Disclaimers;
It's Joss Whedon's world, I'm just playing with it.
If we all play nice together and put the toys back where we found them,
everything will be lovely.
This story's rated between a PG and PG-13. No
explicit sex, some sensuality, some language, normal levels of slayer-ish
violence. Nasties attack, Slayers slay, wackiness ensues. And if the thought of
two women(Buffy and Willow in this case) being in love with each other wigs you
out, then what are you doing on this web-site anyway?
Classification; Action/Romance
Archives; Let me know, and I'm liable to say yes.
Feedback; give me a happy, and e-mail me at Jim_D_Means@prodigy.net
Synopsis;
One year into the future, the Hellmouth is wide open and the vampires
have taken
over the Earth.
A maimed Buffy travels back through time to stop the unholy bargain
which
was responsible for her world's destruction, and
help her younger self face the truth about her
feelings for Willow.
The Dying of The Light
Written by Kirayoshi
Chapter
three;
Gods and Monsters
"What can you tell me, Rupert?" a desperate Joyce asked the former
Watcher.
Giles looked up from his examination of the unconscious young woman on the
couch. "I’m
sorry, Joyce, but anything I have to say at this time would be strictly in the
realm of
speculation."
"A simple ‘not a clue’ would suffice," Buffy added.
Giles glared at the Slayer, then continued. "I can tell you this; this
young woman is obviously
not Buffy, or at least not your Buffy. Nor is she a vampire or demon; her
skin’s too warm for
a start, plus her pulse and respiration are strong. Vampires have neither. Also
note; the
scarring where her right arm was," he pointed to the shoulder, visible
under a tattered tank
top, "the scars are a few months old. And she looks physically older, and
not just in years.
No, this woman’s been through hell and back."
"Could she be from a parallel universe?" Willow asked nervously.
"Like the one my evil
vampire twin came from?"
Xander added, "Me, I’ve got five dollars that says that this involves time
travel."
Anya looked at her boyfriend and asked, "You have five dollars?"
"Please," Giles interrupted, "this speculation is getting us
nowhere. Right now, she seems
healthy, for all the damage that has been done to her body. For now, all we can
do is keep
her comfortable, and--"
Giles suggestions were drowned out by Buffy’s double muttering loudly in the
throes of a
nightmare; "No, no, not Willow, not you, not my Wills!
NOOOOOOOOOOOOOO!"
Suddenly, she bolted to an upright position, her eyes wide open, red-rimmed and
big as
baseballs, a sheen of sweat covering her body, her jaw locked open in fear. Her
head darted
from face to face, from one corner of the room to another, like a caged rat.
She trained her
eyes on Giles, and demanded, "Who are you?"
"My name is Rupert Giles," he answered. "Should I call you
Buffy?"
The woman grabbed Giles’ arm roughly by the wrist, and placed her thumb firmly
over the
primary vein. Giles was surprised by this development; even with one arm, she
still
possessed a slayer’s strength.
The young woman held his wrist for a few seconds, her look of fear soon giving
way to a
look of astonishment, then one of great relief. "A pulse," she
whispered, gasping. "You have
a pulse." She noticed Giles panting. "You’re breathing! Quick, Giles.
The time!"
"You seem to have the wrist with a watch, Buffy," Giles commented.
Buffy quickly let go,
and Giles looked at the watch face. "I have it at four-twenty-five. Just
at sundown."
The older Buffy looked impatiently at Giles. "Date, month, year!" she
shouted, waving her
hand in a circular motion.
"Time travel," Xander asserted. "Told you."
"It’s the nineteenth of December, 1999," Giles answered. Buffy sat
forward on the couch in
wonder.
"It worked," she said simply. "The spell worked." She then
leapt off of the couch, shouting,
"I MADE IT!" She grabbed Giles in a one-armed hug, squeezing him like
a vice. "God I
missed you, Giles!" she cried, tears of joy spilling from her eyes. Giles
found himself holding
her as hard as he could, his normally stoic exterior crumbling under this
genuine display of
affection.
She let go of her mentor, spun around the room, her eyes lighting on Joyce.
"Mom, you’re
still alive! Oh God," she rushed headlong into Joyce’s arms, nearly
knocking her to the floor
with the ferocity of her embrace. "Oh God, I love you, Mom," she
cried over and over.
"I love you too, sweetie," Joyce answered, at a loss for anything
else to say. Holding her,
however, had convinced her that this was no demon or vampire; this was as much
her
daughter as the young woman standing beside her.
Older Buffy disengaged from hugging Joyce, and turned to Xander and Anya.
"X-Man!" she
exalted, slapping him on the back with gusto. "Ya old knuckle-knob! How
the hell are ya?"
Xander stood dumbstruck at her assault, but had no time to respond as she
turned her
attentions to his girlfriend. "Anya, I’m even glad to see you! C’mere you
old vengeance
demon ya!" she wrapped her arm around Anya’s neck, shouting, "If I
had both arms, I’d give
you a noogie!"
"I’m grateful for small favors then," Anya said under her breath.
"Buffy?" Willow asked the human tornado which had been ripping
through the Summers
house.
Older Buffy stopped and spun toward Willow. "My God, Wills?" she
asked in a little-girl
voice. "It’s you, isn’t it? You’re not a vamp? You’re alive?" Willow
nodded timidly,
uncertain what this doppleganger would do next.
