|
ep 6
AIRS: SEPTEMBER 17
The lights in The Vortex were dim, most of the
illumination focused upon the stage, where a group
new to the club played a solid ballad, soft but
laced with a beat that lent additional passion to
the melody and lyrics. Many of the patrons chatted
in low voices while swaying in their seats to the
rhythmic song, which was infused with an old-time
feel and obviously composed by one who found
inspiration more in the classic rock era than
anything that had since arrived on the musical
scene. The enthusiastic drummer, perched upon a
small podium at the rear of the stage, twirled the
stick in his right hand with an expert flick of
his wrist while tapping his foot lightly on the
pedal pounding the large bass drum, the face of
which declared the ensemble to be "Three Moon
Tuesday." The displayed motif was rather
attractive in a moody sort of way – a lunar image,
partially obscured by meandering clouds set in an
inky and starless sky.
The overall air of the quintet tended toward the
casual. No two members of the band were dressed in
the same fashion, nor did they make any pretense
of being so. Composed of a trio of males and a duo
of females, Three Moon Tuesday appeared to be a
rather motley crew of individuals, but their sound
was unmistakably original and very soulful. The
lead singer, a tall and well-built young man with
crisply curling chestnut hair which reflected a
copper tinge beneath the spotlight, had an unusual
voice, gravelly but laden with potential power. He
strummed occasionally on the rhythm guitar which
was slung low on his hips, but obviously possessed
no true talent for the instrument, his major
contribution being the unique tone of his gruff
but surprisingly melodious pipes. The final male
member was short in stature and, although he
played lead guitar, seemed content to loiter in
the shadows stage-right rather than dominate the
center as most lead guitarists preferred to do.
His demeanor was one of easy nonchalance as he
soundlessly mouthed the lyrics in perfect time
with the vocalist.
The keyboard player, exotic in appearance and
unmistakably of American Indian descent, sang
harmony. Her waist-length hair was smooth and
sleek like liquid mahogany. Her expert fingers
caressed the ivories of the synthesizer and she
was by far the most striking member of the band.
The second female was a tiny thing, virtually
dwarfed by the bass guitar that she plucked with
supreme proficiency. Elfin-like with her layered
cap of dishwater blonde hair, the most prominent
features of this pixie were her huge blue eyes,
the color of cornflowers.
The club was packed almost to capacity, but there
were a few vacant tables and unoccupied bar stools
to be had for the taking. Buffy and Xander had
staked out a table relatively close to the dance
floor, but at a far enough distance to maintain
the illusion at least of engaging in private
conversation. Facing the stage, the Slayer wasn't
truly paying attention to the performance, her
gaze fixed upon two female figures sitting at a
table on the other side of the floor. There, Dawn
and Kennedy were indulging in what appeared to be
a rather secretive exchange of words. Buffy did
her best not stare obsessively, but she kept a
watchful eye out nonetheless, just to make sure
everything was going smoothly between her sister
and the younger Slayer.
The song being played swirled around the club,
invading every corner with its haunting melody and
mournful lyrics.
Upon the lake, reflections I see,
As blossoms trail from a tree.
I look at her, she's looking at me.
There's sun in her hair, my Circe so fair.
"Have you ever tried actually carving a Chinese
dragon?" queried Xander.
Buffy pondered the question for a moment. "No,"
she replied, "but I may have killed one once."
Xander nodded with understanding. "It's good we
have things in common."
"What's good," retorted Buffy with admiration, "is
you. All Mr. Business Guy. You've been in that
workshop of yours almost non-stop for weeks. I was
feeling very neglected."
Xander chewed on this remark for a while. "Well
you've still had Willow, Dawn, Giles, all your
Slayerness ..."
"Yes, but I was developing a Xander deficiency,"
pouted Buffy.
Xander winked his one good eye. "I hear they'll
have a pill for that any day now."
"A pale imitation," scoffed the Slayer "I want my
Xander 100% pure and without an accompanying list
of twenty disturbing side effects."
"Okay, point taken. And, may I say, ego fluffed,"
beamed the carpenter. "Anyway, being around more
shouldn't be so hard. The bulk of this project is
done now. And just in time. If I had to carve one
more elephant on a display case, I think I'd have
to dress Banan up in a giant peanut outfit and
leave him at the zoo for Jumbo."
Buffy crinkled her nose. "Death by snackage. Not
very dignified."
"And yet still extremely satisfying. Like a
Snickers, only without so much nougat," stated
Xander with a firm nod of his head.
The seasons change to nature's own call.
The leaves are starting to fall
And I know that I must stand tall.
As I say goodbye, my Circe, don't cry.
Sipping on her drink, Buffy looked over toward
Dawn's table, leaning a little to one side to she
could be sure to have a good view of her sister
around Kennedy. Following her gaze, Xander threw
the Slayer an admonishing look and prodded at her
arm. "Buffy."
"What?" she demanded. "I'm ... "
She scanned the crowd for something to blame.
"... admiring that guy's ..."
She tilted her head to one side as the object of
her apparent attention began to shake his
moneymaker with much gusto. It was far from a
pretty sight and totally inappropriate for the
music.
Buffy frowned but had reached the point of no
return. "... butt," she said confidently. "Yes. He
has a nice butt, and it's worthy of both
admiration and songs. Lasting tributes to the ...
buttness of his firm—"
"Okay," the carpenter hastened to interrupt. "I'm
stopping you now, partly because I do not want to
hear the other adjectives you're about to use, and
partly because I'm not about to turn around and
see if you're tellin' the truth or not. But I will
say this: you gotta give the Dawnster some room.
Back off a little."
Buffy sighed. "I'm trying, it's just really hard.
There's so much going on here we don't know, you
know? At least in Sunnydale, I knew where all the
bad parts were and made sure Dawn knew too. But
here, we've only been around for what? About six
months? I've only barely figured out my way to the
7-Eleven. And anyway, I'm just wondering what she
and Kennedy are doing. I keep getting this weird
ringing in my ear ..." She paused mid-sentence as
her expression grew vaguely paranoid and totally
suspicious. "I think they're talking about me."
"Maybe it's just Tinnitus," suggested Xander
pleasantly.
Kennedy poked at the paper umbrella floating gaily
on the surface of her drink while Dawn slurped
noisily on her Shirley Temple.
"That one?" queried Dawn, gesturing toward the
dance floor.
The tree has grown and sprinkled with starlight.
A beacon, it glows ever-bright
And it guides me on through the night.
Do you yet feel the same, my Circe, my flame?
Kennedy squinted and then shook her head. "Too
tall."
Biting into a maraschino cherry, Dawn looked
around and then took another stab. "That one?" she
asked brightly, pointing across the room.
Kennedy followed the teenager's extended
finger. "In the red?" she asked.
Dawn shook her head and jabbed more fiercely. "No,
the black. With the jacket?" She looked at Kennedy
with excitement, but Kennedy simply shrugged, not
seeing.
"There," insisted Dawn losing patience, "next to
the guy with the thing?"
Leaning over, Kennedy attempted to see where Dawn
was pointing. Still at a loss, she stood up
slightly in her seat and then nodded. "Oh!" The
Slayer sat back down again. "Too short."
Dawn let out a heavy puff of air. "Okay, then the
one in the red."
"Too bony," came the swift reply.
"Oh, come on," said an exasperated Dawn. "Willow
is, like, 89% bone, don't even pretend you don't
go for that type."
Kennedy narrowed her eyes. "Look, I'm just not
interested, okay?"
Dawn tossed her head. "Fine," she huffed,
glowering at the Slayer.
Kennedy prodded at her umbrella until it finally
gave up the ghost and sank into the depths of her
drink.
"That one?" proposed Dawn chirpily, pointing at
the dance floor yet again.
"Arg," groaned Kennedy. "Would you knock it off
already?"
Dawn quickly became indignant. "Whaaat? I'm just
trying to help."
But nothing ever stands still.
It never has, never will
And the shaded tree casts such a chill.
It stings like a dart, my Circe, my heart.
"You're trying to set me up with some other girl
so I won't try and get back with Willow. I got you
pegged, Sunshine," Kennedy told the teenager. Her
voice was flat and devoid of emotion.
Dawn grimaced. "Well there's that, yeah, but- but
not just that. I just think, you know, you'd be
happier with ..."
"I'm perfectly happy," insisted the Slayer, her
eyes faltering at the younger girls' intense
stare. She lowered her gaze before
continuing. "Okay, I'm not perfectly happy, but
I'm also not interested in window-shopping for
girlfriends with you, alright?"
Offended, Dawn sniffed. "Fine." She cocked her
head curiously. "Have you even spoken to her yet?"
"... words were exchanged," came the clipped
response.
"Words besides 'Hi' and 'Fine'?"
Kennedy shrugged. "Okay, no then."
"It's been over a month," said Dawn gently.
"42 days," the Slayer corrected, "but who's
counting?"
I smile as you call me friend
And accept what I cannot mend.
But we've a bond that no one can rend.
I'm glad you're complete, my Circe so sweet.
"I just think you should move on ..." remarked
Dawn not unkindly.
"Fine," Kennedy agreed tersely. "Message received.
Now drop it."
Dawn pursued her lips. "Dropped," she grouched.
Kennedy took a long pull of her drink and, keen to
smooth things over, treated Dawn to a brightly-
painted smile. "So, did you hear about Buffy
getting her butt kicked by one of the Super New
Newbies the other day?"
The teenager's eyes widened in anticipation as she
excitedly leaned across the table, her elbows
resting in a puddle of melting ice.
Across the room, Buffy glowered at Dawn and
Kennedy and then swatted at her ear, violently
shaking her head. When her vision cleared, she
looked up to find Willow standing at the table.
The redhead looked very much like a female version
of Nanook of the North wearing a thickly-quilted
brown parka, complete with fur-trimmed hood. Her
cheeks were rosy from the cold.
"Hi guys!" announced the witch with a tiny wave of
her mitten-clad hand.
On stage, the vocalist hesitated as his lead
guitarist paused mid-riff. As the singer stole a
quick glance to the right, it appeared as though
the musician was about to sneeze as he gazed out
over the footlights but after a few twitches of
the nose, he found the chord and continued.
Sitting down, Willow slipped back the hood of her
parka and shook out her hair.
There's sun shining down on the tree
And my spirit is once again free.
Though you'll always be part of me,
The memory's enough, my Circe, my love.
The witch shivered as she shrugged the jacket off
her shoulders and draped it over the back of her
chair. "I miss California already," she sighed,
flexing the fingers of her right hand. She was no
longer wearing the brace, although the digits
curled stiffly.
"You know I hear it could snow next week? Snow.
The last time I saw snow, it was a foreshadowing
portent of the world's first, greatest evil
awakening on Earth to ... to, uhm ..." The
carpenter turned to Buffy. "What was it doing
again?"
"Near as I could tell, insisting repeatedly that
it was very, very evil. And killing Christmas
trees," the Slayer informed him. She
shrugged. "Didn't get much more out of it than
that."
To a round of appreciative applause, Three Moon
Tuesday concluded their first set of the evening.
A healthy rendition of cheers emanated from the
back of the room. The lead singer slipped the mic
back into its stand and leaned forward. Directly
in the beam of the lights, his handsomely-chiseled
features were even more apparent and his eyes were
darkly brooding as he surveyed the crowd. A bevy
of young teenage girls gathered at the front of
the stage breathed a collective sigh of adulation
and one of them stifled a small squeal.
"We're gonna take a breather," he growled huskily.
The girl squealed again. "Be back in 20."
He leapt gracefully from the stage and then turned
to help down the Indian princess, his arm curling
protectively around her waist. She slipped a hand
into his back pocket and together, they strolled
toward the bar, whispering intimately. The flock
of disappointed groupies scattered, heads drooping
and shoulders slumped in dejection. With nowhere
near as much flamboyancy, the lead guitarist
propped his instrument against the amplifier and
made his way down the steps of the stage into the
audience.
As the lights dimmed, a throbbing techno beat
pumped through the sound system and the dance
floor erupted into a torrent of energy. Xander,
Buffy and Willow, however, seemed not to notice
the change of musical pace, engrossed as they were
in conversation.
"So," shouted Buffy smiling at Willow, "how'd the
magic lesson go, Ms. Granger?"
Willow grinned. "Hit and miss. I floated a pencil
all the way around the room! A-And then somehow
managed to make it fold in on itself." She gave a
nervous chuckle. "Created a teensy little spatial
anomaly. Heh."
A look of alarm crossed Xander's face as Buffy's
eyes grew saucer-like.
"But I totally fixed it, easy as pie," the redhead
assured, grabbing Xander's drink and taking a
sip. "The pencil's kinda ... you know, blue and
possibly sentient in some way now, but otherwise—"
Willow paused for a moment as a hand tapped her
lightly on the shoulder. Startled and still lost
in thought, she spun around in her chair, "—no ...
problem."
Her voice trailed away as her jaw dropped. With a
look of utter shock and surprise, Willow blinked
at the figure standing in front of her, hands
thrust deeply into the pockets of his jeans.
"Hey," said Oz.
CREDITS
Almost as soon as recognition flared in Willow's
synapses, she threw her arms around the werewolf's
neck with a cry of "Oh my god, Oz!"
Oz's response was traditionally low-key. He simply
smiled and slowly wrapped his arms around Willow
in return, clearly savoring every moment and
luxuriating in the feel of Willow's hair as he
stroked the back of her head.
After a moment, Willow pulled away and immediately
smacked him lightly in the arm. "You never wrote
me back, you cad!" she chastised with a smile.
Shrugging, Oz shoved his hands back into the
depths of his jeans pockets. "Yeah, AOL cut me
off. It's a funny thing – when people send you
bills? They actually expect you to pay 'em." Oz
frowned as if to say, 'who knew?'
Xander waved his hand at the notion. "Pay? Pshaw.
What do you think all those free discs are for?"
Grinning broadly, Xander extended his hand. "Hey
man, good to see you."
Oz clasped Xander's hand warmly. "You too. Hey
Buffy," he said, nodding to the blonde.
"Hey," Buffy greeted, clearly pleased to see Oz
again after so many years. "Don't suppose you've
set up shop here in Trillium, huh?"
"Nah," he replied with a slight shake of his
head. "Me and the band are just passing through."
Turning his gaze to Willow, Oz lowered his voice
slightly, seeming to block out everything in the
world apart from the redhead. "We were on our way
up to Cleveland, actually. I thought that's where
you were."
In response, Willow poked him in the arm. "Well if
someone hadn't been a little delinquent – or
somehow managed to forget the wonders of Hotmail
and Net Cafes," she cast him a dubious look and he
had the good grace to appear at least a little
chagrined, "– he woulda gotten that memo and not
been all outta the loopy."
"Sorry about that." He glanced around the table,
clearly searching for something. "So where's your
new girl? Kennedy?"
Buffy and Xander exchanged a quick, uncomfortable
look and Willow's smile faltered for just a
second. "We, uh ... we broke up."
The werewolf's eyebrows twitched upwards slightly,
the only betrayal of his surprise. "Oh. I thought
you were doing good."
"Yeah, it's a kinda long story," responded Willow
by way of explanation.
"Tell me later?" he requested gently, earning a
nod and smile that he was compelled to mirror.
Reclaiming her seat, Willow tugged Oz's hand until
he slid into the one next to her. "So you!" she
began, very obviously appraising him up and
down. "Lookit you! New band and everything!"
"Yeah. They're pretty cool." Oz inclined his head
toward the bar. "Vic, the lead singer, has a voice
like some sort of cross between Barry Manilow and
Joe Cocker. It's interesting."
"How'd you meet up with 'em?" the witch inquired,
taking another long sip of Xander's drink,
heedless of his expression that indicated she
might want to get her own.
"I was just driving around after Sunnydale. Goin'
wherever. One night, a few days before full moon,
I was in this club where Vic was singing. Turns
out he's a wolf too, but couldn't control it. He
asked for my help, so I did." Oz shrugged
nonchalantly, as though the situation was nothing
extraordinary.
Buffy, on the other hand, had a look of mild alarm
at the realization there were other werewolves
around.
Her best friend's distress went unnoticed by
Willow, who was beaming proudly at Oz. "Wow,
that's great. So you– you helped him and his
wolfie's all under control?"
"Yeah, Vic's got a good handle on it. The others,
it's varies."
Mild alarm climbed up one notch. "Wait, 'others'?"
