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Re: Part 38

Postby JustSkipIt » Mon Jul 28, 2003 2:11 pm

Hi Mary,



As always, loving the update note, disclaimers, and dialog. Anya makes a great point that she and Tara are the most in danger with being the newbies. Although why would that make Dawn a target? As far as anyone knows, she's been around for 14 years right? Hmmm.



So ok, finally the scoobies have learned to not talk about the identity of the key in case someone is listening in. Hey guys: how about not talking too much about Aunt Bev's role either? Like the little hobbit spies would only hear talk about the key but not about Bev? I understand that they had to talk openly to get the story out but you'd think that from that point, they could do some logic transferernce and figure out not to talk about her too openly for fear of the hobbits.



Anyway, I love the way the whole gang is coming together so well. That's great and beautiful. And that Tanya is coming...awesome.



I'm not worried about the Bev/Ben interaction but it should be great. Good luck. Debra





---

"Seek the company of those who are still seeking the truth and run away from those who think they have found it.--J.T. O'Hara

JustSkipIt
 


Response Reply (or, Reply Response)

Postby AntigoneUnbound » Mon Jul 28, 2003 8:59 pm

Puff: First of all...Maui? Maui?!? Damn, girl...Well, welcome back! Glad you enjoyed the updates. I have to admit, I'm sort of partial to Beverly myself. I'll be curious to hear what you think of Tanya. (She has an affair w/ Glory. I think.) Anyway, thanks for the kind words. Rub the horses' noses for me. Heck, rub the wife's nose for me, if you get the urge.



Tempered Cynic: Mais oui, but of course I shout you out! So you liked the underwear hypothesis, eh? Yeah, it was a real struggled to decide which style to assign to whom. I imagine each woman in each style, and three hours later, I had my answer. You raise a couple of very interesting questions re: Tanya's possible compulsion to come to SD and Beverly's reaction to Ben. I think he poses an interesting challenge to her "radar" power. Thanks for the always articulate feedback, TC. Such replies as yours are truly my raison d'etre (literally, "raison eater"). Have a good one!



Tiger Kid Hey, no sweat on the timing; I'm just glad you're enjoying the story and I always appreciate the feedback. (You know, every time I try to avoid being redundant, I end up repeating myself.) Thanks for the kind words and the computer compassion, TK!



Jixer: You make a great point about Ben: "Ben, made to be the prison of a mad, evil god was a bundle of conflicting desires." Well put, Jixer...And my question, of course, is: How much choice does he have in his actions? Lots of people in this story have been placed into roles that they were never exactly consulted about.



Oh, so very kind--wanting to become rich in order to send me a computer? God love you...But don't worry, Jixer--I'm just going to steal one!



Thanks for the kind words, good soul.



Dark Magic Willow: My, such a soliloquy from our li'l Buffy! You're right--I'm partial to dialogue. I wonder what makes any of us prefer one means of delivery vs. another? Hmm...Thanks for the kind words, DMW, and I hope you like the upcoming encounter.



Debra: Glad you like the various touches! (I know I always enjoy being touched variously. But that's not really the matter at hand, if you'll pardon the expression.)



Yeah, Russ caught the slip-up about Dawn's novelty status, too. Totally my bad...I gotta figure out what to do w/ that, just for my own obsessiveness's sake.



Oh, about the not-so-discreet conversational discretion: I forgot to mention that the minions don't speak English. Yeah, that's it.



Thanks for the kind words, Debra!



OK--that's all for now. Update tomorrow night (Tuesday). Again, I really appreciate the computer info some of you have sent my way. It makes the task less imposing.



Mary


AntigoneUnbound
 


Re: Part 39

Postby AntigoneUnbound » Tue Jul 29, 2003 8:44 pm

Hello all. This is a very short update, due to the press of getting my office cleared out and files transferred. It looks like I'll be back on this computer one more time after this, and then hopefully I'll be back in Kitten Land by next Tuesday.

Since this update is so short, feel free to give equally short feedback (if you feel like leaving feedback at all). The next update will be a considerably longer one.

Thanks!

Disclaimers: I asked Joss if I could have Willow and Tara, since he wasn’t doing anything with them, but he got all testy and said no. So they’re not mine, but I invited them over for a party so they’re hanging out with me for awhile.
Spoilers: Up to season 5. I’ve played slightly with the timing of a certain Big Bad’s appearance, with some implications for Dawn’s entrance.
Rating: R for now; if it changes, I’ll give heads-up.
Distribution: Sure, with acknowledgement.
Feedback: Oh yes! [To be read in that special Tara voice we heard at the end of "NMR.]

*****
Part 39
*****


"Ben, this is my aunt, Beverly Maclay. Aunt Bev, this is Ben…" Here Tara trailed off, looking questioningly at the intern.

"Dover," he supplied with a self-effacing smile.

Just as Willow was thinking how thoroughly he must hate his parents, she noticed that Beverly was rubbing her temples.

"Hi Beverly," Ben said easily. Beverly managed a smile, and shook his hand.

"Nice to meet you, Ben." She rubbed her temples again, grinning ruefully. "Sorry; I seem to be having a wee bit of a headache here; completely out of the blue."

Ben’s gaze was sympathetic. "Sometimes I get those, too. Weird, isn’t it?"

"You said it," Beverly nodded. "I was fine just a minute ago, and then it hit like a ton of bricks." She gave him a wan grin. "Anyway, don’t worry—I’m not one of those people who meet doctors and immediately ask for free advice."

But Ben just laughed. "Hey, for all we know, I could be giving you a headache. I hear that from plenty of women." Then he blushed, as if realizing the various ways that his comment could be construed. "Are you sure you’re OK?" he asked, his voice now the essence of professional objectivity.

"Yeah—I think it’s passing," Beverly assured him. Willow, though, suspected she wasn’t being entirely truthful. "So how do you know these two fine women?"

Ben’s eyes took on a regretful cast. "I was involved with Mrs. Summers’ case when she first noticed she wasn’t feeling well. I met Buffy and then Willow and Tara and the rest of their friends over the next few weeks at one time or another." He turned to Willow. "How’s Buffy doing?" His voice, Willow thought, was studiously neutral.

Willow shrugged. "It’s been tough. I can’t imagine how hard it must be to lose a parent, much less when you then have to turn around and raise your younger sister by yourself."

"Riley’s probably a big help though," Ben commented. Now he was clearly putting effort into his nonchalance.

