She had to admit though that she didn’t need any help feeling aroused around the Kitty… look she was perky already… killing was always exciting… but the aphrodisiac qualities of Slayer blood were well known.

The old Willow might have tried to quantify that scientifically, but the old Willow probably would have fainted just from seeing the body. She would never have been strong enough to make this kill herself. She wouldn’t have been interested in the Kitty in all likelihood. The old Willow had been timid… just a little girl. A girl interested in dreaming of boys. One boy anyway. Never woman enough to claim and be claimed by the Kitty.

Willow was that woman now… and she wanted to play. She looked at the Kitty and smiled. Her best, inviting, grin and then she squatted beside down the body of the Slayer, feeling the leather of her trousers tighten around her naked flesh. Mmmmnn… soon fully naked. Soon playing with the Kitty. She would even let the Slayer watch. She would turn the head in the right direction and allow Faith into their fun. The Slayer’d had such lovely hair. Strokable.

Was the Slayer interested in being a voyeur? It didn’t matter… the Slayer was dead, but she would still be there with them in the bedroom. Willow looked into her lifeless eyes. The Kitty had suggested that the Slayer got the urges to play too – from her kills. From killing Willow’s kind.

Willow could understand that… Her own body was charged in the aftermath of this one. Faith might have made an interesting vampire… if there had been no Kitty to play with. She could feel her body still building. Warming – and she hadn’t even drunk yet!

Add the Slayer’s blood to heat and there would be arousal on a level that might never have been seen before.

Seen, felt or tasted.

This was going to be a very special night.

She had killed the Slayer. Would the old Willow have been able to do that? No. Never. Never strong enough for that. All fluffy. All pink… The Kitty had some pink parts… parts that Willow wanted to play with now.

She had killed the Slayer and now she was on a par with the Master and Luke. She was their equal. Except they were dead. She had killed them too. Mmmm. The knowledge and the power it gave her filled her, every part of her. Fun parts too. And still no Slayer blood had passed her lips. This was going to be sooo much fun.

She grabbed the Slayer’s body, lifted it, preparing to bite… but first – before she got her true face on… she turned to the Kitty. “Wanna be bad.”

It could have been a question. It wasn’t. Willow needed to be bad. She needed to work off the new delicious tension in her body. She needed her Kitty to do that. She wasn’t about to offer the Kitty a choice in this once she agreed. Willow was definitely intending to be on top – no matter how sexy Tara might be when she took charge. She needed it… maybe the Kitty did too.

“Wanna be bad now.”

She prepared to bite the dead Slayer’s still warm neck, giving it a quick preparatory lick. Cleaning the area rather than taking anything from it.

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

“Wanna be bad now,” Willow said to her.

Those words ripped into Tara in a way that nothing about this whole thing had up to that point. If Willow had been trying to save her… showing some love… then it would have been better. Surely a little better. Just a little… Because she had needed saving; Faith had been ready to kill her; she had been ready to let Faith to do it. But that was what was in Willow’s head? Lusts, desires… Killing Faith for her blood.

The vampire was about to bite Faith’s dead body. Her face was tainted by the demon that was inside her. No, by the demon that she was. Willow was evil…

Willow wanted to play.

Now.

She wanted to bite Faith… she was licking Faith’s twisted neck.

“No.”

She wasn’t saying it to Willow. She was saying it to Faith. She wasn’t going to allow this. She wasn't going to allow Willow to violate Faith’s body as she had allowed the vampire to take her life. She might have allowed Faith to die. But she wasn’t going to let Willow drink from her. She wasn’t going to allow Willow to touch her anymore.

Lick… Tara shuddered.

The vampire started to react angrily to the denial of her pleasure, obviously intending to bite her anyway. Willow wanted to play and she wanted to be in charge too…

There was no play here. There was no joy. There couldn’t be.

There was just Tara’s dead friend.

Had there ever been joy? Maybe on her side of it… maybe.

Faith was dead… and there were two people who had killed her. One of those was a demon rather than a person and that just heaped more guilt on Tara herself. Faith would have killed her, but who could say that the Slayer’s reasons – the Council’s reasons – were not valid after this?

She just… she just couldn’t face losing Willow.

She still couldn’t. That was why she had not been able to take a hand. To make a choice that would have killed any of them. Why she had felt that she just had to let whatever that had to happen, happen.

And look what that feeling had got her. Her lover was about to bite her dead friend for the start of a ‘play time’ that Tara could never allow to happen. She should never have played with Willow at all. Ever. She knew that.

But Willow had saved her from being killed by Faith.

Without Willow I would never have needed saving.

“No,” she said again as the long lick concluded. Again the word was not intended for Willow. But this time she pressed and the vampire was flung backwards, away from Faith’s body which slumped to the floor again even before Willow crashed into the wall, shaking the sideboard with the force of the impact. She was a vampire though, she wouldn’t be hurt by that.

Tara knew she wouldn’t have done it if the action could have hurt Willow. That was a huge part of the problem.

Willow’s eyes flashed. They were already yellow as the demon had been given its licence, not the lovely green that they should have been. She had always liked Willow’s eyes. Even back in the time when Willow had just been a dream the memory of those eyes had lived with her, haunted her after she awoke from dreaming.

Young woman… not a vampire. The dream Willow was more alive than this one was. Even if she wasn't even real that was the person that Tara had fallen in love with.

For a moment after the impact she thought that the vampire was about to come at her, attack her. There was rage in those eyes which was quickly replaced by a gleam of a different, more familiar kind. It was a light that Tara recognised well. It was Willow’s desire. Willow thought she wanted to play and she was more than willing to go along with it. The vampire was sitting up, unfastening the corset, giving Tara a smile that had only one meaning. Willow still wanted to be bad with her.

She loved Willow but now, at this moment, the idea filled her with disgust.

“Leave. Now.”

That stopped the vampire… absolutely dead stop. Stopped her cold. All things that Willow was. Cold, dead. Stopped in time… unchanging.

Faith was dead and Willow was thinking of playtime? It made her feel sick.

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

“Leave. Now.”

The Kitty, despite a lot of provocation in the past, had never spoken those words to Willow before and Willow didn’t want to hear them said again. They said too much. They told her to go… which she shouldn’t allow, this was her territory. It might be the Kitty’s apartment but it was her territory. That was why she had killed the Slayer… the Slayer was in her territory and the Kitty… only one person was ever going to kill the Kitty. If it ever had to be done then it would be Willow that did it.

Only her. So much did she enjoy Tara that no one else was going to interfere with that.

Only Willow. She had already had to make that point to Luke. And now to the Slayer too. Was everyone around here stupid? The Kitty was hers – not theirs. But now the Kitty wanted her to leave? What was up with that?

She had saved Tara from being gutted with the knife that was still in Faith’s hand. Nice knife, she could appreciate a tool like that – she might have to keep it for herself. It looked like it would cut flesh sooo easily.

Did the Kitty have no gratitude at all though? Couldn’t the Kitty thank her properly? Couldn’t the Kitty show her appreciation to Willow? “Wanna be bad,” she said again but she could see that if she was going to be bad then it would be all alone and not with the Kitty.

The Slayer’s blood would be wasted.

She didn’t think that Tara was going to let her take it with her.

The Slayer, what was up with her anyway? Why would Tara’s ‘friend’ be holding a big, sharp, shiny knife like that to her? Threatening Willow’s Kitty… she must have been stupid or something to try that. The Slayer had known about her she was sure… that just made her stupid if she had thought that Willow would allow that. If she had done it then Willow would have hunted her down. And… why hadn’t Tara been fighting back?

The Kitty could have done to Faith what she had just done to Willow herself. Thrown her clear across the room with a thought, a wave of her hand. It hadn’t even hurt that much, but the Slayer wouldn’t have been able to get near her. Why hadn’t the Kitty been fighting back? She hadn’t known that it was Willow that was coming this way… even with that pendant. And if Tara had been trusting the pendant then she hadn’t known she would be saved until Willow had actually arrived… when the Slayer was already stood over her then. Already threatening her.

The Kitty had… given up.