Buffy cut in sharply. "What others?"
"The band," replied Oz calmly. "Roadies."
"So you have, what? A pack now?" asked Buffy, an
undeniable edge to her voice.
Without hesitation, Oz countered, "Sometimes we
call ourselves a posse."
Ignoring the sarcasm, Xander frowned and leaned
forward, resting his forearms on the table. "Isn't
that kinda ... I dunno, dangerous?"
"Not really. Those of us with more control help
those with less. Keeps everyone safe."
Buffy seemed far from convinced, but she held her
tongue for the moment.
"But ... tonight's a full moon. Right?" Willow
frowned and tilted her head to one side as she
cast her gaze to the remaining band members on
stage who had been joined by a few of the group's
roadies.
"Yup," confirmed Oz. "We like to play on full moon
nights. Gives the sound something extra."
Her expression registering full disapproval, Buffy
opened her mouth, but any possible words were
guaranteed to be ignored as Oz leaned over to
Willow. "Listen, we're due back on in a few
minutes. Can we meet later? Get some coffee?" He
looked hopeful. "Talk?"
"Coffee with a werewolf on a full moon night?" The
witch's smirk said she was perfectly okay with
that arrangement. "Twist my arm."
Oz's smile was subdued but genuine, and with
parting nods to the others, he moved back toward
the stage. Neither he nor Willow noticed the
uneasy looks shared by Buffy and Xander.
The recreational room was mostly empty, something
of a rarity for Slayer Central. Neither Faith nor
Hazel was complaining about being the sole
occupants, however. They had laid claim to the
large, comfortable couch that was perfectly
positioned in front of the 42" flat-panel HDTV.
The exceptionally high quality of the television
managed to heighten the staggeringly low quality
of the kung fu movie in the DVD player
Faith contentedly sipped on a beer as she watched
the film, her head tilted just slightly to the
side to convey her concentration. On the opposite
end of the couch, Hazel was also watching the
movie while occasionally shoveling handfuls of
potato chips into her mouth. The Junior Slayer's
expression, however, was considerably more
skeptical.
She spared a sideways glance at Faith, confirming
that she was alone in her dubious viewing of the
film. Still, she pressed on valiantly. "Uhm ...
why are we watching this again?"
"Cuz you were bitchin' that all we ever did was
train and try an' beat each other up," replied
Faith, not taking her eyes from the screen.
"So ... you ... got us a movie about other people
beating each other up?" Hazel summed up with a
confused frown.
Glancing over, Faith jabbed her finger at the
screen, the beer can still clenched in her
fist. "It's not just about that. It's got ..." The
Slayer searched her memory bank. "What's that
thing called?"
"Kicks?" offered Hazel helpfully, wincing as a
series of high-pitched, inarticulate screams
ripped from the throats of the characters on
screen.
Faith shook her head, still frowning as she tried
to remember. "No."
"Explosions?"
"No."
"Stunts?"
Becoming frustrated, Faith shook her head
again. "No, the story thing."
"Oh! Plot."
"That's it." Faith settled back onto the
couch. "It's got plot."
Hazel regarded the movie critically. "Really
doesn't."
"Sure it does! See that guy's—" Faith stabbed her
finger at one of the characters, sloshing beer
onto her hand "—gotta find and beat up that other
guy because that guy won the fighting tournament
thing, but he cheated, right, so he's gotta get
his honor back by beatin' the other guy ..."
The younger girl wasn't persuaded. "Those aren't
so much plot as lame excuses for more fighting."
Faith stared at Hazel, blinking. "And?"
Sighing, Hazel tossed the remaining half-handful
of greasy chips into the bowl and wiped her hand
on a nearby napkin. "When you mentioned movie
night, I was kinda hopin' we'd get away from the
all the violent stuff. Maybe see ... Oh! Finding
Nemo is out!"
Hazel grinned at Faith with obvious excitement
that Faith did not share, heightened by the
completely blank expression the Senior Slayer
wore. Hazel attempted to explain. "The animated
movie? About the little fish that gets lost?"
Faith's lack of comprehension was replaced by an
expression that simply seemed to say 'yeah, I'm
gonna watch that'.
"No, seriously, it's cute!" insisted the younger
girl. "I went with my friends when it was in the
theater, back home? See, Nemo's dad teams up with
this really stupid fish, but she's so funny! And
then they have to try to swim all the way to
Sydney to find Nemo – hence the title and all –
but along the way they ..."
The sounds of obviously fake and wholly obnoxious
snoring began to drown out Hazel's dissertation on
the movie's merits, and she threw a potato chip
directly at Faith's head. Despite her eyes being
closed, Faith deflected the salty projectile with
ease and cracked an eye open with a grin.
"Stop that! It's good!" Hazel demanded, then her
face lightened as a thought occurred to
her. "Actually, you know? There's a character that
kinda reminds me of you. The Willem Dafoe-fish.
Can't remember his name. But he's all, like,
scarred and grumpy on the outside, but—"
"But soft and chewy on the inside?" finished Faith
with a slightly mocking tone.
Suddenly finding the entire conversation
embarrassing, Hazel's head dipped toward her chip
bowl. "Uh ... I just wanted ... You know ..."
"Somethin' besides fightin'?"
Chewing this over for a moment, Hazel
shrugged. "...suppose so..."
"Well that's good. You should want more'n
fightin'." Directing her attention to the
television screen and its never-ending parade of
violence, Faith sipped her beer. "Guess I should
too."
Hopefully, Hazel regarded Faith. "So maybe...?"
"Your fish movie?" Studying the film, Faith
pointed to the screen again. "Only if you can do
that by next week."
Hazel threw herself back into the sofa cushions
with a loud groan.
In his office, Giles was working hard on some
rearranging and general upkeep. The files folders
were now categorized and neatly stored in their
appropriately-labeled cabinets, the surface of his
desk had been polished, as evidenced by the can of
Lemon Pledge and yellow duster thrown on the
floor, and his next task was to hang his newly-
acquired print above the bookcases built by Xander.
Giles stepped back for a moment and admired the
framed poster– Gustave Moreau's "Saint George and
the Dragon", the original of which hung in the
National Gallery. Balancing precariously on a
small stepladder, he hoisted the picture and set
it carefully against the wall. Frowning, he
shifted the frame a fraction to the right and eyed
it critically. Shaking his head, he inched it to
the left and wrinkled his nose. With a small
groan, he lowered his aching arms and rested the
frame momentarily on the top of the middle
bookcase before hefting it upward once more. A
miniscule shimmy left, an infinitesimal slew
right, and Giles smiled happily at the result.
Gluing his eyes to the exact point of reference,
he cautiously allowed the picture to slide down
the wall until it met the top of the bookcase and
then reached up to his mouth for the pencil
clenched between his teeth. Leaning forward, he
marked the wall with the a small dot and then
peered closer to make sure he could see it
properly. Maintaining his focus, he felt around
the top step of the ladder for hammer and nails.
With precise positioning and making sure his feet
were firmly planted, the Watcher raised the hammer
and prepared to strike. At that exact moment the
telephone rang with what seemed to be a deafening
jangle in the silence of concentration. Startled,
Giles glanced swiftly at his desk and muttered
under his breath before letting loose with an
agonized yelp as the head of the hammer met
squarely and heavily with his thumb.
"Bloody hell," he cursed, clambering down the
ladder and sucking on his injured digit. The throb
was almost unbearable and he glared at the
telephone that was merrily insistent in making its
demand to be answered. He placed the hammer on his
desk and gingerly flexed the wounded appendage,
wincing as prickles of pain assaulted his wrist.
The telephone emitted yet another cheerful jingle
and an ill-tempered Giles grabbed angrily at the
receiver.
"I have high expectations for this call being
worth what I went through to answer it," he said
icily into the mouthpiece. "Please don't
disappoint me."
As he listened to the voice at the other end, his
aggravation melted to be replaced by an expression
of surprise.
"Ms. Harkness! Good eve—" he checked the antique
clock/barometer hanging on the far wall and noted
the time, 10 o'clock at night. "Well, very early
morning where you are, I suppose. How have you
been?" He smiled pleasantly even though nobody
could see him.
Perching on his desk, the Watcher tucked the phone
against his hunched shoulder, crossed his arms,
and paid close attention to what he was being
told. However, the pleasure initially registered
on his face quickly faded to concern.
"Well, yes. I-I mean, no, not as such, but ... It
was buried. The– The entire town collapsed on—" he
paused, hearkening thoughtfully to the words
filtering into his ear.
"No," declared Giles with much confidence. "No.
It's closed. I'm certain of that."
He frowned at the response.
"We did tests. Spells, to– to test for any
lingering traces, and there were none. There was
nothing left," he assured, tilting his head as the
faraway voice continued.
"You're sure?" he queried hesitantly before
adding, "No, I understand. ... I agree, we can't
risk going anywhere near it until we know for
certain. ... Thank you for telling me. Please, as
soon as you know anything more— ... Yes. Good
night."
As the conversation ended, a look of extreme worry
crossed the Watcher's face and he absent-mindedly
settled his glasses more firmly against the bridge
of his nose. With a series of rapid beeps, the
telephone reminded him that the connection had
been severed. Running a hand through his hair,
Giles allowed the receiver to drop slowly back
into its cradle.
Willow and Oz had sequestered a table at The
Common Grounds, the local all-night coffee shop in
downtown Trillium. Given the lateness of the hour,
it was largely empty; only one other person was
present, a young college student who was sitting
in the far corner pouring over stacks of
textbooks. The two redheads had seated themselves
outside under the clear night sky, not seeming to
mind the biting winter wind. While the coffee shop
was well lit, the full moon hanging overhead would
have provided more than ample illumination.
Willow had tugged off her mittens and was warming
her hands on a steaming mocha, sipping it
occasionally. She remained bundled in her parka,
and seemed quite a contrast to Oz, wearing only a
thin cotton button-up shirt that was left hanging
open to reveal a well-worn t-shirt underneath. Oz
showed no signs that the cold bothered him,
however, and was instead focused on the cup of
herbal tea sitting on the table before him.
Pulling a small leather pouch from his back
pocket, Oz undid the laces and reached inside. He
grabbed a pinch of some sort of powder and
sprinkled it into the tea. Closing the pouch with
practiced ease, he stirred the mixture, watching
as the granules quickly dissolved.
Wisps of yellowish smoke trailed upwards, and
Willow's nose crinkled involuntarily. "Well,
that's certainly ... pungent," she
commented. "What is it?"
"Lots of stuff," Oz replied, giving the tea one
final swirl for good measure and taking a huge
drink, oblivious to its temperature. "Arnica root
mostly."
Tilting her head to one side, Willow's eyes
narrowed in thought for a few seconds, then she
grinned. "Wolfsbane."
"Yeah. Figured at first it was a big joke, but
turns out not. Guess things are clichés for a
reason." After his first initial gulp, Oz seemed
content to simply sip his tea, very calm and
sedate.
Willow watched every movement, and Oz watched
Willow watching him. "You're doing good then?" she
inquired. "No– No relapses or anything?"
"There were a few tense moments when I found
out 'Charmed' was renewed," responded Oz in
complete seriousness, "but I worked through it."
"You look good," the witch appraised.
"You too."
The moment that passed between them was silent but
charged as the two stared at one another, their
gazes locked. Willow glanced away first, a faint
blush painting her cheeks as she busied herself
with the mocha. Smoothly, Oz resumed the
conversation. "So what happened with Kennedy?"
"Oh ... well, there was a spell— Not me, though,"
Willow hastened to point out, despite the lack of
any reproaching look from Oz. "Kenn cast it. Kinda
backfired – magick's kooky that way, as you know –
and we all sorta started sayin' all the stuff we
always really wanted to say but never did. Led to
some moderately interesting exchanges ... an' me
realizing that I just couldn't love her like she
wanted me to. Not right now."
Oz absorbed this for several seconds, then nodded
in understanding. "Makes sense."
"Yup. Guess I'm just not really ready for the
shiny new relationships right now, you know?"
replied Willow with some resignation.
As Willow drank her mocha, Oz studied her very
carefully, mulling over her words but saying
nothing.
Once more, the witch broke the silence. "But what
about you? Any new amours I gotta give the ol'
hairy eyeball to?" she queried, proceeding to very
exaggeratedly pantomime said hairy eyeball.
"Not so much," he replied with a faint smile.
Willow was aghast. "Oh, come on! All this time,
and no one's tickled your fancy?"
"My fancy's pretty tickle-free," admitted
Oz. "Haven't really been interested." Willow's
face immediately became sad at this news, but the
musician shrugged dismissively. "The band keeps me
pretty busy. And the work's important. We've got
twelve wolves with us now."
"Wow." She was suitably impressed. "So everyone in
the group...?"
Oz shook his head before draining the remainder of
his tea. "Most are, but some are here just to help
out. We've got five people who are around because
a wolf friend or family member travels with us.
Anyone's welcome, though."
Beaming at this information, Willow slapped her
hand lightly on the tabletop. "That's so great!
You're, like, the spokesperson for lycanthropy."
Her eyes widening, she excitedly suggested, "We
should have a telethon!"
"Me and Jerry Lewis." Oz nodded sagely.
Already off and running with the idea, Willow
enthused, "We can get some of those guys who spin
plates ..."
"Put someone up in a tree for three days," was
Oz's suggestion.
"Show back-to-back episodes of 'Are You Being
Served?' ..." Willow was really getting into it
now.
"It'll be an all-star extravaganza."
Willow laughed merrily at the picture they were
painting, and Oz smiled contentedly, basking in
her good mood. Finally, the witch's laughter
petered out, and she returned to her rapidly
cooling mocha. Raising her eyes, Willow regarded
Oz fondly. "I missed you."
"I missed you, too," he replied sincerely.
Another moment of silence passed, filled with
things unsaid.
"So, what day should be National Werewolf Day?"
Willow finally asked, her thoughtful frown only
semi-serious.
"I'm thinking the same as National Corndog Day,"
mused Oz. "If that's our only competition, we'll
have it made."
Willow's laughter returned full force, and Oz
settled back into his chair, happy to simply watch
her.
"So whaddya think they're talkin' about?" asked
Xander, his hot breath crystallizing in the chilly
night air.
Buffy hunched further into her coat and blew upon
her gloved hands. "Whatever it is, it's probably
pretty serious,"
The moon was suspended like a huge silver disk as
Buffy and Xander walked home. Their shadows
lengthened to gigantic proportions and then shrank
to dwarven size as they passed beneath the
streetlamps. After she'd spoken, the Slayer glance
behind her with a concerned frown. She paused for
a second and peered more closely into the gloom
but discerning nothing untoward, quickened her
pace to catch up with Xander.
"Do you think they'll ...?" began the carpenter,
his tone leaning toward the pondering side of
speculation.
The Slayer halted any further conversation along
those particular lines. "That knowledge is so far
beyond me," she stated firmly.
"Yeah. Me too," Xander admitted.
"I'll tell you what I do know, though," she
continued, "having my monster scorecard suddenly
filled with werewolves is making for an edgy
Buffy."
Xander nodded wisely. "Agreed it's minorly wig-
suggesting, but Oz said they've got it all under
control."
"Yeah," scoffed the Slayer, "and the last time Oz
thought he had it under control, he nearly ate
Tara." She sighed and stared at a brightly-
twinkling star. "I trust Oz. I do. I know he
wouldn't let himself be around people if he
thought he'd hurt them. But the others ... That's
a whole deck of wild cards. I just think–"
Stopping short, Buffy swiftly turned and, with
narrowed eyes, surveyed the area intently. Just
beyond her line of vision, a vague indiscriminate
shade stealthily blended into the darkness and,
ducking low, slunk furtively behind a nearby
dumpster. Buffy's head snapped in the direction of
the imperceptible movement, obviously sensing the
action rather than actually perceiving it.
Realizing that the Slayer was no longer matching
him stride-for-stride, Xander craned his neck to
see where she was, finally spotting the blonde
head topped by a knitted cap that sported an
incredibly large bobble. "What?" he whispered
covertly. "What is it?"
Frowning, Buffy held up her hand. She fixed her
gaze on the dumpster and then her eyes speedily
traveled to the vicinity of a neatly-clipped row
of Rhododendron bushes partially encircling a
front garden. She stared keenly at the shrubbery,
seemingly guiltless in its immaculate innocence,
and tilted her head to one side.