"Whenever we can find him," she replied cryptically. Glancing at Beverly, she could see in the stark glare of the light that the woman was growing pale. Tara had noticed it too.

"C’mon Aunt Bev. Whatever it is, it isn’t going away. Let’s get you home and see what we have in the way of headache medicines."

"Yeah, I think that’s probably a good idea," Beverly managed, pressing the heels of her hands against her eyes.

Ben was scribbling something on a piece of paper he’d pulled out of his windbreaker pocket. "Here’s my number," he said, handing Willow the information. "Call me if you don’t feel better. I mean it," he declared over Beverly’s protests. "I keep pretty weird hours and I really do love what I do, so call me any time tonight or tomorrow if it doesn’t go away and you’re worried."

"Thanks Ben," Tara replied. "That really is sweet of you."

"No problem. It was great to see you again. And it was nice to meet you, Beverly," he added, smiling at Tara’s aunt. "I hope you feel better." Then he moved off into the dark.

"Do you want to sit down?" Willow asked. She was worried at the intensity and sudden onset of Beverly’s pain.

"No, I’m good. Really," she stressed, seeing their faces. "I’m probably just having a sugar high from all those cookies at Giles’." She smiled. "Actually, it really is starting to ease up now." She gave her temples a much lighter rubbing. "Yeah, it’s definitely going away. Isn’t that weird? Two minutes ago, it feels like somebody’s shoving their fingernails into my brain, and the next…" She looked up suddenly, glancing first at Willow and Tara and then off into the darkness that Ben had just entered. "Whoa…"

"You don’t think Ben has anything to do with Glory, do you?" Tara asked, visibly shocked.

"Ben?" Willow protested. "Every time I saw him at the hospital, I wanted to ask if he had a note from his mother to be out that late."

"Yeah, right—because evil always comes clearly adorned with horns and sinister countenances and preferably a few sixes etched into the forehead in plain view," Tara replied, arching one eyebrow.

"Well, did you pick up anything from him, Beverly?" Willow asked, turning to Tara’s aunt, who was now stretching her neck as if trying to relieve a crick.

"Like what? Herpes?"

"No, like an aura, or a feeling, or maybe mild intestinal cramping. I don’t know…anything." Willow could hear the frustration in her voice.

"No—he seemed like a friendly, genuinely kind person. All I know is that the second I met him, my head started to hurt and it just got worse until he left; and now the pain is almost totally gone." Beverly looked from one woman to the other. "What about you two? Don’t you pick up on things like that; people not being who they say they are? What about that trip to the Nether Realms you told me about, Willow?"

Seeing Tara’s horrified expression, Willow hastily explained, "I was telling Beverly about some of our various exploits, and I gave her the abridged version of what happened when Faith took over Buffy’s body. Nothing too specific."

Like how we were both dripping with sweat and other body fluids and I pretty much came from the intensity of it all.

"Oh," Tara mumbled. "Yeah, well, that worked with Faith’s little identity joy ride, but I never really noticed Ben."

"Neither did I," Willow chimed in.

"There’s a shocker," Beverly commented dryly. "Just out of curiosity, was this Faith a little on the hot side?"

Tara’s eyes said, You go first, and Willow suspected hers were playing the same feature. After a moment, she said, "Well, she’s hot in a skanky kind of way…Not that I find that sort of look attractive."

"Right," Tara quickly chimed in.

"So all we have for evidence is my headache—notable for the intensity of both its onset and its remission." She shook her head. "Ally MacBeal would have a field day with it, provided she didn’t pass out in court from hunger."

They were all quiet for a moment, pondering the implications of what had just happened...or seemed to happen, or hadn’t happened, Willow realized—depending on how you looked at it.

Finally, Beverly sighed. "Let’s get our women-lovin’ selves home, women. I wanna call my sweetie and tell her to get her woman-lovin’ self out here." She paused, then added quietly, "I need her."

*****
To Be Continued
*****
AntigoneUnbound
 


Re: Part 39

Postby russ » Tue Jul 29, 2003 9:23 pm

Ok, here comes feedback, & I'll try to keep it short as requested.



Ben Dover!! He may be host to a hell god, and later try to sell out Dawnie to save his life, but he still doesn't deserve a moniker like that.



So, let's see if I've got this right: when Bev meets Glory, Glory feels icky and has to leave; when Bev meets Ben, it's she who is affected. How curious. It's as if her power reacts in reverse to the hidden Glory within Ben. And the fingernails in the brain sensation -- shudder.



I wonder if in this version of the story Ben can be saved. It always seemed a shame he had to be sacrificed; he was basically a decent, caring person who collaborated with the enemy against his conscience. It will be interesting to see if they remember Bev's suspicions once away from Ben.



Thanks for taking time to write & post even in the stress of relocating. Hopefully everything goes smoothly.



Russ

russ
 


Re: Response Reply (or, Reply Response)

Postby The Rose24 » Tue Jul 29, 2003 9:38 pm

Yay!!!! :applause :applause :applause



You are early again! Pretty soon the three of them are going to put two and two together. I hope before it's too late.

Tara: My heart doesn't stutter.


Tara: Willow, I got so lost.

Willow: I found you. I will always find you.


Edited by: The Rose24  at: 7/30/03 7:17 pm
The Rose24
 


Re: Part 39

Postby justin » Wed Jul 30, 2003 2:46 am

That was a great part. Short and sweet :D



I liked the part when Willow asked Beverly if she had picked anything from Ben and she answered



Quote:
"Like what? Herpes?"




I :heart Beverly



Though I have to wonder where her personality came from, since it doesn't seem to be the sort of personality you'd expect a bunch of sexualy repressed monks to create.



I understand, you should be with the person you l-love


I am


justin
 


Re: Response Reply (or, Reply Response)

Postby Vampivy » Wed Jul 30, 2003 3:43 am

Oh Mary, what would I do without your witty sense of humor? Ben Dover??? Funnier if it were a typo but I doubt that it was. And this too of course:

“Well, did you pick up anything from him, Beverly?" Willow asked, turning to Tara’s aunt, who was now stretching her neck as if trying to relieve a crick.

"Like what? Herpes?"

"No, like an aura, or a feeling, or maybe mild intestinal cramping. I don’t know…anything."




Interesting reaction that Beverly had with Ben, kinda scary to be honest. To see her vulnerability like that with Ben made it more real that she might not be as invincible as I would have liked to believe considering she can propel a Hellgod with her mere presence. Reality is really starting to set in about how ugly this whole Glory situation is gonna get. Hope the casualties aren’t too bad.