Willow was more than surprised – surprise was finding yourself in a strange world where you were all pink and fuzzy. This might have been the first thing that had shocked her since finding out that Tara was real and not a figment of her imagination, or a thing of her dreams.

“You always fight me,” Willow accused her. It was true. Tara never allowed Willow to have her own way. Not all her own way. There were always limits. There were always restrictions that the Kitty imposed on her – if only because she was willing to accept them. For her Kitty. “Why didn’t you fight her?”

“I was tired Willow,” the Kitty replied.

Was tired? Past tense?

Tired?

Tired even before? Before the Slayer had come for her. And now the Kitty, Tara, was angry with her for killing Faith? This was her fault? The Slayer had come to hurt the Kitty. The Kitty had seen her… known what she was going to do.

Tara had let the Slayer start to do it.

And now this was her fault?

Why was Tara tired?

Tara had slept just fine all last night. Willow had watched her.

The Kitty sounded tired though. Perhaps they could just sleep now… playtime later. Without the Slayer’s blood which would be cold by then. But if the Kitty was tired… Willow could make do, for now. Bed was a place of being all naked and close – there were opportunities to provoke playtime. But then the Kitty said it again.

“Go. Please Willow just go… I have to…”

Willow had to obey her. There hadn’t even been the words ‘thank you,’ let alone proper thanks.

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

With Willow gone Tara knew that she had to tell the police. She had to tell someone. She had to do something with Faith. Get a doctor… something… She had to…

She had to stop.

She had waited until Willow had gone before she allowed herself to do anything at all. To speak again would have risked begging Willow for help that the vampire could never give her. Willow didn’t have that capacity within her soulless shell. It was either the begging or condemning her for something in which she had by no means acted alone.

To move would have been to fall into Willow’s arms.

Or to beat her hands against the murderous demon’s chest – perhaps finding a stake in her hand in the flurry of blows.

No. Not that. Tara was sure that she couldn’t.

Less sure though now that she thought about it. She should have done that long ago.

Willow had to leave before she could do anything at all about Faith.

Perhaps her final words to Willow had been too harsh because her lover left without a word, with barely even a look except for a final smirk at Faith’s dead body. Was Willow making a point or genuinely enjoying herself with that look?

It didn’t matter.

Faith was dead.

She had practically chased Willow out of there in order to be alone. Without moving or speaking much. She looked down at the floor. No. Not quite alone. Not alone at all. She could almost hear the Slayer if she closed her eyes… and she did close them. A lot. In that hour or so… she had her eyes closed for so long. To what was happening. To what had happened. But somehow they always opened again. She couldn’t stop herself looking, as if to prove to herself that it was really true.

She couldn’t quite make out the words that the image of Faith was saying when she closed her eyes though. The voice was there, in her head… but it was indistinct.

It might have been an hour later when she crawled across the floor with her chest wet where the tears had dripped from her chin and soaked into her clothes. Free flowing tears. Tears of years and years. Tears for everyone who had died. Everyone she had failed. Everyone she had helped and then betrayed.

Tears for her family.

Tears for her mother.

And, yes, tears now for Faith.

Faith should never have been a part of those tears. The Slayer had always been fatalistic, knowing that one day – maybe soon – a vampire was going to succeed in killing her. But it should never have been like this. Never like this. Never without a chance to fight.

She should never have put Faith or anyone else in the position where they even had to come to her like this. She had made… some bad decisions.

And this was the result. People were dying.

She hadn’t cried since that day at the High School when she had first discovered Willow Rosenberg’s name; stared in disbelief, and perhaps a little longing, at the picture of the girl that Willow had once been. The girl of her dreams rather than her nightmares. When had she cried before that? Not since they had died and she had become the person that she probably never should have had to be.

The person who got people killed either by her actions or by her lack of actions.

A person who could not win… but should have tried.

Perhaps she was crying for the Tara Maclay that she should have been.

The one that she wasn’t.

If she wasn't crying for that Tara then perhaps she should have been mourning her absence. Perhaps she would have been able to do better.

That other Tara Maclay might, after this, have been able to hate Willow instead of just hating herself. Because that was where she was now… she still couldn’t hate Willow. It must have been the love getting in the way.

She crawled over to Faith and took the knife from her hand carefully so that no one would know that it had ever been there – and who would they tell? She couldn’t let the body be found like that – as the Slayer. Even though the police would not know that she was. She had to be found as Faith… she had to have something other than being the Slayer. She had… she had to be the one thing Faith had never allowed herself to be.

Faith had to be the victim now so that she wouldn’t be condemned after she had died. And Tara knew that she couldn’t tell the whole truth…

Faith had to be the victim

Faith was the victim.

Even Willow was a victim in a way. It was Tara herself that had made all the choices. She was the guilty party here.

She managed to get up and used the magic to force the knife from the bathroom window onto the much higher roof of the building opposite before returning to the bedroom, falling again beside Faith.

“I’ll see you again,” she told the lifeless corpse. “I will. We’ll go down town… and maybe I’ll even have a drink this time. Not just water you know.” She dragged her sheet from the bed. Her fingers tore the fabric as she grasped it and pulled the elasticated cover from the mattress. “Soon, you know. We’ll do it soon.”

Then she covered the body and somehow she couldn’t believe that Faith had stopped looking at her. Why would Faith want to go out on the town with her again? This wasn’t how friends were with each other.

And Faith was dead… they weren’t going anywhere.

Jenny… By the goddess… what about Jenny?

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

Tara slumped against a streetlamp, sliding down it to the cold ground. The sun would soon warm it up. But it couldn’t warm her could it? Hadn’t something sucked the life from her? Daybreak was threatening as the sun sent its rays up from behind the horizon turning the sky orange.

The sun wouldn’t warm her. She was beyond warming. The cold within her had set in for good. Like permafrost.

It had only taken them a few short hours to get to the conclusion that she could go? Why the hell could she go? She should have been locked up… but she couldn’t be. She had things that she absolutely had to do – so she had told Detective Stein the truth.

Almost the truth. Just the parts had been switched around. Faith was her friend. And she hadn’t known the intruder who kicked in the door.

Is that how you treat your friends Tara? No sir it’s not.

Faith had been there visiting when someone had broken in and attacked them. Faith had died… protecting her. Their attacker had run off when Faith had died. She didn’t think it was a deliberate killing.

Except that she had allowed it to happen. If the detectives thought that she looked guilty it was only because she was.

The killer… the other killer… must have been in a gang or something. On drugs. Maybe PCP.

Detective Stein had looked unsurprised at that description, knowing full well who she was and for whom she worked. Maybe that was what had made him believe her story. Maybe he didn’t believe her. Nevertheless they let her go. She had been complicit… but she hadn’t done the deed. As they had said, she didn’t have the strength to snap a neck like that.

That at least was true.

I don’t have the strength for the things that I should do… let alone the things that I shouldn’t.

She rested her back against the streetlamp and hugged herself, her knees to her chest, looking into growing light. And then there was someone there, outlined by the red glow. Blocking it. A hand reaching for hers.

She recoiled when she felt the cold.

She had completely missed the pain that the pendant was causing her. Perhaps that was what had happened before when… It was inconsequential compared to what was inside. Nothing… nothing compared to what she was feeling. She shook the hand away but it was persistent and grabbed her.

It pulled her up with a strength of which that slight body should not have been capable. She knew who it was. She didn’t care though. She couldn’t look at the vampire. Even when Willow put her hand under Tara’s chin and lifted her head she closed her eyes. She didn’t want to see.

“Have to go now. Daylight,” the vampire said.

Of course Willow couldn’t stand the daylight and it was coming. They were both creatures of darkness now.

Perhaps if I just held her now… until sun came up on us. Her destruction might take us both.

That wasn’t what she had to do though… not enough. Nowhere near enough. That wasn't why she had lied to the police. That wasn’t why she wanted to be free… here… in the world… for just a little longer.

There were things that she absolutely had to do.

She had put them off for far too long already. She owed them to Faith. She owed them to everyone that she had failed.

