Marilda: Thanks once again for your eloquence. (-;
BFR from Paris: Glad to see you here, but it looks like I hooked you too late.
justin: I struggled with making the possibility of Destiny changing seem plausible in this part, and I'm glad that I succeeded for you. I'm not sure that Destiny was envious of Destruction; I think unsettled is a better term. He's accustomed to things more or less staying the same, but Destruction's departure has set off a series of deep changes within the Endless themselves.
There won't be more of this story, though there may be other Endless Moments. There is an interesting loose end in Tara's possession of the Book of Destiny. Anyone want to buy a slightly used history, past and future, of the universe? It may not be completely accurate any longer, but it might be good enough...
russ: I'm glad you caught my thoughts about stories and forcing characters into them; it's not something that happens only in fiction, as the people around us, parents, family, and friends often try to mold us into the story they think will fit us.
Destiny's choice offers a new story, a new future, for everyone, but at first the changes are small such as Tara's near miss with the bullet that you mention. The past may be as malleable as the future too. A new story, and thus a new Destiny will arise, created by this choice, as Justin points out. However, this new Destiny will be a new person with his own personality, and he cannot be considered to be Tara's father.
Grimmy: I don't think you lose anything significant in this story by not knowing Sandman, though I strongly encourage you to go out and read the books. I've seen German editions, and I suspect there are Dutch ones as well. Let me know if what I said about incarnations of Destiny above helps you with any confusion you might have over Justin's post.
I did intend some of the comments about forcing characters into a predestined story to apply to Buffy, of course, though they're important thoughts about our real lives as well as I mentioned to Russ above. What has changed? In a word, everything, yet the differences will be small, almost imperceptible at first as they spread out from the time and place where Destiny made his first and last choice.
The changes were enough to change where Willow and Tara were when the bullet went through the room; I had a bit more on Willow originally, but I couldn't find a way to tell what was happening to her in those few seconds from Tara's point of view, and as Tulipp pointed out to me in feedback, that's a problem when I've told the entire story from Tara's point of view and the impact of the story rests with Tara.
Trom deGrey: Thanks, and I'm glad I managed to surprise you. I always wondered when Tara came to that decision; I figured it had to be before Entropy, even if it wasn't something she realized consciously yet. I didn't like Hell's Bells, but as you point out, Willow and Tara's interactions were great; there was so much going on in their faces and movements that I knew that Tara had to have made her decision there, in her heart if not in her mind.
The full consequences of Destiny's choice is an interesting subject to contemplate. It's never as simple as the dichotomy between free will and predestination.
--
"Omnia mutantur, nihil interit." -- "Everything changes, but nothing is truly lost."
Edited by: darkmagicwillow at: 7/29/03 5:49 pm