The older Buffy, tears streaming from her eyes, strode slowly toward Willow,
and fell into her
arms. She wailed loudly, bawling like a little baby, babbling incoherently. At
times, Willow
thought that she heard Buffy saying, "Oh, God, I’m sorry Will, I’m so
sorry, so sorry"
repeating her apologies for whatever unspoken crime she had committed. In some
corner in
the back of her head, it reminded Willow of Heather Donahue at the end of
"The Blair Witch
Project", holding her camera up to her face and making a last desperate
confession. Willow
would have laughed, if not for the surreal quality of this current situation.
Then the blond grabbed Willow’s neck and brought her face level with her own.
"Don’t
worry, Wills," she said solemnly. "I swear by the love I have for you
that it won’t happen
again." Before Willow could ask what she was talking about, the maimed Slayer
pulled
Willow’s face to her own, and kissed her hard on the mouth.
The kiss lasted for several seconds, long enough for Xander to whistle softly,
commenting,
"Whoa, subtext much?"
Buffy--the one with two arms--looked at this bizarre scene, and commented,
"Okay, I’m
officially freaked out now."
The older Buffy stopped the kiss at these words, and finally acknowledged her
counterpart.
She let go of Willow, and turned to her younger self. "My God, seeing you
like this," she
stammered. "I almost forgot what it was like. To be hopeful, to have
friends like this--Don’t
worry, Buffy, it won’t happen to you like it did for me. We can change it. We
have to."
These last words were spoken as a vow.
"Hoo-boy," Xander commented. "Okay, Alt-Buffy. Maybe you should
start at the beginning
and work your way up to ‘it won’t happen to you like it did for me’." As
Xander spoke, a tea
kettle started to whistle in the kitchen. "I thought that you might like
some tea or hot cocoa,"
Joyce said absently. She quietly headed for the kitchen while Giles and the
Scoobs looked
anxiously at the stranger in their midst, waiting for the bomb to drop.
Alt-Buffy looked at the faces that surrounded her. They were her friends, yet
in a way not.
She was an outsider to them, yet she was the same young woman who they called
daughter,
friend, beloved. She found her way back to the couch, and collapsed with a
thud. "I’ll tell
you what I can, guys, but I don’t know all the facts myself. Xander was right,
however. I am
from the future, just over a year from now, I’m not sure, I stopped counting
dates after a
while. They stopped being important." As she spoke, she accepted a cup of
hot chocolate
with miniature marshmallows that Joyce had made for her. Joyce passed hot
chocolate
around for the rest of her guests, along with tea for Giles, and they drank
their cups silently as
Alt-Buffy told her story;
"You see, tonight, December 19, something terrible happens. I’m not sure
what. All I know
is that I was patrolling around Whetherly Park, trolling for vampires, when
suddenly, dark
clouds covered the sky, fire erupted from near where Sunnydale High School used
to be,
then the next thing I know, the Hellmouth is open for business. I mean wide
open. I have no
idea what caused it, I just knew that we were in major trouble. Worse then the
Master and
Angelus combined, then squared.
"The next two months, we tried to figure out what happened, Willow holed
up in the college
library behind her computers, Giles buried himself in the stacks, I tried to
fight everything that
poured out of the Hellmouth. It was too much for me, even for an army of
slayers. The
Initiative tried to fight alongside me, but they were severely outclassed. One
or two of them
were turned, and they turned everyone else in their bunker. Then," she
caught her breath,
then continued, "the vampires turned everyone else. Mom, Giles, Xander,
Willow, Oz,
everyone.
"All of Sunnydale became vampires. Then all of California, then all of the
continent, then all
the world. It spread like the common cold, like that plague from "The
Stand", until only a
handful of normal people were left. They were captured by the vamps,
lobotomized,
branded as cattle and kept only to produce blood for the vamps. I guess they
kept me alive
for revenge. They knew I was the Slayer, and I stopped the demons of the
Hellmouth from
destroying the world before, so they kept me alive to see their final victory.
I became
Charlton Freaking Heston in "The Omega Man"!"
She narrated her tale in a dull monotone, her fear responses deadened a long
time ago. She
had lived through this horror, but for her audience, it was as fresh as each
tomorrow. Joyce
absently chewed her knuckle, Xander held Anya a little tighter, and Willow
wanted nothing
more than to hold this woman’s hand, and drive out whatever foul visions she
had witnessed.
She wanted nothing more than to be a friend, and hopefully a lover, for this
damaged woman.
"It was six months ago, when I saw Angel being killed on live TV, when I
decided there was
only one thing for me to do. It was about that time when I became a
southpaw," she added,
indicating her right shoulder. "Oz held me down, while Riley hacked it off
with an ax.
Anyway, I realized that I had to find my friends and family who had been
turned, and slay
them. Destroy their vampire bodies, so that their souls could find rest. Once
that was over, I
would take the nearest sword and drive it into my heart. Better to die by my
own hand, than
risk being turned, right? I was going to Hell anyway, why not on my own
terms?"
"But something else happened, or else you wouldn’t be here," Giles
hazarded a guess.
"Yeah," Alt-Buffy answered over a sip of chocolaty goodness. "I
ran into Cordy, after taking
out Vamp-Willow in LA. Turns out that she had been hiding out in an old church,
and
avoided being vamped. She hooked up with some outfit called the Powers That Be,
and
they gave her something--Mom, where’s my duffel bag?"