Well, here’s hoping that my computer problems don’t continue but if they do and if I can’t get back online and leave you feedback regularly for later chapters, just know that I’ll at least try to keep reading somehow. Posting feedback with dial-up internet for me lately has been hell. And about that concert in August it’s the “Summer Sanitarium Tour” with “Metallica”. It’s really great to have a place where I can vent all my frustrations. Here at Pens it’s the amazing writers like yourself that haven’t let me forget how much I truly love Willow and Tara and that alone has meant more than I can truly say.



Thanks and hopefully I’ll be back soon. Good luck on your own computer hunt by the way.



Patty



Vampivy
 


Re: Part 39

Postby chilled monkey » Wed Jul 30, 2003 5:00 am

You know, I think this is the first fic on this board that I've read that includes Ben. I'm with Russ in hoping that he can be saved, as I quite liked him. He is basically a good person, it's not his fault that he's the host body of a Hell God.



Bev.'s personality just goes to show that she is a real person despite the circumstances of her origins.

chilled monkey
 


Re: Response Reply (or, Reply Response)

Postby Lt Sticks » Wed Jul 30, 2003 7:15 am

Hi Mary, awesome update, just had to mention that I used to know someone called Ben Dover...this sure brought memories back :lol



~Sticks

A fire in my heart, reborn from the ashes...just call me Phoenix


I'm Under Your Spell, nothing I can do, you just took my soul with you...



Sapphic Sanctuary

Lt Sticks
 


Re: Part 39

Postby Grimaldi » Wed Jul 30, 2003 8:05 am

great update :)



Ben's last name is just too funny :lol

I'm not stealing, I'm just taking things without paying for them. In what twisted dictionary is that stealing?
Oh, relax, Casper, I'm not here to interrupt your blissing. Too much makes you go blind, though, you know

Grimaldi
 


Re: Part 39

Postby 2DIAMONDS » Wed Jul 30, 2003 8:08 am

"Well, did you pick up anything from him, Beverly?" Willow asked, turning to Tara’s aunt, who was now stretching her neck as if trying to relieve a crick.



"Like what? Herpes?"





LMAO!!!!!!!!! :happycry



Helen

xoxo

2DIAMONDS
 


Re: Re: Part 39

Postby MorgainePriestessOfAvalon » Wed Jul 30, 2003 11:26 am

Ben Dover?!! :rofl I love this fic. Great update, can't wait for more.

MorgainePriestessOfAvalon
 


Feedback

Postby Puff » Wed Jul 30, 2003 12:39 pm

Hi Mary oh writer of hysterical fiction. Ben Dover? ROFLMAO that's almost up there with Glory in a wimple.



Anyway moving quickly on. What an interesting update, I am so glad that Aunt Beverly was able to sense something was different or off about Ben and maybe link him to Glory...although I'd like her to try and convince anyone that Ben is Glory as we all know how well that went for Spike. I'm eagerly awaiting the arrival of Tanya and reading what Tanya and Beverly are like together, I bet Tanya must have a wicked sense of humor to match Beverly.



Oh and woo hoo for mentions of the nether realm spell and thoughts of sweaty Tara and Willow.



Thanks for the update Mary :)

Puff
 


Re: Re: Part 39

Postby jixer » Wed Jul 30, 2003 12:59 pm

Hello Kittens-



Now if you wanted to piss off a hell-god sticking her into a genuinely nice guy would probably do it. I have to wonder about her co-gods not wanting to let poor Glory play in any hell-god games.



I'm also thinking about one of my all time favorite moments in canon. When Tara was sitting next to Glory, frightened and in pain, and Glory offered her escape for the identity of the key Tara gave Glory a look that needed no words to convey her absolute refusal. I think it was the finest moment any of the Scoobies had that season.



Thank you for the short update,



Jixer











jixer
 


Re: Part 39

Postby TemperedCynic » Wed Jul 30, 2003 7:21 pm

More.



[I remain the model of brevity].


More than any other time in history, mankind faces a crossroads. One path leads to despair and utter hopelessness. The other, to total extinction. Let us pray we have the wisdom to choose correctly. Woody Allen (1935 - )

TemperedCynic
 


recent update

Postby Tigerkid14 » Wed Jul 30, 2003 7:56 pm

Hey, I hate to show my ignorance especially when everyone around me apparently knows this, but where did the name Dover come from? BTW, Mary, I really like Aunt Beverly's quick wit and I hope your stress goes away. I find that chocolate of some sort always helps.

Catch ya later

~Tigerkid

Tigerkid14
 


Re: recent update

Postby shuyaku » Wed Jul 30, 2003 9:22 pm

:rofl (you know what that's for ;) )



My first thought about this update was "Geez, those monks were a bunch of idiots!" You'd think they would have insured that the Protectors would be able to recognize Glory in all of her incarnations.



But then the more I thought about it, the more it made sense. If they Protectors could recognize Glory, then Glory would be able to recognize them as well. This is much more effective - Aunt Bev is certainly smart enough to figure out how Ben fits into this and Ben is seemingly none-the-wiser.



And I'm with Aunt Bev - she needs her woman lovin Tanya asap!



Great update!

-shuyaku

shuyaku
 


Re: Part 39

Postby JustSkipIt » Thu Jul 31, 2003 6:25 am

Hey Mary, queen of computer woes and bad names...



Well I'm glad for the short update because, little time = I could read this days late. But hey, doing it now right?



Anyway, a little on the disapointing side re Bev & Ben but good with not a shotgun blast in every scene. Very nicely done with the tension just sitting there and waiting. I love Tara and Willow and Bev together with their common bond(s). Can't wait for Tanya to arrive. Great job.

---

"Seek the company of those who are still seeking the truth and run away from those who think they have found it.--J.T. O'Hara

JustSkipIt
 


Re: update

Postby mollyig » Thu Jul 31, 2003 9:20 am

I've had quite a few updates to catch up on, and have really enjoyed reading Beverly's tale unfold. I had been curious as to whether she would be able to identify Glory's alter ego. I suppose we have the next best thing in that she at least suspects the reason for her headache, and will, hopefully, be wary now.



Thanks again for this fine story.

. . . and tolerance it ain't acceptance . . .
Laramie - Amy Ray

mollyig
 


Re: Feedback

Postby AntigoneUnbound » Thu Jul 31, 2003 12:08 pm

Hello, all. Just a quick "thank you" for your many kind and supportive thoughts. I just turned in my office keys and I don't have time to give individual feedback, but I definitely will when I regain computer access early next week. So thank you, each of you, for taking the time to reply.



