Skip to content


Fic: Vignette Series

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

Re: Fic: Vignette Series

Postby Sassette » Mon May 15, 2006 9:47 am

**EasierSaid: Aww, shucks :blush Thanks. I've mentioned before in replies what I like about writing the Vignette Series, but you've hit on a few new things that haven't really been brought up. For a long, long time, over-exposition and long-winded backstory/setup was a big flaw in my writing. There's something about writing >short< that's very challenging for me. Writing these vignettes really makes me consciously decide what the scene is about, what I'm hoping to accomplish with it (though, usually, the answer to that one is "Awwww ... W/T Lovin'! Yay!"), and whether or not something really needs to be in the story. For this one, the idea was that the "are we boring" discussion is universal, even for our favorite demon slayers, who lead just about the most exciting lives any of us can imagine. To that end, I only talked about the actual slaying enough to establish that they were covered in yuck, and that no one had been hurt that evening: the two things that needed to be established in order to make the "are we boring" discussion both ridiculous (because - hey - being covered in demon yuck? Not boring) and realistic (because they wouldn't be discussing such a thing if someone had been hurt ... they probably wouldn't have gone home if someone had been hurt) at the same time. So, I've said before that the vignettes are easy, but that's not entirely accurate: once I have a concept, writing them tends to be >quick<, but they're not easy.

The subject matter, however, also helps with the quick-and-sort-of-easy part. I think everybody pretty much knows by now that I find W/T fascinating, and spend an indordinate amount of time thinking about them. Great sweeping epics are a whole lot of fun, but the fact is, W/T are major supporting characters in the Buffyverse, so favorite W/T moments from the show tend to be the quiet ones where they're just >together<. They had a few kick-ass moments, but mostly, they're the sidekicks in the demon-fighting part. I love a good story where W/T are the main characters and demon-fighters, but the fact that they're sidekicks in canon pretty much made the vignette series possible. Despite the fact they're in it for the long haul, the demon fighting is not their destiny, not their responsibility, and while that makes them admirable, brave, and heroic, they're not going to spend inordinate amount of time obsessing about it, either. They're allowed downtime, and it's this downtime that I focus on here. I get to move the focus away from the supernatural, and just write about two people in love, who happen to both be women who help their friend fight demons.

And that got more long-winded than I intended, and I'm running a little late for work ... gotta' scoot. Thanks for reading.

-Sass
User avatar
Sassette
3. Flaming O
 
Posts: 109
Topics: 1
Joined: Mon Apr 25, 2005 10:09 pm
Location: SoCal


Re: Fic: Vignette Series

Postby sam » Tue May 16, 2006 1:26 pm

Sorry, I'm so late in replying. This installment is frigging awesome. I loved reading it :pinky and I loved the ending.
Love sam xx
"Sometimes things happen between people that you don't really expect. And sometimes the things that are important are the ones that seem the weirdest or the most wrong and those are the ones that change your life." - Jessie Sammler. [Evan Rachel Wood]

Credit for icon: lj user crazedxinsanity
User avatar
sam
15. Apple Sauce & Tuna
 
Posts: 2188
Joined: Mon Apr 25, 2005 6:03 am
Location: Nottingham, England


Re: Fic: Vignette Series

Postby Sassette » Sat May 20, 2006 12:36 am

Irene and sam - I will have replies to your replies tomorrow-ish ... but right now, I should really get some sleep.

Series: Vignettes
Number: 47
Title: Break
Author: Sassette
Feedback: Can be sent to pink_overalls@yahoo.com , or posted here.
Spoiler Warning: AU … sort of. Set S4, but also post S6.
Summary: There is no summary for this vignette.
Disclaimer: I didn't create these characters. I’m just borrowing them, because it’s lots and lots of fun.
Rating: PG-13

Break
Part 47 of the Vignettes Series
By Sassette

Willow Rosenberg was late for class. Could she really help it that she’d lost track of time having a discussion with Tad, the TA of her C++ class, about some custom libraries she’d built? It wasn’t until she’d gotten the feeling that TA Tad was hitting on her that she’d checked her watch, and in a panic – from both her tardiness and the feeling an invitation for coffee was imminent – she’d rushed out.

She’d have to explain to TA Tad sometime that she wasn’t interested, but not when she was late for class. Late for class meant the only authorized activity, in her own mind, was hurrying off to class and hoping her professor either wouldn’t notice, or wouldn’t care.

The possibility of bringing an apple next week to try to help smooth things over was running through Willow’s mind as she raced around a corner, then found her world turned upside down as she landed on her rear end and her books went flying.

And the lid on her handy “to-go” cup of coffee came off, and suddenly free from the confines of the cup, the coffee jumped her in its bid to escape, spilling all over her shirt.

“I’m ... I’m so sorry,” Willow heard a voice say as she contemplated the soon-to-be coffee stain. She noticed movement out of the corner of her eye, and got a flash of blonde hair, as whoever had just run into her started gathering up her books. “Are … are y-you … ummm … okay?”

“No problem,” Willow said with a sigh. She really couldn’t be angry – it’s not like she had been watching where she was going, and if she hadn’t been late in the first place, this wouldn’t have happened. Clearly, the Gods of Scholastic Achievement and Perfect Attendance were punishing her for her transgression. “Are you all right?”

“I’m … ummm … I’m fine,” the young woman said, glancing up at Willow shyly as she held out a book. “Your, umm .. y-your shirt … it’s, umm …”

Willow looked into clear blue eyes, and her mouth opened, and she just started talking.

“Yeah, I know,” Willow said. “And really, I’m kind of disappointed in my upbringing right about now. They teach you early on not to run with scissors, or eat the paste, but they don’t really go over the whole ‘don’t run with coffee’ thing.”

“And, umm … don’t eat the paste is … it’s good advice in general, but it, umm … it doesn’t really apply? To y-your, umm … to this, umm … situation.”

“Exactly,” Willow said. “It’s not like I even have any scissors – just coffee. Or at least, I had coffee, but now that I ran with the coffee, the coffee is gone forever, and if someone had just warned me once, this wouldn’t have happened. Oh, God!” Willow said, startling the young woman with her sudden outburst. “I’m just sitting here in the middle of the hallway like a big dummy while you gather up all this stuff,” Willow went on, finally noticing that her books and her coffee hadn’t been the only collision casualties. “Let me help,” she said, straightening up papers and stacking books, feeling a little flushed and flustered.

“Umm … thanks,” the young woman said.

“I’m Willow, by the way,” Willow said, continuing to pick up – just how many loose sheets of papers was this girl carrying around, anyway? – as she surreptitiously looked at this stranger.

She was probably around Willow’s height, maybe a little taller. Her clothes were baggy, hiding her body, and her hair feel forward, hiding her face. But there was something … Willow was the kind of person who had a love/hate relationship with mysteries: she enjoyed solving them, but she hated not knowing things, and a mystery, by definition, involved not knowing something.

And this girl was so “hidden in plain sight” that Willow guessed there was something to know there, some answer to some question she hadn’t even asked yet, and whatever it was made her tingle.

“Tara. My name … I’m, umm … Tara.”

At that, Tara raised her head fully and held out her hand, and Willow had one of her answers. This girl was beautiful.

“Nice to meet you, Tara,” Willow said, taking her hand. The tinglies intensified, and there was another answer, and Willow smiled.

“Umm … likew-wise,” Tara said, ducking her head again, but not enough for Willow to miss the little half-smile on Tara’s face.

“Now, we have something very serious to discuss,” Willow said, putting on her mock-stern face.

“W-we do?”

“Yes, absolutely,” Willow said, nodding firmly. “I’m afraid that, since you spilled my coffee and all, there is a debt between us. A coffee debt. This debt can only be repaid in one way: you’re just going to have to marry me.”

“W-what?” Tara asked, her head shooting back up and her eyes widening in incredulity and shock.

“Unless you think it’s, y’know, too soon for marriage and all,” Willow said quickly. “I’m totally fine with just shacking up first, if you don’t want the commitment, or – oh, hey – it’s probably way too soon for that, too, so we could call this whole accident thing even if you just replaced my coffee, like, we could go get some coffee, together. Not that you would have to pay for my coffee! I can pay for my own coffee, and yours, too, unless that’s too much, or you’re offended, in which case we could just both get ourselves some coffee at the same time, and maybe sit at the same table?”