"Wait there," she hissed softly at the carpenter.
Xander shuffled his feet uncomfortably and took a
step forward, halting only when Buffy treated him
to one of her 'I dare you to move' glares. He
huffed a little under his breath but stayed put.
The Slayer cautiously crept toward the targeted
hedge. Closer and closer she approached, soundless
as a stalking tiger. Upon reaching her
destination, she ripped the branches apart and
stood ready to attack. But the flattened shrub
revealed nothing of interest – indeed, it revealed
nothing at all. Her forehead creasing deeply,
Buffy tensed her muscles while her eyes rapidly
darted in every direction. Still nothing. Her
shoulders slumped and then she grimaced at the
trampled Rhododendron. The Slayer attempted to
fluff the crippled twigs back into a nice bushy
shape, but they hung limply and listed badly to
one side.
"Buff?" murmured Xander questioningly with
something of a theatrical tone.
Sighing at the carnage left in her wake, Buffy
joined Xander. Her eyes continued to appraise the
immediate area but whatever she had sensed, if
there had been anything at all, had made good its
escape. Her expression was puzzled as she looked
up at the carpenter. "I thought I heard ... I
thought something was following us. Nothing's
there, though."
Anxiously glancing over his shoulder, Xander
stated with conviction, "Oh great, now the
suggested wig is the arrived-and-moved-in-next-
door wig. That's the last thing I need, to become
a werewolf snausage."
The Slayer tucked her arm into the crook of his
elbow and led him away. "Your confidence in my
ability to keep you safe is assuring," she told
him flatly with a wry smile.
"Nah," responded Xander, "it's nothin' to do with
you. It's just a thing. I saw Cujo last week.
Images of big, angry, flesh-rending, man-killing
dogs – little too fresh in my mind."
As they made their way home, the shadows of Buffy
and Xander lengthened and shortened in tempo to
the light filtering down from the streetlamps – as
did the dim and indistinct silhouette which
followed at a very safe distance.
The full moon shed its pale illumination over the
park. The night was crisp and clear with only the
occasional cloud to obscure the sharply twinkling
stars. The young teenage boy strolled the path in
an unhurried manner, listening intently for the
muted rustlings of nocturnal insects making their
way through the undergrowth. In his left hand, he
carried a large jar, empty and carefully cleaned,
with the shreds of a mayonnaise label still
attached to the outside. Clutched in his right
hand was a small net. He looked up as a firefly,
moving far too swiftly to be caught, darted in
front of his eyes. He followed its glowing wake
into the depths of the trees and failed to notice
the silent parting of the tall grasses behind him.
Hesitating, it appeared for a moment as though he
might make chase and attempt to capture the
flittering insect, but apparently thinking better
of it, he moved further down the path.
A barn owl perched upon the branch of a nearby oak
startled him with a mournful hoot while regarding
the youngster solemnly with huge saucer-like eyes.
The boy chuckled to himself for being such a wuss
and then dropped to his knees as a cricket,
chirping merrily, hopped across the graveled
walkway.
"Gotcha!" he whispered delightedly, trapping the
small insect with his net. Unscrewing the cap of
his jar, he scooped the cricket up from the ground
and shook it gently until it tumbled from the
netting and hit the glass bottom with a tiny ping.
The teenager grinned, obviously exceedingly
pleased with his first find of the night. Without
warning and with an ear-piercing screech, the owl
took flight and the boy almost dropped the jar in
astonishment at the sudden departure. Scrambling
to make sure the lid was still closed, he pushed
himself to his feet and looked back at the now
vacant branch.
With the eruption of a stiff breeze, the leaves of
the oak swayed violently back and forth. The
riffle they made was somewhat eerie and the
teenager shivered, looking behind him hesitantly
as the cricket, seeking an escape route, leapt
ever higher within the confines of the jar. From
the corner of his eye, the boy discerned a shadow
falling across the path, but it had vanished when
he turned to face it. "Wuss," he chided again.
Straightening his shoulders, he made a fine show
of nonchalance as he purposely strode forward,
stopping short when he heard a snuffling coming
from his left. He bent down and peered curiously
into the gloomy light shrouding a row of dense
bushes. Shaking his head, he was about to move on
when the snuffle sounded again and he inched
closer, noticing a pair of bright jade eyes
watching him through the murk.
Frowning, the teenager crouched and craned his
neck in order to gain a better look. A black nose,
shiny and glistening in the moonlight, sniffed
inquisitively as the boy shuffled nearer. With an
audible sigh of relief, the youngster dropped his
net and stretched out his hand.
"Aww," he murmured softly with a broad
smile. "Nice puppy. Don't be scared. I ain't gonna
hurt you. Are you lost?"
The boy opened his mouth in a soundless scream as
the animal's pointed snout emerged from the
darkness of the hedge. He appeared to want to draw
back his hand, run from the spot, cry out for
help, but he was frozen in panic and unable to do
any of those things. He closed his terror-struck
eyes and shrieked in agony as the wide jaws
snapped around his wrist. A trickle of scalding
tears meandered down his cheeks and he whimpered,
allowing the mayonnaise jar to drop. Upon hitting
the ground, the lid flew off and the cricket,
having gained its freedom, chirped merrily again
before hopping away to sanctuary.
Raising its shaggy head, the creature howled at
the image of the lunar goddess shining down from
above as the teen's body quivered with pain.
Summoning all the strength he could muster, the
boy tried to scuttle away from the bushes and he
screamed pitifully into the night sky. A sorrowful
hoot from the returning barn owl was his only
response. Tightly seizing the boy's ankle within
its curving claws, the animal slowly and
deliberately dragged the teenager into the depths
of the bushes. The youngster snatched desperately
at the small branches with his good hand, but the
fragile twigs snapped easily within his grasp. His
fingers trailed in the dirt as he disappeared into
the undergrowth. He shrieked only once more before
falling silent.
Soon, the only sounds that could be heard were
those of fabric and flesh being shredded,
accompanied by the sickly slurpings of frenzied
feeding and the merry chirp of a cricket
Buffy bounded up the stairs of the Scoobies' house
and headed directly for Willow's room. She paused
just outside the door, rapping lightly on the wood
and then shifted her weight from foot to foot
impatiently. After a second or two had passed
without response, the blonde frowned and opened
the door slowly, peering inside.
Willow was still in bed, clad in a pair of red
flannel pajamas. The covers were almost entirely
ripped away from the empty side and bunched around
Willow at odd angles. Even more amusing was that
at some point, Willow had kicked half of them off,
but still clutched a fistful of sheets and blanket
possessively.
Grinning madly, Buffy crept fully into the room.
Willow didn't move a muscle, deeply asleep and
even snoring ever so lightly. The Slayer
considered the bed with an appraising eye, then
ran toward it. Launching herself into the air at
the last second, Buffy landed solidly on the empty
side, sending Willow bouncing into the air. The
redhead squeaked in alarm, her eyes flying open.
She very nearly rolled off the mattress entirely,
but somehow managed to stay on. Wild-eyed and with
a terrible case of bed-hair, Willow's head whipped
around frantically for her attacker.
Only Buffy could be found, lying casually next to
Willow, her head propped up by one elbow and huge
cheesy grin plastered to her face despite, or
perhaps because of, Willow's glower. "I wanted
girl talk and got tired of waiting," the Slayer
stated cheerfully without the slightest hint of
remorse.
Willow groaned and flopped down again, pulling the
nearest pillow over her head.
"Oh no you don't." The Slayer easily yanked the
pillow away. Willow shot her the most fearsome
glare she could manage at that moment, but Buffy
was clearly, irritatingly, completely immune. "You
have dirt and I wannit," she insisted.
"No dirt. This is a dirt-free zone, sterilized and
hermetically sealed."
"And that's why you didn't come home until six in
the morning?"
Buffy waggled her eyebrows suggestively. Willow
bonked her in the head with a spare pillow.
"We were talking, you perv," the witch said with
bottomless exasperation.
Still Buffy's mind was on a singular track and
refused to be deterred by such silly and
unimportant things like facts. "So that's what
they're calling it now?" she asked with an
innocence that could never hope to be genuine.
Willow rolled her eyes as she spoke to the
ceiling. "God, someone in this room is in serious
need of a good—"
"But enough about me," Buffy hastily interrupted
before her face displayed extreme
disappointment. "Seriously, nothing? Zippo on the
best friend shareage front? No cuddles, no
smoochies?"
Grinning indulgently, Willow rolled her head to
the left and regarded her best friend. "Buff, what
part'a 'gay now' was left open to interpretation?"
"Well, yeah, I know," she quickly
defended, "but ... it's Oz."
"It is. And I love Oz, but I don't love love Oz,
you know? I made my choice a long time ago."
"Oh." Buffy's disappointment in a failed
reconciliation lasted only for the briefest of
moments, and she soon brightened. "But the
talking, that was good?"
Smiling happily, Willow nodded, although the
gesture seemed awkward given that she was still
sprawled on the bed. "It was. He's doing really
well, with the 'grr' thing. Oh, an' his band? They
actually have a couple of record companies asking
for demo tapes." The redhead glowed with pride, as
though this were somehow a personal achievement.
"That's really great," agreed Buffy
wholeheartedly. "Good for him."
"And you can tell he's really excited about it,
too, cuz when he told me?" She made a cutting
motion in the air for emphasis. "His tone of voice
actually changed."
Buffy's jaw dropped and she gaped at Willow,
drawing on every ounce of power she possessed to
exaggerate her shock to epic proportions. "Get
out."
"Strange but true," the redhead confirmed
solemnly, and then her expression and tone grew
serious. "I admit, though – I'm kinda worried
about him."
"In what way?" questioned Buffy with concern.
"Well ..." Willow pushed herself up from the bed,
and she turned to face Buffy directly, tucking her
legs beneath her. Buffy moved as well, shifting
from her reclining position until she was in one
that mirrored the redhead's. Willow sighed
slightly before continuing. "We talked about
pretty much everything last night, and ... I
dunno, it seems like he's in sort of a ... a
holding pattern? I mean, I don't think he's even
had a date since Sunnydale." Willow's expression
was suddenly profoundly sad. "I think he's lonely."
"Maybe he's just not ready," the blonde suggested.
"Maybe," agreed Willow, drawing the word out
thoughtfully. "But it's not the wolf. He says he
has complete control of it now, and I believe him.
A–And I don't think it's his music, or his work
with the others ..." She shook her head, unable to
come up with any other possible deterrents. "I
dunno."
Smirking, Buffy pointed out, "Well you are a
pretty tough act to follow."
"Don't get me wrong, that's flattering as all
heck," the witch admitted with a grin, "but I want
him to find someone else. He's such a great guy,
Buffy, he deserves to be happy. I just want him to
be happy."
Buffy chewed over the puzzle for a minute before
responding. "I guess when you think you've found
The One – capital 'tee', capital 'oh' – moving on
isn't as easy as it sounds. Even when you don't
have any other choice," she lamented.
The words – and more importantly, the truth behind
them – settled around the two friends, and they
received a simultaneous flash of insight. The look
they shared made it perfectly clear that they were
each suddenly empathizing only too well with Oz's
plight.
Anxious to not dwell on unpleasant topics so early
in the day, Buffy bounced off the bed and to her
feet. "But enough of this maudlin-ness," she
announced with authority. "Xander's already gone
to the Vortex to hang with Oz for a bit, and we
are going to do the same." The blonde completely
ignored Willow's pleading glance at the clock,
happily displaying the time to be 9:37, heedless
of tired little witches who stayed out too
late. "The band's only in town for a few more
days, and I say we milk 'em for all they're worth.
If we hang around them enough now, we can maybe be
on their VH-1 'Behind the Music' special when they
get all big and famous."
"And if that isn't incentive for getting out of
bed, I dunno what is," grumbled Willow,
reluctantly swinging her legs off the bed.
On stage at the Vortex, Three Moon Tuesday roadies
were conducting sound checks and fine-tuning audio
equipment while the vocalist and keyboard player
worked the kinks out of some new harmonies. On the
podium, the drummer adjusted the set-up of his kit
and then began to polish his cymbals to a
brilliant shine. Perched upon a high stool near
the drummer's podium, ankles curled around the
legs of the chair, the bassist strummed absent-
mindedly on her six-string and clutched the
instrument tightly to her chest as though it were
a security blanket. Her eyes were fixed firmly on
a table in the center of the room, where Oz was
engaged in conversation with Xander.
Just beyond the fringe of the stage, Dawn
chattered in an animated fashion to a young boy
lounging on the corner of the platform, the design
on his oversized black sweatshirt ostensibly
proclaiming him to be a Spider-Man enthusiast.
With delicate features, tousled wheaten hair, and
eyes an unusually striking shade of green, the kid
was nodding politely and seemed to be listening to
Dawn's babble, but his demeanor was one of
distraction and his expression somewhat troubled.
Obviously not particularly eager to be
participating in chitchat, he swung his legs back-
and-forth, heels striking the wooden base of the
stage with a dull thud every other second.
Seemingly oblivious to his lack of verbal
enthusiasm, Dawn exuded more than enough for the
both of them.
"... I find it leaves a real lasting impression,"
Xander stated with much conviction. "I'm talkin'
serious, heavy duty, no holds barred, engrained in
your head for the rest of your life effect, my
friend."
"You're certainly passionate," replied Oz.
"Damned right I'm passionate!" exclaimed the
carpenter. "I searched years for results like
this! ...well okay, three weeks. But those were
three long, arduous weeks, not to be scoffed at."
Oz nodded. "Absolutely. I'll also be abstaining
from flouting or gibing."
Xander's head bobbed in a wholehearted fashion as
he drove his point home. "So take it from a man
who's been around – a man who knows. You need only
remember these three simple words: Mop 'n' Glo.
Mop. 'nnn'. Glo."
"I always pegged you for a Pine Sol man,"
commented Oz wryly.
The carpenter let out a sigh of utter
contentment. "See this is what I've been missing.
Real man-oh-ah-man-oh discussions. I mean don't
get me wrong, Buffy an' Willow are great, but for
the love of testosterone, huh?"
"I've always ranked it among my personal top three
hormones," agreed the lead guitarist.
Balancing on the rim of a bar stool, a brightly
smiling Dawn continued to effervesce at her
preoccupied companion. The boy scuttled a little
further back onto the floor of the stage and Dawn
scooted her chair closer.
"So, Toby," she said, twisting her neck in order
to catch his attention, "hangin' out with a band.
That's gotta be cool."
Toby shrugged and stared at the design on his
sweatshirt. "It's okay."
"Sounds exciting to me," Dawn virtually
gushed. "Always going from place to place, new
cities to see and explore ..."
"I guess," the boy conceded. "But it gets a
little ... tedious? I mean, just when you think
you've maybe found some place nice, it's time to
run again."
A frown creased Dawn's forehead. "Run?"
Toby flashed her a nervous glance. "Move on," he
clarified quickly. "Move on again. To the next
gig. Stability's underrated."
Dawn wrinkled her nose. "I suppose. I dunno
though, it can be boring. Sometimes I feel so
stable, I think they should start modeling
buildings in California on me!" She chuckled, but
the giggle sounded lame and Toby simply
stared. "You know," she added "cuz'a earthquakes
and designing stable, shake-proof buildings, and
okay, just forget I said anything."
Turning away momentarily, Dawn gave a small self-
conscious cough, took a deep breath and then
plunged back into the conversation. "If you don't
like it, why don't you stop?"
Swiveling, the boy earnestly regarded the band's
bassist, still strumming the strings of her
instrument with an inattentive air. His eyes grew
clouded and sorrowful. "Sometimes you gotta do
stuff. Even if you don't want to, y'know?"
Dawn nodded emphatically. "Boy, tell me about it!
Just the other day Buffy – Buffy's my sister –
anyway, Buffy was all like, 'No, you can't stay up
until 2am on a school night!', and I'm all, 'But
if I don't catch this show, I'm gonna be left out
and ostracized by my peers', and then she's
entirely unsympathetic and says ..."
Xander leaned across the table. "I still think
this'd be a little freaktacular. I mean, how do
you make sure everyone's in line and not sneaking
off at night to trip the wolf fantastic?" he asked
skeptically.
Oz rocked back in his chair and folded his
arms. "Restraints, for those who can't control it
yet," he supplied.
The carpenter was somewhat cynical. "And that's
safe?"