Have a great weekend,

Mary



AntigoneUnbound
 


Re: updates 37b-39

Postby stereo33 » Tue Aug 05, 2003 2:55 pm

Hi Mary - All caught up again!

Aunt Bev's meeting with the Scoobies was very interesting to read for a variety of reasons, but mainly I kind of liked the fact Tara spoke out for her Aunt when talking to Buffy (I think out of all of them Tara would probably be the one Buffy would listen to without going off at the deep end).

Also Ben's introduction was timely, and you've definitely got me wondering now how you're going to play this one out - Ally MacBeal would indeed have a field day :)

Thanks Mary, I'm looking forward to more.

Karen

Edited by: stereo33 at: 8/5/03 1:56 pm
stereo33
 


Re: Feedback

Postby darkest willow » Thu Aug 07, 2003 8:22 am

All right. Just caught up, and I simply have to say...saucy Giles?



Ok, I'm little bit worried about the phone number. He could be in Glory-phase, and would she recognize the voice? I liked the point about evil, because everyone has that capacity, no matter how well you think you know them. The right circumstances and/or a sense of self preservation or betterment(?) will bring out the "evil" in everyone. Even though Ben seems so genuine and innocent, besides the deception about Glory, he has, himself, perfomed deeds that would be considered evil. Like that weird little creature from space that he called. I think that the level of a person's "evilness" changes depending on what situation they are currently in. Ben does evil deeds in order to preserve himself. Willow, in another world, did evil deeds because she was driven mad by grief. You would be hard pressed to find a person who would do no evil no matter what the circumstances were. Another thing- is it evil if you don't see it as evil? going back to the earlier comment about how we perceive things defining them, if you don't perceive a harmful deed as evil, do you really understand that it isn't right? We don't call animals "evil", even if they maul or kill a human. We call them "wild". Oh, and vampires and demons. They aren't inherently evil. Several demons have demonstrated that they have the capacity for "good". However, one has to wonder why so many of them do harmful deeds. As for vampires, I think that if there were little vampire cats running around eating other cats, then they wouldn't be evil. The cats would just be doing what their instincts tell them they should. Vampires are only evil because their human minds tell them that what they are doing is wrong and they don't care. It's the sort of thing that's mirrored in our justice system. If a young child kills someone, then they go to prison for a time because in most of these cases, the courts think that the child did not know that what they were doing was wrong. On the other hand, when they are of age to know that it isn't a game, and that people die and it's wrong, they go to prison or are executed. (By the way, I'm not saying I agree with execution, but that's a separate issue). So anyway, what I've basically taken this whole paragraph to say is that I think evil is defined by how it is perceived.



Earlier, Willow made a comment about crosses and holy water. I've been wondering about that. Is the whole thing based on the belief that Christianity is the "one true religion"? It could be the force of the weilder's belief in the item they hold. But if that's the case, then why can Willow, a Jewish Wiccan, effectively use crosses and holy water against the vampires? Maybe it's the vampires. Vamps that used to be Christian are affected by crosses, etc. So, for example,would a Jewish vampire would be affected by a star of David? It could be that religious items have that effect because they remind the vamps of all that they believed. Vampires once had morals and believed in some sort of deity, and they turned aside from all of that. Vamps do things that any religion would frown upon and condemn. Also, they left the afterlife behind to. Many religions believe in an afterlife, but vamps die and stay. Who knows what happens to their souls in the meantime. Oh, here's an idea. Maybe it's because any and all religions talk to the soul. They want to save your soul. The idea when you find your own religion is to find one that speaks to your soul, connects with it. So what happens when there's no soul to connect to?



Anyway, done rambling. Loved the updates, eagerly waiting.

darkest willow
 


Greetings from the Techno-Estranged

Postby AntigoneUnbound » Fri Aug 08, 2003 9:11 am

Hello, all! As you can infer, things are moving slowly on the computer front but I've located some access in the local library until I have the funds to actually procure my own. Thanks again to all of you for the great feedback and equally supreme support.



I'll be posting an update tomorrow (Saturday), in which Tanya makes an ill-advised move on Buffy and things get ugly.




Russ: Y'know, "Ben Dover" came to me out of the blue and tickled me so much I gave in to it. I'm a weak, weak woman...You're not the only one who wants Ben to be saved. I think he epitomized the fact that in that world, basic human decency is fine but it takes more than that to make it, be vindicated in the end. In any other scenario, he wouldn't have had to make such wrenching choices. Anyway, I'll see what I can do about his continued well-being, Russ. Thanks!



Rose: Hey, glad my timing worked for you. I hope you like where I take these crazy kids from here. Thanks, Rose.



Justin: Loved your point about Beverly being a saucy wench in spite of her sexually repressed progenitors. Yeah, she's a hoot to write, once I had committed to keeping her around. (That's a little clue about where I had originally intended to take her.) Thanks!



Patty: Oh, no--Ben's last name isn't a typo. Sounds like you're having techno-issues as well. Hope yours abate sooner rather than later. Thanks for taking the time and trouble to leave feedback. Take care.



Chilled Monkey: Yeah, Russ wants Ben to make it through this alive, too. Thanks for following this.



Lt. Sticks: What a great name! So you actually knew a Ben Dover? I can only imagine his travails...Glad you're enjoying this, and thanks for letting me know!



Grimaldi: Well, you know, for this update I went with the truism that size doesn't count. Glad you liked!



2Diamonds: Glad the herpes worked for you! (Um, maybe that's not the best way I could have expressed that...) Welcome to the Board, 2-D~~Hope you're enjoying it, and thanks for the feedback.



Morgaine: I think humor is one of my favorite things to write, so I'm glad to know it works passably well. Thanks for the nice words.



Puff: Ah, to have brought a smile to your wimpled presence...My work here is done! I'll be curious to see what you think of Tanya, and the role she plays. Thanks for the kind thoughts and wishes, Puff. How's married life treating you?



Jixer: Oh, yeah--you just know Glory is supremely pissed about being housed in such modest, unassuming, and pleasant quarters as Ben. (It always cracked me up that the actors name was "Charlie." Who's named "Charlie"? And oh, God--please forgive me if you or your son or your father is named "Charlie." It just seems like such a "howdy-do, aw shucks" kinda name.) Yes, I vividly remember Tara's mute refusal to Glory. (I was sitting two benches away.) Her eyes said everything, as they so often do...Thanks, Jixer, for the great feedback!