Tara’s eyes widened more and more as Willow kept talking. “I, umm .. I h-have to, umm … go.”

“Oh, smooth, Rosenberg,” Willow said, laughing at herself and drumming her fingers on the table, her chin resting in the palm of her other hand.

“What’s smooth?” Tara asked, looking up from the pot she was stirring. She lifted her wooden spoon and took a little taste of the pasta sauce and nodded in satisfaction. “Here … try this,” she said, before cupping her hand beneath it to catch any drips and walking over to the kitchen table where Willow was staring off into space, an open book in front of her.

Willow obliged and made her ‘yummy’ noise. “That’s really good.”

“So what are you doing over here? And what’s smooth?” Tara asked, wandering back to the kitchen.

“Oh, nothing,” Willow said, waving her hand airily, as if dismissing the entire line of conversation. “How much longer until dinner?”

“About ten minutes,” Tara said. “But you don’t get any unless you talk,” she went on, shaking the spoon at Willow to emphasize her point.

“I was just daydreaming,” Willow admitted.

“I’m slaving over a hot stove so you can study, and you’re daydreaming instead?” Tara asked, raising an eyebrow. Tara was actually pleased to hear that Willow was daydreaming. Between the graduate work, the part-time job, and Scooby responsibilities, Willow was, in Tara’s opinion, trying to do too much.

Tara had actually arranged a night off from a Scooby research night by showing Buffy a copy of Willow’s weekly schedule and informing the slayer that her best friend was not only taking on more work than one person could reasonably handle, but skipping meals, too.

Willow had only protested for a few minutes – and Buffy and Tara were both prepared to back down if Willow was truly upset about a night off – before giving them both a grateful look and agreeing to do schoolwork instead of Scooby-work. Which was, really, a great concession, because otherwise, Willow would have stayed up all night if she had to in order to do both.

“Does it help that I was daydreaming about you?” Willow asked hopefully, walking up behind Tara and giving her a hug, squeezing briefly before letting her arms remain loosely around Tara’s waist.

“Mmm … depends. More specifics, please,” Tara requested.

“Well, it’s a game I play to take a break from studying – I try to imagine how we would have met without demons or magic,” Willow explained.

“Really? Would we have met?” Tara asked. Which was a silly question, she knew, because of course they would have met. Still, she wanted to encourage what Willow would consider near-criminal slackerness, but most people would consider a normal brain-break. Even Willow’s brain had to get tired, sometime, Tara mused.

“Of course,” Willow said. “We both took that English lit class, remember?”

“Ahh … but would we have both taken it if we hadn’t already been dating?” Tara asked, raising the spoon into the air. Willow captured Tara’s raised hand in hers and moved it closer, licking the spoon. “Hey!” Tara protested, pulling it back out of reach.

“Well, that’s what you get for doubting we would have met anyway,” Willow said sternly. “I hope you’ve learned your lesson.”

Tara put the spoon back in the pot, and lowered the heat on the stove before turning around in Willow’s embrace. She rested her arms on Willow’s shoulders and leaned in, kissing her lightly before resting their foreheads together. “I know we would have met,” Tara said with a little smile.

“Yeah? How?” Willow asked.

“Mmm … eventually – and it might have taken years, but eventually – I would have worked up the courage to go talk to the really hot redhead I’d seen walking around campus.”

“Really?” Willow asked with a smile.

“Really. Because I knew that if I didn’t eventually go talk to you, I’d regret it for the rest of my life,” Tara said.

“So you were stalking me? I never imagined >that< scenario before,” Willow teased.

“Tsk – I wasn’t stalking you,” Tara said, laughing lightly. “I just noticed you.”

“Then how come I didn’t notice you?” Willow asked.

“Because nobody noticed me,” Tara said dryly, raising her eyebrow again.

“You know what? I think …” Willow said, her expression growing serious and her gaze distant as she tried to verbalize what had just occurred to her. “I think, at the time, I was really looking for something, and I didn’t know what it was, but I just … I felt like something was missing. I think, in a way, I >did< notice you, because you were what was missing from my life, and now that I’ve found you, I can’t imagine my life without you.” Her eyes focused in on Tara’s face as she finished speaking. “So, when I’ve got a spare moment, I like to imagine how we would have met, because I have to believe that no matter what, we would have met.”

“We would have,” Tara agreed with a smile, leaning in and kissing Willow softly.

“Mmm … more yummy than food,” Willow said.

“True – but my Willow cannot live by kisses and gay love alone. We tried that, remember?”

“Oh, yeah,” Willow said, a slow, naughty smile spreading across her face. “I remember.”

“So, food – which I need to finish. And while you are no longer in trouble for getting out of helping me cook because you need to study, and then not studying, you still need to tell me what was smooth if you expect to be fed.” It was an empty threat, they both knew, but getting Willow to take a break was working better than Tara had expected, and she wanted to keep Willow’s mind away from the studying. And, since Willow seemed to be in a kind of silly and playful mood, Tara figured she just might have a shot.

“Tyrant,” Willow said, shaking her head sadly. “The love of my life is a tyrant.”

“And the love of my life is beautiful, smart, sexy, and has this really outstanding creative mind … so I push her to tell me things she’s thinking, because they’re always worth knowing,” Tara said, poking Willow in the belly.

“Fine, fine,” Willow said, giving in to Tara’s prompting, and her belly-poke. “Well, remember TA Tad?” Willow asked.

“TA Tad brought us together? He’s your replacement for demons and magic?” Tara asked, going back to her cooking as Willow leaned against the counter and talked.

“No, but I was discussing some computer stuff with him and lost track of time – and he was hitting on me – so I was late for a class and ran out,” Willow said.

“TA Tad made you late for a class by hitting on you? No wonder you used to glare at him every time you saw him,” Tara commented.

“This is a >daydream<. TA Tad never hit on me. I glared at him because he was always checking you out.”

“So … you’re late for a class,” Tara prompted, nodding and choosing to ignore the tidbit about TA Tad checking her out, as it was not a thought she wanted to pursue.

“Right, so I round a corner and we crash into each other, and all of our stuff goes flying.”

“I hate to tell you this, but that’s kind of a warn and tired cliché.”

“Yeah, I know,” Willow said with a little shrug. “But it was the best I could come up with this time. So, I spill coffee all over my shirt, and we start talking, and I am immediately interested.”

“You didn’t even know you were gay at the time,” Tara pointed out.

“Well, yeah, but that’s my problem with this whole daydreaming thing. I have a hard time knowing that at the time I didn’t know the things that I know now, y’know?”

“Ummm … I think so,” Tara said, biting her lip, her eyebrows pressing together. “Can you say that again … slower?”

“I just mean that I know I’m gay and in love with you, so when I imagine different ways I’d meet you, imaginary-me knows what me-me knows, and so imaginary-me immediately knows I’m gay and in love with you. Hence the ‘smooth’ part: I basically proposed to you, propositioned you, asked you to buy me coffee, offered to buy you coffee, and downgraded the whole thing to the both of us buying our own coffee at the same place and time and maybe sitting together – all in one breath. Then you had to go away. Even in my daydreams, I’m a total spazz.”

Tara laughed, long and hard. “God, I may have been pining from afar, but I probably would have run away screaming if you’d done that. And sweetie?” Tara said, her voice laced with humor and affection. “We’ve been together five years, and you still haven’t proposed.”

“That’s because you beat me to it,” Willow said with a shrug, setting the table. “Proposing to someone you’re already married to seems redundant.”

“Hmm … good point. And I like never letting you forget that I asked first,” Tara said with a grin.

“I know,” Willow said with a snort. “Dinner smells really, really good,” she said as Tara set down the meal. “And so do you,” she went on, hugging Tara and taking comically exaggerated sniffs at her neck and hair.

“Willow!”

“What?” Willow asked, lifting her head and doing her best to give Tara an innocent look.

“That tickles,” Tara said, arching away as Willow repeated her sniffing.

“Not the response I was going for,” Willow said with mock-sadness, ceasing her tickling actions .

Tara pursed her lips and narrowed her eyes. “You know that tickles. What were you going for?”

“Mmm … I was hoping you’d respond to my obvious attraction to you with your own overpowering lust, and that you’d forget about dinner, knock all the food and plates to the floor, toss me flat on my back onto the table, and have your way with me.”

Tara nostrils flared as she imagined doing just that; however, part of her goal for the evening was making sure that Willow ate actual food.