"Right here, honey," Joyce fetched the ratty old bag and handed it to
the injured slayer. Buffy
rummaged through the bag, and withdrew the scepter. Giles looked at the device,
a brass
rod entwined by two copper snakes, and nearly dropped his tea onto his lap.
"My God," he
whispered reverently. "The Scepter of Hermes!"
"Who-mes?" asked the younger Buffy.
"Hermes," Xander snapped his fingers. "Wasn’t he the Greek god
of speed? Yeah, he was
in charge of travelers and roads, too, wasn’t he?"
"Very good, Xander," Giles commented, genuinely impressed. He then
thought for a second,
and asked him sternly, "Did you get that from an episode of ‘Xena, Warrior
Princess’?"
Xander smiled innocently, "Educational television. Gotta love it!"
Giles let out an audible exasperated sigh, and continued in full Professor
Mode; "According
to legend, Hermes was gifted by Hephaestus, the god of the forge, with a staff
and winged
shoes, that allowed him to fly, and travel at any speed imaginable. With the
staff, the myths
say, no place on Earth, in Heaven or in Hell was too distant to him. If these
so-called
Powers That Be are associated with the godlike beings that recruited Angel,
then this must be
that very staff! Amazing!"
"Great, so we stick it in a crate next to the Ark of the Covenant,
Indy?" Buffy asked. "What
does this have to do with whatever’s going down tonight at Sunnydale
High?"
"That staff is what brought me here, Buffy," Alt-Buffy answered.
"I guess if no place in the
universe is to distant for it, that must mean time-travel as well. I don’t know
how it works,
really, I just got impressions from it, including a spell to recite when
activating it; ‘Tempus
Fugit, Tempus Fragnat’."
"Oh, oh," Willow barked excitedly, grasping at something that she
could understand in this
strange conversation. "That means ‘Time Passes, Time Breaks’, or something
like that, right?"
"Something like that, yes, Willow," Giles agreed. "Uh,
Alt-Buffy, I guess," he turned toward
the older slayer. "You say you received images from the scepter. What kind
of images?"
"Mostly faces and things from my past," Alt-Buffy answered.
"Lots of stuff from Sunnydale
High, especially the old football field. I also got some images of Mr. Snyder
for some weird
reason."
"Oh God, Snyder?" Xander groaned at the thought of the late
unlamented principal of
Sunnydale High. "Give me the Master, give me Angelus, give me another
Ascension. Give
me the Master and Angelus with front row seats for the Ascension, but please
dear God, not
Snyder!"
"I wouldn’t worry about Snidely Whiplash," Buffy commented, "seeing
as how he got
gobbled up by His Honor during our graduation. Much dead now."
"No he isn’t."
Six pairs of eyes fixed themselves on the speaker. Anya, who had kept her own
counsel
during this exchange, finally saw fit to speak up.
"I hate to contradict, Anya," Willow said, "but he got eaten up
real good by a Snyder-eating
dragon-sized demonic mayor Wilkins. It was the highpoint of the commencement
exercises."
"A human named Snyder was eaten," Anya insisted, "but the animus
remains. Belial."
"Belial, Belial," Xander searched his memory, "nope, I don’t
recall a Belial on ‘Xena’. Unless
he’s related to Dahak."
"I know of Belial," Giles muttered. "One of the higher ranking
demons in the hierarchy of
Hell."
"An arch-duke of Hell," Anya intoned with dread in her voice.
"Lord of the Pit, Author of all
Lies, these are his titles."
"Y’know, Anya," Buffy said in an edged voice, "I can’t help but
wish that you had brought this
up sooner."
"I wasn’t a part of your merry group until after graduation," Anya
explained innocently. Or as
innocently as an ex-vengeance demon can get. "By the time I got back
together with Xander
and joined the Slayerettes, Belial had departed the mortal plane, so I figured
that he lost
interest in your world. But if you’re having flashbacks of him, I would guess
that he’s coming
back."
"But how did you know about him?" Giles asked.
"No demon can hide its true essence from another demon," Anya said
simply. "In fact, once I
learned that Belial had set himself up as the principal of your high school I
said to myself,
‘Self, this looks like home sweet home!’. You see, Belial wants above all else
control. Over
life, over souls, over all creation."
"And Snyder being such a control freak," Giles added, "he would
have been an ideal host for
Belial. I always suspected that he knew about Mayor Wilkins, and about
Buffy."
"Oh God, this almost makes sense," Joyce breathed. "That
miserable troll set out from day
one to make Buffy miserable. Unfair punishments, intimidation, expulsion, he
did everything
he could against my little girl."
"Mom, please," Buffy and Alt-Buffy said in unison, then looked at
each other, embarrassed
that they spoke that way. Xander looked at the two and quipped, "You knew
that was going
to happen."
"Joyce has a point," Giles conceded. "That evolutionary
throw-back always seemed to have
a vendetta against Buffy. Anyway, what matters is, if Belial is behind all
this, we may be
facing a grave crisis. Buffy," he spoke to the younger Slayer, "you
were planning a patrol,
right?"
"I was going to stake out Whetherly Park," Buffy answered, then
amended her reply; "No
pun intended. Perhaps I should go by where the high school was instead?"