Oz hesitated briefly before replying. "Safer than
leaving behind someone who can't work through the
urge."
"Huh," the carpenter mused. "Well, you have more
patience than I. But then, we knew that. You know,
it sucks that you'll be leaving again so soon.
Nothing we can bribe you with to get you to stay?"
Before the lead guitarist could answer, the door
to the club burst open and a sparkling stream of
winter sun flooded the dimly lit interior. Buffy
and Willow entered, arm-in-arm with heads
together, alternately whispering and breaking into
peals of delighted laughter. Oz squinted at the
bright light but otherwise never took his eyes
from the redhead as the pair approached his table
and settled themselves down.
"Mornin' stranger," grinned Willow. Oz returned
the enthusiastic greeting with one of his
enigmatic smiles. "Gosh," she continued, "it's
been so long since I saw ya last, I almost forgot
whatcha look like!"
"Much like before," he admitted. "Only more so."
"How'd everything go last night?" queried the
Slayer with a tiny frown.
Oz vacillated, but only for the fraction of a
second and nobody appeared to notice his slight
hesitation. "You know. Pretty much normal. Lots of
howling."
"Because last night I–" Buffy stopped suddenly,
noticing Dawn and Toby by the stage. "Is that
Dawn?" she asked sharply.
Her eyes narrowed suspiciously at the chiming of
Dawn's excessive laughter and then her face
adopted a stern expression as her sister reached
out to touch the boy's arm. Abruptly, the Slayer's
jaw dropped.
"Is that Dawn flirting?" she demanded of nobody in
particular. Nonetheless, all heads turned in the
direction of the young couple.
"Reply hazy," reported Oz. "Try again."
Buffy stared aghast as Dawn flipped her hair over
one shoulder and giggled loudly once more.
"Aaaand we have flirting confirmation," verified
Willow with a broad grin.
"Yup," nodded Xander with authority. "She's
definitely doin' her best to dazzle and enchant
with her shiny hair."
The Slayer was totally astounded. "I can't believe
she's flirting! Why is she flirting?"
Her challenge was directed at Xander, then Willow,
then Oz. The three exchanged a look of stunned
surprise.
"Cuz she's a seventeen an' doesn't have a
boyfriend?" suggested the redhead with raised
eyebrows.
"Exactly!" Buffy snorted with self-righteous
indignation. "Seventeen! Half of which is less
than nine! Too young for boyfriend!"
"Buff," prompted the carpenter, "I feel compelled
to point out that at seventeen, not only did you
have a boyfriend, but he was, like, fourteen times
your age, and went all charmingly psychopathic
when ya ... y'know ... gave him the grande muy
mucho happy. Again – feelin' the need to point
out – at seventeen."
Buffy's mouth jerked soundlessly for a moment,
then she found her voice once more. "So ...
she ... should ... learn from my example. Yes. And
now I will go. To example-fy. And possibly
threaten."
Without further ado, Buffy leapt to her feet and
stomped purposefully toward Dawn and Toby. With
much trepidation, the others watched her go.
"I forgot the frightening intensity," remarked a
sardonic Oz.
Xander shrugged and grinned cheerfully, "That's
our Buffy! She's so wacky."
"Like a sitcom next-door neighbor who becomes way
more popular than the rest of the cast, and so
they go and give him his own show," announced
Willow. "Only it's never as funny as the real
sitcom because whose house is he going to burst
into unannounced now? And what's he gonna do,
borrow his own lawnmower and not return it?" The
redhead expelled a puff of air and waved her had,
arbitrarily dismissing sitcom neighbor spin-offs
everywhere.
"Right," agreed the carpenter with a hint of
sarcasm. "Just like that. Only without the laugh
track or the painfully hollow morals or the
actually being a neighbor." He gaped at Willow
incredulously. "Where do you come up with this
stuff?"
Willow tossed her head with a high and mighty
gesture. "You cannot hope to understand the secret
depths of my mind," she told him haughtily.
"And believe me," retorted Xander, "both I and my
sanity are eternally grateful for that fact."
Wrinkling her nose, the redhead stuck out her
tongue at the carpenter, who quickly mimicked the
sentiment. Oz shook his head slightly at the
apparent regression and then looked over in
Buffy's direction. The Slayer and the boy were
standing nose-to-nose. Indeed, although Buffy was
on tiptoe in order to do so, she actually appeared
to be looming over the youngster although Toby was
a good foot taller, albeit that he was cowering
from the confrontation.
On the other hand, Dawn had visibly shrunk at
least a foot-and-a-half since Buffy's arrival. She
seemed to be wishing that she could die, or that
Buffy would die, or that maybe they could both
die, that would be good too.
"The Dawn thing's still got me," Oz
reflected. "It's, like, I met her years ago, but
until yesterday, I hadn't met her at all." He
lapsed into contemplative silence before summing
up the situation with an introspected "Huh."
"Yeah, best not to dwell on it. It's sorta brain
melty material," Willow commiserated.
The trio at the table continued to watch Buffy's
intimidation for a few seconds more and then the
redhead's attention diverted to the petite bassist
still perched on the stool. The girl's eyes
continued to be transfixed upon Oz, but when she
noticed Willow's gaze, she ducked her head shyly
and looked away. The witch frowned.
"Who's that?" she asked Oz, unable to stifle her
curiosity.
Oz glanced over his shoulder. "Oh," he replied
with a fond smile. "That's Jemma. She's the bass
guitarist."
Xander swiveled in his seat searching out the
object of their conversation. "She can strum my
bass any–," he began appreciatively and then took
note of the stares being directed at him from Oz
and Willow. Oz quirked an eyebrow while Willow
gawked, eyes wide and unbelieving.
Xander was suitably abashed. "I'm doing
that 'talking' thing again," muttered the
carpenter. "I thought I broke that habit. Bad
Xander. Xander quiet now." He sipped on his drink
and averted his gaze toward the ceiling.
"She looks a little freaked," remarked the redhead
as she appraised Jemma from a distance.
Oz tilted his head. "Might have something to do
with Buffy swinging a chair at her brother," he
deadpanned.
Willow grinned and leapt to her feet. "I think
it's time for me to network!" she announced as she
cheerfully bounded over to the bass guitarist.
With confounded expressions, Oz and Xander watched
her leave.
"Behold the secret depths of her mind," stated a
mystified Xander.
By the time the witch had reached Jemma, the
performer's attention was riveted upon the
exchange taking place between her brother and
Buffy. The Slayer was still ranting and raving,
hands placed resolutely on hips in a threatening
stance. Toby, however, appeared completely at a
loss for words as he shrank further and further
back onto the stage, apparently hoping that a deep
chasm would materialize into which he could plunge
headfirst.
Willow positioned herself between Jemma and the
ongoing drama. "Hey," she beamed brightly.
Startled, the guitarist instinctively responded
with a shrill, "Hey!" She blinked timidly for a
moment and then seemed to calm down. "Hey," she
repeated softly.
"Nice guitar," complimented the redhead. "Is it a,
uhm ... a–a Bender?"
Jemma frowned. "A ... bender?" she queried.
"Yeah," confirmed the witch. "Bender. No, wait,
that's the robot on 'Futurama'." She frowned.
Jemma smiled bashfully. "You mean Fender," she
corrected nervously.
Willow nodded with enthusiasm and Jemma's smile
grew a shade less reserved.
"It's not," she said quietly, "but thanks for
thinking so. You've given it quite an ego-boost."
"And if you can't make a musical instrument feel
better about itself, then you're just a lousy
stinkin' sorry excuse for a human being," the
redhead stated with certainty.
Jemma chuckled and the eyes which regarded the
witch timorously grew a little more friendly.
Taking this to be a good sign, Willow hopped up
onto the stage and tracked down a vacant stool.
She dragged it over next to the guitarist and
grinned. After a few moments of silence, during
which Jemma returned to gazing at Oz and Willow
closely observed Jemma's expression, the witch
smirked knowingly.
"So, part'a the band ... You're a wolf too, huh?"
she asked of Jemma, her face beaming once more.
Jemma's eyes grew wide and wary. "Me? N–No! No,
not me. Toby. My brother," she told Willow,
gesturing with her head.
Willow's gaze wandered to where the confrontation
had been taking place. Ostensibly done with her
ranting and raving, at least for the time being,
the Slayer was sitting with arms crossed over her
chest in an authoritative manner, glowering at
Dawn, whose face was the approximate color of a
newly boiled lobster.
"He's a wolf? queried Willow. Jemma nodded. "Oh,
good," sighed the witch sarcastically, "because
Buffy didn't have enough ammo. Poor Dawnie."
"Toby's a good kid," insisted his sister. "Just
kinda on edge right now. It's a hard time for him.
For all of us."
Willow nodded with understanding. "He's new,
then?" Jemma confirmed with a slight inclination
of her head. "It's hard, I know," continued the
witch. "When someone you love has to go through
that. The feeling that there's not a whole heck of
a lot you can do for them."
Jemma propped her guitar against the stool and
twisted her hands in her lap, a guilty expression
creeping over her face.
Willow wrinkled her nose. "Tip?" she suggested
gently. "Don't read Call of the Wild – not quite
the soothing fare you're looking for. Oo! Maybe
Clifford books instead! Never tried that one."
Jemma chuckled, her self-imposed blame lifting a
little. "You're Willow, right?" she queried.
"Right," verified the witch. "Gah, sorry. My
manners stayed in bed this morning." She beamed
anew before adding, "And you're Jemma."
The bass guitarist appeared astounded that Willow
should be in possession of such knowledge. "Oz
mentioned," divulged the redhead in a whisper.
"Yeah, that's how I knew," Jemma returned. "Oz.
He ... He talks about you. A lot." She paused and
a tiny frown creased her forehead. "Or, well not a
lot," she quickly explained. "He doesn't really
talk a lot. But comparatively speaking."
Willow rolled her eyes in agreement. "Great guy,
that Oz," she said simply, casting a glance
sideways in order to make note of the younger
girl's reaction.
Jemma blushed. The pinkish tinge lent a glow to
her cheeks, enhancing the pale blue shimmer of her
eyes as she absent-mindedly ruffled her layered
cap of hair.
"Yeah," she sighed, her blush deepening. "He sure
is."
Reaction received and duly processed, Willow's
smile widened as her attention focused first on
Jemma and then on Oz. With a visible twinkle, the
witch wrapped her arms around herself and hugged.
Kennedy's room remained almost entirely spartan. A
punching bag hung from the far right corner of the
room and a rowing machine occupied the space
across from it in the opposite corner. The only
other adornment in the room was a cheap calendar,
currently depicting a tree well within the grips
of autumn. It was the sort of calendar that
everyone seemed to have, but nobody ever paid for,
and such was likely the case here as well.
Regardless of how she had come across it, however,
Kennedy had made full use of it and the boxes of
days underneath the picture were scrawled with
notes and times for her various classes and
sessions at Slayer Central. Practically no box
remained untouched; Kennedy's time was filled near
to capacity with Slaying duties of one kind or
another.
The bed and a bookcase bearing only three random
books that appeared to have been tossed inside
took up the remainder of the room's space. The bed
was still unmade, but Dawn didn't mind. She'd
claimed one of the corners and was perched on it,
seething in righteous anger. Kennedy, working out
on the rowing machine, was bearing the brunt of
Dawn's venting.
"And then she – oh my god, get this – and then she
says, 'I break five two-by-fours as easily as
you'd snap a toothpick. Imagine what that would do
to guys who got grabby with my sister.'"
The Slayer chuckled appreciatively. "That's good,
I'll have to remember that one." Dawn glared
furiously but Kennedy only shrugged, unwilling to
apologize or retract the comment.
This did little to soothe Dawn's fury. "I just
don't get it! When she was my age, she'd been
Slaying for two years! She'd already saved the
world! She died. Why can't I talk to a boy without
her getting all butch ..." She cast a wary eye at
the Slayer. "... Cassidy about it?" she added
lamely.
Kennedy didn't seem to notice. As she spoke, her
workout never faltered once, and her breathing was
steady and even. "Well you're her sister. It's a
sister-thing."
"No," the teenager argued, "a sister-thing is to
steal my clothes without asking. This is an insane-
out-of-control-parental thing. She's like every
over-protective TV dad ever created, all rolled
into one short blonde package and I hate it."
"I don't think she does it to piss you off." The
Slayer considered that statement carefully. "I
mean, she might ... but I don't think so."
Shrugging, she continued, "The whole monk thing
you were telling me about? Sounds like they
scrambled her brains, kinda hardwired her
into 'Protect Dawn' mode. Though I don't think
that's all it is. I think she just loves you and
wants you to be safe."
"I can be safe!" Dawn protested, throwing her
hands in the air. "I can have a life and be safe!
I've gotta make her see that, because this?" Her
wave encompassed years of sibling unfairness. "I
can't take this any more! The choices are very
simple: she stops, or I kill her!"
The rowing machine slowed and then stopped.
Kennedy considered Dawn thoughtfully, biting her
bottom lip as her gaze narrowed. "I think I can
help you out with that ..."
Initially, Dawn looked extremely hopeful and
expectant, then a different, more sinister,
possibility wormed its way into her head and her
eyes widened. "I–I don't mean really ... kill her.
I mean, yeah, sure, she's irritating, but I kinda
like having her around." Dawn brushed the
suggestion aside. "Besides, if you kill her, she
just comes back."
Rolling her eyes, Kennedy resumed rowing. "Not
with the killing. The stopping. I think part of
the problem is that Buffy still has this image of
you, and she's having trouble shaking it. So what
we need to do is give her a new image. Show her
you can take care of yourself, and maybe she'll
let the leash slack a bit."
"Take care of myself?" Dawn repeated in an
interesting tone that clearly said she was liking
this idea already.
The Slayer nodded. "Yeah. You know, self-defense,
learn a few moves. I know you're not too bad with
a sword, but I'm thinking more hand-to-hand stuff,
since you can't really carry a sword around all
the time. Or, well, you can, but the long coats
get really hot in summer."
"You'd teach me?" The teenager's eyes were bright
and shining.
"Sure."
"Oh my god, that's so awesome!" enthused Dawn,
bouncing in place on the bed.
"Fills up more time in my day," Kennedy replied
off-handedly.
Realizing now that Kennedy's offer wasn't entirely
altruistic, Dawn's exuberance became more
subdued. "You know you really should talk to her,"
she encouraged gently.
"You know you really should let it go, or I become
Slayer-exclusive," was the counter.
Unwilling to lose this opportunity, Dawn grinned
and let the matter drop. "Deal."
Kennedy nodded, short and final, keeping her
rowing smooth and constant. "Okay then. Oh,
and ... don't tell Buffy. It'll make it that much
better when you can surprise her, right?
Smirking, the teenager added, "Plus she can't tell
us not to if she doesn't know."
"There's that," agreed Kennedy.
Dawn leaned forward excitedly. "Think you can
teach me how to do the pinch, like Xena?"
'Are you nuts?' was unspoken, but very clearly
implied. Kennedy decided to halt that little train
of thought before it started. "So some ground
rules ..."
"No aside comments. No sarcasm," cautioned Giles.
Buffy rolled her eyes.
"No rolling your eyes," he quickly added. "And
above all else, no questions about my shirt."
Standing in the center of the private training
room, the Watcher was wearing a pair of jogging
pants and a gray t-shirt which read "/(bb|[^b]
{2})/". The Slayer, also decked in workout gear,
leaned on the hilt of a large and heavy broadsword.
She tilted her head. "But what does it mean?"
"That would be a question," was the tart
response. "Now come on."
Hefting his sword with both hands, Giles launched
an attack. Buffy, balancing her weapon in one
fist, easily parried. She shuffled to one side, a
bemused smile on her face as she continued to
fixate upon the gray shirt bearing the mysterious
message.
"Slash, bracket, bee, bee," she read wrinkling her
nose. "Little line thingie, bracket—"
"You're still on about the shirt," accused the
Watcher.
"I'm reading," Buffy countered. "You didn't say no
reading, you said no questions. That wasn't a
question."
"Yes, all right," Giles conceded with an irritated
sigh.
"This is a question: Why are you wearing it?"
asked Buffy brightly.
Giles lowered his sword and then swiftly raised it
again as the Slayer charged. "Because my other
workout clothes are currently in need of
laundering, and I haven't yet taken the time."