“Willow Rosenberg,” Tara said sternly. “You are going to eat this dinner.”

“Okay,” Willow said with a dramatic sigh as they both sat down at the table. “But if I clean my plate, do I get a special treat?”

“Perve.”

Willow had the good grace to blush, as she couldn’t exactly defend herself against the fondly delivered accusation. “But I’m your perve … ?” she ventured, hopefully.

“Well, if you’re my perve, then yes, you get a special treat if you clean your plate.”

“Is this treat spelled S-E-X?” Willow asked, snickering.

“You know, when I was a little girl, I told my mother I wanted to grow up and marry a perve. Dreams really do come true,” Tara said, smiling inwardly, with relief that Willow was finally taking a break, and with anticipation as she planned Willow’s special treat.
User avatar
Sassette
3. Flaming O
 
Posts: 109
Topics: 1
Joined: Mon Apr 25, 2005 10:09 pm
Location: SoCal


Re: Fic: Vignette Series

Postby wilgen » Sat May 20, 2006 1:51 am

Hi Sassette,

Sigh, as always another breathtaking vignette.
Really happy you're updating again.

Take care, wilgen.
wilgen
4. Extra Flamey
 
Posts: 170
Joined: Sun Apr 24, 2005 1:00 pm


Re: Fic: Vignette Series

Postby Tonto » Sat May 20, 2006 4:10 am

Absolutely adorable. You really captured their personalities. I just love your vignettes! Please keep them coming! :)
GOOOOAL!!!!!
Tonto rides again!
User avatar
Tonto
3. Flaming O
 
Posts: 129
Joined: Wed May 25, 2005 8:15 pm
Location: San Francisco


Re: Fic: Vignette Series

Postby Thianne » Sat May 20, 2006 5:08 am

first thing first:

I walked into the staff dining area at work and suddenly got pings from freakin' >everywhere<.

:lmao

“Unless you think it’s, y’know, too soon for marriage and all,” Willow said quickly. “I’m totally fine with just shacking up first, if you don’t want the commitment, or – oh, hey – it’s probably way too soon for that, too, so we could call this whole accident thing even if you just replaced my coffee, like, we could go get some coffee, together. Not that you would have to pay for my coffee! I can pay for my own coffee, and yours, too, unless that’s too much, or you’re offended, in which case we could just both get ourselves some coffee at the same time, and maybe sit at the same table?”

and i say again: :lmao

great job sass, keep them coming! (er...i meant the vignettes, just in case!)
Vale
-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-

"When you get excited about something, one might imagine you as a small, maniacally grinning rubber ball, which someone throws at the wall in an enclosed room, and goes bouncing off every surface for about 15 minutes."
- Mudrat
User avatar
Thianne
13. Big Knowledge Woman
 
Posts: 1861
Joined: Thu Oct 13, 2005 1:09 pm
Location: Italy


Re: Fic: Vignette Series

Postby Sassette » Sat May 20, 2006 10:25 am

**Irene7353: Hola, Irene! I'm good, thanks. And I just finished working my crazy hours - a huge project is completed as of Monday, so I'll probably get to sleep for long stretches of time at regular intervals soon. How's the fic-writing going? I haven't had much reading time, but I'm hoping that's going to change over the next several weeks.

Now I'm trying to remember when I started >writing< my vignettes ... though I'm pretty sure it was >after< October of 1994, as at that time, I was sixteen, in high school, and I'm pretty sure Buffy the TV series didn't exist yet. Do you exist in some kind of time flux alternate dimension? Because that would be awesome. And thank you - the 'in betweens' are just a lot of fun for me. I'm glad they're fun for you, too.

Y'know, I'm going to be thinking about W/T singing, dancing, and doing the hokey-pokey now ... thank you for that visual :) It's actually very, very entertaining... you should ponder it for awhile.

**sam: Thanks! And don't worry about replying late ... unlike real life, punctuality isn't important here, as far as I'm concerned. Because, really, I don't have a leg to stand on ... I post new vignettes very >very< infrequently :) But thank you (and a special thank you for the pink dancing elephant, as I love him so) - I'm glad you enjoyed this vignette, and I have to say, I was rather fond of the ending of this one myself. I like to think of them wet and chasing each other around the house ... and that came out much pervier than I intended.

**wilgen: Thank you ... I'm really glad you liked it. I have to admit, I was a little worried about how #47 was going to turn out, as I was half-asleep when I wrote it. Glad to hear it worked.

**Tonto: Thanks - I'm going to keep writing these as often as I can for as long as I can ... so you can definitely expect more. I'm really glad you like them, and that you think I've got their personalities down - and thank you for reading.

**Thianne: Heh ... well, it's true. I refer to that event as "The Day Of The Gay". I don't think I have ever, in my entire life, gotten so many unexpected pings ... 'cuz, y'know, a gay pride parade or something like that - you expect to see lots of gay people. Staff dining room at work? Not so much.

Thanks ... I'll keep them coming as long as I can (errr ... I mean, I'll keep writing vignettes, not that I'll keep W/T coming ... err ... urgle ... gah! I'm going to stop this sentence before I hurt myself).

-Sass
User avatar
Sassette
3. Flaming O
 
Posts: 109
Topics: 1
Joined: Mon Apr 25, 2005 10:09 pm
Location: SoCal


Re: Fic: Vignette Series

Postby willohand » Sun May 21, 2006 7:11 pm

:thud okay it has taken me some time (but ive actually done it) I have now read every one of these. And for the record I have to say that #`s 13 and 15 are the best of the best on this very long list.
# 15, 'Issues' and # 13, 'Uncomfortable Chair' just leave me in awe. I love this couple. Being a H U G E Willow fan and a willotara fan I cant help but fall to pieces everytime I read # 13.
How do you do it? How does your brain come up with such pain and sadness? Where does it come from?
I just wanted to finally thank you for the entire series but for these two especially. Any chance at all that you can do a second piece where Tara has been freed from her chair and has to deal with it? Or how about Dawn`s p.o v. about Tara having her brain sucked by Glory.Id love to read poor Dawnie`s thougts.
Just wondering out loud.
You are truly a deep and emotionally writer. Again thanks.
willohand
5. Willowhand
 
Posts: 269
Joined: Mon Apr 25, 2005 5:05 pm
Location: New York City


Re: Fic: Vignette Series

Postby willohand » Sun May 21, 2006 7:37 pm

:pinky :party Whoaaaaa there.I just checked my list and woohoo I forgot to mention how cute I find # 39, Whats a girl gotto do Disco Inferno.
Now let me start by saying I laugh each time I have readi it. Thats right I have it bookmarked. So yeah this one is a riot.Imean Willow and disco dancing? You have truly out done yourself on the laughometer. :sh but its all true.This one is too funny to not :pray for another similiar to it,but of course it can be only one right.
SDo yeah I was going over my list when it jumped out at me. I smiled right away.
Okay so I think this is it for me leaving replies. Just going to read #39 one more time.
willohand
5. Willowhand
 
Posts: 269
Joined: Mon Apr 25, 2005 5:05 pm
Location: New York City


Re: Fic: Vignette Series

Postby EasierSaid » Sun May 21, 2006 8:44 pm

Wow, another vignette! What a great surprise. I just wanted to say thank you for giving my girlfriend and I a topic to discuss at the dinner table this weekend. (I had given the topic thought before, but we hadn't really discussed it at length.) Would we have met, if we hadn't met how we met? (And would it have been as convoluted as that last sentence, haha.) How would we have met, if differently? Great topic for Willow and Tara, especially given the circumstances of their demon-enhanced meaning. I really liked how you handled their moment before dinner, how it was basically a low-key conversation. Thanks, as always Sass.
EasierSaid
7. Teeny Tinkerbell Light
 
Posts: 695
Topics: 1
Joined: Sun Apr 24, 2005 12:04 pm


Re: Fic: Vignette Series

Postby watty » Mon May 22, 2006 3:49 am

I haven't thought about the "would we have met under different circumstances" question at all with mine; mostly because our meeting was so long ago. But as a fic writer, that question has is always on my mind, especially when embarking on a new fic. How else, apart from UCS / magic / slaying, could our heroines have met? How can I avoid the 'spilled coffee over the other' scenario which, like Tara says, is such a tired cliché. Proposing to the girl she just met ... heehee, yes real smooth and has potential. :lol

Your transition from Willow's daydream to the scene in the kitchen was nothing short of genius. I also love the small movements you included, the hugs, Tara cooking, Willow grabbing the spoon to sample the cooking -- it makes their interaction all the more realistic and natural ... avoiding the "talking statues" situation.