Tempered Cynic: The model of brevity? My dearest TC--you are the model of many things, not the least of which is eloquence. Merci, mon ami(e).



Tigerkid: Glad you're enjoying this, TK! Re: Ben's name--just say it out loud a couple of time and notice the visuals that come to mind. Chocolate as a stress reliever? Thanks for the tip~~I'll try it!



Shuyaku: You know, I really struggled w/ how to navigate Ben and Bev's encounter, and in the end (whose end? Not sure yet, but I'm hoping it won't be painful), I decided to go w/ the allusion to a dire event, one which has yet to be fully realized, rather than the explicit denouement thereof. Like you, I'm sort of intrigued by the notion of how "evil" is conducted and manifested; how we sense its presence in the face of a benign countenance. I like hearing your thoughts about how that moral estimation might take shape and why it might be diluted/transformed in certain circumstances. Thanks for the great feedback, Shuyaku--you rock in five different languages!



Debra: You know, as I mentioned to Shuyaku above, it was definitely a tough decision re: the depiction fo B/B's encounter. I'm going w/ the "less is more" approach, at least for now, but who knows--I'm a fickle, fickle girl. I hope it pays off in the long run.Glad you liked the humorous touches. Hey--obviously, I'm short on computer access but I plan on checking out "PD,D" when I have more time. I've definitely been thinking about our girls!



Mollyig: Yeah, Bev's pretty sharp, so I think she's on the look-out for sure. Thanks for the good thoughts.



Karen: You make a good point about whom Buffy will listen to, and if I made a mistake w/ that "whom," someone please tell me. Anyway, she doesn't rely on either volume or decibel of her words to make an impact; hence, when she speaks w/ heightened urgency, people listen.



Darkest Willow: Wow--that was a great discussion of how we recognize and define evil. I agree w/ your point: whether we realize it or not, we contextualize evil, give it certain parameters by virtue of how we punish it. I also loved your discussion of the assumption that Christianity is the "one true religion" through the use of Christian symbols like crosses and holy water. For all that Joss INITIALLY challenged the viewers to examine assumptions of all kinds, he really missed the chance to do so re: religion and racial and class diversity, at least in my opinion. I really enjoy reading your thoughts and reactions, DW--thanks for taking the time to offer them.



OK--that's all for now. I've missed you all a great deal, but I'll be back tomorrow.



Mary


AntigoneUnbound
 


Re: Greetings from the Techno-Estranged

Postby shuyaku » Fri Aug 08, 2003 11:43 pm

I decided I would like to pick my 5 languages...



German - schaukeln sie meine welt

French - balancer mon monde

Italian - dondolare il mio mondo

Dutch - Wieg mijn wereld

Spanish - meza mi mundo



:lol



I off on vacation for the next 10 days (to meet my gf's dad for the first time :shock !) No internet access and Tanya's finally showing up - urgh :spin . So I'm predicting serious Pens withdrawals... I promise lots o' feedback when I get back.



-shuyaku

shuyaku
 


Um, about that update...

Postby AntigoneUnbound » Sat Aug 09, 2003 12:51 pm

Hello, all. The library closes at 5:00 on Saturday and isn't open on Sunday (I've been working most of today), so it's gonna be Monday before I can post the update. Sorry about the delay. I feel like I've been asking you kind folks for a lot of slack re: posting lately. Life has just been three shades of crazy these past 2 weeks. My schedule is clear on Monday, though, so please know that there will be the Queen Mother of Updates by late afternoon EST. Again, I apologize for the delays. Right now, I feel like some kind of techno-fugitive, darting from one terminal to another at any time I can snatch.



By the way, Shuyaku, I was even more impressed w/ your general impressiveness when I saw your translational masterpiece. Is there no end to your talents? In your absence, I offer a resounding "no." Have fun meeting the parents! My partner's step-dad recently told her that she needed to end our relationship b/c her mother is so upset about it that it's putting strain on their marriage. They're called "boundaries," Mr. and Mrs. Whack-Job, and they're available in your grocer's mental health case.



Thanks,

Mary


AntigoneUnbound
 


Re: Greetings from the Techno-Estranged

Postby Vampivy » Sun Aug 10, 2003 2:26 pm

Hey Mary, no worries about posting the next update. I’m sure we can all be patient. Well, at least I can be.:crash

“My schedule is clear on Monday, though, so please know that there will be the Queen Mother of Updates by late afternoon EST.”

See, apparently it will be worth the wait.:party



Take care, you techno-fugitive you.

Patty





Vampivy
 


Re: Um, about that update...

Postby chilled monkey » Sun Aug 10, 2003 2:39 pm

I'm sorry to hear about what your partner's step-father said, if you'll pardon my saying so.

No problem with the update. I'm sure it will be worth the wait.

chilled monkey
 


Re: Um, about that update...

Postby russ » Sun Aug 10, 2003 9:12 pm

Behold Mary, fugitive of the technological age. She darts from one terminal to another, one step ahead of the techno-police, always on the lookout for the one-armed man who ... no wait, wrong story.



Just wanted to say that you do not need to ask us for slack re posting. You don't owe us anything, you know. As I said to Debra recently, it's not like we're paying you for your work. What you post is from the generosity of your heart, and it's greatly appreciated. Many, given your circumstances, would have simply disappeared without a trace. The fact that you are making the effort to find opportunities to post speaks of your commitment to the story and your readers. By the way, is a Queen Mother of an update more, or less than a Queen of an update, or a simple mother of an update? Anyway, I'm looking forward to it when I finally perch here sometime way too late tomorrow night.



If I may say so, your partner's mom & step-dad really need to Get A Life. Of their very own. And stop trying to mess up yours & your partner's. Geez, de noive o' some people.



Russ

russ
 


Re: Part 40

Postby AntigoneUnbound » Mon Aug 11, 2003 4:26 pm

Hey folks--here's the update. I'll be back in about 2 hours to check it out. Thanks again to all of you, and [b]R[/b] I really appreciate your kind words. More replies to follow.

Disclaimer: I don’t own squat, a fact abundantly well attested to by virtue of the fact that I’m slinking around from one computer to another instead of getting my own.
All other information available upon request, including my little-known but highly regarded manifesto, “John Ashcroft and Saddam Hussein: Mortal Enemies by Day; Impassioned Lovers by Night.”
*****
“What time does her plane get in?” Willow asked, reaching out to hug Beverly as she walked into the hotel room. Tara, close behind her, did likewise.