"That’s where the visions seem to be leading us," Giles answered.
"Besides, the Hellmouth is
at its weakest over the old school grounds, and that’s where you," he
pointed to Alt-Buffy,
"saw the fire display."
"I’d better go with Buffy," Alt-Buffy suddenly volunteered.
Giles thought about it, then said, "Perhaps you’re right. The two of you
can guard each
other’s backs. Willow and I will do the research. Xander, Anya, stay with
Willow, do what
she asks. I’ll be at the campus library."
"You have a computer, Mrs. Summers?" Willow asked.
"I have a good laptop, with a reasonably fast modem," Joyce went to
her study to locate the
computer.
Soon, the Scoobs set out on their separate errands. The two Buffies on patrol,
Willow as
Research Girl and Giles in the library stacks." Xander, Anya and Joyce
stood by pensively,
assured of only one thing; if Belial was their enemy, then they were in for the
fight of their
lives.
Chapter
4
A
Pleasant Walk, A Pleasant Talk
"Hey,
Wills," Buffy’s voice called over the cell-phone she carried on her
patrol. From the light tone, Willow
imagined that it was her Buffy, the one with both the arms she was born
with. "Buffy and Buffy reporting
in as scheduled."
"Hey
back, Buff," Willow answered on her own cell-phone. She had the prescience to carry hers with
her, which became their primary link with the patrolling Slayers, since Mrs.
Summers’ phone would be tied up with Willow’s websurfing. "Any signs of skanky evil?"
"Quiet
as an audience at a Xander Harris standup routine," Buffy answered. "We’ve been heading toward the old
school grounds, and turned up nada. The
closest we got was a pair of Goths at the corner of Swanson and Perry. They matched the vampire profile so we
trailed them for a few blocks, only to see them duck into The Old Spaghetti
Factory on Sutherland."
"So?"
Willow asked. "Maybe they’re
Italian vampires?"
"Will,
remember when I treated you to dinner at the Spaghetti Factory for your
birthday, and you said you liked the food, but it had a little too much--"
she paused for a beat, waiting for Willow to supply the end of her sentence.
Willow
complied, amazed that she had overlooked the obvious. "Garlic, of course.
My bad."
"Don’t
worry about it. How’s Research
Girl?"
"Currently,
more like Stuck-In-Download-Hell Girl.
Your mom’s laptop doesn’t have quite the speed of my computer at the
dorm. I’m trying to hack into Snyder’s
personal records, trying to find some connection with this Belial
whatever. So far, the encryption codes
are pretty tough."
"If
anyone can do it, it’s my favorite Wiccan-slash-hacker."
"And
how many other Wiccan-slash-hackers do you know, Slaygirl?"
"Love
you, Wills," Buffy smiled slightly at the teasing tone in her friend’s
voice. "I’ll call back at the
half-hour. Bye."
"Bye,
Buff," Willow hung up her cell-phone and tried to concentrate on the
screen. ‘Love you, Wills,’ she had
said. If only...
"Hey,
how’s the research?" Joyce’s
greeting interrupted the young witch’s wandering thoughts. The voice, along with sweet baking smells,
drew her attention.
"Slow
and steady," Willow answered.
"Here,"
Joyce put a plate beside the computer.
"I baked some chocolate chip cookies."
"Wow,
that was fast," Willow commented as she reached for a cookie.
"Actually,
it was store-bought cookie dough. I
just thought that you could use a break from staring at the computer
screen." Joyce glanced at the
screen herself and asked, "What are you looking for in particular?"
"I’m
waiting for a download from a high school in Spokane, Washington," Willow
answered as she nibbled on her cookie.
"Apparently Mr. Snyder’s last known position before transferring to
Sunnydale. It may take a while. Don’t worry though, the web server’s a local
call. No phone bills."
"Willow,"
Joyce sat beside Willow as she spoke in a comforting tone, "my daughter is
out there putting her life on the line on a regular basis. If it will help her, I’m not going to fret
over phone bills." Willow smiled
at Joyce’s assurances. She remembered
how hard Buffy’s mother had taken it when she learned about her daughter being
a slayer. Her initial reaction had been
to practically kick her out of the house.
Since then, she had made her peace with Buffy’s life. Willow knew that Joyce would never be fully
comfortable with Buffy’s calling, but she at least understood it a little
better now.
"Willow,"
Joyce started, then stopped. She was
afraid of the question she knew she had to ask. She munched on a cookie for courage, took a deep breath and started
again. "Willow, there’s something
I need to ask you. About Buffy."
"Fire
away," Willow said absently, as she took a bite of her cookie.
"How
long have you been in love with her?"
Instantly
a shower of half-chewed cookie bits was expelled over the laptop screen by the
force of Willow’s spit take. Willow
immediately fretted, rubbing the sleeve of her sweater over the screen. "Ohmigod, Geez, Mrs. Summers, I’m
sorry, I’ll just clean this up, get some gayper-PAPER towels, we’ll get this
straightened out, just like me and Buffy.
Straight. Yep, that’s us,
straight as the Nile, except for that crooked bit where it branches off into
the delta, oh God, help me, I’m trapped in a recursive babble loop."
Joyce
placed her hand on Willow’s, offering her support, while at the same time,
fighting the urge to giggle at her display.