Also adore your Tara; she is no longer the shy stuttering girl of S4:
“Mmm … eventually – and it might have taken years, but eventually – I would have worked up the courage to go talk to the really hot redhead I’d seen walking around campus.”

and
“Because nobody noticed me,” Tara said dryly

I can't help but feel that finding love and her place in the world (as a witch and Scooby) has made Tara the confident woman she is, and one who can look back at her younger self with dry humor (and a little indulgence?). Not only is she confident, she is a vixen too!

“Well, yeah, but that’s my problem with this whole daydreaming thing. I have a hard time knowing that at the time I didn’t know the things that I know now, y’know?”

“Ummm … I think so,” Tara said, biting her lip, her eyebrows pressing together. “Can you say that again … slower?”

It is a cliché but I so identify with Willow on this ... that my brain needs a translator, since apparently my brain is only compatible with 5% of the world [/self-deprecating moment]. Anyway, Willow = spaz? :lmao Thanks for another vignette. They say it's hard to find the perfect cup of tea (or coffee if that's the preferred beverage). I feel with these vignettes that I have found my perfect cup -- there's perfection in taste, intensity and smoothness. (I think that falls into the 95% of the incomprehensible part of my brain.)
[br]
User avatar
watty
14. Lesbo Street Cred
 
Posts: 2086
Topics: 1
Joined: Sun Apr 24, 2005 5:15 pm


Re: Fic: Vignette Series

Postby NewRuthRising » Mon May 22, 2006 6:12 am

Of course, there were those little twinges she got. Feelings, mostly, when she knew something was going to happen, and that special tingly feeling when she knew that Willow was going to happen.


I was rereading and saw this. I love it! Man, I'm glad you're back. Insomnia was really dull till I came back to Pens.
"And beyond the Wild Wood?" asked the Mole.
"The Wide World," said the Rat. "And that doesn't matter."
User avatar
NewRuthRising
7. Teeny Tinkerbell Light
 
Posts: 617
Topics: 1
Joined: Mon May 02, 2005 11:54 am
Location: HappyOaks Institute for the Dangerously Cheerful


Re: Fic: Vignette Series

Postby notl33t » Mon May 22, 2006 8:20 am

Whoa, Sassette, your first post on this thread was all the way back in May 10, 2002. Dang. That's a long time to create and spread great W/T goodness through fanfic. I applaud you. :applause

I really love Tara's line to Willow about how Willow must eat the dinner Tara had prepared. Reminds me of all of my exes and my current GF. I sometimes forget to eat when I'm working on stuff.

Mmm...and the daydreaming about S4 Tara was also terribly cute! Especially the Willowbabble.
User avatar
notl33t
5. Willowhand
 
Posts: 288
Joined: Mon Aug 08, 2005 9:18 am
Location: Somerville, MA


Re: Fic: Vignette Series

Postby dorksrcool » Mon May 22, 2006 7:54 pm

And this girl was so “hidden in plain sight” that Willow guessed there was something to know there, some answer to some question she hadn’t even asked yet, and whatever it was made her tingle.


Awesome. That is exactly what I thought about Tara when I first saw her on screen. Even the tingly part. :blush

I really love how you write the interactions between these two. It's so cute. You can really tell they've been together for a while here. You write about ordinary, mundane things couples do, but you somehow manage to make their relationship seem extraordinary. Bravo! :applause
As one, they turn to the soda machine. It flies back into the door like a cannonball. Willow looks at it, at Tara. She doesn't let go of her hand.
(from the shooting script of "Hush")
User avatar
dorksrcool
8. Vixen
 
Posts: 707
Joined: Thu Apr 28, 2005 11:35 am
Location: San Diego, CA


Re: Fic: Vignette Series

Postby Sassette » Mon May 22, 2006 10:50 pm

Fair warning now - this may be a bit of a downer, but I'm hoping you all find the overall message to be as uplifting as I find it.

So - this isn't a new vignette, or replies to replies (though, I've read them and I appreciate them, and I'll reply to them specifically later), but it's some stuff I want to reply to generally (and some stuff about my life to mention).

Today at work, my team and I successfully brought online a huge >huge< project. I've been working with this system for about 4-5 years now, and we did a massive upgrade that, so far, is immensely successful and impressive for everyone who uses it, so I'm feeling pretty damn good.

And, I just got home from celebratory drinks (as evidenced by the fact I'm having to massively edit this post to fix all the drunken typos).

So, I'm drunk, I've been chain-smoking for two weeks and have developed a bit of a cough (and I just don't care about that part :) ), and I'm feeling pretty damn good right now, because this was a seriously major undertaking that should have taken half a year, but instead, took me a month-and-a-half.

What does this have to do with Willow and Tara? And the vignettes?

Plenty, actually.

Here's the way I see it (in my squiffy way) ... there's an exchange of dialogue in the episode-that-date-not-speak-its-name that goes something like this (I'm paraphrasing here ... did I mention I've been drinking?):

"I'd forgotten how good it could be ... without the magic ..."

"There was plenty of magic."

There's something very specific that I'm trying to convey in the vignettes, between silly and serious and all things between. This 'something' has been mentioned a little bit by me, and in comments about how 'real' the vignettes are, or how they sparked conversation between kittens and their significant others ...

This something is very, very simple: there's magic in the little things.

No, there really, really is.

There's magic in a look, or a touch. There's magic in a silly daydream, or an urge to dance. There's magic in a quiet conversation with someone who >really gets you<.

And that's just in a relationship. In life, in general, there's magic in the moments. There's magic in a shared laugh with friends. There's magic in a moment of solitude. There's magic in a sunset, or a painting, or a home, or even a tv show.

There's magic in a job well done.

I've been going back and forth about bringing this up, because it's very very personal, and I've even thought about writing a vignette along these lines, but I just couldn't. In late September of 2005, my dad died of a very sudden and massive heart attack. I can't even begin to describe how much this event has affected me.

He was a quiet man, and a steady man. His humor and his warmth was masked by a deceptively gruff exterior that never, once, fooled his family. He valued integrity, hard work, and achievement.

I can't say enough about him as a human being. He was flawed, but perfect in those imperfections. He was simple, but oh-so-complicated.

There's a family story, and I barely remember this, but one year, at Christmas, my little sister finished opening her presents, and then she sat down in the middle of the room and she cried and cried, because she'd gotten everything she wanted.

My father wanted to live his life with my mother, to raise his children to responsible adulthood, and to have a room in his house big enough to hold a computer with massive computational abilities (little did he know that he'd end up having a computer with a gig of ram on his >desk<).

So, while I'm sad that my father is gone, when I think of him and I tear up, it's because I know he got everything he wanted.

I've written these vignettes for years and years, but it took my father passing to really pinpoint what they're all about there's magic in a life well-lived.

-Sass
User avatar
Sassette
3. Flaming O
 
Posts: 109
Topics: 1
Joined: Mon Apr 25, 2005 10:09 pm
Location: SoCal


Re: Fic: Vignette Series

Postby dorksrcool » Mon May 22, 2006 11:24 pm

Sass, my dear, you are a beautiful person. Thank you for this heartfelt, dare I say "magical" post. I'm a little drunk too, so sorry if I sound like an idiot but your words really resonated with me tonight. You've essentially described why I like W/T and their relationship so much, and why I love this board so much. It is all pretty fucking magical to me. And that's why I don't like The L Word. Whatever Aly and Amber, and all of the writers and everybody did with those characters was magic. And the stuff that you all do when you continue their story in fic is magic. I really, really appreciate all of it. Thank you, and I hope you don't have a headache in the morning 'cause I sure will.

:peace
amy
As one, they turn to the soda machine. It flies back into the door like a cannonball. Willow looks at it, at Tara. She doesn't let go of her hand.
(from the shooting script of "Hush")
User avatar
dorksrcool
8. Vixen
 
Posts: 707
Joined: Thu Apr 28, 2005 11:35 am
Location: San Diego, CA


Re: Fic: Vignette Series

Postby reyjawk » Tue May 23, 2006 4:47 pm

Sass,
First and foremost I am sorry for the loss of your father. I cannot really add anymore to that...

