Hey all, thanks for the feedback and for joining in on embarassing Celia. Its a team effort...
Part 119 is below... but first:
Catwoman - You were suprised I started it? Probably less surprised that I was back in December when I started it...
Glad you are enjoying it and that Darla does something for you as a character - I think you will see more that you like in the next few parts (or you might already have seen it... I forget.)
Thanks... enjoy 119 now.
Katharyn
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Title:
The Sidestep Chronicle – Second Chronicle – Somewhere to Be (Part 119)
Author: Katharyn Rosser
Feedback: Constructive criticism is always welcome.
katharynrosser@hotmail.com Flames just demonstrate you have a tiny mind.
Spoiler Warning: Pretty limited. The story occurs in an alternate universe as set up in “The Wish” though reference is made to events that occur in both realities. Nothing is referenced that occurs after S5 though. Guess why? Most “spoilers” would be for the first chronicle of this fic rather than the show and if you haven’t read that then much of this will make no sense but you can try and get round it by reading the preface to Part 104 which summarises most of what went before.
Distribution This story was written for Pens. Pens is its home. No archiving off Different Coloured Pens (This applies to all of the Sidestep Chronicle)
Summary: Toni comes face to face with Willow and Tara. Or is that face to faces?
Disclaimer: I 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. You know the drill.
Rating: R – a general rating for occasional content. Individual parts might be less than this level.
Couples: Tara and Willow forever – others couples as necessary but nothing unconventional.
Notes: Thanks To: All My Brilliant Beta Readers (AMBBR) Kerry (Forrister) and Jo (Wizpup) who for some reason signed right back up for this fic after seeing the size of the last one. No accounting for madness is there. And Celia (TiredSoul) who should have known better but signed up anyway. *HUGS* and Big Thanks to all of you. This is one of Kerry’s and… She always knows what to say. Thanks to all you readers who stuck by me over a looooong period of time, waiting and now reading again. And also to the new ones – love to convert a lurker. The last section was beta’d by Celia – actually it was requested by Celia as where I left it wasn’t good enough. Apparently. J
The Sidestep Chronicle – Second Chronicle
Somewhere to Be
By
Katharyn Rosser
Willow smiled. That had been pretty fancy as far as stakings went. Sometimes, when they’d already won the battle, she liked to figure out just what they
could do. Not necessarily doing it
better, just what they… could do. Like… for practice, and to make things a little more interesting and lively. The vampire had been down, the girl was free of him and safe, so there had been no problem in testing her fine control of the stake. She liked to do well and that wasn’t a crime – especially not as far as Tara was concerned.
Willow knew that her girlfriend had been throwing the stake up for her so that she could catch it, magically, and stake him. That was the best way that they’d found when they were dealing with thickened air. If you made the air effectively a solid then there was no way through it with the stake. The air was as much a shield for the vampire as it was a hindrance to his movement. At least until you removed it just at the right moment.
To stake a trapped vampire then it was necessary to let that thickening effect fade, late enough that the vampire couldn’t escape, but before you hit it with the stake. It wasn’t as easy as it seemed – because Willow’s mind, like most peoples, was focused on the visual. Though she
knew the extent of the magical effect, how thick it was, she couldn’t see it. At least not without focusing on another kind of vision, which in itself was a distraction.
Distractions were bad because vampires were faster than they were. Vampire reactions were more than human. She knew it better than most because for a long, long time after she’d come back from that nightmare she felt liked she’d slowed down - as well as becoming physically weaker. The world had been a very different place to the one the vampire had remembered. Even though it had kinda been the same.
It had been slower certainly but it looked different too. It had taken a while to realise it looked
better. It had taken about the same amount of time to know that really, with Tara, she was stronger in every possible sense than the other Willow could ever have been. Even without the magic. Just enough time to find the love that had always connected them.
She had fond memories of finding the love on the farm… Tara bringing her back, and also of bringing herself back.
What she’d done with the stake was tougher than their usual moves, with the tumbling and all, and she was happy with how it had gone. The timing had been a little off – but not enough so that she’d actually missed or anything that could have been as disastrous as letting the vampire escape to attack them, or just move enough to avoid being dusted.
She watched for her lover’s reaction and noticed Tara was unable to resist a wry little smile crossing her lips before the little shake of the head that cleared it. Tara’s attitude to such ‘practice’ actually made Willow smile in itself. By virtue of her talents being directed in the area of fire and air – though like Tara not exclusively so – she tended to be the one who killed the vampires by overtly magical means when they were out together. And her baby knew she had to practice.