“Just before three,” Beverly replied, draining the last of her third coffee that day. “I was thinking of leaving in about half an hour.”

Tara looked at her watch. “Are you going by way of Wisconsin? It’s just past one, Bev, and the airport is all of twenty miles away.”

“I just don’t want to be late,” her aunt huffed. “Besides, if it were Willow, you would have slept overnight in the terminal last night just in case the roads were closed today.”

“She’s got a point,” Willow murmured.

“OK—how about we leave at a quarter till two and stop for coffee on the way?” Tara suggested.

“Are you sure that gives us enough time?” Beverly said skeptically. “I’ve heard about the California traffic.”

“Beverly, unless the entire state of Nevada decides to stop by to see the Sunnydale Museum of String Art, we’re in good shape.”

“OK, OK…I know I’m being neurotic.” She smiled slightly; a crooked grin that Willow recognized.

Did Quinn smile like that, too? Except that Beverly isn’t related to them…Except that she is.

Forty-five minutes later, much of which was spent reassuring Beverly that she looked fine, looked great, looked absolutely wonderful and yes, she was a freak but no, not a bad one, they took off in the elder Maclay’s rental car.

*****

They did indeed have plenty of time to spare. “I guess you two should have brought some school stuff to work on,” Beverly said apologetically.

“Yeah, I’ve been meaning to read ‘War and Peace,’” Tara replied dryly.

Finally, the irredeemably cheerful voice of the airport’s announcer burst over the line to inform them that Southwest Flight 228 from Dallas was now arriving. Beverly jumped to her feet and took up a position perhaps twenty feet from the arrival door.

“Five bucks says I know what they’ll be doing tonight,” Willow nudged Tara as they followed her.

“Ten bucks says we’ll hear what they do tonight,” Tara muttered in reply. “So sometime between now and then we’re picking up some ear plugs because I just don’t need that.”

Tanya St. Clair was a tall, athletic-looking woman with dark brown eyes and a wry grin. When she and Beverly had finally extracted themselves from each other—earning considerable gawk points from their fellow airport patrons in the process—she greeted Willow and Tara with quick hugs.

“I hear you two have been taking great care of Beverly,” she said warmly.

“Yeah, well, we’ve been adequate tour guides, I think,” Tara replied. “But she’s been missing you like crazy.”

“I hear you,” Tanya murmured, pulling Beverly close. Looking quickly around the terminal, where a few travelers were still casting what they thought were subtle glances in their direction, she added, “Don’t get many Black people in Sunnydale, do you?”

“Not as many as we should,” Willow acknowledged ruefully. Thinking of Kendra, she added, “And the ones we do get tend to die.”

“Well that sucks,” Tanya commented dryly.

“But I’m sure they’ll make a special effort for you, Honey,” Beverly said reassuringly.

Tanya shook her head. “You know, if you’re White and gay, you get looks. If you’re Black and straight, you get looks. But girlfriends, if you’re Black and gay—just step right up and prepare to be an object of enduring fascination.”

“I’ve always said you’re timeless,” Beverly said proudly, as the four of them headed out through the sliding glass doors.

*****
Dinner that night looked like any other gathering of four people who are getting to know each other better…Selective reminiscences, political discussions regarding matters of common concern, and ongoing analysis of the impending apocalypse.

Willow and Tara gave Tanya a brief history of their nocturnal activities, and Tanya shared her thoughts on Beverly’s unsolicited call to arms.

“It blows,” she weighed in.

“Tanya, Sweetie, I love it when you talk dirty.” Beverly grinned and twirled some more angel hair pasta onto her fork.

“And now, of course, my inimitable partner here will make a joke, hoping to thereby deflect the solemnity of the moment.” And though she rolled her eyes as she said it, Willow knew that this was a conversation they had had many times over the past five years of their five-month relationship.

“Guilty as charged, and yet so unbelievably cute that you can’t help but love me.” Willow noticed that while Beverly’s right hand was wielding her fork, her left was nowhere to be seen. She had a pretty good idea where it was.

“My love for you has never been the issue, Baby.” Tanya turned back to Willow and Tara. “Let me ask y’all something.”
Willow looked up sharply “Y’all.” Someone has called me that before, but not here. Not in Sunnydale. Maybe an alternate reality? But this wasn’t the time to figure it out.
“You two signed on for this, right? Of your own free will? You go out at least two, three times a week—more in May, it seems—and you stake and you behead and you ax and you curse and probably a slew of other things that you won’t be putting on your curriculum vita when you go out on the job market. And you don’t even get hazard pay?”

“Well, it’s not like we’re in it for the money,” Tara argued.

“I’m not saying that. Of course you’re not in it for the money. What I’m saying is that you give and give and give and if you get hurt, that’s it. Your tough luck. And if the very worst happens, like with Kendra and Miss Calendar, does the Society for the Preservation of the Species pick up the funeral expenses? No, they don’t. Am I right?”

Willow shifted uncomfortably. What could she say?

“Yeah, I know,” Tanya grinned. “I’m just a Summer’s Eve douche commercial of soft focus and sunshine, aren’t I? I’m not trying to be a downer; I just don’t like how everyone’s life gets tossed around croutons on some giant, inter-dimensional salad and we don’t even know who’s holding the tongs.”

Beverly placed her glass carefully back onto its cardboard coaster. “You know what I think?” she asked quietly.

Tanya gazed at her. “What?”

“I think maybe it’s easier to be angry with whatever forces put this stuff in front of us than it is to be angry with me for choosing to go along. Because it is a choice, Babe, when you get right down to it. Nobody held a gun to my head.” She held Tanya’s gaze evenly.

Willow became intensely preoccupied with the parmesan cheese shaker. She felt Tara grip her hand tightly on the seat between them.

“Maybe I am,” Tanya finally conceded. “The thing is, there’s no way you wouldn’t do your part. I know you, Girl. And I chose to stick with you, even though nobody held a gun to my head.” She sighed. “So maybe I’m just railing against everything that makes it seem damn near impossible to get a good night’s sleep in this life.”

Beverly leaned forward and kissed her gently, then whispered something in her ear. Tanya just arched her brows and pushed her away with absolutely no real indignation or force.

Probably something about the likelihood of getting any sleep tonight, Willow thought.