She finally opened her eyes and looked at Willow. There was concern in the vampire’s face, but no compassion. The sun was coming up. Willow feared it of course. But Willow was here anyway. She had found her here. Willow had come for her.

Maybe the bite would be kinder. Then she could be like Willow, not feeling all this.

No. Not that. Never that.

“Go home,” she finally said. “No you can’t. The police are there… just go Willow. Go somewhere. Hurry… or you’ll get caught…” Even after this, she was afraid not of Willow but for her. What does it take? What does it take to make me see sense?

She left Willow there, walked away from her, knowing that the vampire wouldn’t linger in some big dramatic gesture. Willow was capable of them but had little need. Why should she worry about Willow? Willow was a survivor.

She owed it to Faith to sort things out. Finish them. She knew what the right thing was, it was just that she was too caught up in the wrong thing. She’d needed to be taught the difference again.

Maybe now she was learning that lesson.

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

He used the big door knocker even though it was early in the morning. Not a good night at all. Murders in Sunnydale were a dime a dozen, most of them though were out in the streets.

This part though – this part he hated the most.

It never got any easier and wouldn’t be just because they were not blood relatives. The Maclay woman had said that they were close… Friends. She had wanted to do it, but procedure wouldn’t allow that. Besides she was the only suspect that he had – even if he knew, both officially and unofficially that she didn’t do it.

But she knew something that she wasn’t telling. He was sure of that.

He heard the drowsy voices from inside and knew that they were coming to the door; he ran his hand over his smooth head. Was it any wonder that he had already lost his hair at his age? This sort of thing was bound to make you lose it. Better the hair than the sanity.

And that witness, the Maclay woman? Well he knew who she was. He had his orders about anything to do with her. How the reports had to read… but then she had actually said to him ‘Gang Related – PCP.’ Which meant that she was hiding something. And that she wanted him to know that she was. He figured that she knew , as he did, that the actual amount of PCP that had ever actually been in Sunnydale he could have held in one hand.

It would have gone in the report that way – orders were orders – but she had a cheek, or a guilty conscience, to be using that on him. If she hadn’t been so obviously distressed then he would have pushed her on that. Hard… She obviously wanted to be punished. Survivor guilt perhaps. She hadn’t done the crime, but she wanted to be punished for it anyway.

He couldn’t do that though. Orders were orders. Standing orders direct from the Mayor especially so.

Really it wasn't the murders that were the worst thing, or even the notifications afterwards. For him it was not being able to do what he had joined the force to do. Solve them. To help people. He’d been in Sunnydale long enough to know that he was never going to get anywhere near being able to prove anything in most cases. Not to a jury anyway. But things around here reached a certain point and then stopped.

Orders were orders.

Tara Maclay could have told him more, he was sure of that. He could have broken her like an eggshell the state that she was in right now. But the chances were that he would never even get to ask her about it again. She wasn't the killer – that was clear enough – but he was damn sure that she knew who was. There was no mystery here. Not to her anyway.

She hadn’t been uncooperative… more in a daze than anything. But he could tell when people were exaggerating, misleading or flat out lying. It was like a gift. Sunnydale PD was not quite as ‘deeply stupid’ as people frequently made out. The clean up rate was hampered by orders and by crimes that were committed by things that were outside the of law. And aside from actually having brains, the department was also filled with officers who were sensitive to the needs of other people.

There was no way to deal with so much death and not be sensitive. The ones who hardened themselves, they were the ones who had, over the years, eaten the barrels of their own guns. Five officers who had started with him had gone that way. Three more had become part of the Sunnydale crime statistics. Even those deaths had never really been explained.

Instead of ignoring the pain, he’d learned to embrace it and use it. Work with it and get through it.

Didn’t mean he would ever get used to it though.

It was a pretty lady who opened the door. He knew who she was, she had taught his son Computer Science until Mike had graduated last year, but if he hadn’t he could have easily mistaken her for the sister of the dead younger woman. Faith. Sort of anyway.

Nice name Faith.

“Sorry to bother you so early Miss Calendar…” he started, seeing that she recognised him after some brief, no doubt early morning, confusion. It must be tricky remembering not only the students but their parents too. Especially at this time in the morning. “Mr Giles.” The librarian had quickly followed his fiancée to the door. He knew Mr Giles… he had been a witness to a few crimes in his time. A lot of people in Sunnydale had.

He hadn’t known that they were getting married until Miss Maclay had told him, almost as an aside, when she had been worrying about how they would take the news. How she would tell them. He had relieved her of that task and she had glared at him. In that moment he had actually been a little scared of her. He had actually thought that maybe she could have committed the crime. Then it was gone and he knew that she hadn’t.

From what the suspect had said to him Miss Calendar and Mr Giles were not just giving Faith a place to sleep. They were friends too. That meant he had to be even more careful.

It was the curse of the police officer, especially a detective, that if one turned up at a strange hour of the day or night people always assumed the worst.

In Sunnydale it was generally worse than they imagined.

He saw the reaction flit across the teacher’s face when she figured out that he wasn’t there to talk about his son’s grades from last year. Poor as they had been. She knew that something had happened. That something was wrong. The librarian was a little slower – but then Mr Giles didn’t know who he was – their paths had crossed only in records. “Sorry, I’m Detective Stein, Sunnydale PD.”

The reaction came then.

The librarian knew as well.

“I believe that Miss Faith Reed was staying with you…”

Damn he hated the past tense it was a shitty way to have to put things.

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

Willow lay on the floor in the bathroom, far from the sun, hands crossed over her naked belly, waiting for the Kitty to return. Tara’s apartment was sealed off so Willow had decided that she would take the one opposite. It was empty and she would be able to hear the Kitty come back. Willow could often feel her as well. In hindsight she had to admit that she had screwed up. Killing the Slayer was all well and good, but expecting Tara to play then… that was a mistake that was going to prevent playtime for a while to come.

Trying to bite the Slayer was probably a bad decision too and the lick… her licks should only be for Tara now. She knew that well enough. The Kitty was jealous. That must be it.

The Kitty was going to be down for a few days at least and that meant that Willow was going to have to make her own fun. A sick Kitty was bad enough, that was just messy – at least she could make use of that for earning gratitude. A depressed Kitty… that was just going to be just boring.

Willow still wanted to have fun. She knew she was going to have to go out to find it. Once night fell again. She needed a kill already and the sun had only just risen. She had been anticipating dining on the Slayer for those few minutes she’d had the chance… it still made her tummy rumble.

She amused herself wondering if perhaps now that the Slayer was dead she could have her fun with the Watcher… maybe along with the, as she remembered her, always fun loving, Miss Calendar. That might be interesting too.

Not like playtime fun… because that was just for Tara now, but definitely vengeance. She had missed her vengeance on the rest of the White Hats and if she could accomplish that with the delicious Miss C, who even the old Willow had always liked in a special way, then so much the better.

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

Tara had been outside for awhile when the detective pulled up. His partner, who had also been the interview room with them, had stayed in the car. She wasn't surprised he hadn’t been sensitive enough for this job. She sort of liked Detective Stein though - in as much as you could ever like anyone interviewing you about the murder of your best friend.

He actually seemed to care. That was all that mattered if he had to be the one.

If it had to be anyone who told Jenny and Mr Giles better it was…

It should have been her.

She had offered but he had stopped her from doing that. She had almost flared then. She had felt the darkness within her. The darkness was loving this…

I should be up there telling them. But how can I… when I was the one who let Faith die? Let her get killed? Maybe with a few hours to figure it out… the how… maybe. But the Detective was there now. They would find out now anyway.

She could have left, but she didn’t. She owed it to all of them to see what she had done. Hear it at least. Maybe throw herself on their mercy. If they had any sense then they wouldn’t have any on her. She crouched on the steps leading up to the next apartment. She could hear the words spoken at the door.

Many of them.

She missed him telling them that Faith was… She missed that. Maybe the wind had shifted… maybe her mind had blocked the words out and stopped her from hearing them.

She couldn’t miss the reaction though.

She couldn’t miss the shocked, anguished cry of Faith’s friend. “No.”

No.