Stakings didn’t count in that – despite the magic involved, stakings they could both do.
Tara was perfectly capable of lethal magic, she might even be better at it, but it didn’t come so easily to her girlfriend as it did to Willow. The effort that it took for Tara to bring the earth or water to destroy a vampire was far greater than for Willow to incinerate it or trap it in the ever-present air. Vampires could live forever underwater – but they couldn’t last a second bathed in flame. It was kind of an unfair advantage. But on the other hand bath-time with Tara could definitely be fun… And not just for the kids.
There was always the ever-reliable stake, and Tara preferred to use that when she could, but… well there was very little variety to it. It wasn’t that Tara didn’t approve of her getting ‘flashy’ it was just that it wasn't something that Tara chose to do herself. It pretty much characterised their outlook on hunting. To Tara it was purely something that had to be done – that was the way it always had been. Tara had been weary of the hunt even before she came to Sunnydale.
Willing, definitely able, but slightly weary. It was a tiredness that wouldn’t go away.
For Willow… it was more complex than that. To her, hunting wasn’t something that
had to be done. It was something that they chose to do and could… in theory… stop whenever they wanted to as well. That was an important distinction in her own mind. Willow had to believe that they could get out of this aspect of their lives… if they ever wanted to. And while she was here… well, maybe they couldn’t ‘enjoy’ what they did – but they could make the best of it, test herself as long as it was safe to do so. Safety was always the key – and this time Tara had been there, watching out for them. If something had gone wrong Tara would have handled it. But nothing had gone wrong.
It was like schoolwork – that had always been pretty much her definition of fun when she was growing up. Getting to do stuff that expanded her mind, her experience, which gave her a future and good grades. That had been something like heaven, still was to a lesser degree. She just wanted to be the best she could.
Okay, now Tara was her heaven… They walked together under the stars while they were hunting. They helped people as they killed demons and vampires. They got to hang out with Rupert, Jenny, Faith and Ben both on and off ‘duty.’ They’d come together through all the hunting. They’d made their friends doing that. There was Larry too – though he’d left town now – another friend. And that was just the benefits outside their own love…
Hunting was a part of who they were
now but if they left it behind then they’d still have the skills. They’d still have the friends. And they’d still be able to take those moonlit strolls under the stars. If they ran into a vampire, sure they would always be able to kill it, but they wouldn’t have to actually
hunt to still have the benefits.
The thing was, they were the most important people in each other’s lives. There wasn’t any reason that shouldn’t and couldn’t be the case. And so it was with her use of magic. She wasn’t being frivolous… the magic that they used, and which used them in turn, wouldn’t let them do that. It was a trade that usually took place. That was the price of escaping what Tara had always called ‘the darkness’ and the bad things she’d always had to worry were coming for her. Sure, they were more restricted… but they were also free of all those bad things in the magic too. And so, Willow could enjoy it, which Tara didn’t really mind – even if she did shake her head like an amused teacher with her star pupil. When it came to magic Willow could always rely on her lover to tell her when she was sticking even the tip of a toe into dangerous waters.
Actually before she even got her shoe off.
And she hadn’t needed to be warned about anything like that for such a long time.
Tara had been there, to the dangerous places, and Willow had every faith that her love wasn't about to allow her to go anywhere near them. Tara hadn’t had to warn her about anything in over two years. Nearly three. So a little wry smile and a shake of the head were, pretty much, okay.
Then again, Willow guessed that this might be the wrong time to mention that she’d been thinking of keeping it spinning through two axis’s as it had been driven down. That might have been
too flashy. If it had just been them then maybe she would have tried for it, but… not with the girl there. Not when there was a chance that something could have gone wrong and they’d have to resort to more forceful magics which weren’t as precise or controllable. Willow didn’t want to think about the possibility of getting knocked or distracted when she was trying to bend fire to her will. Burning someone other than the vampire wouldn’t have been a good thing at all.
She looked beyond Tara at the girl who was scrabbling backwards along on the ground and staring at the place where the vampire had been before it went ‘poof.’ The surprise on her face suggested she’d never seen the way that those creatures died before.
Maybe she hadn’t even known that they
could die. She hadn’t thought they could be, back in that cage with Xander, vampires had seemed the strongest thing in the world to her. But there was always something stronger.
Tara.
Love.
Which were kind of the same thing. But the point was she could well believe in the younger girl’s disbelief.