As they walked out to the car afterwards, Tanya lit up a cigarette. Nodding to Willow, who had fallen in step with her behind Tara and Beverly, she said, “Bev’s been after me to give these up since the day we met. I told her that if she does her stint in the Key Protection Service and makes it through, I’ll quit.” Exhaling, she added softly, “She’s risking her life to save the world. I figured I should put something up on the table, too.”

As they lay in bed later, Willow curved back against the warmth of Tara’s body, she asked quietly, “What’s trump?”

She could almost feel Tara’s bemused gaze at the back of her head. “Are we talking Donald or cards?”

Willow turned, sliding her leg between Tara’s. “Cards. What’s trump in this hand? Or, to be more specific, who?”

“Will, Sweetie, walk toward the sound of my voice and then give me the decoder ring to what you’re talking about.”

“OK, see, the monks decide that in order to best protect all of humanity, they’d alter the reality of Goddess-only-knows how many people. Basically, they over-ruled somebody, or something—whatever or whoever had set the previous reality in motion. But are they the final word? Could somebody come along and trump their ace?”

Tara’s palm against her cheek was warm. Had she ever not known the feeling? Was there a reality out there in which that hand never touched her? And if so, could she please, goddess, make sure that it never threatened this one?

“I don’t know, Sweetheart. I wish I could offer you proof that there’s some kind of method to all this madness, but I can’t. The only thing I know for sure is that you’re lying here next to me, and you love me like I love you. I can handle the existential uncertainty of the species so long as that truth holds.”

Willow pressed herself as tightly as she could against Tara’s warmth. “I know,” she sighed. “The whole thing just offends my sense of order and stability.” Kissing Tara’s shoulder, she added, “It’s either arbitrary or it’s cruel. Either way, I’m not a satisfied customer.”

She felt Tara laugh softly against her hair. “Well, we can look into legal action after it’s all over.”

She finally fell asleep, well after Tara had done so; and her dreams were filled with crazy bottle-blondes and books that were suddenly re-written half-way through their plot and finally Tara, feeding her lobster with her fingers. She was grateful, the next morning, that she had spent the longest time in the last scene.

*****

The four of them met for lunch the next day at the same pizza parlor where Beverly had had her “Holy shit, it’s the Key!” epiphany.

“You want to meet the rest of the Scoobies?” Beverly asked Tanya with a grin.

“Only if the ex-demon asks me about our sex life,” Tanya replied easily. “I brought along some videos.”

Beverly’s expression of horror, nano-second in duration though it was, told Willow that just such tapes existed.

I bet Tara would look totally hot in a sexy vid…Wonder if I could get her to go for it?

“When I cringe and run from the restaurant, I’m sure you know it’s not homophobia,” Tara commented. “Just good old-fashioned family boundaries.”

“Yeah—let’s see if the monks can alter reality to erase the last ten seconds,” Beverly muttered. She glanced at her watch and pushed back her chair. “Time to feed the implacable demons of parking. Spare change, if you please.”

Moments later, she was shoving a random assortment of quarters and dimes into the gaping maw of the meter. As she turned to leave, she heard a sudden scuffling in the alley to her left. She took a half-step toward the sound.

“Hey—anybody there? Everything OK?” In lieu of a verbal response came a louder clanging, like metal tumbling about itself. And then she heard—or she could have sworn she heard—a faint gasping, as if someone were fighting to draw breath.

And because she was the kind of person who did things like help strangers and talk to people in elevators and sign on to protect mystical balls of energy, she dashed into the alley to see if someone needed assistance. As the darkness of the space closed in around her, she looked up to see a very short creature with serious skin problems standing on top of a trash dumpster. He was hoisting a club, and seemed intent on bringing it down with no small measure of antipathy upon her head.

“Oh, fu—”

*****

Which was how Beverly came to find herself in Glory’s penthouse. She awoke to hear that Hell God’s shrill voice reaming new and varied orifices into her minions.

“You’re lucky she’s still alive,” she hissed. “If her skull’s cracked or she has some kind of weird brain damage, she’s not going to be of any help to me; and if that happens, you won’t be of any help to me, ever again, because I’ll pull your spleens out through your nose.”

“We’re so blindingly sorry, Most Abundantly Divine One,” came a quivering reply. “We thought that she might prove difficult to subdue, given her special status.”

“As what? A big dyke? She’s a Protector, you worthless lump of idiocy, not a Slayer. You know what her power is? She gets near me, and I get all woozy. To anybody else, she’s just another woman in comfortable shoes.”

“We pathetically beg your most undeserved forgiveness, Oh Stunningly Rapturous Yet Tasteful One. We only wished to be certain of delivering the foul one to you.”

“Hey,” Beverly managed in a hoarse whisperer. “I’m fine with ‘dyke,’ but ‘foul’ just won’t do. Besides,” she added, glancing from one toady to the next, “when was the last time your face saw the business end of an exfoliant?”

Speaking left her nauseous. She dropped her head for a moment, hoping desperately that she didn’t toss her cookies in front of this crew. She could feel ropes cutting into her wrists and ankles, binding her to the hard wooden chair in which she sat. She heard rather than saw Glory take another step away from her, although she was already skulking close to the back of the room.

“Ooh, look—it’s a Protector…left so very unprotected. You know why you’re here, of course.”

“You wanted to ask me to the Prom and didn’t want to do it in front of my friends?”

Oh God, if she’s gonna kill me, please let it be quick. Please.

“No, silly; I don’t play for your team. I don’t really play for any team, to be honest. I’m more of a free agent kinda girl.”

“More like a free agent kinda whack job,” Beverly corrected her, knowing as she did so that Glory probably wasn’t terribly receptive to constructive feedback.

“You say potato, I say tuberous food source first cultivated by the Mayans,” Glory blithely replied. “But let’s cut to the main feature, shall we? You know the identity of the Key, and I need that information. Let’s work together on this one, shall we?”

“Let’s see about getting you eaten by a giant slug, shall we?”

“Oh, honestly…You’re all about empowering women, aren’t you? And what could be more empowering than helping a woman—a God—regain her rightful throne? Let’s face it, Sweetie—it’s right out of Marion Zimmer Bradley.”

“What, they have Barnes and Noble where you’re from?” Keeping her talking, Bev.

Why? she suddenly asked herself. Nobody can beat a Hell God; you’re not going to give her the information she wants. So, what—keep her talking, so you can be good and conscious when she starts to torture you?

I gotta try, she finally knew. Tanya will kick my ass if I get killed.