She couldn’t miss the repetition. She couldn’t miss Mr Giles trying to sound strong and take them all inside. She couldn’t miss the pain in their voices.

She couldn’t miss the heavy door closing and shutting her out.

She could miss Faith though.

She already did.

There was just the things that she had to do now.

*****************
Katharyn
23. Volumey Text
 
Posts: 3794
Topics: 5
Joined: Sun Apr 24, 2005 1:23 pm


Re:

Postby willntlover » Wed Aug 07, 2002 10:54 pm

I know i have never given any feedback to the author of this amazing story, and for that i am truly sorry. Your fic is a place of its own. the characters, their faults, the dynamics of your story are truly exceptionally unprecedented. i have enjoyed this fic so much.



-Will

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

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

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


willntlover
 


Re: Fic: - The Sidestep Chronicle

Postby LeatherQueen » Thu Aug 08, 2002 12:17 am

So many questions for Tara. But I'm afraid of what answers she'll find.



I can really feel the momentum of the story right now. It's so heavy and it feels like a thousand pounds of lead just dropping. All onto Tara's shoulders.



But damn, do I love this story.






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


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


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

LeatherQueen
 


Re: Part 69

Postby mollyig » Thu Aug 08, 2002 5:23 am

I was thinking about this story and Faith's death yesterday, and it occurred to me that Tara would have known Willow was approaching by the pendant, and lo and behold, she did. I love how intricate the detail is in your story Katharyn.



A person who could not win - but should have tried. Interesting how Tara described Faith as being fatalistic . . . a trait they seem to share. The policeman's observation of Survivor guilt was very insightful, perhaps not just from this incident but also from when she lost her family.



Adding up the total of a love that's true, multiply life by the power of two
Indigo Girls

mollyig
 


Re:

Postby Tulipp » Thu Aug 08, 2002 6:51 am

Katharyn, this was wonderful and so, so sad. I loved the way the various versions of who had killed Faith--"She had killed her, Willow had killed her, They had killed her"--echoed throughout the first several sections. I could feel Tara's confusion and guilt and horror and real inability to think straight after that.



And Willow...wow, I thought I would be able to anticipate her reactions, but I didn't, really. As you know, I have a tendency to forget that VW can't be compassionate, etc., but here she was really about possession and ownership. The idea that she would kill anyone who took her Kitty away from her--figuratively or literally--just chilled me, and it's about time I realized that! Poor Tara, for whom a fate with Willow currenty is heading toward meaning a fate with ONLY Willow. I know you will write us out of this abyss, but right now, Tara is in a dark and dead place.



Beautifully done.

Tulipp
 


Re: Fic: - The Sidestep Chronicle

Postby Katharyn » Thu Aug 08, 2002 10:00 am

Thanks guys,



Willntlover - Thankyou... apologies unecessary.



Leatherqueen - There is a momentum building to carry us through this whole arc. The arc that will take us to the good place. As for the burden... we known how strong Tara is.



Mollyig - Yes the pendant was active... fate approaching was (sort of) Willow.



I think Faith was fatalistic. She knew that the day would come - she just wanted it to be far away.



Survivor guilt... Tara coul have died... she is guilty that she didn't I think.



Juli - It is interesting that you raise who killed Faith "they", "She", "Willow" etc... Who did do it? Tara might not say Willow...



I think that by now it is clear that Willow is gone. Rather she was never really there. Tara feels for the real Willow, palely reflected in VW.



And yes she is a dark place - even when the sun comes up. But there is light coming.



Many thanks for the feedback.



Katharyn

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



Katharyn
 


Re: Part 69

Postby IsayAmberBensonsgorgeous » Thu Aug 08, 2002 10:46 am

ok, how do you do that, blow me away with every new update? and don't tell me it's magic ... just wow. i can't wait to see how this murder will further affect their realtionship, and what Tara thinks she must do. if i would ask real nicely would you consider posting say two updates a day? :)

ok, i can be delusional, can't i?

C

"Es ist fuer einen Menschen unertraeglich, ertragen zu werden." (Jean Cocteau)
"Ain't never gonna love you any better babe - And they'll never gonna love you right" (Kozmic Blues - Janis Joplin)

IsayAmberBensonsgorgeous
 


Re: Part 69

Postby Katharyn » Thu Aug 08, 2002 11:39 am

Hey ISABIG... how do I do it? Okay so I am not allowed to say magic? Right so back to pure dumb luck.



I like it... somehow this story just works for me you know? There was never a problem, unlike other fics I have written, deciding what had to come next or anything. I don't think that will happen to me again *sigh*



2 updates a day? I could manage that for about 5 days (unbeta'd) and then... you would be waiting up to a week per part... and I would have to rush them so... nah.



Thanks.



Katharyn

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

Katharyn
 


Re: Fic: - The Sidestep Chronicle

Postby forrister » Thu Aug 08, 2002 12:30 pm

The bit I really loved about this part was the insight into how Willow was thinking. It fitted, and was shocking. It reminded me sharply that this was VampWillow. I felt so sorry for Tara it hurt. Thats what makes this such great writing, it gets into the character's heads and makes you feel for them



Loved this bit Sweetness.





Bonum certamen certavi, cursum consummavi, fidem servavi.



(I have fought the good fight, I have finished the race, I have kept the faith).

forrister
 


Re: Fic: - The Sidestep Chronicle

Postby Katharyn » Thu Aug 08, 2002 12:56 pm

Hey babe... thankyou. And you modestly ducked the assistance you provided... so I mention it now just to keep it clear!



I must say that I am perhaps overly "internal" in my writing (eh LMC?) but this is the sort of part where that pays off and works better I think.



Anyway... you know what is coming and you never teased!! I am very disappointed... even though you are afraid of giving things away.



*HUGS*



Katharyn

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



Katharyn
 


Re: Part 69

Postby forrister » Thu Aug 08, 2002 1:21 pm

Sorry - didn't know I was allowed to tease. Okies



What will Tara do now? Is her course clear? Is there only two ways out for her and does one of them suck? Can she live with herself? Can she live with Vamp Willow? Can she live without her?



Its always darkest before the dawn - and sometimes the night seems so black that dawn is like some sort of wishful thinking, but fear not - it will come, and it will bring all the light that one could wish for.





Non multa, sed multum.

(Not many, but much. [Meaning, not quantity but quality])



forrister
 


Re: Fic: Sidestep Chronicle

Postby Big Dummy » Thu Aug 08, 2002 1:43 pm

Kathry, your fic is like a drug. I'm completely addicted, and waiting for the next installment is 10 times worse than it ever was waiting for a new Buffy ep. Believe me, that's saying a lot!



I'm completely at a loss. I don't know what to think anymore. VW's reaction to the killing, wherein it all boiled down to lust (physical and bloodlust) for her, and she actually thought she would get Tara to play, really did show just how far she is from RW. And I wonder why this wasn't the absolute turning point for Tara, why she couldn't hate Willow and be done with her. But then there are these little things, like Willow going to find her outside and the gesture of holding out her hand to her, almost like a tender moment, and the waiting in the other apartment and thinking over what she did and considering that maybe she didn't make the smartest decisions, that help me understand how hard it is to turn away from someone when you want so very badly to see the possibilities in them, to believe that possibilities even exist. Toward the end I was even thinking "Hmm, maybe Will is learning something here". Of course, it all had to do,still, with how it affected her playtime, and not out of any real concern for Tara, or real consideration of why her actions would upset her Kitty.



But, Tara's got her quest on again. I can only imagine it has something to do with the Mayor, from whom we haven't heard much recently and since there are (currently?) no more Big Bad Vampires in town. And maybe this has something to do with the return of Lilah soon?



Man, wishing there was a Cross and Stake for this fic. Spoilerwhore that I am.

Big Dummy
 


Re: Fic: - The Sidestep Chronicle

Postby TareBearRS » Thu Aug 08, 2002 2:22 pm

Wow, really strong update.

I don't even want to imagine being in Tara's shoes now, she's feeling so guilty.

How can she be with VWillow after this, it will be so hard to get the picture of Faith out of her head.