"It’s okay, Willow. Xander
and Anya are in the next room, AND THEY HAD BETTER BE FULLY CLOTHED," she
raised her voice and craned her neck toward the hallway, setting off a distant
thud of someone falling off a couch, "and I promise that anything you say
won’t leave this room."
Willow
looked at her hands, the computer screen, a particularly interesting corner in
the room, anything but Joyce’s face.
She was surprised, not only that Joyce knew the depth of her feelings
for Buffy, but also that she seemed cool with it. "Well, Mrs. Summers," she stammered meekly, "we
met in our sophomore year in high school, which was three years ago, so I guess
the answer would be," she finally looked Joyce in the eye, "pretty
much all of my life. Just how did you
figure it out?"
"Well,
seeing my daughter’s counterpart kiss you when she came too was a big
hint," Joyce admitted.
"Hey,"
Willow protested. "I didn’t start
that kiss."
"You
didn’t stop it either," Joyce teased.
"Hey, I’m not mad at you about it, nor would I be mad at Buffy if
she announced that she loved you. Or,
judging by Alt-Buffy’s performance, I should say when she announces it. A mother knows these things, even one as
seemingly oblivious as myself."
She patted Willow’s knee.
"It was some kiss, wasn’t it?"
"Yeah,"
Willow admitted. "Remember in ‘The
Princess Bride’ when Buttercup pushed The Dread Pirate Roberts down the hill,
and he shouts out ‘As you wish’, and she realizes that The Dread Pirate Roberts
is really Wesley, and she follows after him, and they kiss each other?"
She illustrated her babbling with rapidly waving hand gestures, then
self-consciously stopped and put her hands in her lap. "Well, it was definitely in that
category of kiss." She grinned at
the illicit memory. "But
Buffy--your Buffy, the two armed one, she hasn’t said anything to me, and I
don’t think I can tell her. I don’t
want to screw up our being best friends.
Besides, I wouldn’t want you to kick her out of the house or anything
like that."
"Willow,"
Joyce half-laughed, "I made that mistake when she dropped the Slayer
bombshell on me. Not the highlight in
my career as a mother. Don’t worry, I
won’t judge you, and I won’t interfere, except to say this." Joyce turned Willow’s face to face her
own. Her voice became soft, hushed, as
she expressed her deepest mother’s heart to Willow. "From the day when Buffy first told me she was a vampire
slayer, my greatest fear for her was that she would die young and alone. That no one would ever understand who and
what she was and that no one would ever love her or want to make a life
together with her. Obviously, there is
such a person, who also happens to be a pretty wonderful young woman herself,
and anyone would be lucky to have that woman love her. If you are the one who can make her happy,
and if she wants you to be that one, I can’t think of a thing that could please
me more." She stood up, smiled at
Willow and finished, "And in the immortal words of Forrest Gump, ‘that’s
all I have to say about that’."
"Thanks,
Mrs. Summers," Willow wiped back a tear as she turned to the screen. "Uh, about those paper towels..."
"I’ll
get them," Joyce answered, breaking the spell of bonding that had occurred
between the two women. Willow turned
back to the screen, just as the download was completed. She somehow felt less like a freak for being
in love with her best friend. And
Buffy’s mother was okay with it. Wow.
With
those thoughts in her head, she unzipped the files and, once the screen was
wiped of cookie crumbs, started to read.
-------------------------------------------------------
It
had become a running gag around the Scooby Gang that Rupert Giles was a
notorious technophobe. Willow had on
occasion called him a Neo-Luddite, and Buffy once exclaimed that he would have
told Gutenberg not to rock the boat with that movable type press of his. While it was true that most of his
experiences with computers were spectacular failures, Giles refused to give in
to the continual jibes that he was accosted with by the Slayerettes. The fact was that he had rather preferred
the printed page to the electronic age.
As far as Giles was concerned, a simple, portable book was worth all the
e-mail and web sites that the proposed paperless society promised.
Nevertheless,
he was glad that Willow was so well versed in computer hacking; the information
that she could discover had often spelled the difference between victory and
defeat. At this time, she was looking
for files on Mr. Snyder while he looked for anything concerning Belial. Once again, he was amazed at the amount of
arcane lore and esoteric knowledge he had been able to dig up at the UC
Sunnydale campus library. Presumably
the result of Sunnydale being governed for most of its history by one immortal
man obsessed with becoming all powerful, even over the corpses of those whom he
governed. Any unholy information he
could discover to further his own warped goals.
Once
he had navigated through the computerized card file(a far less painful process
than he had anticipated) he located the corresponding texts. Several books that hadn’t been opened in
years, some, Giles would have wagered, not opened during his lifetime, were
strewn over the table where Giles was reading.
The first two books yielded nothing that Giles hadn’t known; Beliel, like the classic Satan or Lucifer,
was a powerful demon, but one of subtlety and finesse. Preferring to do his mischief through
underlings and unwitting dupes, Belial would tempt certain people, particularly
those who desired control above all else, and promise them control. In the end, however, it was Belial who would
control his victims, who gladly signed away their souls, only to lose all that
they desired. They became no more than
puppets for the demon master Belial.