Why should she have known anything about those creatures? Despite having the memories of being one, Willow knew she still didn’t know everything. She wasn’t sure even an ancient vampire like the Master had known either. Not everything. Everything was a lot. The only ‘everything’ she really had, and felt comfortable in understanding, was she and Tara’s love for each other.
She had a handle on that.
But the girl wasn’t actually trying to get away from them this time – which was good on a scale of one to… running away afraid. She’d pushed back, but she was reacting to the vampire – looking to where the vampire had been and where a gentle cloud of dust still hung in the air. The girl wasn’t looking to them – or trying to get away from them. Last time, for whatever reason, she had been wanting to be away from them. Willow knew how much it had bothered Tara that she felt she was the one to blame for what had happened there.
But the girl wasn’t running this time.
They could keep up with her.
She was just moving backwards along the ground until she wasn’t right next to them anymore. That was fine. In her circumstances Willow would want a little bit of distance too. How was she supposed to know that the ‘poof in cloud of dust thing’ wasn't catching like the common cold? Or that there weren’t more vampires? Willow didn’t recall getting a very detailed answer from Tara about just how they were going to talk to this girl… And she was definitely a ‘girl.’ It would be a couple of years yet before anyone was saying ‘young woman’ on a regular basis. Maybe a teacher who was being condescending.
Neither of them knew sign language. Maybe she could read lips though? Maybe that was a way around it? Maybe she should suggest that as an option to Tara, who was determined to be the one to make right what she’d done last night – or thought she had.
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Willow was about to say something; Tara could tell it was something she’d been thinking about too. There was the telltale movement of the head, the way her lips opened, closed and then opened again before actually starting to speak. She looked at her lover and gave her a tiny shake of the head. No. Talking amongst themselves, if the girl didn’t lip-read, wasn't going to help build trust here and they really, really needed to do that. They needed her to trust them or at least to not run away again. No… actually the girl
did need to trust them. She’d almost been killed. Again. But this time Tara knew it was because she’d already run away once and not let them help her. Whatever good reason she’d had for leaving them last night – she needed to trust them at least enough now to be taken somewhere safe.
Tara also knew it was because she’d done something she shouldn’t have done – but that was okay if the girl would just stay now – let them help her. There was no harm done if she did that now – there was even some extra good. Another vampire destroyed – more lives saved for the future. One vampire could kill hundreds of people a year… and all of their children and grandchildren, ad infinitum, which would never be born.
One vampire was worth a lot.
Still, the girl… Tara was kind of hoping saving her life, again – needing to do that again - would have showed the girl that running away wasn't going to solve her problems here. Not even if she ran clean out of Sunnydale.
But talking amongst themselves, even if she could see one of their lips – and could read them – when she was deaf… It wasn't fair. At least not until they knew her – and what she considered to be fair and good manners. Without knowing that it would be liked having a conversation and deliberately excluding the girl from it. In fact, more than ‘not good manners’ Tara pretty much considered it rude too. She didn’t know what the ethics of talking in front of deaf people were, but she just thought – deep down – that it wasn’t a nice thing to do. Also it would just say that they
were planning something. That they were hiding something. Either that or they were ignorant and didn’t care what she thought about them.
They really weren’t hiding anything though – and the only thing they had been planning was what they were going to do when they’d found her. How they were going to talk to her.
Now they had.
And see how well that plan had come together. They didn’t have any more idea now than they had when they’d talked about it before. The reality was different to the theory. It was a very different thing talking with Willow about the abstract idea of how they would deal with her than looking into her wide, wary and fearful, eyes and doing something.
Right then Tara just wanted one of them to hug this girl – but they couldn’t go there. Not yet. Comfort wasn’t what was needed. It was reassurance. That they weren’t bad people. That she was safe with them and they wouldn’t let the vampires hurt her. But…
Well, there was pretty much a complete lack of a functioning plan of communication here. She didn’t need to be paranoid about this girl thinking they were planning something because they really, really weren’t. They wanted to – but they weren’t. Tara could understand paranoia though – it had probably kept this girl alive for as long as she’d needed to so far. This girl was entitled to her paranoia.
Her dad was dead.
And she’d probably seen it happen to him too if she knew it.
Tara still didn’t know what she was going to do when she chose to just sat down on the grass a meter or so from the girl’s feet. And then she didn’t move at all. She just sat there, looked at the girl and absolutely nothing passed between them. No looks. Certainly no attempt to put some reassurance in her mind. Nothing. There was no way in the world that Tara was going to do anything other than allow the girl to size her up. To size up both her and Willow. They needed her to realise that, whatever it was that she was afraid of, it didn’t need to ever be Tara or the woman she loved.