And i wonder what Giles reaction will be, will he go after Tara himself?

So many questions.....



R.

TareBearRS
 


Re: Part 69 - why is everyone going "FNAR?"

Postby VampNo12 » Thu Aug 08, 2002 4:31 pm

Wow Katharyn this part was intense, disturbing, but most of all a fascinating update! Tara has been suffering under a huge amount of guilt/burden for allowing Willow to continue to kill "innocents", but usually it's in an abstract way (ie Tara knowing Willow is hunting/killing, but not actually witnessing first-hand). However, with actually witnessing Willow killing Faith, the pain/guilt must be so much worse, because Tara couldn't make a "choice" between her friend and lover, but rather left the outcome to "fate". I thought these lines of Tara, ("The Slayer would be the one trying to kill her... to restore her soul to her. The demon would be the one trying keep her alive and preserve what Tara had become. Almost as monstrous as the demon she had always been taught that she would be now."), a great commentary on Tara's state of mind. Or in other words, again I get the sense of Faith being Tara's "conscience" (ie Tara understanding why Faith is there to kill her, and in a way her death bringing her relief), because Tara knows with her inability to do what's right (ie kill Willow), she has allowed the grey area she has been in to shift to darkness (ie blaming herself for keeping silent "They had killed Faith. She had allowed Faith to be killed. She killed Faith.")



I think Willow's disturbing behavior in this part, crystallizes so well that she isn't the Willow of Tara's dreams, but rather a poor alternative as a vampire. Or in other words, even with her subtly changing in some ways, she is still a vampire guided by her demon instinct. With this in mind, I thought Tara thinking ("Willow hated Faith-not just the slayer-Willow hated Faith as a person. For being her friend. For taking Willow's Kitty away from her. Being the Slayer had been the least of Faith's crimes in Willow's eyes.") very significant. Meaning, yes she hated Faith, but her taking her "Kitty" away interrupted her playtime, which was Faith's greatest crime. Again we see that Willow is focused on relieving boredom (and Tara is a pleasurable way to do this), Tara isn't a person in Willow's eyes, but rather a "thing/her property", and Faith was infringing on her "territory".



Not only is Tara horrified and guilt-ridden over Faith's death, but the utter "glee/arousal" Willow is displaying (especially with "Wanna be bad now", have some "play" with a dead Faith), just again reinforces to Tara how wrong this version of Willow is for not only herself, but to be still allowed to survive. However, what I find significant is Tara's inability to still do what she knows is right (ie staking Willow). Willow might be Tara's fate (and vice-versa), but this just again adds to her sadness/suffering (ie this "fate" is more a burden/punishment than a happy reward).



Lastly, Tara's need to be hidden (but present) to hear the detective give the "bad news" about Faith to Giles/Jenny just conveys that Tara has to punish herself more by being confronted by the pain she caused, by not making a "choice". Tara was tired before Faith's death, and now with the added guilt she has put on her "shoulders", I am looking forward to how Tara copes/responds to the latest "blow". Can't wait for the next part!





Edited by: VampNo12  at: 8/8/02 3:44:58 pm
VampNo12
 


Re: Part 69 - why is everyone going "FNAR?"

Postby Caoilin » Thu Aug 08, 2002 6:00 pm

Quote:
Maybe the bite would be kinder. Then she could be like Willow, not feeling all this.




Is this the first time that Tara, even briefly, has actually considered this? I may have missed it, but I recall only her adamant rejection of the idea, not the brief "maybe I should allow it - wait, what am I thinking" type of thing. So scary. It's so hard to see the character I've come to love suffer so much. I'm horrified and saddened by what she's become.



Katharyn, this is so wonderful. I love how you're taking your time with it. The knot in my stomach just gets tighter with each chapter. It's riveting.



-Caoilin

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The concept of 'Passion' is a simple one...extreme emotion is an inherently passive process. What is amazing is that this passiveness, this humble helplessness, is desirable. We, as a species, crave to be drowned, to be in awe, to feel as if we may crumble to death.
---Victorian Gentleman-Adventurer Stick Figure (merovingian)

Caoilin
 


Re: Fic: - The Sidestep Chronicle

Postby Kalita » Thu Aug 08, 2002 8:45 pm

Very interesting part, a lot of deep internalized stuff.



The absolute polar opposites of Tara's and Willow's thoughts and feelings during that scene was the real kicker. The central dilemma of the whole story is distilled into that, how they each react to that happening.



And now they must move on - and what will become of Tara when they do?



I wait, as always, in great anticipation.

"Numfar... Do the dance of shame."

Kalita
 


Re: Part 69 - why is everyone going "FNAR?"

Postby Katharyn » Thu Aug 08, 2002 10:46 pm



Big Dummy - My installments are only 3 days apart though - which has to be better*S*



Who says that this isn't the turning point for Tara? Hmmm? *Teasing*



I had never considered the "mixed messages" that Willow was sending here. I think I was trying to show that she was what she was... a demon... but there was still some feeling for Tara there. Perhaps not as much as Tara would hjvae hoped - but still some despite this.



And yes Tara knows what she needs to do now to try and make things better.



As for your final comment you don't need spoilers you jusy need to have a little faith... everything will come good.



Thanks.



TarebearRS - Hmmm I wonder too... The next part deals a little with Giles reaction and brings a character back in that has been missing for a while. Just when Tara doesn't need it. One thing I would say is that we are looking at this from a fairly objectove viewpoint... Tara still has the decisions to make based on her own experience. And she will.





VampNo12 - Hey there... THis is the first killing Tara has witnessed for some time, as she has been avoiding them - you are quite right. That gets to her more than abstratc knowledge.



I am more and more accepting of the idea of Faith being Tara's conscience. This Faith sees good and bad and she says so... Little touches in the future may reinforce that.



Willow would always, like most vamps, have wanted to kill the Slayer - whoever that was. I think though, that as you say, Willow wanted to kill Faith more (oh and Lilah.)



Don't be too down on what Tara can and can't do here. It is very soon after the event... and as you say right now she is punishing herself.



Thanks... I always enjoy these*S*



Caoilin - I think it might be the first time for the bite unless there was a very early reference and yeah I think that is significant. Aslo gets to why Tara cannot do some of the things we think she should be.



And taking my time... some might say I rushed.*s* Thanks...



Kalita - my stuff is always internalized as you have seen and suffered through... it is just more fitting for this sort of thing I think. I think you are right... we do see the two sides of them here without a PoV getting in the way - and that is the story. Somehow they have to reconcile that.



What will become of Tara? Well eventually she will be happy. They both will.



Thankyou all for continuing to support this story...



Katharyn

-----------

Katharyn
 


Re: Part 69 - why is everyone going "FNAR?"

Postby xita » Fri Aug 09, 2002 11:22 am

Well catching up now, interesting I should catch up a ch. 69 ;)



Well what can I say that I can't , hee. Willow's reaction was rather shocking because it is so inappropriate and it is crystal clear now that she doesn't love or care in the way Tara would want. This line really struck me as an example of how VW just doesn't get it, "Trying to bite the Slayer was probably a bad decision too and the lick… her licks should only be for Tara now. She knew that well enough. The Kitty was jealous. That must be it." She thinks it's jealousy... how wrong VW is.

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

Childie -"Not all girls are raving bloody lesbians, you know!"

George - "That's a misfortune of which I am perfectly well aware."

The Killing of Sister George

xita
 


Re: Part 69 - why is everyone going "FNAR?"

Postby Katharyn » Fri Aug 09, 2002 11:42 am

Hey there Xita ... yeah it is strange that you catch up in part 69. Ironic even given your express wishes*S*



The point you make is a good one but I think that VWillow is suffering from something that many of us do (though not in those circumstances) - the assumption that others think, feel and are motivated by the same things that we are. Empathy for another person gets us past this, getting to know them.



If Willow were empathise with Tara well enough to know it was not true... in this sense it is almost as if they remain strangers to each other - because only now is Tara realising this sort of thing about Willow. Or rather only now is she believing it.



This isn't the Willow that Tara was supposed to be with. She is starting to understand that now - rather than just knowing it.