Glory, meanwhile, was giving a detailed description of the horrors that would ensue if Beverly didn’t divulge the Key’s identity, and showed an impressive knowledge of human anatomy in so doing.

“Listen, Glo—do you mind if I call you ‘Glo’?—let’s just face the fact that we are separated by profound ideological differences. Is there someway we can set aside those differences and just be real with each other? Just be ourselves? Me, a dedicated if somewhat irreverent woman who teaches inner-city school children; you, a profoundly disturbed deity in exile from hell.” Squinting, she could dimly make out Glory huddled at the back of the room. “Ebony, and ivory, live together in perfect harmony…” she sang in a remarkably off-key voice. Beverly knew she had no ear for music.

“What in the name all things unholy is she doing?” Glory demanded, her voice hitting a new octave.

“I believe it’s a popular song from the 1980’s, Thou Most Lusciously Amoral One,” came a helpful voice from behind her. “I believe Paul McCartney and Michael Jackson sang it.

“Michael gets out, and I can’t get back,” Glory muttered.

“Side by side on my piano keyboard, oh Lord…”

“Shut up,” Glory screeched, flinging a vase which shattered inches to her left. “I’m sick of this…Sick of everyone trying to keep me away from what I need. If you were stranded in the desert, don’t you think I’d give you a drink of water?”

“I’m guessing no,” Beverly replied, trying to keep her nausea gauge at half-tank.

“Well, no—I’d probably taunt you and hold the glass just beyond your reach,” Glory admitted. “But that’s because I’m a Hell God. I’m not wired to be beneficent. You—you help the Key; you help strangers in an alley; you help snot-fricken’-nosed kids…but you won’t help me.”

“At the risk of arguing the subjective nature of good and evil, those snot-nosed kids aren’t planning to annihilate the human race. At least not the ones in PS-367.”

“Fine,” Glory hissed. “You think I’m not getting closer? I know the Key’s here. I know it’s in human form. I know it’s one of the newer members of the Slayer’s circle. I can just take them one at a time—the new ones, the old ones…Sooner or later, somebody’s either gonna spill the beans.”

“You don’t know this crowd,” Beverly said evenly.

“I could just keep you here, and kill them one by one until you gave in.”

“Oh, yeah—that would really put me in a helpful mood. Save your breath for your blow-up doll, OK?”

“Or maybe I wouldn’t have to kill them all.” Glory’s voice was suddenly, sickeningly smooth. “I could just take the one. The one who came because she just couldn’t stand to be away from you. You think you might be able to come up with a name if her life depended on it?”

Beverly wondered if they could hear her heart pounding in her chest. Of course they could—it was deafening; cacophonous.

“What’s the matter, Bev? Suddenly you’re very, very quiet, and you were so spirited just a moment ago.”

Beverly felt the nausea cresting again, and this time it had nothing to do with her injuries. This was the worst, and she had done it. How could she have been so stupid? So selfish? To have Tanya come here in the middle of all of this? When Beverly was certain to be a target in one way or another?

“Baby, if you stay, I can’t even pretend that you won’t be at risk. The safest thing would be for you to take off now and find some nice woman who isn’t mixed up in something so crazy…And who manages to balance her check-book,” she added. Maybe if she could laugh about this, her heart wouldn’t rip completely out of her chest with the pain.

And Tanya had stared at her, that searching, fathomless gaze that Beverly now knew was an invitation—an invitation to walk into something real and honest, and not back down, not take refuge in half-truths and irony and easy outs. She stared at Beverly, and asked simply, “Do you love me?”

And Beverly, because she knew that Tanya knew the answer but needed to hear it, had gazed back her and replied, “Yes. With everything I am, I love you.”

“Then I stay,” Tanya had answered in return. “And we don’t ever, ever have this conversation again.”

That had been months ago, right after she had learned she was a Protector. But this—how could she possibly refuse? Could she really stand by and watch Glory kill her partner?

Finally, she looked up, and stared hard at the dim shape of Glory at the far wall. “If you make one move toward her, I’ll terminate my existence,” she said slowly. “I’ll be dead before you can say ‘Questionable Hair Rinse.’”

“Daddy, how come you beat Uncle Quinn and Uncle Nathan so much when you guys play poker? Are you just luckier?”

The eyes were mischievous; the smile, a welcome into a secret. “I’m no luckier than they are, Baby Girl. I just bluff better.”

“You’re lying,” Glory retorted. “Your hands are tied; your feet are tied. You can’t raise a finger to hurt yourself.”

“I don’t have to,” she replied evenly. “It’s mental, and it’s all mine.”

“This is nothing but a pathetic bluff,” Glory shouted.

“Then your decision should be an easy one, shouldn’t it? Just go ahead with your threat, secure in the knowledge that I won’t die right in front of you without ever saying a word.”

When Glory didn’t answer, Beverly could feel confidence edging back into her heart. “But if that isn’t your final answer, then just drop the idea of touching her, even coming near her. Because at that point, my life doesn’t matter and I’ll kill myself just to piss you off. Got that, Oh Skanky Ditzy Compulsively Masturbating One?”

Hey—that was a good one, Maclay.

Then she looked up and even through the darkness and distance she could feel Glory’s fury radiating off her.

Of course, now she’s really angry…

*****

To Be Continued
AntigoneUnbound
 


Re: Part 40

Postby darkmagicwillow » Mon Aug 11, 2003 5:13 pm

I knew Beverly shouldn't have entered the alley; good girls aren't very smart, are they? Of course, the bad girls aren't very bright either, as we see when she ends up in Glory's presence. The Hellgod demonstrates a remarkable knowledge of human culture, talking about the Mayans and MZB, even as she wastes her time making threats when she could just go out and eat all the Scoobies' minds in the time it would take a mortal to have lunch.



Thinking of Scoobies and lunch, are they all still waiting for their pizza (and don't you hate those pizza parlors that make you wait 30 minutes?) or what?



Moving on to people who are smart, Willow's thoughts on Trumps intrigued me. If one exists (and you know my thoughts on where one is hiding right now), it would offer a way out of this whole mess, in an even deeper way that surrendering the Key to Glory would. Why is the Key protected from Glory? Isn't she doing what you're supposed to with it? Why would anyone want to merge all the realities that way anyway? (Actually, there's an intriguing answer to that last question is Clive Barker's epic fantasy Imajica.)

--

"Omnia mutantur, nihil interit." -- "Everything changes, but nothing is truly lost."

darkmagicwillow
 

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