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Willow watched them both, sat there on the grass, insanely for a few moments she was thinking about Tara’s skirt getting grass stains on and how she was going to get them out afterwards being as it was her turn to do the washing. She got past that though pretty quickly. The trouble was Willow wasn’t really sure what
she was supposed to be doing now. Tara was wasn’t doing anything – but in a meaningful way. Willow supposed, she could sit down too, but that would make this tableau look something like an after sunset picnic – and right outside city hall. In this town anything like that could mean a vamp pig-out – or at least the vampires might try it. If they tried then the girl would run again. Also it might be crowding the girl Willow could sit and risk spoiling whatever Tara was doing in getting this girl to trust them.
Or she could stay on lookout for trouble.
Tara knew best when it came to trust. She was a superb judge and she was the sort of person most people, most good people, instinctively liked and
wanted to trust. Willow had seen it happen and was always amazed by how easily it came to her girlfriend. Her lover was still a little shy, say in a social gathering with new people, but once she came out of that shell… People always liked Tara. People brought her out of that shell because they wanted to like her.
Willow was the one that found herself having to make an effort to meet new people at those parties. It was easier to stick with Tara though – she could be ‘the girlfriend’ for a little while and then people got to know her too.
She could let Tara win the girls trust now, and make sure they were safe as they did that.
On the other hand, if she didn’t sit down with them then there was a chance that the girl would think that Willow wasn’t
willing to sit down with her. That she wasn’t to be trusted as much as Tara was. There was this whole big quandary going on in her head now about what she should do for the best. The safest thing seemed to be to wait there and let Tara invite her over if she wanted to. Neither going nor staying. Just sort of there. She could do that and Tara didn’t need to actually ‘say’ anything to invite her to them. Just the way she moved would let Willow know and they could always communicate through the magic if they needed to as well.
With her if not the girl.
Better to be the one on look out – keeping them safe. Just so long as she kept her eyes on Tara and the girl. She knew, because Tara had already promised herself, that her lover wasn't going to touch the girl’s mind. That had been a disaster last time. The shock wave of fear and revulsion from the contact… well Willow had been able to feel it because of her own link to Tara. The girl hadn’t liked Tara being in her head. Not even to reassure her. Not to tell her she was safe. Willow knew she might well have made the same mistake, it wasn't that Tara had made a choice she wouldn’t have. She and Tara didn’t overuse the ability to put a thought in the other’s head – it was part of their connection but body language and familiarity was equally as powerful – but on the other hand she would never have thought about how a strange person doing that could feel.
Thinking about it now, Willow knew she
would have made the same mistake. She’d have been quicker to try and get into the girl’s thoughts and she probably wouldn’t have been as… gentle and warm as Tara. She’d probably have been more eager to reassure than Tara had been. Helpfully eager, but not with the delicate touch Tara always had. In short the girl would have been more afraid now than she was of Tara.
Now though – well despite Tara’s determination not to ‘try’ anything at all the girl was getting something from the passive position. For the longest series of moments… Tara and the girl just kept looking at each other.
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Toni had steeled herself for it from the moment she’d been certain who it was who was out here with her. The two women from last night – who’d helped her but then done… That bad thing too. She knew what this blonde woman was capable of. She’d seen that same look of compassion in what, seemed like, a kind face the previous night. But that hadn’t stopped the blonde from following that vampire woman into her head where no one should have been. No one but Toni herself.
She didn’t want anyone in her head like that. Even if… Even if it had just been the sort of things the woman seated beside her had put there – a feeling of safety. But how could she be safe if someone was inside her mind like that? It shouldn’t even be possible – but it was worse than someone reading her journal. It was… It was a violation of everything that was private and just hers.
She didn’t want that. Not ever again. Not after the years of nightmares that she’d had to feel in those split seconds with the vampire woman. Horrible… terrible… icky things no one should ever have had to see – or go through – at least not in a world which was even half way fair.
This world wasn't though, was it?
Not fair at all.