I have been enjoying your Vignettes for a long time now. Sometimes I go a few months without checking in on the board and when I come back and see that you have written one I smile in anticipation...

I agree with you that the magic is in the mundane as well as the life altering. There are moments I walk by a field see grass swaying in the wind, flowers growing and a blue sky over head and I am filled with the beauty of it all and know at that moment there is a God. Other times I see the same field and only notice the neglect, the weeds, the emptyness.

I believe all relationships are like that, whether intimate or platonic, sometimes you only see the weeds and thorns, while other times you get drunk on the frangrance of the flowers...

Take care and God bless...I cant wait to read your update...

Toni
reyjawk
1. Blessed Wannabe
 
Posts: 10
Joined: Mon Apr 25, 2005 2:45 pm


Re: Fic: Vignette Series

Postby binky » Sat May 27, 2006 7:04 am

Hey, I'm sorry I never dropped by to leave you proper feedback. I just have to thank you for your time writing and posting these. I love this format, and you use it better than anyone else I've read.

binky
When you find the good kind of magic, when you find your true partner in casting it, don't let her go into the Nether Realm alone... Interludes.
The rise of the greatest Seeyo in the history of Humanity in the Cosmic. The Coven.
I doodle too. GRAPHICS
User avatar
binky
4. Extra Flamey
 
Posts: 179
Topics: 4
Joined: Sun Jul 24, 2005 4:05 pm
Location: New Jersey


Re: Fic: Vignette Series

Postby Thianne » Sat May 27, 2006 12:49 pm

sass, i'm sorry for your father. at the time i used to just lurk around in the board, but if i had known i would have given you my condolences way sooner.
the thing is, that even if you where drunk (or maybe because you were drunk - you know what they say: in vino veritas) you hit the nail in the head: it's true. what you said is all true, because life isn't made of big events, it's the daily, little things that shape us and made us what we are, and are the little things that can make us happy, or sad, every day.

and it's good that your intent behind this vignettes was to show us this, mainly for two reasons:
1) that is exactly how i always took them, a reminder that willow and tara's relationship, beyond what they showed us on screen, was made of moments
and 2), which is closely related to 1), is that it's good for us to remember that so we can enjoy more fully the little ordinary, magic, special moments of our own daily life.

and this is something that we all now (i'm stating the obvious, here), but i for one thank you because your vignettes remind me of that. so, in conclusion: thanks for sharing sass.

love :bigkiss
Vale
-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-

"When you get excited about something, one might imagine you as a small, maniacally grinning rubber ball, which someone throws at the wall in an enclosed room, and goes bouncing off every surface for about 15 minutes."
- Mudrat
User avatar
Thianne
13. Big Knowledge Woman
 
Posts: 1861
Joined: Thu Oct 13, 2005 1:09 pm
Location: Italy


Re: Fic: Vignette Series

Postby Tujeky » Tue Jun 06, 2006 1:56 pm

After many months without checking the board (work, work, blah), I am so glad that this series is one of the first things I read again.
Every vignette brings sigh and satisfaction. I believe it's in those little moments that we truly learn about ourselves, and each other. You've given me 47 chances (plus two interludes...ahem) to rediscover the Willow and Tara that we've all come to love. It's a testament to you as a writer, and to the characters themselves, that these little moments in time can hold such a graceful gravity. Thank you so much.

And now with the begging! :blush Please, more!
Tujeky
2. Floating Rose
 
Posts: 33
Joined: Sat Jul 23, 2005 1:57 am


Vignette #48

Postby Sassette » Tue Jun 20, 2006 9:38 am

Yay, a new vignette! Because, really, sometimes I sit down to write, and I've just got nothing. Today, I got up early to play video games before work, and this popped into my head.

But first, the overdue replies:

**Irene7353: Awwww ... now I'm a little disappointed that this was a very minor goof instead of wacky goings-on with the very fabric of time. Because I do so love it when that happens ;)

**willohand: Thank you for reading all of these. #13 and #15 were fun in a rip-my-heart-out kind of way (#13 more than #15). #15 was simply the idea of going through old yearbooks popping into my head. The fact that Willow doesn't really like who she was in high school (which is insane - Willow was awesome in high school) did the rest. #13 was a request for a vignette about what was going on inside Tara's head during the brain suck - the uncomfortable chair, the room with no windows or doors, the unplugged black and white tv on the floor ... that was a freaky dream I had once. The bugs were added because they creep me out. I'll kick around your ideas in my head - if nothing comes of it, it's because I've gotten into the habit if avoiding the post-S5-dead-Buffy timeframe and because I usually do W or T or W and T POV, not because they aren't good ideas. Heh ... #39 WaGGD: Disco Inferno is just about one of my favorites. I do, in fact, giggle madly every time I think of the Copacabana montage. TeeHeeeeeee.

**EasierSaid: Thank you, and you're welcome. I don't think anyone has ever said that they had a conversation with their girlfriend sparked by a vignette before (not counting 'Addiction' - the one where Tara catches Willow reading fanfic - as that one was written to mirror conversations that pens-addicts have with their girlfriends). So what was the verdict? Would you have met if you hadn't met how you met? And does this hypothetical AU meeting involve either pirates or monkeys? Or ninjas? Or piratical monkey-ninjas? Okay, so my brain does strange things to me when I wake up early. Feel free to disregard these questions :)

**watty: Heh ... really, the idea of doing an AU fic (that is, non-BuffyVerse uber-AU, as oppposed to split-off-from-canon AU) is what popped this into my head. Because, really, that list of questions you rattled off if what you have to start with - and as I haven't yet come up with anything (hence the lack of AU fic-writing on my part), I just decided to run with the coffee-cliche.

I'm really glad the transition from daydream to real-life worked for you. I have to admit I was a little worried about it. I was happy with it, but worried about it all the same - it's hard sometimes to know if something works because I wrote it correctly, or if something works just for me, because I'm the one who wrote it. Kind of like that last sentence. As for the small movements - thank you. Sometimes, they're just not there ... I don't see them moving, so I don't put that stuff in. This particular vignette was extremely visual for me, and I'm not sure why. I pictured the entire thing as if it were a on my television, complete with dream-bubble over Willow's head.

There's definitely indulgence in Tara's feelings about her younger self. One of the most fun things about writing these vignettes for me is how much Tara grows and changes in just two years. Especially when writing future-Tara, there's a sense, for me at least, that she's so happy with how her life has turned out, it allows her to look at the pain of her past with a sense of humor - in kind of a "I can't believe I was scared of my own shadow that long because I fell for that I'm-a-demon stuff" way. I see Tara as the kind of person who really understands, on a basic and intuituve level, that life is a journey, and that she wouldn't necessarily have gotten to where she is now if she had been on a different road for any reason.

Hmm - I think I fall into the 5% of the population who needs no translation of your brain ... your coffee analogy makes perfect sense to me. Though, now that I'm reading that W/T exchange again, I believe Tara did catch Willow's meaning the first time around ... but just wanted to hear her say it again, slower. Vixen.

**NewRuthRising: Thank you :) I agree that insomnia seriously, seriously bits without fanfic (that is, it bites anyway, because not sleeping is pretty much not fun - but fanfic makes it better). If you'll allow me to overanalyze canon for a moment - Tara's ability to sense auras with no ritual or rhyme-y wording necessary, to me, says that she's generally "in tune". I went from there to the idea that she's very, very mildly pre-cognitive on a subconscious level.

**notl33t: Heh ... I was just wondering how long I've been writing these. I was planning on looking it up, and now I don't have to - so thanks! :) And thank you for the applause. It >is< a long time to be doing this, but I certainly enjoy it.

I definitely see Willow as the "forget to eat" type. She's very focused and driven. Really, I just see thinking about Tara to be the only thing she'll pull her focus off of a project to do :)

**dorksrcool: Gosh, thanks. I love writing their relationship at different stages. I tend to overanalyze things ('cuz, y'know, I'm a nerd), but that's how I make this jumping around to different times work for me. I start different vignettes in different ways, but always, at some point, I stop and mentally take stock of where they are in their relationship together.

