FACE THE STRANGE by Crazy Baron
Chapter 7: How Many Special People Change
Mom's words instantly swept away all of my thoughts and feelings and
plans for the immediate future, together with the remnants of my
inebriation. Their place was taken by one single overwhelming emotion,
anxiety. I had feared precisely this moment ever since I had been told
my transformation was probably irreversible, and hoped that I might
somehow be able to avoid it; but now there was nothing I could do
anymore. Dad was home, and the time had come for his new daughter to
introduce herself to him and brace for the impact.
I followed Mom sheepishly into the house and took off my coat in the
foyer. My legs and hands were limp and I felt an inert, cold hollowness
inside of me, as though I were a criminal who had been proven guilty
beyond a shadow of a doubt and was called back into the courtroom to
hear his sentence. One part of me wanted to delay the inevitable as long
as possible, while another part wanted it to be over as quickly as
possible.
"Where is he?" I asked Mom in a half-whisper when I was rid of the coat
and had changed from the boots into comfy sneakers.
"In the living room," she replied in her normal conversational voice,
"reading today's paper."
"At least that hasn't changed," I commented and tried to smile. One of
Dad's favorite ways of relaxing was to pick up a newspaper or a book and
retreat to the living room, where he would while away the evening hours,
reading and sipping beer or sherry.
On the surface, that day was no exception to his routine. Finally at
home after a long working trip abroad, Anthony Caldwell was sitting
comfortably in one of the armchairs with the paper in his hands. The
chair had been moved back to its proper position, that is, with its back
against the wall opposite to the foyer so that the chair and the couch
formed two sides of a triangle, leaving the coffee table in between and
within easy reach from both. A tall beer glass, almost full of dark
golden liquid, rested on the table and rounded out the scene that
registered in my brain when I entered the living room waveringly and
stopped in front of Dad, some two paces away from him. I was here. It
was his turn to react and say what he had to say.
Although my trepidation was, I think, understandable in itself, its
magnitude is not easy to explain. Tony Caldwell was admittedly not the
most open-minded person I had met in my life, but sheer overt hostility
was not very typical of him. Regardless of his inclination to
stubbornness and his general reluctance to reconsider his views once he
had formed an opinion on any given subject, he could usually be reasoned
with to a fair extent. I had nothing worse than a few harsh words to
fear from him, and even so, I would much rather have faced an enraged
Sathir'na demon or a pair of rowdy vampires than my father right there
and then.
He raised his head, and his blue eyes, gazing over the edge of the
paper, landed on me. His eyebrows were slightly arched, as if to signify
mild surprise, but the expression on his face was otherwise nearly
blank. I swallowed hard and waited for him to open the conversation.
Instead, he saw it fit to stay mute for a good five seconds more. The
delay was pure torture for me.
"Hi, Mike," he said in a colorless tone that revealed next to nothing
about his true state of mind. He might have been simply stunned and
shocked, or perhaps there was a small amount of malice and prickly
sarcasm collecting its strength and preparing to air itself somewhere
underneath his nearly unperturbed shell.
"Hi, Dad," I responded.
He paused for several additional seconds and pretended to skim over the
newspaper, with the result that I almost told him off in frustration.
"To get to the point," he spoke at length, "I don't understand this."
The words came out of his mouth in a slow, measured manner. He lifted
his eyes again to look directly at me, and at last there was a flash of
genuine, unconcealed emotion in them, one of bafflement.
"Well, it's---" I began, but he continued straight away with,
"When I boarded the plane and left for Germany in October, I had a son
who was studying for his Master's at a university. You're clearly a
girl, or a young woman, but everyone keeps telling me you're actually
Mike. I don't get it at all."
"I am Mike," I said. "Or I used to be him, but a couple of days before
Halloween, Kate and her friends talked me into putting on this costume
that I'm wearing at the moment. It's stuck on me and cannot be removed
anymore, from what I've been told."
"Right," he acknowledged. "Your mom spoke about that on the phone, and
she swore it was for real, but I definitely thought the whole story was
some kind of an idiotic practical joke. It's kind of absurd, don't you
agree?"
"I won't insist it's not, Dad."
"So it's still you on the inside?" he inquired. "You're in the body of a
girl, but your mind is the same?"
"Yep."
"And you have your memories and skills and feelings and the rest?"
"That's how it works, yeah. I know I'm Mike, and I remember everything I
used to and feel like I used to. Nothing is really different about me,
except my body. I have no idea as to how the costume actually performed
the transformation, because obviously the whole thing should be
impossible, but... it did. I can't explain that. It changed me into this
woman, all the way down to cells and molecules."
"Does that mean you had the, uh, essential parts rearranged? You sit
down to pee now?"
"Yes, I do."
"Are you attracted to men?"
"No!" I denied emphatically and felt a twinge of shame as soon as the
words had left my lips. What I had said was perhaps not a through-and-
through lie, but it certainly wasn't the whole truth either. As if on
cue, a mental image of me sharing a passionate kiss with Angel the
vampire came to the forefront of my mind, and even though I tried to
push it aside, it refused to go away.
"I see," Dad said bemusedly, folded the newspaper and put it down on the
table. He took a deep breath, in an exaggerated and dramatic fashion,
and rubbed his eyes. The trip had been taxing on the man, both mentally
and physically, and the stupefying discovery that his adult son had been
magically turned into a woman during his absence was unquestionably a
very heavy additional load for him to bear. The light of the ceiling
lamp revealed what I presumed were new streaks of faded color in his
soft black hair, as well as in his well-groomed mustache. If the
insanity was to keep going as it had so far, I figured, the man would be
lucky to have any hair left on his head at the end of the year.