Some of those things the vampire had forced into her head… some brief moments of them had seemed to, maybe, involve the redheaded woman that Toni still didn’t dare look at whilst she was standing over there. She was with the blonde again, here, like she had been last night in the park. At least the blonde wasn't in those terrible feelings as well… but the redhead was. Toni was pretty sure of that. She was right there, a small part in the visions she’d been forced to see. The redhead was in there so what did that mean? From what the vampire had put in her head, Toni could even feel herself biting that red haired girl. Now that was a whole other level of violation – making her experience it. And then… moments later – in the dream at least – she was watching as the redhead was biting someone. In that dream the red haired girl had been all pale, with the teeth of a monster and a delight in hurting people. The redhead was a vampire herself.
Had been… Whenever that feeling, that nightmare, was.
Except… Well, it didn’t look like she was
now did it? Not that Toni was able to bring herself to look again though. Instead she just made herself meet the blonde’s eyes. After that one had been in her head she didn’t really want to be there again – but the redhead was a worse option if her nightmares were real and…
They’d saved her from the vampires twice now. This time she could… she felt like she could see right into that blonde woman’s heart when she looked – but also that she was allowing the blonde into hers too. Both of them were totally open which was better than what had happened last night. Just because she didn’t feel threatened didn’t mean she was forgetting what the blonde had done yesterday.
But… This… Doing nothing. Sitting here – open – and looking at each other allowed Toni to look back on last night. She still didn’t like it – but maybe… Maybe she’d made a little mistake about what had happened too. Maybe she’d been… Maybe it had been the vampire that had made…
She didn’t know… but she could feel…
In a way… last night had been like a softer version of what the vampire had done to her. There weren’t images there and none of it had been forced on her as the vampire had. But… she’d been able to
feel some of things that the blonde woman felt – and maybe not just what she’d wanted her to feel. There had been fear, fear of losing something important. Fear of not making amends. There had been guilt.
What had she been guilty about?
Even feeling it was… better than the vampires.
There had been regret. No regret in a vampire.
There had been contentment and there had been, still was now, … Such an overpowering love that Toni had to blink when she realised.
She didn’t think…
She didn’t think that anyone who felt that much love for anyone could possibly be bad. Which was why she didn’t mind that the blonde woman, seated on the grass opposite her, might see the things that were inside her too – but just like a normal person would. Not in the invasive way she might have done that last night.
And perhaps last night had been a mistake… people made them. Everyone did. People tried too hard.
The blonde
cared, that was it. She so obviously cared about what had happened to Toni more than the cops ever had while she’d been in the Police Station. And yet this woman didn’t know anything about what had happened.
And still she cared.
She’d, both these women had, saved her life. Twice. This woman cared… and she knew too. What she knew, Toni wasn’t sure. But someone she felt that the blonde, at least, understood – but Toni herself wasn’t even sure
what she understood. The blonde woman understood what she was feeling even if she couldn’t know why.
Somehow she could feel this woman knew what losing her Dad had done to her. She understood that pain. That loss.
She could see it and she understood. But how did she know? How could she know what had happened? Unless she’d seen it last night… when she’d done the bad thing?
Or… there was another option. A bad one.
Without a word the two of them understood each other. They might have been able to find words that they both understood too, but right then Toni didn’t need words or communication problems. She knew that the blonde, and the red-haired woman with her, really cared...
About each other – and for some reason about her too. Which… felt better than having no one to do that.
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Tara didn’t need to be in the youngster’s head to feel the moment arrive when a silent understanding came into existence between them. The moment when the fear, if not the mistrust, ceased to be the overwhelming issue for the girl, when she knew that if they wanted to hurt her they could have just… done nothing at all. Left her to get hunted down on the streets again. It was a moment she realised that Tara didn’t want to hurt her. That Tara hadn’t meant anything by what had happened the previous night and she wasn’t going to do it again – which was what Tara thought she must have been afraid of.
And if the girl could feel the apology Tara wanted to give her then she hoped that was there too but she wasn’t going to use any magic to go there. She would allow… she’d allow herself to view what was already there though. The natural life energy of a person was always there. It was just that most people couldn’t register it.
Tara was, as she cautiously allowed herself to
see, able to see all those swirling emotions within the girl’s aura. It wasn’t a surprise to find them there. This girl was tired. She was desperate. Afraid. Scared. Probably hurt by events and people who’d wanted to help her. And she’d lost… a lot. Tara and Willow were the least of her problems. All in all they barely registered on the scale.
All those colours – every one of them another emotion, all bound up in the things that had happened to her, were happening to her and which she was probably afraid of happening to her later on.
But gradually the girl, seeing something within Tara, perhaps in her passivity or perhaps even in the same way Tara saw her now, became a little less afraid of them and that was the absolute best that Tara could hope for here. The rest of it would have to wait until they could find a way to communicate in a way that was less well, passive and nebulous. This hadn’t been communication… it had just been seeing each other. Seeing what was within someone else by looking into his or her eyes.