**Sassette: Eh - a little melodramatic, but true. Very true.

**dorksrcool (again :) ): Aww, thanks. I was feeling quite introspective, and had definitely hit a big milestone with the completion of that project (recently, I've been a bit busy with the post-project stuff, but mostly I've been giving my brain time off by doing silly mindless things ... which has been just >awesome<). I'm glad that post resonated with you (and, now that I've reread it, I'm a little relieved that it made that much sense ... heh). And no, I didn't have a hangover. Tall glass of water and two aleve before bed - doesn't actually "cure" the hangover, but since aleve lasts twelve hours, it staves off the owie part.

**reyjawk: Thank you. I'm glad you've enjoyed the vignettes - I certainly enjoy writing them. That was a lovely way of describing those moments when we're aware of all the good things, and that there's something in this world that's so much greater than ourselves. It's nice to keep those in mind - it reminds us to look past the weeds and thorns.

**binky: Gosh, thanks. You're very welcome. I'm delighted to have an audience to share these with, and very much enjoy writing these vignettes. Don't worry about lurking - I watch the view count after I've posted something, and I've trained myself to regard the count ticking higher as its own kind of feedback (I've certainly been guilty of only having time to read and run before, so I definitely understand). Even so, I'm always delighted when someone delurks in this thread to just say "hi - I've been reading and I like these" ... but when someone, like yourself, says they just >had< to post? That's going to make me smile all day - so thank you.

**Thianne: Thank you. In vino veritas, indeed. I think I had a vague sense that the vignette series was about the magic of little moments, but not necessarily on a conscious level. I'm so glad to hear that this is how you've always taken them, anyway. Until recently, I've thought of these as a fluffy writing exercise, and it's actually kind of nice to know that they've always been more than that. For me, writing one of these vignettes is one of those little magic moments. Thanks for the feedback - and you're welcome for the vignettes :)

**Tujeky: Work, work, blah? Oh, yeah - I know how that goes :) I'm a very flattered that the vignette series is one of the things you chose to revisit after a long time of the aforementioned "work, work, blah". I'm glad you've enjoyed these little moments - as I have spent awhile enjoying the phrase "graceful gravity" ... thank you.

And now, the vignette:

Series: Vignettes
Number: 48
Title: Inventory
Author: Sassette
Feedback: Can be sent to pink_overalls@yahoo.com , or posted here.
Spoiler Warning: No spoilers
Summary: Willow and Tara take inventory
Disclaimer: I didn't create these characters. I’m just borrowing them, because it’s lots and lots of fun.
Rating: PG-13

Inventory
Part 48 of the Vignettes Series
By Sassette

“What’s all this?” Tara asked, a confused expression on her face as she walked into the back room of The Magic Box. All of the “slayer training” accoutrements were shoved to the side of the room, and in their usual places sat stacks of crates and cardboard boxes.

When Tara had gotten Willow’s message on the answering machine, she had put the candles away, and scratched off her plans for a quiet dinner with her girlfriend for their anniversary. Well, it was one of their anniversaries: six years ago that night there had been a power outage, and an extra-flamey candle, and all Tara’s dreams came true. Even so, it was just a simple fact of life with Willow that demon activity trumped a romantic evening in, but Tara didn’t mind. She was proud of the life she and Willow led, fighting demons and saving the world.

But Willow’s message had been vague, saying only that she would be at The Magic Box all evening, so Tara had grabbed her bag and headed out, only to find no one in the front room where the research usually took place, and the back room filled with unfamiliar boxes.

“This,” Willow said, waving a hand to encompass everything, “is the estate of one Mr. David Jameson.”

“Who?” Tara asked.

“David Jameson,” Anya said, coming through the back door and holding it open as Xander stumbled in with another crate. “An old eccentric who was absolutely convinced he was going to be killed by a demon, and bought anything that looked old and had a good story attached to it. He has some good pieces intermixed with the junk, though. I’ve had my eye on his collection for awhile, so it’s about time he died.”

“Oh,” Tara said, blinking. “How’d he die?”

“Demon,” Willow said absently, helping Xander with the crate as Anya looked on.

“He had a few things that protect against demons by themselves, but placed too close together created a mystical vortex that opened a portal and summoned a G’lorn,” Anya explained. “Just goes to show that too much paranoia helps demons kill you.”

Tara’s lips quirked with amusement as Willow and Xander placed the crate down and Willow retrieved the clipboard she had placed on top. She crossed her arms and leaned against the doorway, taking everything in.

“Okay,” Willow said, her brow furrowing as she flipped a few pages, her lips pressing together in concentration. “This one is … C13, and it has the Fobian Crystal in it, and the Amulet of Dron is …”

“A6,” Anya said, coming to stand next to Willow. “Here, give me that,” she said, reaching out to take the clipboard.

Willow moved the clipboard out of reach. “Uh-uh,” she said, shaking her head and frowning at Anya. “That wasn’t the deal. I help out, I get the clipboard,” she said firmly.

“Fine,” Anya huffed, standing next to Willow, their heads bent together as they poured over the paperwork. “Take a break,” she said absently to Xander, who sat down on C13 with a sigh of relief.

Tara stifled a chuckle, and covered her mouth with one hand to hide the grin. It was soon after Xander and Anya got married that Willow had done some of her computery-mojo on the Magic Box (somehow, a database that kept track of who bought how many of what for how much and when allowed Anya to make more money) in exchange for a 25% discount for life, and then bought out half the stock only to sell it back to Anya at a tidy little profit.

At first, Tara had been upset about making money off of a friend, until she’d noticed that their bickering and sniping at each had evolved into an intricate and unfathomable series of deals that boiled down to a de facto business partnership, with Willow eventually running The Magic Box Online in her spare time. A new grudging respect entered their interaction with each other, and the insults eventually changed into something affectionate.

In Tara’s opinion, that fact that Anya stopped talking about Xander’s penis was probably the lynchpin to the whole thing.

Not that she mentionated that fact. She’s have to say “Xander’s penis” in order to do so, and didn’t want to be the one who reintroduced the topic.

Tara shook her head, coming out of her reverie as Willow and Anya’s conversation got louder, and they started gesturing wildly at each other.

“Twenty percent and five minutes,” Anya was saying as Willow gave her an outraged look.

“Got more,” Buffy said, walking into the room, a huge crate held easily in her arms, but blocking her view of everyone and everything.

“Which one?” Willow asked, pausing in her negotiations with Anya.

“B10,” Buffy called, her voice too loud, as if she assumed she had to yell because she couldn’t see anyone.

“Bingo,” Xander muttered.

“Here it is,” Anya said, running a finger down the page. “Nothing dangerous – over there is fine,” she said pointing to the one empty corner.

“This way,” Xander said, getting up to help Buffy find the place Anya had pointed.

“Thirty-three percent and fifteen minutes, and you get all the profit from the first five Halloween web sales,” Willow said.

Anya’s eyes narrowed. “All the profit from the first five Halloween web sales, you get 25% and ten minutes, and a trial run of that membership card thing you wanted to do.”

Willow’s eyes lit up. “Thirty percent.”

“Twenty-seven.”

“Twenty-nine.”

“Twenty-nine and I get to take the clipboard.”

“Twenty-nine and you get the clipboard for ten minutes.”

“I get the clipboard for ten minutes and you admit that the genuine eye of newt was a bad idea.”

“Deal. The genuine eye of newt was a really bad idea,” Willow said as she and Anya shook on it.

“Okay, back to work,” Anya said, taking the clipboard out of Willow’s hand with a triumphant flourish, and taking it and Xander and Buffy outside.

Willow let out a relieved breath, blowing the hair out of her eyes before turning to Tara with a soft smile.

“Hey,” she said, walking towards Tara.

“Dare I ask what that was all about?” Tara asked, pushing off from the doorway and meeting Willow halfway across the room.

“I just got ten minutes alone with you and a trial run of that membership card thing I really want to do for 6% of the profits off of everything in this room, my half of the first five Halloween web sales, admitting that the genuine eye of newt was a bad idea, and temporary custody of the clipboard,” Willow said, smiling slightly.

“Mmm …” Tara said, stepping into Willow’s arms and snuggling in. “Ten whole minutes?”

“Yup,” Willow said, sighing happily and giving Tara a little squeeze. “I’m sorry about all this,” Willow said, searching Tara’s face closely for any hint of sadness or anger – and because she just liked looking at Tara.

“It’s fine,” Tara said, her thumb tracing a lazy line up and down Willow’s neck.