Halting in mid-assault, Buffy regarded her Watcher
with extreme amusement. "Why Giles, are you
actually acting like a bachelor?"
"The moment I begin subsisting on inferior
American beers and tins of canned meat, then by
all means, point out whatever you like," snapped
an aggravated Giles. "Until then, keep your arm
straight and remember to watch my eyes." He thrust
forward but the Slayer simply dodged out of harm's
way and then cocked her head at the shirt's
enigmatic content.
"Why'd you even buy a shirt if you don't know what
it says?" she asked. "It could say anything. It
could say 'I'm a hunka hunka British-guy love'."
"I doubt that very much," came the sardonic reply.
The Slayer shrugged, "Me too, actually. Nothing
there looks like 'hunka'."
"And I didn't buy it. It was a gift," Giles
hastened to add.
Buffy was instantaneously intrigued. "A gift? Ooo,
from your estranged sweetie-honey? Maybe it does
say 'I'm a hunka—'"
"It does not, and no. Willow gave it to me. She
seemed to think it ... charming in some fashion,"
he protested firmly.
The Slayer pouted. "Willow, huh? I didn't get a
strange, indecipherable pressie for no good
reason. I'm jealous."
"I'd give you mine if you meant you'd pay more
attention to this lesson," stated Giles with
conviction. "Now stop just automatically blocking
my blows. It's very annoying."
Sighing the sigh of the supremely put-upon, Buffy
widened her eyes until they were mockingly large
and began to pay far too much obvious attention to
the Watcher's onslaught. To his chagrin, she
continued to block and counter-swing with an ease
that was somewhat eerie.
Several minutes of swinging and parrying continued
until Giles cleared his throat. "Buffy ..." he
began nervously.
The Slayer huffed. "What, now I can't even think
about the shirt?"
The Watcher peered through his glasses. "What? No.
Not that ... I have something to tell you."
Buffy slowed down the arc of her hefty sweeps
until the sword came to a stop. "Sounds serious."
"Hopefully not," intimated Giles, "but ... just in
case ..."
"Okay," the Slayer replied cautiously, trying to
make light of things but obviously fearing the
worse. "What is it? Are they changing my
conditioner formula?"
"It's the Hellmouth." He carefully rested his
sword against the wall and waited for a reaction.
"You mean Tri-Mouth," Buffy censured sharply.
Giles ran his fingers through his hair and then
crossed his arms. "No, I mean Hellmouth. The
Sunnydale Hellmouth." He frowned at himself,
trying to find the best way to explain
things. "Or, well, perhaps not the Hellmouth
itself, but- but Sunnydale."
Her eyes widening for a split second, Buffy rested
her sword next to Giles' weapon and crossed her
arms. "Okay, you've got my attention ..."
"I received a call from the Coven last night," the
Watcher explained. "Last month some time they
noticed a surge of mystical energies over the
Hellmouth. They've been trying since then to- to
somehow get a reading on- on what exactly is
happening."
"And ...?" queried a wary Buffy.
"Well, they can't really tell. The energies used
there were extraordinarily potent. Their seers
haven't been able to get a fix on anything
specific," Giles admitted regretfully.
"They can't just ..." The Slayer paused to flick
her fingers into the air. "... bamf on over and
check it out?"
A pensive expression crossed Giles'
face. "Unfortunately not. Again, the mystical
forces are far too disruptive. By the same token,
they can't risk sending anyone in a more
conventional sense to investigate. Not without
some idea of what could be happening there."
Buffy's voice became strained. "So what're we
talking ... Nasty tentacled beasties? Dimensional
barriers coming down? Hell on Earth? Cuz we've so
been there."
The Watcher reached out a consoling
hand. "Buffy ..."
She shrugged away the comforting gesture. "I
thought we were done with Sunnydale, Giles. The
Hellmouth is closed. Remember you telling me
that?" She struggled to summon a reasonable
facsimile of his accent. It was very poor. "'The
Hellmouth is closed'."
Despite the seriousness of the issue, the Watcher
couldn't help but flash an amused smile. "It is
closed. I'm certain of it," he reiterated. "I
don't know what this is, but it's not the
Hellmouth."
Buffy rubbed the back of neck, wincing at the
tension she found there. "I hope you're right, cuz
that thing's killed me twice already, and I'm not
anxious to give it a shot at best of three."
"It would be best of five, actually," the Watcher
corrected automatically, quickly dropping the
issue under Buffy's glare. "I understand. I just
thought you should know. I'll keep you and
everyone appraised of the Coven's findings. In the
meantime, please, don't let it worry you too much.
There's far too much here at home that needs your
attention."
The silence which ensued, as Buffy glared sulkily
at Giles and Giles attempted to smile reassuringly
at his Slayer, was broken by Xander bursting
through the door with a loud declaration
of "Buffy!"
Both Buffy and Giles turned toward him. Sensing
his urgency, the Slayer asked quickly, "What is
it?"
"It was just on the news. Last night," panted the
carpenter. "An attack. This kid – they found his
body in the park, near Holton Street." He paused
for a moment and grimaced as his complexion took
on a vaguely green tinge. "It was ... ugh. They
said he was mauled, some kind of wild animal."
"Animal attack," confirmed the Slayer. Spinning on
her heel, she faced Giles. "I knew you shouldn't
have said that thing about trouble here at home."
"I'm thinkin' maybe lions and tigers ...?"
pondered Xander.
"And wolves," added Buffy, her tone flat and angry.
Giles removed his glasses and began to polish them
with the hem of his shirt. "Oh, my."
"Oz," spat the Slayer. The name sounded almost
like a curse. Her eyes narrowed as she looked from
Giles to Xander. "I knew there were wolves here,
wolves they couldn't control." She shook her head
and balled her hands into fists. "And I didn't do
anything."
"Buffy, you couldn't have known," Giles told her
softly. "Oz assured you—"
The Slayer agreed, but her tone was cold and
harsh. "That's right. Oz assured me. Let's see how
assuring he can be now."
vXander and Giles stood motionless as Buffy
stormed out of the room.
"Wouldn't wanna be Mr. Stoicism right now,"
remarked the carpenter. The Watcher replaced his
glasses and shook his head in soundless but
absolute agreement.
"So," said Xander, his eye fixed firmly on Giles'
chest. "What's up with the shirt?"
Buffy rounded the corner of the Vortex, heading
toward the side lot where bands could park to
easily load and unload their equipment on stage.
Oz's van was parked just outside. The vehicle's
exterior paintwork was plastered with stickers of
all shapes, sizes, colors and designs – mementos
of the places he'd visited. A curtain of multi-
colored beads was suspended from the ceiling,
separating the back from the front. It was obvious
that the rear of the van had served as a lodging
for more than one night. There were rolled-up
sleeping bags stacked in a corner, together with a
few piles of assorted clothing scattered about the
floor and a box of various musical paraphernalia,
such as picks, extra guitar strings and a few
spare drumsticks.
What immediately drew Buffy's attention, however,
were the van's owner and his visitor. The side
door had been rolled back and Oz was perched at
the entrance, his legs dangling over the cement
below. Standing nearby, leaning against the
vehicle's side was Toby. The boy's head was
lowered with his eyes cast to the ground, and they
were talking in low voices.
At the Slayer's appearance, the conversation came
to an abrupt halt. A momentary flash of fear and
something else appeared in Toby's eyes. He looked
to Oz for guidance and the guitarist simply nodded
his head. It was all the encouragement Toby
needed, and he quickly jogged away, casting a
final glance at Buffy over his shoulder before he
rounded the corner out of sight.
"Buffy," called Oz to the figure that was rapidly
approaching. "Hey."
Buffy's eyes narrowed as she stared after
Toby. "We need to talk," she told Oz crisply.
"Okay," he easily agreed, giving her his complete
attention.
Buffy folded her arms across her chest. "Last
night. A boy was attacked." She scrutinized Oz's
face but although his eyes widened slightly, it
was otherwise as enigmatic as ever. "Killed," she
stated matter-of-factly. "The police think it was
some sort of wild animal attack, a bear or bobcat."
"A wolf," suggested Oz.
Buffy nodded her agreement. "I think so. Full moon
last night, and knowing what you can do—"
Oz held up his hand, effectively halting the
current flow. "I didn't do this. I wouldn't."
Rounding the corner of the Vortex, Jemma froze as
she saw Buffy and Oz deeply embroiled in their
exchange. Quickly, she ducked back out of sight
and pressed herself fully against the side of the
building. Her expression was apprehensive but she
strained to hear as much as the conversation as
possible without moving closer.
"I don't think it was you," Buffy continued. Her
tone had softened considerably. "But Oz, you've
got a whole pack of unknowns here. People you
yourself admit can't control what happens to them."
Oz remained stoic. "We restrain whoever needs it.
We don't let them just run around."
Buffy sighed. "I'm sure you don't let them,
but ... Did anyone get out last night? Get free?"
Pressing a tight fist to her mouth, Jemma inhaled
sharply. An expression of intense worry crept into
her eyes.
"No," maintained a confident Oz.
Buffy pressed further. "No one."
She frowned at Oz's negative shake of the head and
studied him intently. Her entire stance screamed
of disbelief, and she couldn't stop herself from
glancing again in the direction that Toby had
taken minutes before.
"You know I'll stop whoever's doing this," she
told him.
He paused, but only for a heartbeat. "I know."
The Slayer's face was stony in its
determination. "I will not let one more innocent
person die."
"You're the Slayer," conceded Oz. "Protecting the
innocent's what you do."
Behind the wall, Jemma bit her lip and wrung her
hands. Turning to leave, Buffy looked back over
her shoulder at Oz, but his expression was
unreadable.
Cautiously, Jemma peeked around the wall and then
darted back when she realized that Buffy would
very soon be heading in her direction. Flattening
herself against the bricks, she felt her way along
until she found the side door to the Vortex and
hopefully turned the handle. With a sigh of
relief, she crept inside just in time to avoid the
retreating Buffy.
Oz watched Buffy's departure with a thinly
disguised frown. Her stride was decisive, her
posture regulated and her spine straight. He
nodded thoughtfully to himself, seeming to
acknowledge the personal recognition of full
Slayer mode when he saw it. He blew out a deep
puff of repressed air as she disappeared around
the corner.
In the park, lines of bright yellow tape cordoned
off the vicinity around the bushes where the boy's
mutilated body had been found. Inside the
temporary barricade, detectives meticulously
scoured the area for evidence. Some distance away,
seated upon a swing in the children's playground,
Jemma watched the painstaking search for clues.
Her expression was despondent as she swung slowly
back-and-forth, the toes of her sneakers cutting
grooves in the sand. Lost in deep thought, she
failed to notice the shadow that approached from
the rear until a tall outline obliterated the pale
light of the sun.
"Eddie!" she gasped, looking up in astonishment as
the motion of the swing was abruptly halted by a
sharp tug on the chains.
Eddie towered over the frail girl and would have
easily done so even she hadn't been sitting down.
Well-built with broad shoulders and a powerful
upper body, Eddie was a little over six feet tall,
every square inch of which appeared to be solid
muscle. With more than a day's worth of five
o'clock shadow gracing his chin, his appearance
was disheveled and scruffy. He appeared to have
been on the road for some time.
"Hey baby doll," he whispered.
Jemma's eyes opened wide. "I ... I can't believe
you're here!" Her voice was laced with
apprehension, but she sported a brave smile.
"'Course I'm here," assured Eddie as though there
could never have been any doubt. "You an' the kid
get all bewitched and seduced by that band ...
runnin' off, leavin' me worried sick about you.
You think I was gonna leave you in the hands'a
those freaks?"
A flash of resentment invaded Jemma's eyes but she
quickly disguised it by looking down. "They're not
freaks," she replied softly.
"Baby doll," patronized Eddie with a condescending
smirk, "'course they're freaks. Goin' around,
actin' like they're normal people." Releasing his
grip on the chain, he knelt down and peered into
her face. The girl flinched involuntarily. "But
they're not normal people. Are they?" he asked
harshly.
Jemma twisted her hands in her lap. "They just-
Something happened to them. To Toby. It's not his
fault," she insisted quietly.
Eddie laughed, but the sound lacked any true
mirth. "I know that," he snorted. "I don't blame
Toby. I've looked after him since he got attacked,
haven't I? Haven't I been the only one that
understands? That can help him? Help you?"
Jemma sniffed and fought to suppress the
tears. "But he wasn't getting better."
Eddie ran his fingers through his dark wavy
hair. "There's no gettin' better from this," he
sneered. "There's only control. He doesn't have,
we have to have it for him."
Jemma voiced a meek protest. "But ... But Oz, he
says—"
The expression on Eddie's face grew ugly. He got
to his feet and jerked angrily upon the chains of
the swing. "'Oz'. That the one who made you run
away from me?"
"He didn't make me, I ..." responded the girl,
cowering beneath the looming presence.
Eddie's eyes narrowed. "What? You what?"
Jemma sat very still. "Nothing," she muttered
fearfully.
Blowing out a huge sigh, Eddie stroked the girl's
hair. The gesture wasn't particularly gentle,
being more possessive and domineering. Jemma
smothered the urge to instantly recoil from his
touch.
"Baby doll," said Eddie firmly, "you know I love
you. I've only ever loved you. An' because I love
you, I'm here to give you a choice."
He jutted his chin toward the crime scene and
forced her head to turn in the same direction. "I
know what happened here. An' you do too. Don't
you?" Not replying the girl struggled to look away
from the miserable sight.
Reluctantly, Eddie dropped his hand. "He can't be
allowed to run free. I can stop him from huntin'
an' killin', you know I can." He massaged the back
of her neck, his forceful fingers causing scarlet
welts to appear on the delicate skin.
Jemma swallowed nervously. "He's a good kid,
Eddie. He doesn't like what you do to him. He
doesn't deserve—"
Violently jerking the swing backward, Eddie
clenched his hands into tight fists and held them
close to his sides. The knuckles shone white and
the girl cringed. "Doesn't deserve!!" he
roared. "He's a freak. He's a monster! He's—"
From the vicinity of the crime scene, a couple of
the detectives looked over at the pair with
inquiring glances, their attention from the task
at hand broken by the disturbance.
Eddie returned the stares for a moment and then
relaxed his body. "The only one here who didn't
deserve what he got was that kid your brother
ripped to shreds." His tone was calm, but
nonetheless accusing. Jemma hung her head, guilt
shining from her eyes.
"I can give you until just before sundown, baby
doll," Eddie told her, low and menacing. "You meet
me here – you an' Toby – an' we'll go back and
never talk about this again."
Jemma's gazed at him, her expression unsure and
very confused. Her unwillingness to make such a
commitment was readily apparent. Eddie smiled, his
mouth crooked and cruel.
"If you don't ..." His voice trailed off but the
unspoken warning hung in the air. "You know what a
Slayer is?"
The girl blinked and regarded him with wide eyes.
"Slayer kills monsters. Monsters like your Toby,"
he confided. "Don't even bat an eye, just another
day on the job for a Slayer. Got Slayers in this
town, baby doll, an' believe me, they ain't so
much interested in reformin' murderers."
Stretching, Eddie straightened his shoulders and
made ready to leave. Jemma watched him with dread.
"Sundown," he reiterated, cracking his
knuckles. "Or I find me a Slayer. Toby's gotta be
stopped one way or the other. I know you won't let
him kill again."
Clinging desperately to the chains of the swing,
Jemma watched him stride away until he was
swallowed up by the elongated shadows cast by the
trees. Her glance traveled back to the policemen
within the bright yellow confines of plastic tape.
Her lips trembled and her quivering fingers flew
to her mouth in an effort to stem the sob rising
in her throat.
Her nose buried in a book on herb usage, it was a
wonder that Willow didn't collide with any one of
a number of obstacles in her path as she moved
through the halls of Slayer Central. Her ability
to walk and read was well honed, however, and she
deftly skirted aside Slayers, tables, and piles of
boxes lining the halls. When she reached her
Sanctum she pushed open the door, still not
bothering to look up from the volume in her hand.
She entered, reading all the while, and it was
only after she had closed the door behind her and
fully entered the room that Willow bothered to
tear herself away.
Immediately, she jumped, a startled gasp ripping
from her throat as her hand instinctively went up
to her rapidly beating heart. Kennedy was in the
room also, perched on a stool by one of the tables
lining the far wall. There was no way of knowing
how long the Slayer had been waiting, but from her
posture, it had been some time.