The
book he was reading now, the title translated into "The Codex of Taliesin
the Lesser", was a particularly rare book, and had seldom left its space
on the shelves; the spine protested with creaks and groans as Giles opened it,
indicating that it hadn’t been opened for nearly a century. The book written by a medieval mage, circa
the first half of the 14th century, who fancied himself the incarnation of
Taliesin, alias Merlin, the mentor of England’s legendary King Arthur. Giles scoffed at the author’s assertions,
which seemed to color the content of the book, but his knowledge of Belial’s
ways had proven more enlightening than anything he had read before this. He came upon one page, covered with ornate
Celtic knotwork designs and entangled animal and human forms, framing a
text. The text was written in one of
the more archaic uncial forms of the Celtic language, one with which Giles had
to struggle mightily to completely translate.
Once he did, the finished paragraph chilled his bones to the marrow;
"These
be the words of Taliesin the lesser
The
words you needs must read and ponder in your heart,
Unwise
be he who would dice with Belial on such a night as this;
In
the final days before the closing of the Thousand Years,
Will
Belial come to one who seeks to govern all.
A
deal will be made, one which shall seal the doom of all men,
Unless
the Chosen One and those who follow her
Do
battle with Belial--
Two
Chosen shall face Belial and
Shall one only remain."
The
implications practically jumped off the page and shouted at Giles. "The closing of the Thousand
Years" clearly meant the end of the millennium, which was indeed
near. Although the millennium didn’t
actually end until December 31, 2000, the prophesy made sense, it clearly
alluded to the present day. Likewise,
"the Chosen One" was obvious to Giles; the Chosen One, the Slayer,
Buffy. "And those who would follow
her"; the Scooby Gang.
Finally,
"two chosen". Two
slayers. Buffy and her counterpart from
the future. "Shall one only
remain". He didn’t pretend to
understand time travel, but he had enjoyed the adventures of "Doctor Who"
as a child in his native London. It
made sense that the displaced slayer, once she had changed her timeline, would
cease to exist. But what if he was
wrong?
He
wrote down the translations of the pertinent texts, and left the library for
the Summers residence. Armed with this
new information, he hoped that he could shed some light on Belial’s plan,
before it was too late for Buffy.
Either Buffy.
He
was already worried about Alt-Buffy. It
was clear from her initial display, hugging her friends and family fiercely, so
that even with one arm she could squeeze the wind out of his lungs with her
embrace. And her desperate apologies to
Willow. Why Willow? Giles had been keenly aware of the depth of
friendship between the Slayer and the Hacker, and while it bothered him that
Buffy’s calling had exposed Willow, along with the other Slayerettes, to a great
many dangers, he came to realize that she owed her continued existence and her
success as this generation’s Slayer to those bonds. Where the Watcher’s Council believed that such bonds were a fatal
weakness, Buffy had made them her strength.
But
this older Buffy, she had lost those bonds, as her loved ones were turned. She clearly blamed herself for her world’s
demise, just as the Buffy he knew blamed herself for taking Angel’s soul with
her act of love, leaving behind the vile Angelus. All the pain and misery Angelus caused, from murdering Jenny
Calendar and Kendra to the summoning of Acaltha and the near death of Willow
herself, Buffy had hoisted upon her shoulders like Atlas carrying the
heavens. No wonder she ran away to LA
after Angelus’ death. Her counterpart,
however, felt an even greater guilt, and Giles was worried that she would do
whatever it takes to stop it. Up to and
including sacrificing her own life.
He
only hoped that she wouldn’t end up sacrificing all she loved in the process.
-------------------------------------------------------
The
two Buffies strode quietly through the clear Sunnydale night, their almost
supernatural senses attuned to any undid or demonic traces around them. So far, their patrol had been quiet. This disturbed them both; if the vampires
weren’t out and about, then it was likely that they were gathering their
strength and their numbers.
Buffy
looked at her older counterpart, and tried to read her expression. She seemed wary, always looking around like
a cat at night. Simple Slayer behavior
on patrol, she thought, but there was something else. Some form of energy, a coiled spring waiting to be released. The older Buffy looked at her sibling and
asked, "Something you want to share?"
"No, not really," Buffy answered.
"Just trying to figure you out.
You’re so much like me, yet not.
I guess I find it kinda freaky."
"Hey,"
Alt-Buffy answered, hiking up her tote bag to keep if from throwing her weight
off balance. "I’m the one from out
of town, this isn’t exactly Normalsville for me either."
"How
does it feel?" Buffy asked.
The
older Buffy shook her head, trying to explain what she could barely grasp. "I feel that this is what my entire
life as a slayer was building up to.
Like win or lose, it’s my last battle.
In fact, I know it’s my last battle; from my contact with the Scepter of
Hermes," she patted the side of her bag with her hand, indicating that she
still carried the scepter with her, "once we whup Belial’s ass, I have to
cast a final spell. Otherwise, all my
changing history will be for nothing.
Kinda like when I wrote that ten page essay on King Lear..."
"...and
forgot to hit ‘save’ and the whole thing was erased before I could print it for
class," Buffy finished for her.
"God that was a bitch." The slayers laughed together at the
shared memory. The younger Buffy then
fixed her gaze on her twin, as she asked, "But doesn’t it bother you
knowing that one way or another, this is it?
I mean, you change everything, you stop being--man, trying to think like
this is making my hair hurt! You’ll
simply stop existing?"