“’Fine’ like ‘Willow, you will never live down working on our Extra Flamey Anniversary’, or ‘fine’ like ‘Willow, this is your free one, but do not ever, under any circumstances, work on our Extra Flamey Anniversary again, unless it is to prevent impending apocalypse’ or ‘fine’ like ‘Willow, I am so impressed with your bargaining abilities and our ten minutes of alone-time that I am going to rock your world as soon as we get home tonight’?” Willow asked with a tilt of her head and an impish grin.

She could tell that Tara wasn’t actually upset. The first thing Tara did when she was feeling angry or hurt was to close off physically. Drawn together like little lesbian magnets, they were always touching or holding hands. It was when Tara went all hands-off that alarm bells would start ringing in Willow’s head, and so the snuggly hug and the thumb running slowly up and down her neck told her, without need for verbal confirmation, that everything was all right.

“Hmm,” Tara said, considering carefully. “’Fine’ like ‘Willow, I don’t care if I spend the evening going through crates and taking inventory, as long as I spend the evening going through crates and taking inventory with you’.”

Willow blinked a few times, and then grinned. “That just might be the sweetest thing anyone has ever said to me.”

Tara shrugged. “Besides, what’s an anniversary if not a time to take inventory?”

Willow’s lips quirked before she schooled her expression into one of mock seriousness. “That’s very philosophical, and very deep,” she said, nodding sagely.

“Hmm, yes, it is. I’m a very deep sort of person,” Tara agreed. “And my anniversary-inventory includes one Willow, in reasonable working order, so I’m also very lucky.”

“I’ll have you know that you have one Willow in excellent working order,” Willow said. “You have one Willow in excellent working order who managed to push second-quarter reports with Anya to next week, meaning she has a four-day weekend.”

“You’re kidding. Really?” Tara asked, her eyes lighting up. She happened to have the next four days free, herself, and the idea of spending all that uninterrupted time with Willow sounded like heaven.

“Really,” Willow said, tucking a bit of Tara’s hair behind her ear. “And …your Willow, in >excellent< working order, has made arrangements to spend some time up at a little cabin that has – may I live to regret this – horseback riding.”

“Okay, now I know you’re kidding,” Tara said, raising an eyebrow.

“Cross my heart,” Willow said, making the appropriate gesture. “We can leave anytime tomorrow, it takes about an hour and a half to get there, we’ll have all day Friday and Saturday, and we can come back Sunday afternoon.”

“You’re not kidding,” Tara said flatly, her expression one of mixed disbelief and excitement.

“I’m not kidding,” Willow confirmed.

“You’re perfectly serious,” Tara said.

“I am perfectly serious,” Willow confirmed again.

“You’re going to ride a horse?” Tara asked.

“I’m going to try it once,” Willow said, her resolve-face firmly in place. “See the resolve face?”

Tara’s eyes widened as the fact that she and Willow were going to spend the next four mutual days off together, and that two of those days were going to involve horseback riding, finally sunk in.

She couldn’t help it. She squealed.

Eyes widening even further, Tara clapped a hand over her mouth to prevent any more unauthorized noises as Willow started giggling madly.

“Okay, that was the best noise ever. Can you do it again?” Willow said, poking Tara lightly in the tummy.

“Stop that,” Tara said, swatting Willow’s hand half-heartedly.

“Make me,” Willow said, poking Tara again.

“Okay,” Tara said, smiling that little half-smile, her eyes glinting with intent. Taking Willow’s face in her hands, she brought their lips together, her smile growing against Willow’s mouth when she felt and heard Willow’s sharp intake of breath.

Willow did, in fact, stop poking Tara in the tummy, her hands finding Tara’s waist and pulling her in, their bodies making solid contact as the kiss deepened.

They didn’t notice when Buffy burst in the back door, with her wild-eyed where’s-the-demon look on her face, Xander close on her heels.

“Guess Willow told her about the trip,” Xander said.

“Guess so,” Buffy agreed, giving the room one last where’s-the-demon sweep, just in case.

“Come on,” Anya said, dragging Xander and Buffy out and shutting the door. “They still have five minutes.”
User avatar
Sassette
3. Flaming O
 
Posts: 109
Topics: 1
Joined: Mon Apr 25, 2005 10:09 pm
Location: SoCal


Re: Fic: Vignette Series

Postby notl33t » Tue Jun 20, 2006 10:07 am

Sweet mercy of God, dibs!

I think this is my first dibs ever, and I thought I'd miss it. I actually tried to scroll down and immediately reply, but got caught up in a beautiful yarn. And what a beautiful yarn it is.

I love the squabbling between Willow and Anya, those two really crack me up. And I love Penitent Willow. There's only one thing I love more than Penitent Willow and that's Take-Charge Tara.

This reminds me of an extra special anniversary with my girlfriend, the one we spent hanging out with my friend who had just gotten over the fact that her sister was paralyzed from the waist down. It never ceases to amaze me how much my girlfriend sacrifices for people she cares about . . . though we've never had work enter into our anniversary time.

Awesome work, Sassette.
User avatar
notl33t
5. Willowhand
 
Posts: 288
Joined: Mon Aug 08, 2005 9:18 am
Location: Somerville, MA


Re: Fic: Vignette Series

Postby db » Tue Jun 20, 2006 11:29 am

Sassette.

I have been steadily reading along (I don't think I have left feedback yet)... but I am now all caught up and I just want to say: Wow. I love your vignettes! LOVE LOVE LOVE them! I love them *all* and I especially, especailly love this last one.

Thank you. These short stories are so *inspiring* and *magical* and *sweet* and completely capture the magic of Willow and Tara together.

Willow made Tara squeal.

:clap

You are a master. Really.

db
Last edited by db on Tue Jun 20, 2006 1:45 pm, edited 1 time in total.
I am, you know.
User avatar
db
9. Gay Now
 
Posts: 969
Joined: Sun Jan 22, 2006 3:19 am
Location: Rochester, NY


Re: Fic: Vignette Series

Postby EasierSaid » Tue Jun 20, 2006 12:30 pm

What can I say? I'm glad that you chose to write this little gem rather than play that video game. (Though, now I'm curious as to which game got slighted...) I think this vignette captured two Cs: confidence and comfort. The Willow and Tara in this short are so confident; confident in their relationship and it seems, in life as well. (Willow's interaction with Anya comes to mind.) Tara shows up at the Magic Box and instead of feeling slighted or hurt about the missed alone anniversary time, giggles at the interactions before her. Willow knows from a simple touch that Tara's not angry about the missed time. It's simple, really, but shows the security between these two. They're solid, and it shows.

The way they comfort each other is apparent, too. Tara with the slight caress, Willow with the romantic plans. They're taking care of each other in a very natural way and that's very admirable. I like that Willow is making an effort with the horseback riding too. Here they are, confident and comfortable in their relationship, and that pushes Willow to test her own personal comfort zone; just because the relationship and life is good, doesn't mean they're not still growing as individuals. The hallmark of a great relationship, I think. Plus, the whole interaction, the dialogue, the poking of the tummy, was adorable and very true to life. Bravo. Last note: Loved Buffy here. Loved how she yelled behind the big box, loved how she came running in at the squeal looking for danger. Great job.

p.s. To answer your question, the girlfriend and I decided we would have met. (Was an interesting dinner conversation; the AU scenarios discussed were really all Tom Hanks/Meg Ryan film plots—volcano sacrfice included—though I'm sure if we kept on the subject, inevitably a Xena or Alias crossover would have been brought up, as well.) Love—who knows why it works, and why we meet our other halves, but thank god we do. Hope you are well, and find additional wonderful vignettes springing to mind in the future.
EasierSaid
7. Teeny Tinkerbell Light
 
Posts: 695
Topics: 1
Joined: Sun Apr 24, 2005 12:04 pm


Re: Fic: Vignette Series

Postby mole » Tue Jun 20, 2006 6:34 pm

Ack! There were updates, two in fact, and I missed them! How did that happen?

I drove for about 9 hours today so I'm not completely coherent but I wanted to say that this bit made my heart warm and my eyes misty:

“You know what? I think …” Willow said, her expression growing serious and her gaze distant as she tried to verbalize what had just occurred to her. “I think, at the time, I was really looking for something, and I didn’t know what it was, but I just … I felt like something was missing. I think, in a way, I >did< notice you, because you were what was missing from my life, and now that I’ve found you, I can’t imagine my life without you.”


May we all be so lucky (at least those of us who have yet to find our soul mates) as to find our true loves.