"Kenn...?" Willow questioned cautiously, setting
the herb book aside.
Kennedy regarded the witch with an intense
stare. "We need to talk."
"How've you been? Have you been good?"
The conversation had been relocated to outside.
Kennedy and Willow strolled through the huge open
field behind Slayer Central, walking together at a
casual, seemingly directionless pace. Willow was
swinging her arms nervously, while Kennedy had
simply shoved her hands as deep as possible into
the pockets of her leather jacket.
"Getting better," Kennedy replied coolly with a
shrug of her shoulders. "Taking a while, but
getting there."
"Good. That's good. Me too. Good, I mean. I've
been good too. And that's ... good."
Willow frowned at her apparent broken record, but
Kennedy grinned at the flustered
redhead. "Breathe, Will. We're okay."
An expression of pure hopefulness appeared on
Willow's face as she turned to the Slayer. "Yeah?"
Kennedy gave the question careful
consideration. "Yeah," she finally agreed with
sincerity.
Visibly relaxing, Willow let out a puff of air and
let her hands clap against her thighs in
relief. "Oh yay. Because I've missed you, you
know." The leer was obligatory and Kennedy's heart
wasn't really in it, but Willow chuckled
appreciatively at the gesture. "For more than
that. I miss you." She bumped her shoulder against
Kennedy's affectionately. "I actually miss having
to clean that icky sword polish stuff off the
carpet."
"I got some spare tubes if you want," the brunette
offered helpfully.
"That's okay, I don't miss it that much," Willow
hastened to assure her. "I miss how you never
really let me get too ... Willowy though, you
know? You're always first in line to give me that
swift boot in the you-know-where when I need it."
Kennedy regarded Willow seriously. "If you're
having second thoughts ..." There was just the
slightest wishful note in her voice.
But the witch shook her head sadly. "No. I'm not.
It was right, and we both know it was."
Sighing, Kennedy reluctantly agreed. "Yeah. But
hey, you can always rely on me to kick your ass,
day or night."
"Thanks," responded Willow with a smirk.
"Anytime."
The two continued to walk through the tall,
browning grass. Willow gnawed her lower lip for a
moment. "I–I've been ..." She trailed off and
fished around in her jeans pocket instead. Kennedy
watched curiously as the redhead produced a shiny
silver stone – the butterfly tear. She glanced at
it, then offered it to Kennedy.
The Slayer stared at her hand for a moment then
pushed it back toward Willow. "I gave that to
you," she stated.
"I know," agreed Willow. "That's why I'm, y'know,
giving it back."
"But I gave it to you," Kennedy repeated, as
though this were all the information needed. She
frowned at the witch. "Don't you want it anymore?"
Willow rapidly shook her head, anxious to dispel
any possible offense. "No, i–it's not that.
It's ... I know it's means a lot to you, and—"
"That's right. It means a lot. And I gave it to
you. So unless you totally hate me now or
something ..."
Her eyes wide at the mere suggestion, Willow
exclaimed, "No! Of course not!"
"Well okay then, so keep it." The brunette's tone
was final with no room for argument. "I wanted you
to remember that someone thinks you're special.
And someone still does." Her voice softened. "So
keep it, Will. Please."
Willow hesitated, and for just a second, it
appeared as though she was going to insist. But
then she instead slipped it back into her pocket
reverently, patting it securely for good measure.
As soon as the stone was safely tucked away again,
Kennedy spoke. "I've been doing a lot of thinking
lately." The Slayer laughed then, and it wasn't an
entirely bitter-free sound. "You know, cuz not a
whole lot else takin' up my nights."
Willow immediately looked down at her feet, at the
grass crushed beneath her shoes with every step.
Only Kennedy's gentle but demanding nudge brought
her gaze up again, to find the Slayer's reassuring
smile that let her know it was still okay.
Continuing, Kennedy declared, "I've come to some
conclusions." This peaked Willow's interest, and
she tilted her head to one side. The Slayer took a
deep breath – clearly whatever she was about to
say was far from easy. Finally, she found her
voice. "I pushed. I pushed you too hard, too fast."
The witch digested this information thoughtfully,
but said nothing.
"Which is entirely your fault," Kennedy added.
Willow gaped in disbelief, but Kennedy simply shot
her a look that said 'come on, you know it's
true'. "Those adorable big baby seal eyes," she
explained, gesturing to Willow's eyes which were,
undeniable, large at that moment. "How you're all
intense when you read. The way your forehead gets
that wrinkle when you don't understand." Grinning,
Kennedy studied Willow's features. "Like now."
Entirely flustered, Willow tried to force her face
into a different look, but her emotions were
simply too erratic and her face too expressive.
What she wound up with was a jumbled heap of
expressions, a Frankenstein's monster of emotion.
Kennedy laughed, finding the whole thing
tremendously endearing. "See what I mean? I was
supposed to resist all that?" She shook her head
at the ludicrous suggestion, like someone had
demanded she force her heart to stop beating. "I'm
only human."
Willow's blush spread from her hairline down her
neck and she ducked her head. "Kennedy ..."
"It's true," the Slayer shrugged, her observations
rock-solid fact in her mind. "And it's okay." She
sighed magnanimously, resting a hand on her chest
dramatically. "I forgive you."
Still rattled, Willow shook her head, trying to
sort out her thoughts. "I don't ... I don't know
why I couldn't ... Why we—"
"I do." Kennedy finally stopped walking, and
Willow halted as well. They turned to face each
other, neither paying any heed to their
surroundings. Willow's expressions had finally
calmed down and she was left with open searching,
a desire to hear Kennedy's explanation.
It was easily summed up in one word. "Tara."
Instinctively, Willow jerked back as though she'd
been shocked. "No. I–It's not—"
"It is. You're not over her." Willow shook her
head a little too emphatically, and Kennedy raised
a quizzical eyebrow. "You think I'm wrong? I
suppose it's possible, there's a first for
everything, right?" Her tone made it clear that
she felt she was on the opposite end of the globe
from 'wrong'. The Slayer crossed her arms and
looked at Willow, challenging. "So. Tell me right
now that you don't still love her more than you've
ever loved anything and it doesn't rip your heart
out every day that she's not here with you."
Willow didn't. She didn't even try. Instead, she
stared miserably at her feet, and Kennedy's hard
features softened. Willow glanced up again as
Kennedy rested a hand on her shoulder.
"It's okay, Will," the Slayer assured her. "You
never really got the chance to mourn. Part of
that's my fault, and I'm sorry. You have to let
her go before you can move on, and I get that now.
What you need is time." Kennedy dropped her hand,
letting it rest at her side. "So time's what
you'll get."
Speaking the words aloud seemed to infuse Kennedy
with conviction, and she straightened. Her eyes
flashed as though she faced a new challenge that
must be defeated, and the Slayer had every ounce
of confidence that she would do just that.
"I'm patient," announced Kennedy, before her lips
curled into a cocky smirk. "I mean, I'm not gonna
live a nun's life while I'm waiting, you know?
Life's too short."
Willow couldn't help but grin and roll her eyes at
that, but there was nothing reproachful in her
reaction to the proclamation.
Kennedy was on a roll now, and she continued. "But
one day, you'll actually be ready to start again."
Leaning in, Kennedy's face was mere centimeters
away from the redhead's. Her voice dropped to a
deep, husky timbre, full of promise. "I'll be
watching you, Rosenberg. And when that day comes,
you better believe I'll be asking for the first
dance."
To seal the vow, Kennedy closed the distance
entirely. Her lips captured Willow's in a move
that was possessive, yet soft and loving – a
reminder of what was waiting. She pulled back
after a lingering moment and smiled, charming and
certain. Spinning on her heel, Kennedy walked away
without a glance, leaving Willow simply standing
rooted to the spot, a bubbling cauldron of
emotions.
A moment passed, where she simply stared at the
place the Slayer had been, and then glanced around
to take in her surroundings for the first time.
Immediately, she recognized that Kennedy had led
her to the memorial site, and her eyes filled with
tears. None spilled, however.
Infused with magickal energies, the grass here was
green and lush, as though it were the first days
of spring instead of the onset of winter. Willow
settled herself down before the sapling and smiled.
"Hey," she began.
Wood made his way down the concourse of the busy
airport terminal, his black leather suitcase-on-
wheels trailing behind. Carefully skirting a woman
struggling with an overloaded Smarte Carte, he
made his way to the "Cloud Nine" coffee shop. The
café was packed and after much searching, he
finally spotted a hand waving above the crowd.
With murmurs of, "Excuse me," accompanied by a
charming smile of apology, Wood pressed through
the herd.
Upon his reaching the table, he stared pointedly
at the chair where Hannah was resting her feet.
With a grin, she swung her legs down and went back
to nibbling at her humongous poppy seed muffin.
Placing his cup of steaming tea on the saucer,
Giles rose and extended his hand. "How was the
flight?"
Wood sank into the now vacant seat with a heavy
sigh. "Bumpy, but I'm getting to the point where I
don't even notice it any more. You know, I think I
have enough frequent flier miles to take a trip
anywhere in the world now. Pity all I want to do
is curl up in my own bed and sleep for the next
week." He treated Giles to a sharp and wary
glance. "I will get to just sleep in my own bed
for the next week, right?"
Giles and Hannah shared a knowing
look. "Possibly," muttered Giles. Then, changing
the subject asked, "Can I get you anything?" He
gestured toward the counter, his smile overly
bright.
Wood shook his head before groaning, "It's so nice
to be home. Okay, so what's up?"
"First, why don't you tell us what you found out,"
suggested Giles as Hannah skimmed a spoonful of
whipped cream from the top of her hot chocolate.
"Mmmmm," she murmured ecstatically with eyes
closed, licking the spoon front and back. She cast
a sideways glance at her ex-husband who rubbed his
forehead wearily.
"That good, huh?" queried Wood.
"This or ..." began Hannah then, taking note of
Giles' heavy sigh and apologetic nod to Wood,
continued, "Okay, okay. It's quite ... striking
news."
"Well mine's not much better," announced Wood. "I
checked all over the storage locations you gave
me, and there's nothing. No trace of anything that
might've been misplaced by our guys. Also, no
evidence of any theft. Whatever was taken, it
looks like it was an inside job. The inventory log
copies clearly show the items being placed in
those safe house locations. Knowing how meticulous
the old Council records were, I think we can
assume it wasn't a data entry mistake and the
items disappeared sometime between being placed
there and our removal."
Giles pondered the information for a moment. "That
still gives us a fairly large window of
opportunity ... Twenty, thirty years?"
"Twenty-six, yeah," confirmed Wood.
"I don't suppose the Council could've just cleaned
up any evidence?" queried Hannah and then
dismissed the statement with a wave of her
spoon. "But there still would've been records of
the items being stolen. So they never knew," she
added thoughtfully, handing Giles a napkin. He
glanced down at the dollop of whipped cream that
had been flung onto the lapel of his jacket and
scrubbed at it fiercely.
"It certainly seems that way." Giles grimaced as
the stain ingrained itself more firmly into the
fabric. He forlornly tossed the napkin onto the
empty plate in front of him. "Could you find any
indication of what exactly was stolen?" he asked
of Wood.
"Aside from what's listed in the log? Not a thing.
Not there, anyway. If these are big-time
artifacts, they're probably mentioned in several
places."
Hannah cocked her head at Giles. "It would be a
good idea to know exactly what was stolen."
He agreed with a pained expression. "I'll get some
people working on that. Could take some time ... I
have rather a lot of books."
Hannah leaned across the table to
Wood. "Understatement of the year," she whispered,
bringing her hand up to her lips in a secretive
motion. Wood nodded vehemently as though she had
just taken the words right out of his mouth. He
turned and smiled encouragingly at Giles who was
doing his best not to appear curious at the
obvious conspiracy.
"Moving on," said Wood with a conviction that
vetoed any possible questioning, "while I was over
there I ran through the list of new Slayers you
gave me."
Immediately, Giles' demeanor perked-up. "Oh, yes?
How many were you able to recruit?"
"None," came the curt reply.
"No one?" inquired Hannah incredulously. She
adopted a woebegone expression. "I suddenly feel
tremendously unpopular." She grinned, first and
Wood and then at Giles.
"Well, I– What–," stammered Giles. "What did they
say?"
"Nothing." Wood rocked in his chair. "That was
part of the problem. I couldn't find them."
Giles frowned and leaned across the table, his
left elbow landing squarely in a puddle of spilled
tea. Hannah handed him another napkin. "The
addresses were wrong?" he asked anxiously, absent-
mindedly wadding up the serviette without using it
and placing it neatly on the plate, next to the
first. Hannah rolled her eyes and gazed up at the
ceiling.
"The girls weren't there," stated Wood matter-of-
factly.
Hannah was instantly all business. "Where'd they
go?"
"That appeared to be a question a great many
parents and not a few policemen would like the
answer to," Wood told her.
"You're saying they vanished?" Giles' tone was
riddled with puzzlement and no little concern.
"Without a trace," Woof verified.
Hannah's eyes narrowed. "Is this like before?"
Wood linked his hands behind his head and rocked
back and forth some more. "Before, we had evidence
of at least half the girls having spoken to
someone trying to recruit them before they
disappeared. Someone besides us, that is. But this
time, nothing. One minute they're going to their
room, walking to a friend's house, leaving for
school ... and then nobody hears from them again."
Hannah mulled this over for a brief second. "So
either whoever's behind this is getting better ..."
"... or they've stopped bothering to talk first,"
finished Giles.
Wood massaged the nape of his neck. "Nice and
ominous, huh? So that's me out. What's your good
news?" He peered at Giles inquisitively and then
tapped him on the arm when no response appeared to
be forthcoming.
Giles started slightly as he emerged from his
reveries. "Hm? Oh. Oh, yes. Erm ... Do you
remember Sunnydale ...?"
Wood allowed the legs of his chair to hit the
floor with a thud. A look of surprise invaded his
face. Breaking off a piece of muffin, Hannah
popped it into her mouth and lifted her eyebrows.
She didn't have to say anything. The 'how about
that?' expression said it all.
Faith had laid possession to the big comfy couch
in the rec room. As with before, it was empty,
save for Faith and another Slayer, a Junior, who
had entered with a book in her hand. She smiled at
Faith and went to sit on the opposite end of the
couch, then suddenly seemed to feel a cold, icy
stare boring into her. Glancing up again, she
realized such was indeed happening. Quickly, the
Junior claimed a nearby chair instead, and
proceeded to bury herself in the book, casing
occasional sidelong glances to see if Faith had
stopped glowering yet.
Moments later, Hazel quickly entered the
room. "I'm here! I'm here!" she announced
unnecessarily.
"You're late," pointed out Faith with a grumble.
Hazel came to a halt before Faith, her hands
behind her back. "I know, but I had to stop off
for something."
The older Slayer glanced up hopefully. "Beer?"
"Underage?" Hazel reminded, indicating herself.
"Oh. Oh yeah. Keep forgettin' those booze-buying
laws."
With a smirk and an eye roll, Hazel returned to
bouncing up and down on the balls of her feet,
only barely containing her excitement. "Not beer.
Better than beer." Faith raised a skeptical brow
at that one, but Hazel ignored it. "Nemo!!"
With a flourish, Hazel produced the DVD from
behind her back and presented it to Faith proudly.
She wiggled the case slightly, trying to urge the
other woman to take it.
Faith could only stare. "This is better?" she
questioned dubiously.
"This," Hazel declared with authority, "is
awesome."
Not waiting for the inevitable derisive retort,
Hazel spun around and bounced to the DVD player.
The Junior sitting in the chair nearby happily
lowered her book. "I love this movie!" she
exclaimed.
Hazel glanced over her shoulder from where she was
kneeling. "Isn't it great? Those seagulls just
crack me up!"
"Oh, and the sharks?"
They both started giggling at the shared memories.
Faith looked on, thoroughly disenchanted. "I'm
pretty sure I said get a fighting movie," she
groused.
Settling herself comfortably on the couch Hazel
picked up the remote control and pressed
play. "Well this ... is a fighting movie," she
responded. Faith continued to stare at her
flatly. "Okay, I'm lying. But it has conflict.
And ... surfing turtles! And a tidy little moral
at the end."
She capped off her summary with a bright, sunny
smile. Faith was not impressed.
"It's about fish," the older Slayer underlined.