That made little sense I think...



Part 70 on Sunday morning... say 35 hours.



Thanks sweets for like... everything.



Katharyn

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



Edited by: Katharyn at: 8/9/02 10:43:08 am
Katharyn
 


Part 70

Postby Katharyn » Sat Aug 10, 2002 11:06 pm

Hey Kittens, Part 70 is here. It will be continued by part 71...

Enjoy,

Katharyn
---------------

Title: The Sidestep Chronicle – Letting Go (Part 70)
Author: Katharyn Rosser
Feedback: Constructive criticism always welcome. katharynrosser@hotmail.com
Spoiler Warning: Pretty limited. The story occurs in an alternate universe though reference is made to events that occur in both realities.
Summary: Faith’s funeral. What more can I say?
Disclaimer: I still don’t own any of the copyrights or anything else associated with BTVS. All rights lie with the production company, writers etc, etc. I am making zilch from this series of stories.
Rating: 15
Couples: G/J
Notes: This is all part of an ongoing arc of parts that take us somewhere very important. Many parts could have been strung together but on balance it works best this way. Part 71 is a direct continuation of this part.
Thanks To: The Kittens and the Mods who made this place a haven.


The Sidestep Chronicle

Letting Go

By

Katharyn Rosser


Willow thought she was crazy and in this instance the vampire could very well be right. Tara hadn’t been able to leave the vampire behind her after that terrible night and the day that followed it. Even though she should have done.

She still had Willow telling her that she was crazy. She still had Willow in her life…. Even if she couldn’t quite let her as close as she had been. They hadn’t seen each other for days… until this morning.

She was crazy.

It was, at least, a nice day for it though. If such a day could ever be considered ‘nice.’ It would have been instant death for any vampire – including her Willow. Tara looked up into the sun wishing she had bought some shades for days like this one. Squinting gave her a headache, but what was another pain – more or less? Between that, the pendant and the hurt that was inside her she might feel maybe a tenth as bad as she ought to. Maybe. So she was squinting… she didn’t get out that much in the daytime anyway… just for work and a few special occasions. Her whole life was in the dark.

What does that say about me? A beautiful sunny day is reduced to ‘instant death for any vampire.’ That’s my life in the dark. It had sort of been Faith’s life too but no longer. Because I made the choice that let her die. I chose love over friendship. And just look at that love.

It had all been so… quick. Faith had fallen dead to the floor and the thought had never entered her head right then that they should move the Slayer’s body out of there. That she should have taken it somewhere else to be discovered. She hated what had happened and she wasn't going to shirk her responsibility for it. She owed Faith that much. She owed Faith a lot more than that. Her partner in destroying the Master and protecting Sunnydale.

Her friend. Her true friend. Untainted by self-serving projects or desires. Faith had never wanted anything from her except her friendship.

She’d received less than nothing.

It hadn’t surprised her that Mr Giles had never even tried to call her, to find out what had happened. What had really happened. The police would have told him only what the official report had to conclude. Mr Giles knew the PCP cliché as well as anyone. What it really meant.

The body had lain there a few hours whilst the police had done their thing. Before she called them she hadn’t even been able to bring herself to touch Faith. All she had been able to do for the Slayer was to get her killer out of there. Eventually she had found a sheet, covered her… but still couldn’t do anything else. Willow, utterly unconcerned at what she had done had wanted to ‘be bad.’ Willow had wanted to play – literally in Faith’s blood. What sort of monster…? The sort of monster that she had ended up loving. Except it was never the monster that she had loved was it?

She was just the only Willow that Tara had ever known.

Tara hadn’t gone back there. There was the police line sealing off the room anyway for a few days… but she had stayed in a motel and only gone back there this morning. It was the longest time that she and Willow had been apart in weeks. And Tara didn’t even care much. She couldn’t care about that today.

Because this was Faith’s day and her heart, her soul was filled with that.

It was Jenny who had eventually who had called her to find out if she knew what had happened. Tara hadn’t even wondered how Jenny had tracked her down. When people were desperate they could achieve even the impossible. Finding her when she was not hiding wasn’t impossible. She had deliberately chosen to leave herself ‘findable.’ Just in case someone wanted to do the right thing and punish her.

Jenny hadn’t wanted to punish her though, because Jenny hadn’t known. Jenny hadn’t known why Faith had come to her apartment, that much was clear from the teacher’s voice; the pleading to know; the fact that Jenny was worried about her too. There had been the phantom attacker after all. Maybe not so phantom…Was she hurt, the teacher had asked? And what had she finally managed to say? It was the truth at least. ‘She was here. She was-’ She’d broken off, unable to finish, politely ended the conversation and returned to waiting for the police to discover something that would tie her to the crime - even if that took her from Willow. She’d gone too far. Too far to know if she could ever pull herself back.

She wanted them to find something… but also she didn’t. Her need for justice to be applied was restrained by the need for things to be right first. There were things that she had to do. Things that she had to put right. And that was why she had gone back to Willow this morning.

To put things right. To start at least. She would have to go to vampire again to pay her debt to Willow. To make things right.

There were just things that she had to do and… if they were to happen then she couldn’t be locked up. If she was then the bad would win. It would stay dark. Being here, today, was one of those things that she had to do. But then… later… whatever they did to her was going to be fine. Whatever anyone did to her was just fine. She just needed some time.

That morning, long before dawn broke, when the police had arrived, things had started to race by. A few hours of interviews, during which she had told something less than the truth and entirely concealed the identity of Faith’s attacker, her murderer. Faith had come to hurt her… that was true, but she had not told them that. Even though I deserved it. It had seemed so important that, just this one time, Faith should be seen as the victim, She wouldn’t accept the dead young woman being portrayed as a criminal. No detective, I didn’t know the person who killed her. They were just there. That was true, almost, Willow wasn't a person.

Willow had been but she wasn’t now. Now she was a monster with the aspect of an angel. A demon with memories of the person Tara was fated to have loved – but had never known.

It would have sounded ridiculous if she had told the truth. Because it was. Not one but two killers in her apartment? That would have been a miscalculation. There were three – she was a killer. She had got Faith killed. The second killed the first and left you alone? The often repeated mantra about Sunnydale police’s stupidity was misplaced. They were just well controlled. They never would have believed that story – even if it was the truth. But the Mayor had issued clear directives about anything of this nature. Tara had seen the directives before.

And so the investigation had been closed.

In the strictest sense she had not killed Faith. She had not done the deed. But she was an accomplice wasn't she? Even if Faith had been there to kill her… she had still been complicit in the Slayer’s death. All because she couldn’t choose whether she should have saved her truest friend or the vampire, the creature, that she loved.

The one who murdered that friend.

She could have been mourning the loss of Willow now. She probably have done that in another cemetery. At an empty grave. This one was very full.

There was to be no legal punishment. The Mayor must have seen to that. She didn’t know because she hadn’t spoken to him. She hadn’t asked him. She hadn’t been into the office since that the day before that terrible night. She couldn’t face his glee in the death of a person she would have liked to have still called a friend. And he would be happy about it, she was sure of that. For some reason there was the equivalent of an extra paycheque in her bank account. She’d ignored it and just enough to pay for the motel with cash and twenty extra dollars for food. She was never going to touch that money until she found a charity that needed it. Although though she might soon need cash… she couldn’t touch it.

The Slayer is dead and now I get paid.

Like some mercenary or something. Assassin…

Murderer.

Her employer probably would have been proud of her for taking the initiative. Faith’s death had never been part of her orders. For good reason. She never would have done it.

And yet she had.

So here she was walking through one of the nicer cemeteries in Sunnydale. She was glad that Mr Giles and Jenny had picked this one. There were so many and they looked totally different in the sunlight. Almost cheery, celebrations of the love that people had for their family and friends. It seemed like an age since she had thought of places like this as anything other than a spawning grounds for the next generation of evil. Easy pickings.

But, in truth, it was a beautiful place. Faith would have hated it for just that reason but even she might have come to like it. Just so long as she didn’t have to admit to it.