Michelle
My one and only wrecking ball
and you're crashing through my walls
~Brandi Carlile
User avatar
mole
4. Extra Flamey
 
Posts: 200
Joined: Thu Nov 17, 2005 8:42 pm
Location: Denver, CO


Re: Fic: Vignette Series

Postby dorksrcool » Tue Jun 20, 2006 6:45 pm

Oh Sass, I love these little vignettes so very much. :luv

Mostly 'cause of words like this,

“It’s fine,” Tara said, her thumb tracing a lazy line up and down Willow’s neck.


Thank you for sharing and I look forward to more. The yummy W/T images you create are priceless.

:peace
amy
As one, they turn to the soda machine. It flies back into the door like a cannonball. Willow looks at it, at Tara. She doesn't let go of her hand.
(from the shooting script of "Hush")
User avatar
dorksrcool
8. Vixen
 
Posts: 707
Joined: Thu Apr 28, 2005 11:35 am
Location: San Diego, CA


Re: Fic: Vignette Series

Postby simplyblue » Wed Jun 21, 2006 10:43 am

Dear Sass,

I managed to miss two vignettes and a lovely and bittersweet moment of authorial introspection-- and today I greedily sat down and drank them all in notwithstanding the fact that I really should be working.

My god you write beautifully and I'm incredulous that until recently you thought of these vignettes basdically as writing exercises. Exercises for you they may be, but once you hit, oh say #20, all on the same basic theme--small-but-important-moments-in-the-lives-of-W/T--didntcha think that maybe you were on to something? ;-)

I am so sorry to hear about the death of your father and so happy to know that he lived his life well.

And just for you--some pink elephants! :pinky :pinky :pinky

--Blue
User avatar
simplyblue
2. Floating Rose
 
Posts: 39
Joined: Mon May 30, 2005 9:59 pm
Location: A tiny blue spot in the middle of a red state


Re: Fic: Vignette Series

Postby Thianne » Wed Jun 21, 2006 11:31 am

sass, i loved that last vignette! tara's squeal of joy, willow and anya's negotiations, ....it was just so funny and so sweet. i loved it sweetie!
Vale
-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-

"When you get excited about something, one might imagine you as a small, maniacally grinning rubber ball, which someone throws at the wall in an enclosed room, and goes bouncing off every surface for about 15 minutes."
- Mudrat
User avatar
Thianne
13. Big Knowledge Woman
 
Posts: 1861
Joined: Thu Oct 13, 2005 1:09 pm
Location: Italy


Re: Fic: Vignette Series

Postby Sassette » Wed Jun 21, 2006 7:07 pm

**notl33t: Heh - congratulations on the dibs :) Thank you - I'm glad you liked it. I enjoy throwing the other scoobies into an occasional vignette, because I get to do things like that Willow-and-Anya deal-making. They crack me up. And I have to agree on penitent-Willow and take-charge-Tara. Yum. And congratulations on the girlfriend who continually amazes you :) That's awesome.

**db: Thank you - I love new feedbackers (I now declare "feedbacker" a word). I'm glad you've enjoyed reading all of these - gosh knows I enjoy writing them, so that works out nicely for everyone involved. Y'know, I was rather surprised by the squeal. It sort of snuck up on me - which is fair, as it snuck up on Tara as well. Sidenote: she did, in fact, end up making the "best noise ever" again, that weekend, only under very different circumstances. Interpret that as you will.

**EasierSaid: Thanks - I'm very happy with the time trade-off, too. I wrote this vignette instead of playing Fable: the Lost Chapters. I'm rather enjoying this game, though I have not yet gotten to much of the added content. Part of my enjoyment is marveling at the sheer marketing brilliance that was basically finishing a game that had been released without being finished, and then making people buy it again. I actually really wish they'd do that with Knights of the Old Republic II, as I have now played that game through 3 or 4 times, and I still have no idea what that game is about. I keep hoping that if I play it again, it will make sense, but it never, ever does. This is my insanity.

That's definitely how I was seeing the two of them at this point. They're very solidly together, they're in their mid-twenties and have kind of settled into their "life after school" lives nicely ('cuz, y'know, all this happens in my head - that's my other insanity), and all their demon-fighting friends are still alive, so I saw them as being in a very good place with themselves and their world. I'm glad that came through.

That caring comfort they give each other naturally is, I think, an extension of their confidence in their relationship. I generally enoy the "plans go awry" concept for W/T, partly because I figure that's probably happened to them quite a bit, though usually plans get waylaid by demons rather than commerce. To my mind, they've learned to roll with things, and their confidence means largely that they're very aware of the difference between something being more "immediate" and something being more "important." Tara knows she's the most important thing to Willow, so when something more urgent comes up, Tara will be more disappointed than upset.

And I kind of rambled there a bit. Thank you for your comments - I was also happy with Willow's horseback-riding decision. This was one of those vignettes where I didn't have anything planned and just kind of started typing. As such, what popped into my head is what happened, with little revisioning. I'd say part of the confidence you mentioned is that there is a great deal of trust in this relationship. Willow trusts Tara enough to give horseback-riding a try, and Tara trusts Willow enough to know she wouldn't be working on their Extra-Flamey Anniversary without a good reason. So it all works out.

As for Buffy, she did actually get to put her slayer skills to use that evening - Anya's 10-minute custody of the clipboard resulted in a misplaced crate opening a vortex and summoning the G'lorn.

And my I say "Oh, My Heck!" I haven't thought of Joe Versus the Volcano in >ages<. I loved that movie.

**mole: Heh - life happens, and that tends to cut into obsessively-watching-for-Pens-updates-time. On the upside, you had two updates to read - I actually love it when I miss a few updates on something and then get to read more all at once. Maybe that's just me.

Ack - nine hour drive? There is very little in this world I can do for nine hours without being very, very pissed off by the time it was over, and driving isn't one of them :) I'm really glad you enjoyed the vignettes, and that that particular line touched you. Thanks for reading.

**dorksrcool: Gosh, thanks :) I love hearing that people enjoy these. Makes me want to write more (which doesn't always work out, but still ... it's nice). Yeah, I just generally see W/T like this :wtkiss pretty much all the time. *shrugs* I don't think I'm alone on that one.

**simplyblue: Yeah, it kind of seems silly in retrospect that I saw these as writing exercises first and foremost after my little epiphany. Careful, though - I live in fear of the day someone says they got caught reading these instead of working. I don't want anyone to get into trouble over these! :)

And no, not really. By #20 I was pretty much still thinking "write fluffy W/T moments" without realizing that all those moments shared that common dare-I-say-Hallmark-esque theme that it is the little moments that make up a life. I can be a little dense sometimes :)

Thank you for all of your comments - and for the dancing pink elephants. Those just rock, and I can't quite describe how or why.

**Thianne: Thank you - I'm glad you enjoyed this latest vignette. I really love it when I get W/T doing something you wouldn't necessarily imagine they would - like Tara squealing, or Willow coming to terms with having an actual (if twisted) friendship with Anya and making plans to go ride a horse. That's just a lot of fun for me - glad it was fun for you, too :)

-Sass
User avatar
Sassette
3. Flaming O
 
Posts: 109
Topics: 1
Joined: Mon Apr 25, 2005 10:09 pm
Location: SoCal


Re: Fic: Vignette Series

Postby spells42 » Fri Jun 30, 2006 5:21 pm

Sassette
I'm pushed for time (gotta get to the store to buy horse feed before it closes!) so I have to make this quick.

Loved this, as I have each one of your vignettes. Especially:
She couldn’t help it. She squealed.

Eyes widening even further, Tara clapped a hand over her mouth to prevent any more unauthorized noises as Willow started giggling madly.

“Okay, that was the best noise ever. Can you do it again?” Willow said, poking Tara lightly in the tummy.
The 'unauthorized noises' phrase makes me grin every time I read it. I can just see them for this whole scene.

So, well done. Do it again, as often as you like (please). I'll be waiting.
Anne
Spells for Two

Every path has its puddle. Old English Saying... I think I just stepped in mine...
User avatar
spells42
6. Sassy Eggs
 
Posts: 471
Joined: Mon Aug 01, 2005 5:09 am
Location: Shoalhaven,NSW, Australia

PreviousNext

Return to Board index

Return to Different Colored Pens

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 8 guests


Powered by phpBB The phpBB Group © 2000, 2002, 2005, 2007
Style based on a Cosa Nostra Design