Allowing someone else to see within you by being totally open. Nothing like the invasion of privacy which had happened last night, and which Tara so bitterly regretted.
The thing that got to Tara most of all was the girl’s loss. Over the years she’d seen a lot of people who’d lost friends, lovers and family who were close to them and she knew how to recognise that in a persons aura. The loss in the girl was raw and it was within everything else she was feeling. Streaks of the emotion stretched out into her fear, her wariness, her determination. It made Tara wonder how well she was dealing with that? Her dad was dead. Tara didn’t know anything about the girl’s Mom but she’d lost him for sure.
And it was tearing her up.
Tara wasn't sure… but maybe that was where the girl’s indecision was coming from too. There was a lot of that in there. Maybe the fear was even of making the wrong choice now. Her whole aura, apart from the loss, reeked of ‘what should I do?’ Perhaps it was a desire to be looked after that existed in everyone – young or old?
Tara could understand all of how she was feeling, if what she was sensing was true. There hadn’t been anyone there for her when her own family had… Not even Willow. There had just been a dream of Willow. but even that hadn’t helped her back then. This girl was younger than the girl that Tara had been then – but not by much. She felt at least as lost as Tara had.
And she shared, unless Tara was way off base, a need to do something about it.
But within that… what would she have given to have someone look after her then? There had been her aunt and uncle, but they’d believed too firmly in the demon heritage to ever
want to look after her.
Here in Sunnydale there wasn’t even that level of ‘support’ for this girl. No one had been there for her when things had gone wrong, when they’d got worse or even when she’d tried to do the right thing, as she understood it, by going to the police. But she and Willow… they were here for this girl now. It was important – they both knew it inside, they felt it. At least they would be if they were allowed to be. Tara wasn’t about to let this girl slip into the sort of life that she’d had… even if that had ultimately brought her to Willow, as well as all their friends.
It had worked out for her – eventually – but not as a direct result of any choice she’d made. She was afraid, even now, that her choice had really been revenge, cloaked as justice. She hadn’t chosen Willow until years later.
For this girl that sort of life would be much, much shorter. Which was why Tara wasn’t about to let her slip into it just by letting her be alone now. She hadn’t told Willow about any fear of the girl choosing a battle she couldn’t win – the thoughts she had about her own choice now – but she’d be willing to bet that her sweet lady probably knew all about what she was thinking anyway. She usually did. They were like two sides of the same coin in many respects. They had two faces… but at the core they were one and the same.
Tara watched as the girl blinked, she was blinking back tears right now which seemed like a good step – she was starting to let herself go. Starting to let what she’d been holding inside come out as it had to do eventually. And she could only do that when she felt safe – it was a survival thing and this girl was clearly a survivor. Those brown eyes were watering. Filling. Tara could have held her arms out to her, offered her a hug or some comfort. But for some reason she couldn’t. The girl… It was like this really wasn't the time for those tears. Here, now… maybe with she and Willow… it just wasn't what she needed now. They’d come eventually.
But for now she blinked them back. Held it inside again and the aura settled a little. Not resolved, still a mass of emotion but no longer surging. As if the near miss with the tears had relieved the tiniest, essential, bit of tension. When the tears were gone she looked at Tara again.
Tara wondered if, perhaps, the girl was questioning why there hadn’t been an offer of comfort? She felt terrible for not offering it to her. Anyone else… Anyone she knew and she would have made the offer. Tara hated to see people in pain – she did all she could to relieve that – but if she’d hugged this girl… Well, it would have been an impression of someone who really cared for her but… Tara knew her pain, or something like it, but that didn’t mean that she had any way to really lessen it. It would have been false because she wasn’t the person this girl really needed. She needed her Mom, her dead Dad or some real friends not someone who she’d only really met twice and didn’t even know the name of.
In her own case Willow had been her salvation in the end. Revenge had been what allowed her to continue – drove her onwards – but only Willow had taken her from that path. Only she’d been able to. No matter how much she might have called it justice only Willow could bring her back to the light. And, funnily enough, despite all the risks she took to try and ‘save’ the woman she loved – and who was already dead – it had been Willow who ended up saving her. Took her from the life and gave her another, better, one. She wasn’t sure where this girl’s salvation was going to come from if not from them.