Tara knew that she was late but that was intentional. She hadn’t wanted to disrupt things by being here on time. If she was seen… she couldn’t be sure what the reaction would be and this day shouldn’t be spoiled – not just for her. This was Faith’s day. Her last day and after the service was done Tara knew that she would just melt away and Mr Giles and Jenny would never have to see her again.

She should probably have stayed away altogether – Willow was right about that at least. The vampire was an instinctive creature and no matter the horror those instincts sometimes created, they were so very often right about things like this. Not being human allowed Willow to look at the species with more objectivity. When she wasn't thinking about dinner. And when Tara had made it clear that she was going anyway all the vampire had been able to say was ‘And you’re wearing that?’

But that was the secret truth about funerals that people refused to admit to themselves. To her just wearing black or sombre clothes wasn’t a sign of respect for the deceased, what you felt was the sign of respect. What you did. What you promised to them and how you honoured them with the rest of your life. The rest of it was just fitting in with what people thought grief had to be – and if that helped them, good…. It didn’t help her though.

So here she was in the same clothes that she had been wearing when Faith had died.
It hadn’t helped her to dress up when she had buried her whole family. One after the other.

There they all were up ahead, she had checked with the funeral home yesterday to find out where and when it would be, visited the site to make sure that she could find them in time… and seen the hole. The big dark hole in the ground that she had sort of wished would swallow her up right then – if that would bring Faith back. If the grave had just needed filling.

But she had things to do, things to make right. So she wouldn’t have allowed that. Not just then. Maybe later.

They dug early here in Sunnydale… probably to avoid the dangers of the evening… but Tara knew that, barring the hunger of the newly risen, cemetery workers, funeral directors… all of them were off limits to the undead, at least knowingly. They were too valuable in maintaining the traditions. Now that the Master was gone – maybe less so.

Faith had made it better anyway. She killed the Master. Things were better here in Sunnydale because Faith had been here. That’s your legacy Faith, she thought as she looked at the coffin, raised above the pit into which it would slowly sink If I could only finish your work… but I don’t know if I ever truly can. Even now. There would always be one left if she destroyed every other.

There would be another Slayer called, but there would ever be another Faith. Faith’s work wasn't really just the work of the Slayer was it? Faith had been something other than the Slayer. She had been Tara’s friend. Jenny’s friend. Maybe a friend to some of these other people. Tara stood at the back of the crowd, marvelling at how many people’s lives Faith must have touched. How many were here for her rather than for Mr Giles and Jenny? From the look of them maybe most. They looked… they looked like people Faith might have saved. Which was funny… Faith had always pretended not to care about the people she saved.

If their roles had been reversed how many would have turned out for her? The Mayor… perhaps Mr Giles and Jenny. She liked to think that Faith would have felt that she could come. If the Slayer had been forced to kill her that night then it wouldn’t have been Faith’s fault.

You made a difference to all these people Faith. Look at them all. They might not have been friends who loved you, but they valued you…and what you did for them and their families. She looked over at Jenny and Mr Giles. And some of them definitely loved you.

That worried her. She had known. But seeing them made it so much clearer. Love was a big, scary, emotion. She had learnt that if she had learnt anything since finding Willow… since the death of her family actually. Look what love had done to her. It would be best just to stay out of their way. Which she had so totally been intending to do anyway. They knew where Faith had been found. They would know Tara had been there and they wouldn’t, for a single minute, believe the police reports.

Tara wouldn’t have either.

And she had spoken to Jenny… albeit briefly. She knew from the tone of the teacher’s voice how Faith’s death had touched them. She had been there, hiding away on the stairs, when the police had first told them. She knew how much it hurt them then. And now.

It was hurting her too.

The good that you did for them wasn’t just killing vampires Faith, Tara brushed the start of a tear from her own eye only when saw them on Mr Giles and Jenny’s face too. You were good for them just by being there. Being a friend as well as a protector. You weren’t just a Slayer. And now what? I would do it for you… but I can’t. They wouldn’t let me be there for them… I shouldn’t be there for them. So I guess that I’ll just have to fulfil your other role, the protector, without them noticing. At least until the danger is past. I’m already working on that.

That time was nearly here. Then she could… do the other thing. Get away.

Near them, but obviously standing apart from their grief, was a younger bespectacled man that she would have immediately labelled “Young Mr Giles.” His whole prissy demeanour screamed ‘Watcher’… and with him… a young girl Tara had never seen before. Already? They replaced Faith already? She reached out and touched upon the aura of the girl and… It was true.

And the girl looked up… right at her.

The new Slayer could feel her touch. Perhaps that was a good thing. It might keep her safe from people like me. The unseen danger that she wouldn’t have expected.

So young though. Too young surely for that life.

She knew that one Slayer died and another was called… but her age? And to bring her here now. It seemed like almost indecent haste… Or perhaps a valuable lesson. Stay alive young lady or this where you will end up. In the ground. ‘The first rule of slaying – don’t die.’ Faith had translated that into something more personal to her – ‘the first rule of slaying – make it to the party.’

Same thing.

Don’t have friends like that witch. They’ll get you killed. Make it to the party. Stay alive.

Everyone seemed to die around her. If… if things happened as they should do then maybe, at last, today someone that should have died long ago. Maybe. She would have to see. That was why she had gone back… why she would have to go back again.

They got another one Faith. Already. She’ll carry on for you. But she won’t do better. She won’t be you. And I’ll stay away from her. I promise.

Tara’s face dropped as a one of the mourners shifted and she saw that he was there too. He was a professional politician. He could look sad but inside, she didn’t have to be able to read him to know what he was really thinking. Sadness had no place inside him. Not for Faith. The Mayor was glad that Faith was gone. With no Master and now no Slayer what was there in his way? Nothing.

He thought that she would be with him too – that she would never be in his way.

Nothing in his way… or…

She put him out of her mind and listened to the service. She needed to do that – it was why she was here. She needed to avoid the anger at his insincerity. She couldn’t deal with the darkness now too. The last time she had been to one of these services they had buried her family, one after another as the bodies had been released by the medical examiner. She’d avoided funerals ever since – even though people had died that she knew. She hadn’t even been to Kendra’s or Mr Zabuto’s. But this time she had to be there. Even if it meant being seen.

She had to be there, because she was responsible this time.

And because Faith was her friend.

Mr Giles went to stand beside the Minister. His words washed over her without really registering. She knew that they were beautiful it was just that she couldn’t hear anything other than the ideas behind them. He spoke, and as he did the words were gone. Gone like Faith. ‘Service, bravery, dedication… life snatched from her.’ They were all phrases that fitted Faith as well as ‘full of life, fun loving and outgoing.’ Most of the people there would only have some idea of what was being said. They had not really known Faith – they had just been helped by her. Tara hoped that the new Slayer was taking it all in. That she, and the man that she assumed to be her new Watcher, would hear what was being said and realise that there had to be more to life than killing vampires.

And in Tara’s own case it was that ‘more’ that had got Faith killed wasn’t it?

Of course it was. When she allowed what must have been a sad smile to reach her lips, that was when Mr Giles’ eyes fixed upon her and she saw him falter in the eulogy. He controlled it well and carried on, but he kept looking at her – as if making sure that she wasn’t leaving. But Tara wasn’t going anywhere. What would he have thought of the smile? Could he tell that it was a sad one? Did he think that she was enjoying herself?

Like Willow had.

Like the Mayor would be?

Did he think that she was like that?

Was she?

After he had finished speaking, the minister said yet more words that she couldn’t take in and the coffin bearing the broken body of the Slayer – Faith – was lowered into the ground. The mourners filed by the grave, looking at the coffin, some of them saying a few soft words. There was dirt and a few flowers being dropped onto the coffin. Tara remained where she was until the last possible moment. Until the last person had gone past. Only then did she move drop the single white rose she had brought with her onto the coffin.

Then she waited. At a discreet distance, feeling Mr Giles’s glare upon the back of her head. She could have gone. Walked away, melted away as she had wanted to – until she had been seen there. She had done her duty by her friend. She could have run.

I can’t leave because I deserve whatever is coming – more.