"But
I’m not," Alt-Buffy tried to explain to the other Slayer. "I’m simply erasing a part of my life
that never should have happened. I’ll
still go on, because you’re me. You’re
alive, so I’ll be alive. And the others
will be alive. Mom, Giles, Willow, the
gang, they’ll be alive!"
"Uh,
that sorta kinda brings me to my next issue," Buffy said. "What’s with you and Willow? I mean, that was some serious smoochies back
there."
Alt-Buffy
looked at her with a slight smile playing on her battle-scarred face. "I love her. Always have. As you
know."
Buffy
stepped back from her partner as though she were thrown off by an electrical
field. "Whoa, time out, instant
replay, be kind, rewind! Love? As in, Angel was right about
Vamp-Willow? She is kinda
gay?"
Alt-Buffy
rolled her eyes at her younger self’s outburst. "The hammer lands on the knee and the foot rises into the
air. Buffy, look at me. This is not just someone who knows what it
is to be you, this is you. And you know
in your heart that what I’m saying is true.
You saw the shy looks she’s been giving you since she lost Oz, the way
she got over-protective when you first started noticing Riley. She loves you. And you love her."
She
turned her face away for a second, then screwed her courage to face Buffy
again. A glistening tear tracked its
way down her cheek. "I know you
do, because I am you. And I love
Willow. She was my center, my source of
strength. It destroyed me when I had to
stake her, because she was as much the reason why I kept fighting the good
fight as any. She’s why I’m here now,
trying to change what was in my world.
It was always her, not Angel, not Riley. It took me too long to realize that. Please, Buffy, don’t let your chance slip away. She loves you so much.
"She’s
your salvation, Buffy. She’s the light
in your life. Don’t let that light go
out. You won’t be able to survive the
darkness that would follow."
Buffy
tried to speak, to rebut her twin’s charges, but the words wouldn’t leave her
throat. Somehow, slowly, Alt-Buffy’s
words sunk in, and with them the realization that her life, whether they won or
lost tonight, would never be the same.
Buffy looked back at those same hazel eyes that greeted her in the
mirror, only older and wiser, and realized that she was telling the truth. Her entire world, her heart, her soul, her
strength, her whole purpose in life became distilled into three simple words;
Willow loved her.
And
she returned that love.
"This
reminds me of a Dylan Thomas poem I was reading the other week in my Lit
class," Buffy recalled. She
started to recite the first lines; "‘Do not go gentle into that good
night...’,"
"‘Old
age should burn and rave at close of day;’," her twin concluded, and the
two of them finished the stanza together; "‘Rage, rage against the dying
of the light’."
This
revelation about her and Willow hit like a body blow, and she had to back up to
recollect her scattered thoughts.
"Whoa," she whispered.
"Look, I just gotta get used to having this running around my
head. I mean, I never considered myself
gay or anything, but now..."
"You’re
not gay," her older self consoled her, "you’re just in love with
Willow. It’s not about what tickles you
below the beltway, it’s about who is your other half."
Just
hearing her other self say these words, Buffy realized that she was hearing
nothing that she didn’t already know intuitively. "Yeah, I guess that helps when you put it that way, Buffy. I’m going to have to talk to her once this
party’s over. Thanks."
"Hey,
what are alternate future counterparts for, if not...shh!" She dug her hand into her duffel bag,
fishing out Mr. Pointy. "Undead
skanky evil at eleven and three o’clock."
The
warning was unnecessary. Both Buffies
stood back to back, their stakes in hand, their bodies as tightly wound steel
springs ready to be unleashed.
"It’s a dead man’s party," Alt-Buffy commented.
"Who
could ask for more?" her younger self finished the thought. Low howls could be heard behind the bushes
and trees around them. The two Slayers
stood poised, ready for any attack.
As
one, a small army of vampires lunged out of the darkness, fingers bent into
claws, fangs bared, ready for the kill.
Buffy high-kicked her first attacker, and lunged her stake into its
heart in half a second, then worked her way through the growing mass of
undead. A simple methodical pattern
governed her movements; kick, stake, repeat.
"Yo," Buffy called to her partner. "How you doing?"
"Good
enough," Alt-Buffy answered. "Mostly newbies, foot soldiers."
"Yeah,"
Buffy added, "but who’s their general?"
Before
she could continue that thought, a vampire got close enough to slam his fist
against the back of her neck. Suddenly
they were all over her. She struggled
against the horde, but their sheer numbers overwhelmed her. "Buffy!" she screamed, "get
out of here! Don’t let them take us
both! Call Giles and the Scoobs, have
them--" Another sledgehammer fist ended that sentence as Buffy was knocked
unconscious. Alt-Buffy broke away from
the crowd of vampires, staking as many as she could, before diving behind a
bush, preparing her escape.
Before
the vampires could pursue her, a car pulled out in front of them. From her vantage point, Alt-Buffy was able
to see only a little of what was going on.
She saw someone step out of the car, and address the vampires. "Don’t kill her," he demanded. "I want her alive. To witness what her rebellion against the
Watcher’s Council has brought her. And
throw that bag aside. We don’t want her
to have access to her weapons."
Alt-Buffy
was stunned as she heard that voice.
The voice of the one human she hated as blackly as any vampire. The man who forced her mentor Giles to
betray her, for the sake of some Slayer’s test that nearly killed her and her
mother. The man who expelled Giles from
the Watcher’s Council for the unforgivable crime of caring about his Slayer.