In a person who was hurting, that sort of pain needed something to replace it, or it left a huge dark festering hole inside… which led to bad things. Bad deeds and thoughts would fill it if they could. They would fill it until they overflowed and escaped into the world. The question was… what else was this girl going to find to fill that hole? Tara wondered because she didn’t intend to let it be anything bad – at least not in these first, crucial hours.
Crucial because it was in those that she’d killed her first vampires, and once she’d started… only one thing had stayed her hand. One that looked like the woman she’d always been meant to love.
She couldn’t see that happening to this girl.
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Willow watched the tears come and, just as she’d thought the kid was going to break down, go away again. Then she watched as the youngest of the three of them watched Tara for a little while longer. The two of them, on the same level, were able to commune in a way that Willow, standing at a slight distance above them, couldn’t share. Maybe if she had sat down… but that could have been kind of aggressive. Interview skills courses had shown her that. You had to try and avoid confronting a person with too many other people they didn’t know – if you wanted to avoid appearing hostile that was.
Back here, she was kind of a neutral observer. Which was good – not a threat. Not entering the girl’s equation. Also she hadn’t been looked at in a long time now. Actually, it was almost as if she was being visually avoided.
And hey, even if she was neutral, she was still deeply in love and that had to resonate somewhere. Love did… It was obvious.
Finally, just as she thought how long it had been since the girl looked her way, those eyes flickered towards her again and rather than measuring her there was a question there. Willow was about to say ‘Hey’ but there really wasn't any point to that now was there? Instead she gave the almost-patented Willow-wave and one of the smiles that went with it. She’d never seen the smile, but it always made Tara smile too. She wanted to be welcoming… not at all pushing to find out what else was down under the town. Even though really wanted – needed – to know.
Tara would never agree to rush this girl, even though she was obviously pretty tough, especially not after what she must have suffered recently. Willow, as usual, was more impatient than her lover, but she knew that Tara was right. Right as usual too. Tara was blessed with a greater empathy than anyone else that Willow had ever known. She’d follow her lover’s lead in this even though she might have
known they needed the information, she never would have plucked up the courage to push the girl for it anyway.
The reaction to her wave was sort of unexpected though. There, on the girls face, were the tiniest beginnings of a smile. It was the sort of little success that gave Willow hope for her. She might have lost… but she was able to see other things than the grief, if only for a few seconds. Grief was important. It was a natural process. But where there was blame involved… it could consume you. She knew that Tara had been scared of that, on this girl’s behalf, since they’d read about the note she’d left the police.
It was Tara’s own nightmare, being sucked back into that, and now it was her nightmare scenario for this girl too.
What if she blamed herself in some way – for not being able to help or something like that? It could be bad.
The girl looked back at Tara, then to Willow. There might have been some wondering there, and then another question. Tara must have seen it too, interpreted it as such. Her lover held up her hand, back towards her, inviting her to take it. Willow came nearer and touched it, gently stroking the back of it. As she did she had a sense of the trepidation in Tara. The fear that this could still all go horribly wrong and that they still might lose the girl. That wasn't going to happen, Willow was sure of it.
By way of reassurance she wove her fingers into Tara’s and gently squeezed, only remembering after a moment of that to return her attention to the girl and her reaction to their togetherness. She meant, with that squeeze, to say ‘We’re in love.’ People in love… well they couldn’t be all bad. The love part of them, at least, had to be good. The girl’s eyes had widened a little, surprise perhaps, and then she was past it as Willow touched Tara’s cheek too.
There was the beginnings of a smile again. A different smile though. Not an amused one. More a… ‘well that’s okay then’ one. Love was showing her the way, which was good.
All that left her with was the decision, after their introduction, about whether to sit or to stand.
Willow still couldn’t decide. She really was indecisive-girl tonight.
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They were clearly together. Which was… well, it was okay. It was reassuring to Toni. She’d been so afraid, last night, that the red-haired one was another of those… creatures. Because she’d seen it in her head even if what was there was different to what had been in front of her. The red haired woman didn’t look the same as she had in the vision that had been put there. The terrible, horrible, feelings. They were feelings more than visions. In those the redhead been killed, sucked dry and the she had been pale… pale like a vampire and with horrible red lips that could have been stained by the blood she’d seen that vampire shed. In her vision at least.
This wasn’t the same person as that had been.
And yet it was.
But if they were in
love then… well there wasn’t anything she could imagine that would bring a person to be in love with a creature like that. Love was special, she’d always been told that. No one could love… The things that vampires did. She’d… Dad had warned her in the cage about some of the things that they’d said they would do – to her and to others. Suggested. Sex stuff that he hadn’t spelled out to her but she could guess at when he’d used the word for ‘having.’ But that was sex, violence. It wasn't love.