Seeing that reason was getting her nowhere, Hazel
waved her hand at Faith as the movie
began. "Fiver, just be quiet and watch," she
commanded.
Grumbling, Faith did so, but her shuffling of
positions on the couch made it clear she was doing
so under protest. Hazel and the Junior Slayer, by
contrast, were immediately, completely engrossed.
Several minutes passed and just as Nemo was
getting ready for his first day at school, Buffy
rushed into the room with a cry of, "Faith!"
Instantly, Faith's head jerked up. "I wasn't
watchin' this," she stated defensively.
"Fine, sure, whatever." Buffy didn't even bother
to look at the screen. "Look, I need you to grab
some silver weapons and get ready for my call."
Faith tilted her head to one side, curious. "We're
going wolf hunting."
The dark Slayer sprung to her feet, an eager grin
on her face. "Aw, sweet! Never tangled with no
werewolf before."
"I'd like to say you won't get to tonight either,
but I've got a bad feeling." Buffy checked her
watch with a concerned frown. "We've got about
half an hour to sundown. Can you make it?"
"I can make it."
With a nod, Buffy ran out of the room as Faith
turned to Hazel. "Sorry Haze. Catch your fish next
time."
Turning and sprinting for the exit, Faith leapt
effortlessly over the air hockey table in her way
and was gone. With an unmistakable pout on her
face, Hazel watched the older Slayer leave.
"Heh," the Junior chuckled, eyes still riveted to
the screen. "Lucky fin."
Outside the Vortex, Oz sat in his parked van and
strummed on his guitar. The melody was vague and
wandering but then Oz, his face a study in deep
thoughts, wasn't particularly concentrating on the
music. He looked up quickly as Jemma rounded the
corner and set his instrument to one side. She
hurried toward him and he glanced into the sky,
where the sun was glowing orange as it sank below
the horizon.
"Oz!" she called as she came closer.
Oz nodded. "Jemma."
"Oz," she began. "I– I need– Toby—"
"I know." he told her softly. Noting the hopeful
expression, he looked away briefly and then turned
back " About that ... I think you should leave."
"What? Leave?" Her tone was shocked and she shrank
a little as though she had been suddenly injured.
"Yeah," he said regretfully.
"But, but..." she stammered, "... leave? Why?"
"He's killed," said Oz, although the words were
far from accusatory. "And they know." His eyes
drifted to the side, as though expecting someone
to already be there. "Or they will soon."
Distraught and fearful, Jemma twisted her hands.
Apparently, this was not what she had been hoping
to hear.
"They're counting on me," continued Oz. "The
others. To keep them safe. I covered for Toby
once, but when they find him – and they will find
him – if he's with us, they'll take us all down."
He swallowed hard as though the statement had
become stuck in his throat.
Stricken, Jemma rubbed her upper arms as her gaze
darted from Oz to the area surrounding the street.
Her lips quivered and she looked like a lost and
frightened child who could find nowhere to hide.
Oz sighed regretfully and shook his head. Jemma
stared into his eyes and blinked at the reflected
pain.
"But he didn't mean to," she insisted
desperately. "He doesn't want to be like this."
"No one does," replied a sorrowful Oz.
Jemma sniffed and tried to stifle the
tears. "What'll happen to him?" she asked in a
small voice.
Oz sighed again. "I don't know."
Reaching out, he took her hand and held it
tenderly in his own. Jemma's body was racked with
soundless sobs as she fought to quell the rising
panic and gain control. In a gallant gesture, Oz
brought the trembling hand to his lips and kissed
it.
"Is there somewhere you can go?" he asked gently.
She bit her lip and nodded.
Releasing her hand, Oz looked up at the sun. "You
should go now."
With beseeching eyes, Jemma peered into Oz's face,
her expression conveying a wish to do anything
else in the world but leave at this point in time.
Downcast, he remained sad but stoic. His finger
traced the outline of her cheek and she slowly
backed away. Swiping at her tears, she looked at
Oz one more time before she turned and took off
like a startled rabbit.
Oz let out a rueful puff of air as he watched her
retreat, then his gaze darted swiftly toward the
boundary of trees growing nearby. A worried frown
creased his forehead as a shadowy figure sprinted
after the girl with a determined stride.
In the private training room, Kennedy had
commandeered a large section of the available
space. Dressed in workout clothes, with her dark
hair fastened securely away from her face, she was
in the throes of executing a series of extremely
intricate and precise martial arts moves.
Concentrating solely on the image reflecting back
from the mirrors which lined one wall, the Slayer
only barely acknowledged Hannah's entrance until
the woman greeted her with a friendly, "Evening."
Similarly dressed, Giles' ex-wife smiled at
Kennedy and was treated only to a very terse nod.
Refusing to break her form, the Slayer continued
to work on her exercises – executing a sequence of
lightning fast jabs in the air and elbow strikes.
Her actions were measured and exact and she moved
with the elegance of a lithe panther. Still
watching the younger woman closely and with much
interest, Hannah settled down at a nearby machine
and, after adjusting the weights, began her own
workout.
As her performance came to a close, Kennedy
brought her hands together and bowed crisply at
her own reflection.
"I'm impressed," observed Hannah with
admiration. "Kusanku kata."
Kennedy grabbed a small towel from the mat on the
floor and mopped at the glistening perspiration on
her face before hooking it over her shoulders. She
turned to face the older blonde.
"Hey. Good call." Her expression registered
surprise and even a little heartfelt admiration of
her own at Hannah's statement.
Hannah grinned and pulled down on the bar grasped
between her hands. The heavy weights at the rear
of the machine glided effortlessly upward. "Made
for nighttime fighting," she remarked, repeating
the action. "Good choice."
"Thanks," acknowledged Kennedy. "You, uh ... You
know karate, huh?"
The blonde smirked but there was truly no trace of
smugness. "Among other things," she admitted
casually.
Kennedy nodded and appeared to remain suitably
impressed as Hannah continued to work the weights
throughout the conversation without breaking a
sweat. Tossing down the hand towel, the Slayer
turned back to the mirror and began her routine
from the beginning. The blonde moved to the
stationary rowing equipment and pulled on the oars
as though she were stroke for the Oxford Blue
Boat. She watched Kennedy more appraisingly this
time.
"Very good," she confirmed as the brunette
executed a second neat bow toward her
reflection. "Your form is excellent," she
added. "You want to watch yourself at the
beginning of series six, though. You should step
back, in case of attack. You don't bother, you
just progress to the next move."
Kennedy cockily dismissed the advice. "Don't think
I need to worry too much by that point. I doubt
anything's lasting that long."
Hannah dropped the oars and shrugged. "No, quite
possibly not ... but anything that does is
probably planning on a counterattack right about
then." She tilted her head to one side. "Wouldn't
you say?"
Kennedy considered the question. "You have a
point," she conceded grudgingly.
Hannah grinned. "In addition, when you step back,
it allows you room to move forward for the next
swing, giving you a momentum you can't gain
otherwise."
Kennedy quirked an eyebrow. "You're pretty sharp."
Hannah chuckled and retrieved the oars. "In-
out ... in-out ... " she muttered under her breath.
Kennedy squatted on the floor next to the
machine. "Don't suppose you'd like to replace a
skinny little repressed Englishman as my Watcher,
would you?"
"You still have a Watcher?" asked the blonde in
astonishment.
Kennedy stomped over to an exercise bike. "Believe
it or don't," she stated grumpily, swinging
herself into the seat.
Hannah tutted. "That just seems an absurd waste of
resources to me. I'll talk to Rupert, see what we
can possibly do about that."
Kennedy's face brightened. "That'd be cool.
Thanks," she offered.
Hannah shrugged. "My pleasure."
The bike rocked precariously as Kennedy's legs
pumped furiously at the pedals. "So what other
surprises you got?"
"Well if I told you, they'd hardly be surprises,
now would they?" chuckled the blonde.
"Oh come on," the Slayer urged. "Some little
tidbit. The rumor mill's already churning out
reports faster'n I can keep up 'em, and believe
me – you can't possibly say anything more shocking
than some of the stuff I've already heard."
Hannah threw back her head and laughed. It was an
infectious sound and Kennedy found herself joining
in. "All right. Something interesting," she
pondered. "Let's see ... I made it to the casting
semi-finals of the original 'Survivor'."
"Get out," accused the Slayer. "Seriously?"
"Believe it or don't," replied the blonde with a
mock display of petulance as her rowing slowed and
then stopped. She winked and Kennedy's face broke
into a wide grin.
"What happened?" asked the excited Slayer,
reducing her speed to something slightly less
break-neck. "Lemme guess, you got beat out by Sue
Hawk."
"Oh, please," scoffed Hannah with a wave of her
hand. She looked into Kennedy's eager face,
obviously anxious to know the full story, and
smiled. "Not entirely. I removed myself from the
competition when I realized, much to my disgust,
that nobody would actually be surviving anything."
"Just between you and me?" confided the Slayer. "I
watch every week in the hopes that someone, some
time, will actually have to do something.
"Well they do run an awful lot," Hannah pointed
out with a grin.
Her breath coming in short gasps, Jemma raced
toward the park. The sun had almost disappeared
beneath the horizon and the pale moon was
beginning to dominate the darkening sky. The
temperature had abruptly dropped several degrees
but she barely noticed, Oz's words still ringing
in her ears. Upon reaching the entrance, she
paused hesitantly for a moment then, with a tiny
sob of desperation, increased her stride once
more. She soon arrived at a secluded area,
obviously some type of nature trail. She glanced
fearfully toward the dense thicket of trees at her
right, unsure whether she should go any further.
Panting and with perspiration trickling down her
forehead, Jemma nervously scanned her surroundings.
"Almost didn't make it," commented Eddie emerging
from the shadows. Ignoring the cold, he wore no
jacket, only an old t-shirt, its design long since
faded, and a pair of oil-stained jeans. His dark
curls had been slicked down and combed away from
his face. A rifle was slung over one broad
shoulder and there was a handgun tucked neatly
into a holster over the other. A large hunting
knife was safely encased in a sheath attached to
his belt. In his left hand, he carried a sturdy
chain that he swung back-and-forth with ease
despite its apparent weight.
"Thought you were gonna make me do somethin' I
really didn't wanna do," he told Jemma gruffly
with a sneer.
The girl said nothing, but her eyes widened as
Eddie tossed the length of chain carelessly onto
the dirt path and moved closer. He nodded
emphatically. "You made the right choice."
"Did I?" whispered Jemma.
"'Course," insisted Eddie with a grin, not
altogether pleasant. "You're savin' the pup.
S'what you really want, right? Not like you'd come
back for me ..."
He stretched out a hand toward her cheek but she
flinched and took an involuntary step backward.
Gritting his teeth, Eddie's fingers balled quickly
into a tight fist, but he seemed to be fighting
the urge to lash out and instead, crouched down to
retrieve the chain.
"That's alright," he told her with forced
calm. "You came back. All that matters."
Hefting the rifle from behind his back, he checked
to make sure it was loaded.
"Where's your brother?" he asked, voice clipped
and eyes narrowed.
"Don't hurt him!" cried Jemma in alarm.
Eddie chuckled. "Relax baby doll, it's a tranq
gun." He patted the holster. "The silver bullets
are in this one. Now where is he?"
"I– He's still with the others. The group.
They ... have him locked away. For safety."
"Yeah, and we see what kinda job their portable
cages did last night, didn't we?" he sneered, his
expression ugly.
A puzzled frown crossed Jemma's face. "How did you
know—"
Eddie swiftly dismissed the potential
question. "Prob'ly gonna wake him up early
tomorrow and make him sing 'Kumbaya' or some other
crap," he stated with scorn. "An' that's what it
is, y'know? See, I got this wolf thing all figured
out. It's not about chants and herbs and moons.
It's about power and control. Your brother, he's
weak, see? He don't got the control."
"And you like control. Don'tcha Eddie?"
Eddie spun to face the intruder, momentarily
startled when he realized that he and Jemma were
no longer alone. Buffy stepped confidently into
the moonlight and Eddie took careful measure of
the rifle she carried over her shoulder. With a
sharp intake of breath, a fearful Jemma stumbled
backward.
Eddie snorted. "Slayer, huh?"
"The Alpha," agreed Buffy. "Which, considering the
circumstances, takes on an entirely new level of
irony, don't you think?"
Slowly, Eddie took stock of the blonde from head-
to-toe. Obviously unimpressed with what he saw, he
grinned. "You're just a little girl."
"Yes, and you're just a big dumb guy with some
serious issues," replied Buffy. "I mean look at
that gun!" She waved a hand toward the bulky
holster and blew out a puff of air. Overcompensate
much?" she asked innocently.
"Look Slayer, I don't got a problem with you,"
snarled Eddie. "We're just gonna collect her kid
brother an' then get outta here."
"Right," responded Buffy, inclining her
head. "See, that's where I'm kinda having trouble.
I don't make it a habit to let murderous creatures
get away." She paused for a second before adding
an apparent afterthought. "As a general rule."
Jemma's eyes were wide as she cautiously took a
step forward. "Please! Miss Slayer!," she
begged. "Toby didn't mean to! I know it was wrong,
and I know he feels so bad about what happened,
but it's not his fault! Please, just let us go,
you'll never hear from us again! Please!"
Buffy glanced at the girl. "Toby? This is nothing
to do with Toby. His talking to Dawn aside, he
seems like a nice, normal, occasionally furry guy.
I'm talking about him." Her finger jabbed
accusingly at Eddie.
His laugh was laced with contempt. "What?"
Jemma stared at Eddie before turning back to the
Slayer. "But ... but they said the body was torn
apart. An animal."
A small frown creased Buffy's forehead and she
wrinkled her nose. "Huh. So they did. Wonder what
that could mean?" She fixed her gaze knowingly
upon Eddie.
"You're nuts," he scoffed as his upper lip curled
menacingly.
Buffy was inclined to disagree. "Nope, pretty sane
really. Oh, don't get me wrong, it's was a decent
enough plan, as really stupid plans go. Kill
someone and frame Toby for it. Then scare poor
Jemma into thinking you're the only choice she's
got left and she comes running back to you."
Eddie tightened his grip on the chain, veins
standing out starkly against the back of his hands.
The Slayer smiled. "Boy, it must've just killed
you when she ran away, didn't it? After all the
work you'd done to make sure she could never leave
you."
Jemma ran her fingers through her hair and looked
around in confusion. "I don't understand."
Buffy crossed her arms and maintained a wary eye
on Eddie. "Mr. Control Freak here, he's had the
hots for you for a while now, huh? Before Toby's
little 'accident'?"
"We were together," the girl admitted in a
whisper, hanging her head. " He ... I had to break
it off."
Eddie whipped the chain into the dirt. "You left
me," he growled.
Buffy nodded in an all-knowing fashion. "Uh-huh.
And I'm willing to bet that just after you found
out about Toby, he came to you, right? Said he
knew, that he could help you? Didn't the timing
ever seem a little ... I dunno, too convenient to
you?"
A light of awareness began to dawn in Jemma's
eyes. She turned to Eddie. "You told me you'd seen
him change."
Eddie discounted the thinly veiled
accusation. "And I did! Look, haven't I kept you
safe? Both of you? You belong to me, Jemma." With
a swift lunge, he roughly seized the girl's wrist.
"Let her go!" commanded a low voice as Oz
materialized from the darkness.
Eddie roared with laughter. "Oh, look at you," he
sneered before pulling Jemma closer. Releasing her
wrist to grab her neck, he forced the girl to look
in Oz's direction. "Isn't he just adorable?" he
asked, the tone dripping with sarcasm. "I can see
why you left me for him!"
Viciously yanking her off the ground, Eddie shook
Jemma as though she were a rag doll. She choked
and kicked her legs before landing with a
sickening thud as Eddie threw her behind him.
Crouching, Oz moved forward with a muted growl but
Buffy cautioned him back with a wave of her hand.
"You like that, huh?" she asked, her tone
dangerously soft. "Picking on someone small and
defenseless. I'm guessing that when you bit Toby,
it wasn't even just about controlling Jemma, was
it? You liked it."
Gasping, Jemma raised herself on one elbow and
gaped at Eddie, her expression one of utter
astonishment. "You?," she labored, still fighting
for breath. "But ... but he's not—"
"He is," confirmed Oz, body still taut and poised
ready to strike . "I can tell."