Quentin
Travers.
Quentin
ordered the vampires to drag Buffy into the trunk of his car, and then said,
"Well done. Now, meet me at the
remains of Sunnydale High School. And
no midnight snacks along the way. When
this is over, there will be plenty of blood for all of you, and no slayer to
get in the way. Now go!" He spoke with authority, and the vampires
followed. Clearly he was their
general.
After
the car pulled away, Alt-Buffy gingerly stepped out from behind the bush,
disbelieving what she saw. Quentin
Travers, head of the Watcher’s Council, working with vampires? He had betrayed the council, and now was
planning to punish Buffy for her desertion of the Council. He had to be behind the destruction that she
had witnessed first-hand. He was making
a bargain with Belial and mankind’s future would be forfeit.
Not
on my watch!
she thought grimly.
She
ran to the discarded duffel bag, and checked its contents. She found the cellular, still whole despite
the impact with the street. Buffy
placed the phone on the ground, and started to dial with her one good
hand. She prayed that she could reach
Giles and the Scooby Gang in time.
-------------------------------------------------------
Giles
had returned to Joyce Summers’ house with the information he had gathered from
the library. He was now comparing notes
with what Willow had discovered while hacking.
"Here we are, guys," Willow announced as Joyce, Giles, Xander
and Anya peered over her shoulder at the laptop monitor. "I think I’ve found the connection
between Snyder and Belial."
"They’re
both scuzzbags?" Xander guessed.
Anya slapped him on the arm, indicating that it was time to serious up.
"According
to this file," Willow continued, "Roland Snyder was the principal of
Shadle Park High School in Spokane Washington for three years, before his
resignation. That was his last recorded
position before his tenure as principal of Sunnydale, otherwise known as the
Reign of Terror. He was honored by the
local school district for his compassionate leadership, and his willingness to
work long and hard with the students and teachers to excel."
"Well,"
Xander piped in, "you obviously have the wrong file." Giles nodded his head, adding, "I have
to agree with Xander. The Snyder I
remember didn’t care whether his students lived or died."
"I
thought I took a wrong turn too," Willow admitted, "but look at this
picture." She pulled down a jpeg
picture of a man posing with the football team, proudly wearing the green and
gold of the Shadle Park Highlanders.
"Yep, that’s Snyder," Joyce announced, "I’d know that
ferret face anywhere."
"But
it’s not Belial," said Anya.
"Even from a photo, I’d be able to sense Belial’s presence in a
human host."
"Well,
according to this file," Willow continued, "just before he left Shadle Park, he was mugged and severely
beaten by three members of the football squad that he was forced to expel for
repeated steroid abuse. Just after
their expulsion they ganged up on him, and beat the dog snot out of him. He left Shadle two days later, and their
vice-principal had to take over. He
fell off the map for three years after that, until he showed up at
Sunnydale."
"Yes,"
Anya admitted, "that would be when Belial took over. When Snyder was mugged, he must have felt as
though he had lost control. That’s when
Belial strikes. He offered him control,
but ended up in control."
"And
that’s just what Mayor Wilkins wanted from his principal," Giles
added. "That’s why he was hired
after Rob Flutie died. And so from a
caring compassionate administrator... "
"He
became that smirking, locker searching, test fixing, Buffy expelling
creepozoidus rex we all know and wish we didn’t." Xander finished Giles’
sentence.
"But
why did the mayor eat him at graduation when he became a demon dragon?"
Joyce asked.
"Maybe
because he became aware of Belial’s plans," Anya answered. "Belial’s a subtle one. He was probably waiting for Wilkins to
finish his Ascension, then wrest the power he would wield away from him. One thing a demon hates is competition from
another demon."
"So
Bill Gates is a demon?" Willow
asked innocently. Giles started to
refute her observation, but found himself thinking about it.
Then
the phone rang. Giles grabbed the
cell-phone and answered. "Summers
residence."
"Giles! It’s Buffy--the other Buffy."
"What
is it, Buffy?" Giles could hear the tension in her voice.
"Vampires
got her. A whole army of them. Quentin’s giving the orders, they--"
"Hold
it. Quentin? Quentin Travers?"
"No,
Quentin Tanentino!" she shouted.
"Of course Quentin Travers!
He said something about punishing her for turning her back on the
Watchers’ Council! They’re holding her
at the site of Sunnydale High. Round up
the posse, I’m heading that way, I’ll meet you there." Giles heard a click, and the line was
disconnected.
Giles
was suddenly a flurry of activity.
"Buffy’s been taken.
Quentin Travers is behind it.
And if the prophesy of Taliesin the Lesser is correct, he’ll be making a
deal with Belial, that will lead to what the older Buffy lived through."
"So
we meet Buffy of Future Past at the school and kick vampire ass! Let’s go!" Xander headed out the door,
followed by Giles and Anya.
Willow
turned toward Joyce and said, "Don’t worry, Mrs. Summers, we’ll bring her
back, and stop all this." She gave
Joyce a brief, comforting hug, although Joyce knew that the young woman needed
comforting as well. Then Willow
followed the Scoobs to Giles’ car.
As
she sat shotgun alongside Giles, she
made a silent prayer to whatever God or Goddess was listening; Please, let me be strong enough and fast
enough to save the one I love.