What it looked like these two had, it was definitely love. There was probably sex going on too, but that was just the way that people were together… she’d had her own sexy urges in the last couple of years. Dad had said…
Dad was dead. Gone. The vampires had taken him from her and then they’d tried to kill her – but these two women had saved her.
Twice.
She didn’t think she’d ever met any gay women before, not knowingly anyway, but it really didn’t make any difference to her. It wasn't where her own desires lay and more importantly she wasn’t sure that happiness, desire or even love were a part of her life anymore. Her dad was dead. But they’d saved her life. Twice. And they’d done that by killing vampires.
It was, obviously, what they did. No coincidence that they’d found her twice.
Her dad was dead. Killed by vampires and the police couldn’t help her.
Next to all that meeting two people in love, which Dad had always thought was the most important thing you could say about people, was pretty trivial and somehow reassuring. She’d lived a life where most of the world didn’t think she was ‘normal’ she had a much broader definition of what ‘normal’ was.
And she didn’t have to like them or trust them more than necessary to let them help her – which they obviously wanted to do – get the things which had killed him and which were still hurting all the other people down there. The police couldn’t help her – or wouldn’t – maybe they could. If they believed her, and didn’t think she was crazy. These women would believe her all right, they obviously knew what vampires could do and did something about it themselves. That also meant they were very dangerous… but the police had guns. They were dangerous. They could be, should have been, trusted. She tossed the idea back and forth in her mind.
Besides… she needed somewhere to go. She knew couldn’t stay out here. Eventually vampires or something else would get her.
She needed to be somewhere that wasn’t her Mom’s or being taken into care.
She needed to be somewhere where she could still do what she needed to about the vampires and stop them hurting people.
And if someone there cared about her – even a little – then she could feel just a tiny bit better.
She’d made her choice because there really was only one.
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They were all there, watching each other, unsure what to do next. It wasn’t something they’d really thought about. Tara might have considered it… but if she had, then she hadn’t mentioned it to Willow. Communication had been the problem and they… well, they might just have overcome that problem by as simple a gesture as holding hands. At least the initial stages – making the breakthrough.
Tara’s hand was cool as it was interlinked with her own. Willow had seen the girl staring at their connection and her reaction, which had visibly passed through her very tense body when she appreciated what was happening. That could have been a bad thing but, when she was already tense, it was actually pretty good.
The girl relaxed a little.
Love, Willow thought, will always win the day. And not just for them it seemed. If there was still a wariness in the kid then it was only natural. They couldn’t expect her to be perfectly okay, now could they? Not yet but hopefully now, the worst of the initial problem was behind them. No more running away or anything like that? She hoped so, anyway. It was tough to find any way to communicate when someone was running away from you.
Slowly Tara’s hand slipped from their connection, fingers lingering as long as they could, catching the two little ones for the tiniest moment of wrestling, which the girl might not have been able to see, before Tara reached out with that same hand and offered it to the girl, to help her up and to get them on their way. The smile… the hand. Perhaps Willow was biased, she knew Tara so well and she knew what those lips and hands were capable of - in both smutty and non-smutty ways – but… why wasn't the girl taking Tara’s hand?
Tara was left standing there, virtually blanked as the girl pushed herself to her feet and gestured as if to ask which way they had to go. Virtually though – not actually. There hadn’t been a determined effort to
look like she was blanking Tara. It could have simply been something that happened. Self-reliance, which this kid definitely seemed to have to go with her obvious strength, might have made her want to get up by herself.
She could have made it look a lot worse if she’d wanted to. She could have slapped the offered hand away. She could have given Tara a look which wouldn’t have left any doubt. Or shook her head. She hadn’t done any of those things.
Or, it still could have really been something the girl meant. Willow nodded down the street to reply to the silent question and the girl set off in that direction. The nod was all she trusted herself to do – they had saved her life. Twice. And she did that to Tara?
But then, Willow thought as she slipped her hand back into Tara’s rejected one, they had no idea what the girl had been through. It was impossible to be mad with her right now because whatever it was… it had been bad.
Besides, this was
her hand as much as it was Tara. Her baby offered it to her often enough. Gave it to her too. Possession was like, nine-tenths of the law.
*********************
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If I want a little pussy, I got my own to play with.
Chance in
Chance.------------------------