He stayed there talking to the mourners, supporting and being supported by Jenny. He was probably waiting to see if she would leave – try to avoid him. He was probably measuring her right then. Thinking of what to say? Maybe Jenny was trying to persuade him… maybe Jenny was telling him to be hard on her. That she deserved it.

And I do.

Eventually he did come over to her, she knew that he was coming, she could feel the anger bubbling behind her, the rage and it was coming closer. The hand on her shoulder as she stood looking at the hole in the ground wasn’t a surprise. A big dark hole… it seemed like the wrong place to put someone who had been as full of life as Faith. The hand spun her around and she met his gaze. Not with defiance but instead with absolute acceptance of anything he might do. Including pushing her in on top of Faith and burying her. She had things to do, but if he needed to then how could she deny him?

For a moment that resignation seemed to surprise him. If she had stared at her shoes, or looked to oppose him then he might have known what to say right away. He probably had it planned – what he would have said if he had met her again.

He was good at planning. But how could anyone plan for this? She felt sorry for him. Sorry for what she had done. For what she had allowed to happen to Faith.

It wasn’t a ‘victory’ that she wanted, making him forget what he wanted to say, but it did allow Jenny to hurry to his side before he said do more than say her name.

Jenny placed her hand on his arm. It was the gesture of a couple in love and in pain. One that offered anything was needed. Restraint. Comfort. Assurance that she was with him. It was when Jenny looked at her, old tears drying on her face even as new ones formed, that Tara completely fell apart. Perhaps Jenny didn’t know what to think about her so she had just settled for sorrow. Mr Giles was a whole other kettle of fish. He needed to take this out on someone.

Why not the person who deserved it?

“Tara,” he had said forcefully as he spun her around. It was then that he had fallen silent, seeing her reaction.

She didn’t answer him whilst he was stuck for words. What was there to say anyway? Only what they wanted to know. She would have needed to know if things had been different. She would have gone to any lengths to find out. She would have tried to bring justice to those responsible. She just nodded showing that she was willing to answer.

“You came,” Jenny said before Mr Giles could recover and think to say anything else, perhaps trying to forestall an explosion of rage that would see someone get hurt. Maybe Jenny was afraid for her. Or for him – by the Goddess could Jenny think that she would hurt them? Surely not…

“I had to come. I owed her that. After what happened, I had to.” That was it – an admission of sorts. She really had to be here. How could she shirk it? Make it look as if she didn’t care when she did. But should she have stayed away – to spare them this… or perhaps this was what Mr Giles needed? Perhaps all she had spared them was what they had actually needed.

Part of what she had to do was already arranged, already in place… so that would still happen if the rage got the better of him. The other thing… well there was a new Slayer.

“You have no-” Mr Giles started to say. Tara watched the hand tighten on his arm, stopping him from saying that. Jenny seemed to think that she did have a right. A duty. A need. Whatever it was he had been about to say. It wasn't just about avoiding the confrontation though. Tara could see that Jenny wanted to know something and to ask she needed him to be quiet.

“Do you know what happened?” Jenny asked her, sounding hopeful.

“Of course she-” her fiancé started to interrupt but was silenced with a look from Jenny.

“I was there,” Tara told them.

“You didn’t do it though?” Jenny pressed obviously needing to know that before anything else, “There was someone else there… like the report said?” But not someone on PCP. Nothing to do with a gang.

That was unspoken because they all knew it. Best case it was a typical cover-up of the supernatural. Worst case…

“I didn’t kill her.” And Tara felt like she was lying to them. More to Jenny. She knew that, deep down where the truth burned, she was lying. She fell silent. Jenny didn’t say anything… but tried to look supportive. Jenny needed to hear the truth that said that her friend had not done it herself. That was a truth. Not the truth.

It was then, finally, Mr Giles brought himself to speak, trying to force himself to be calm. “But you know who did don’t you.? You know that the report was a cover up. There was no gang member. There was no PCP. You know who it was.” His words were more a series of statements than of questions.

They all knew there were no gangs and no PCP in Sunnydale. The vamps wouldn’t allow it.

“The r-report. That wasn't me. I thought the police would… but…” Tara tailed off. She had thought that the police would punish her. Hoped for it until she realised what was still not done. What could she say? The police had let her go. The police would not charge her with anything. And she knew why.

“The Mayor. Was it him? Did he order it?” Giles asked her.

After his first sentence, she had nearly said yes, that it was the Mayor. It was he who had stopped her being charged. But then she had got what he meant… he had not ordered it. “No.”

Even if he had paid her for it.

“Then it was…” he didn’t finish the sentence but they all knew what he meant.

All she had to do was to admit it. “Y-yes.”

“Willow,” Jenny finished drawing the right conclusion from the few words that had been spoken.

Mr Giles just stared at her for a moment before he could speak again. Maybe he was reading the guilt that was surely on her face. It filled her so it must have been on her face. “You let her do that,” Mr Giles accused. “You saw her do it. You saw her kill Faith.” He shook his head, perhaps not believing his own accusations, not believing it could have happened that way. But knowing that it was true if only from her reactions.

This wasn’t the time to remind him that Faith had been sent to kill her on the orders of the Council and with his blessing. It was sort of beside the point. Faith had said that she’d been protecting her from those orders, but it was he who had given Faith the very orders that had brought her to Tara’s apartment that night. But this was not the time. There probably never would be a time. She liked Jenny too much to do that to them. Jenny didn’t need to know that. At all. So Tara just nodded and accepted what he was saying.

“I should…” He came for her with the rage clear in his eyes and she stood there, accepting whatever his judgement was and that was all that stopped him, she thought, from striking her. Lashing out. He would have stopped after one blow, but even that never landed. He, like Faith before him, wavered in the face of Tara’s blind acceptance of whatever fate brought.

So it never happened.

Instead…

“You should calm down Mr Giles,” someone else interrupted. “This is not the place for unseemly histrionics by a person in your responsible position.” The Mayor stepped into their little triangle. “Though I am so very sorry for your loss and I know the effects of grief – what it can drive a person to.”

She hadn’t heard his voice in a while. She had been avoiding him, and somehow she had forgotten how sincere he always managed to sound. The man was the master of sincerity. He was a complex character. Some things, unexpectedly, he was genuinely sincere about – the people of Sunnydale for example. But everyone there by the grave knew what he truly felt about the death of the Slayer. Not even Faith, as she had been for the rest of them, just the Slayer.

Mr Giles switched his attention from Tara to the Mayor, which perhaps had been the purpose of the politician’s measured words. Tara responded to being released from his gaze by turning her eyes on Jenny. A warning passed between the two of them in a glance, almost like a moment of mutual understanding. ‘No. Get him out of here. Get him out of here now. I know what he can do to you both. What he will do if he thinks you are his enemy. Go.’

At least that was what Tara hoped it said to Jenny. The Mayor, she was sure, could hurt them. Badly. Whether or not Jenny understood her, the effect was what she had wanted. Before Mr Giles could start to vent his rage on and threaten the Mayor of Sunnydale, Jenny tugged at his arm. Richard Wilkins just smiled at them both as if it all meant nothing at all, just something brushed aside. But Tara knew that the ‘aside’ was a place where he filed all of these things away for later use. Always.

She knew that he would remember this moment. She knew that he would have his, not revenge as that was not what he did, but his moment. If it took a century and it was against their great grandchildren he would have his moment. If she let him.

Great-grandchildren… strange to think of future lives now. Maybe it was natural though in the midst of the death and the grief. Maybe… she gave Jenny another look. Thanking her and reassuring her.

She hoped Jenny understood.

“Tara… with me,” he said. It was the closest he had ever got to being curt with her.

Dutifully, surprised at how easy it was to obey him she moved into step and the two pairs retreated in different directions. As she glanced back at the other pair she noticed that Jenny did the same. Was there some reassurance for her there too?

She had burned her bridges hadn’t she? Long before today. She couldn’t be with them… and she couldn’t stay with the Mayor either. For herself she couldn’t do that. She had to get out.

There were complications though.

Willow shaped complications.

*******************
Katharyn
23. Volumey Text
 
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