"He's got his wolf suppression mode on, but it was
him, Jemma," the Slayer told the girl.
Oz relaxed a little, but continued to remain
prepared for action if necessary. "Toby told me.
This morning. He thought that Eddie let him out
last night. He told me everything."
Buffy nodded in confirmation. "Turns out that
Eddie here had something over Toby, too. If he
told you what was really going on, Eddie
threatened to turn you, too."
Jemma's hand flew to her mouth as she made dry,
retching sounds. "Oh my god." Her blue eyes
spilled with tears. "Oz ..." she pleaded.
"Dont you talk to him!" raged Eddie, furiously
lashing the chain around a nearby branch and
letting it hang. "I'm here. I'm right here. I've
always been here for you. And you don't care, do
you? You've never cared!"
Jemma clutched at her stomach., cheeks wet and
streaked with dirt. "I cared Eddie. I just can't
be with you."
"Ungrateful bitch!" he thundered with a powerful
backhand that sent her sprawling once again. A
thin trickle of blood oozed from her split lip.
With amazing agility and speed, Oz launched his
attack, surprising the much larger man with a
solid punch that landed directly in the solar
plexus. Unfortunately, it was a brief advantage.
Quickly recovering, Eddie threw an uppercut which
caught Oz squarely on the chin, sending him
slamming into a tree. Momentarily stunned, he sank
to the ground.
"Oz!" cried Jemma as she scrambled frantically to
his side. She cradled his head in her lap and
gently stroked his face.
Overcome with fury, Eddie raised his head to the
moon and howled. His clothes began to rip and
shred as his body transformed. The straps holding
his weapons snapped as his torso grew larger and
shaggy fur became visible. The elongated mouth
opened to reveal teeth, razor-like and deadly. He
extended his hands, now sporting cruelly hooked
claws. Dropping to all fours, jade eyes glimmered
maliciously as the massive wolf surveyed his
surroundings, looking first at Oz and Jemma before
focusing on the Slayer. He howled again at the
moon and wavered, as if trying to determine his
first target of choice.
"Okay, seen enough. Naptime for you, big doggy,"
remarked Buffy with a flat tone as she raised the
barrel of her tranquilizer gun. Seeming to have
made his decision, or perhaps had it made for him,
the wolf now directed his full attention to the
Slayer instead of the other two. He growled a low
and somewhat apprehensive warning, almost as
though part of him recognized the weapon she was
holding.
"Sorry," she apologized wryly, "but puppy dog eyes
never did work on me."
Without hesitation, she pulled the trigger. The
dart traveled swiftly toward the wolf's
hindquarters, which would have caused him to
promptly collapse in an unconscious stupor, had
Eddie not leapt clear at the last moment. With a
thunk, the dart imbedded itself into the bark of a
nearby tree.
The Slayer puffed. "Really gotta talk to Giles
about more training time with these things," she
grumbled.
Before she had the opportunity to reload, the
werewolf charged, and she resorted to using the
long-barreled gun as a makeshift club. Turning
wolf hadn't made Eddie any smaller, and he was a
huge target. It was easy for her to catch him in
the face and torso with the butt of the weapon,
and this seemed to give him pause, but only for
the first few hits, afterwards only serving to
anger him. In wolf form, both hands and mouth were
all rapid and lethal, and it only took a few
seconds for Buffy to realize that useful as the
range of the club might be, it was too slow to
deal with assaults from all those fronts.
She tossed the weapon aside and started in with
the good old hand-to-hand which, while no more
effective at harming him, allowed her to use all
her limbs in the fight. The constantly snapping
jaws made landing any blows to the face difficult,
and Buffy had connected three solid hits in the
chest with no effect when he managed to get a claw
on her shoulder, ripping her shirt and drawing
blood. Turning to the side to favor the arm, she
tilted and brought up one leg into his midsection –
a straight kick that knocked him back a few feet
despite his size. The Slayer took a look at her
arm, and Eddie paused, nose quivering as he
sniffed the air in her direction.
"Fine," said Buffy with a wince. "Plan C."
Almost on cue, he charged again. She braced for
the attack and made to grab him by the wrists and
start grappling, wrestling with the beast to force
it into a position where she would have useful
leverage. The match-up was difficult—although she
was stronger, he had more mass and a pair of
sharp, slavering jaws that snapped at her any time
she started to get the upper hand. When Buffy
tried to spread his arms apart, he went after her
face, and when she tried to force them together,
he nearly bit her arms. To make matters worse,
Eddie showed no signs of slowing down. She wasn't
going to be able to wear him out anytime soon.
Buffy stole a moment to look back at the other
two. For all intents and purposes, Oz still
appeared to be out of it. Jemma was next to him,
eyes riveted on Buffy and the wolf, staring with a
sort of horror at what her former boyfriend had
become and what he was doing. The Slayer looked
back just in time to dodge a vicious chomp. She
swerved her head and avoided having most of it
ripped off, but he had also pushed forward with
all his weight, causing Buffy to lose her balance,
and the two of them fell to the ground, Buffy
landing on her back.
The wolf, sensing weakness, renewed his efforts to
tear out her throat, face and anything else he
could get his teeth on. She had managed to hold
firm the paws in her hands, and resorted to
bringing a knee up into Eddie's stomach, but it
had no visible impact.
"Get out of here!" she yelled at the other two.
Using the ground as a brace against her back, she
began to push up, forcing the wolf off of her.
Before she got far with this, however, he thrashed
about, and the shift of a couple hundred pounds
weight brought him back down again, even closer
than before. Eddie reared back for a full-force
bite, and lunged forward at the Slayer's
vulnerable throat.
Suddenly, just as Buffy felt the hot wolf breath
on her neck, the sound of a single gunshot rang
through the air. With a yelp of pain, the creature
slumped unmoving to the side. Looking over, the
Slayer saw Jemma standing like a statue, Eddie's
silver bullet-loaded gun, still smoking, braced
rigidly in front of her. Almost in slow motion,
she allowed it to drop from her hands. The vacant
gaze of her eyes barely registered Buffy and Oz as
they approached. Then, hot tears began to well.
Opening his arms, Oz enveloped her in a close
embrace and she clung to him like a small child.
He smoothed her hair and whispered to her
comfortingly as Buffy stared down at the body. No
longer wolf-like in appearance, Eddie had returned
in death to his human shape.
With a great show of readiness, Faith burst into
the clearing armed to the teeth with suitable
weapons – several daggers sporting silver blades
and a crossbow complete with specially made
arrows. Planting her feet firmly upon the ground
and with a huge grin, she was very the image of
delighted anticipation and sheer excitement. She
looked around expectantly and then her face began
to fall when she found nothing of particular
interest taking place. She noted the weeping Jemma
enveloped in Oz's arms and then spotted Buffy.
"Where's the wolf?" she demanded in hushed tones.
Buffy said nothing, simply pointing to the
deceased Eddie. Faith threw up her hands in
disappointment.
"Dammit!" she spat, "I always miss the good
fights!"
Buffy shrugged. "Maybe next time."
"Yeah?," queried the Dark Slayer regretfully. She
spared a glance in Oz's direction. "Think he's got
any more big bad wolves need takin' out?"
Buffy regarded Jemma and Oz with a smile before
shaking her head. "Nope," she stated with
conviction, treating Faith to a consoling pat on
the shoulder. "I don't think we'll be hearing any
more huffing and puffing for a while."
The night crowd had swarmed in and taken over the
Vortex. The floor was packed with bodies dancing
to the musical selections of the DJ on stage. In
the center of the action, Faith moved to the
energetic beat, orbiting around Wood who was
managing admirably to keep up with her. Not far
away, Kennedy had found herself a tall, curvy
blonde and they were each obviously enjoying both
the music and the other's attentions.
The tables were also filled nearly to capacity and
waitresses ducked around in their ceaseless
circuits to the bar and back again to fill orders.
Oz and Willow had staked a table in good location
to the stage, while nearby Buffy, Xander and a
very dejected Dawn were embroiled in conversation.
Two tables away from Willow and Oz sat Jemma, an
untouched drink in front of her and a vacant,
stunned look lingering on her face.
"I can't believe you lied to her," Willow said in
a vaguely admonishing tone. She fished the olive
out of her martini and popped it in her mouth,
shaking her head at the werewolf.
"Didn't want to, but it was sort of a necessity."
Oz's tone was level, as usual, but there were
traces of regret just beneath the surface. "She
had to believe she was really going back to him.
He would've been able to smell if she wasn't
telling the truth. He might've attacked her, or
just run off."
Willow was sipping her drink when she heard that
and choked a little, quickly setting the glass
back on the table. "You can smell emotion?" she
marveled, obviously never having heard that tidbit
of information before.
"Yeah," he replied as though she'd just pointed
out his hair was spiky.
"That's ..." she quirked her eyebrow at him,
filing the information away as she searched for
the right words. "... really freaky," the redhead
finally summed up.
Without registering a change in facial expression,
Oz responded, "Absolutely."
Mulling over this new insight, Willow leaned
forward a little conspiratorially. "So what's a
lie smell like?"
"Sort of buttery."
Dawn sat between Buffy and Xander, blowing bubbles
dejectedly into her soda. Her cheek didn't so much
rest on her hand as her hand had somehow managed
to sink into the flesh and possibly meld with it.
Xander patted her comfortingly on the
shoulder. "There there. Someday your prince will
come."
Nodding enthusiastically, Buffy cheerfully
added, "And he will be sweet and polite and of the
non-monster variety."
"It just sucks that he's a werewolf," the teenager
complained. "I mean, I guess I should've known ...
but I didn't think to ask. I mean, usually you
ask, you know ... 'What grade are you in?' or 'Do
you like Good Charlotte?' Not, 'Are you planning
to eat me tomorrow?'" She blinked. "Okay, that
came out wrong."
"Well, you could just overlook the whole werewolf
thing," Xander suggested helpfully. "I mean, Will
did it for a couple'a years and—"
He glanced up. Buffy was glaring. Big glares.
Xander gulped.
"Or you could be pen pals," he backpedaled.
"It just sucks!" Dawn's quick exhalation of air
somehow seemed to emphasize exactly how much
suckage was contained in this situation. "My first
kiss is with a vampire, then I fall hard for a guy
and his magic jacket, now a werewolf ..." She
looked despairingly from Xander to Buffy. "It's
like I'm turning into you guys!"
Buffy and Xander's sympathetic expressions
instantly dissolved.
Willow was twirling the now olive-less toothpick
around the rim of her glass. "How'd you know it
wasn't Toby?" she inquired.
Oz shook his head, draining the last of his herbal
tea. "We didn't. Not for sure. But this morning,
Toby told me that when he was the wolf, he sensed
something. Someone."
The redhead nodded. "Eddie."
"He thought so," confirmed Oz. "When he told me
everything, seemed a definite maybe."
"Good hunch. What if it wasn't, though?" queried
Willow, peering into Oz's face.
"Toby wanted to be locked down and tranq'd up. If
it was him, he'd be where we left him until
tomorrow morning."
Willow's expression melted. "Aww, that's sweet. In
a visually disturbing way. Do you think he'll be
okay? With the wolfie?"
"Eventually," replied Oz. "Sense memory from the
wolf's a good sign."
"So," intoned a meaningful Willow, "What now?"
Oz frowned at the question, seeming to think that
the answer should be obvious. "We keep working.
Keep teaching."
"No," huffed the witch impatiently. "I mean for
you."
Oz appeared to be rather surprised. "Oh. We have a
gig in Logan Town ..."
The redhead laughed and poked at his arm with the
toothpick. "No! For you you."
Confused, he gazed at her. She grabbed both sides
of his head with her hands and swiveled his face
until it was directed at Jemma. Oz widened his
eyes.
"Ah," he smiled slightly, finally making the
connection. "Don't know. I guess she'll be coming
with us. Gig and all."
With a dramatic roll of her eyes, Willow shook his
head from side-to-side. "Ask her out, you big
dork! Geez, do I hafta put you two in a wolf-cage
or somethin'? Cuz I will."
Oz was uncertain. "I don't know, Will."
"Well I do!" announced the redhead. "She's so
obviously totally into you. And you ..." the
poking of the toothpick moved to his
shoulder, "You like her too." Oz made to open his
mouth in protest, but Willow tutted and dismissed
the unspoken thought. "Ah-ah-ah! Don't even try to
deny it. I can tell. You've got your little
chivalrous protective aura thing goin' on."
Tilting his head, Oz regarded Jemma solemnly but
still failed to make a move, the expression on his
face indicating that something seemed to be
holding him back.
"Oz," murmured Willow, swiping affectionately at
his nose to get his attention. "You know I love
you. I always will. So when I say this, know that
I say it with every ounce of infinite affection
for you I have in my heart." Her tone grew
stern. "If you don't ask her out, Daniel Osborne,
you are a very dumb man and I will seriously
consider cursing you with itchy palms for at least
a week."
Scratching his head, Oz smiled at the threat.
"Now go," insisted Willow. "Make her as happy as
you made me."
Getting to his feet, Oz leaned over and gave
Willow a kiss on the cheek. She beamed and touched
the place where his lips had been with her
fingertip. His eyes were wistful and she nodded
encouragingly, seeming to acknowledge his desire
for what had once been but could never be again.
Tugging on his shirt and thrusting his hands into
his pockets, Oz walked with determination to
Jemma's table. Willow beamed as the girl looked
up, expression growing brighter with every stride
Oz took. He smiled down at her, one of those
enchanting enigmatic smiles that only Oz could
produce, as he pulled out a chair and sat down.
Willow heard the echo of his voice over the loud
music. "Hey."
The redhead sighed happily at the developments and
looked up in surprise as a frazzled waitress
placed a fresh martini in front of her, complete
with three olives. The girl waved
unenthusiastically at the table where Xander was
sitting. He grinned and gave Willow the thumbs-up.
Willow returned the gesture and promptly downed
one of the olives before taking a sip of the
drink. Her eyes scanned the dance floor, finally
coming to rest on Kennedy. Her smile was warm as
she took note of the fact that Kenn appeared to be
having a thoroughly good time, apparently as much
into the music as she was into her swaying partner.
Willow's gaze darted briefly to Oz. He was holding
Jemma's hand and smiling, their heads close
together in conversation. Jemma looked so happy.
Willow sighed contentedly. The lights dimmed and a
slow number filtered through the audio equipment.
Willow watched as Kennedy slipped an arm around
the blonde's trim waist and whispered in her ear.
The blonde nodded and closed her eyes, cheek
resting on Kennedy's shoulder. Willow sighed with
contentment once more before popping both
remaining olives into her mouth at the same time.
IN 2 WEEKSThe Chosen...
Fade from black to a shot of Kennedy, performing a
series of complex acrobatic maneuvers while she
slaughters dozens of vampires, then fade to black.
Unknown Voice (V.O.): Slayers...
Fade from black to a shot of Faith, teeth gritted
in a fearsome visage, swinging a battleaxe and
killing scores of demons, then fade to black.
Unknown Voice (V.O.): Our enemies...
Fade from black to a shot of Buffy, dripping with
weapons, Rambo-style. She simple stares, the
promise of a violent death for all who oppose her,
then fade to black.
Unknown Voice (V.O.): It's time we struck back!
Cut to a room full of demons of every size, shape,
color and breed errupting into cheers. At the
front of the room, wearing a big, proud,
disconcertingly toothy grin, stands a well-dressed
demon, soaking up the enthusiasm. Norg stands at
his elbow, and the bigger demon looks down at him.
Norg: Nithely done, thir.
Cut to the Boss handing out papers and fliers to
the gathered demons.
Boss: We’ve developed an incentive program...for
each act of murder, chaos and destruction against
the Slayers and their group, you earn points. If
you save up, you could snag some sweet goods.
One demon leans over to his neighbor, looking at
his pamphlet excitedly.
Demon: Ooh, clock radio!
Cut to Kennedy and Hazel sitting at a table,
looking confused and disturbed at the papers in
their hand.
Kennedy: "Check all that apply: bruise/stubbed
toe, broken limb, organ damage, disembowelment,
decapitation"?
Hazel: I’m guessing that one’s worth more than a
stubbed toe.
Cut to Faith, bloody swords in each hand, looking
confusedly around a business office.
Faith: Man, this is just messed up.
BUT FIRST SEE THE SECOND EPISODE OF BUFFY “HUMAN
NATURE”
|