"Be honest with me," Dad said after collecting his thoughts. He looked
me in the eyes. "If this is just a prank, and I strongly suspect so, you
can admit that now. Did Mike and Kate put you up to this? I won't be mad
at you, Miss, or at them. I assure you I can take a joke as much as the
next guy, but you have gone maybe a bit too far."
"It's no joke," I said quietly and shook my head. "I wish it was."
"Seriously?"
"No joke."
Dad rose to his feet. "You know," he said, "I've run into a lot of weird
stuff in my time, but this takes the cake. I'm not the smartest person
in the world and my education was pretty limited, but I'm perfectly well
aware that the talk about Halloween costumes transforming people into
other people is nonsense. It's bullcrap. You should know that; you're a
scientist, for Heaven's sake--or my son is. I have no idea who you
really are if you're not him."
"Believe me, Dad," I pleaded with him, struggling to maintain an even
tone and not to let my sorrow and desperation get the upper hand. "I'm
being totally candid. I understand the story sounds crazy, but that's
only because it is crazy. Things like that shouldn't happen, but they
did. Don't ask me how, and don't remind me that I should know better.
I... I can't explain it, like I already said." For a passing moment, I
had to fight back tears.
"And you want me to accept that?"
"You can live in denial, if you prefer," I retorted, biting my lip. "I
tried that, and a few others did too. Didn't turn out very well."
"Hm," he uttered and strolled to the front of one of the living room
windows. Immersed in his thoughts, he stared into the dusk twilight
outside and rocked on his heels, with his hands behind his back. I
waited for him to resume the conversation, but all he did was to mumble
something under his breath. I had rarely seen him in such a condition.
He retained his composure, however barely, but the quick-witted,
cleverly sarcastic Tony Caldwell whom I had expected to meet was nowhere
to be found that night.
After a full minute had passed without either of us saying anything, I
made my exit and slunk to my room. Dad had my sympathy, but I couldn't
spare much energy for cheering him up when I was at pains just to get
by. Feeling exhausted, I collapsed on my bed and lay on my back, gazing
at the ceiling boards.
Kate had suggested that I should put on some music and enjoy it, but I
was too despondent and tired to get up and trudge to my stereo set.
Instead, I listened to the sounds of life in our household. At one
point, Dad answered a phone call, and he then engaged in one of his
favorite hobbies, arguing and haggling with a telemarketer in a loud
voice. Mom was doing something in the kitchen, and Kate returned home a
little later. I noted these things in a disinterested, dispassionate
manner. There was a void within my chest that sucked in emotions and
left only a dull apathy behind.
The women exchanged a couple of words, and Kate went to the living room
to see Dad. Their reunion was happier than his and mine had been,
judging by the tones of their voices. This observation did little to
lessen my bitterness, and when Kate's footsteps began to carry from the
staircase, I hoped she was only coming upstairs to go to the bathroom to
wash up, or maybe to hang out in her own room.
A few moments later she appeared in my doorway. Bowing to the
inevitable, while also actually glad that she had come to see me, I bent
my knees to make room for her on the bed. She sat down.
"Am I in for a homily?" I asked. "Something tells me you're not
overjoyed about how I behaved back there."
She let out a small sigh. "I wouldn't say you're completely wrong when
it comes to my feelings, but I wasn't going to lecture you. I wanted to
see how you're doing, that's all."
"I appreciate you taking the trouble."
"I'm beginning to think you're angry with me and not the other way
around, Cindy," she said with a smile. "You should know you're the most
important thing in the world for me, bar none. Even if you sometimes act
like a jackass, which you do, I'll always love you."
"If you don't mind me saying so, you've been pretty snappy towards me
lately."
"Like when?"
"The night before the last, for instance, when we were having the
meeting."
"To be perfectly honest, I get a little frustrated with you every now
and again, and I guess then I say stuff that doesn't come out right or I
lose my temper too easily. The thing is, you resist your changes
endlessly out of some dogged conviction that you're supposed to be male
and you make yourself and everyone around you miserable in the process.
Maybe you don't see it in that light, but that's what it looks like to
me. I'm going out of my way to help you get started with your new life,
and Mom and Dawn and the others are doing their part too, but you're
dead set against it. Why can't you simply go along and accept the fact
that you're a girl? Why do you keep torturing yourself? I can't
understand that, no matter how hard I try."
"Then there was the sleepover last week," I reminded her. "You did have
a fair amount of fun at my expense when the others came."
"I'm sorry if I offended you," she apologized in a manner that left me
no doubt as to her sincerity. "It was intended to be totally harmless,
and, well, you were acting kind of ridiculous that day, what with the
fuss you made over your new name and all that, so it wasn't totally
undeserved."
"Maybe you've got a point," I admitted.
I swung my legs out over the side of the bed and sat up to be level with
her.
"Dad's home," I mentioned.
"Yeah. I just met him." She was about to continue, but she fell silent
when she saw the expression on my face. Her casual, unworried tone
changed immediately. "What? Don't tell me he... Cindy, if that old
bonehead said something to hurt you, I'll sure as hell let him---"
"No, it's not that," I interrupted her and shook my head. "We talked,
and that's it. He's terribly confused, which is completely
understandable. I can't blame him for that."
"Tell me what's wrong, Cindy," she prompted, her intense concern for me
plainly showing. "What did he say to you?"
"Nothing much. He asked me if I sit down when I go to the bathroom, and
I told him I do. Things like that. It's not his fault that I feel this
way. I'm... I can't..."
Hot tears welled up in my eyes, and abruptly they began to flow. This
time, there was no stopping them. I had been transformed into another
person against my will, I had been transported into a parallel
dimension, I had fought horrific demons and vampires, I had traveled
through a frightening and surreal imagination world, I had witnessed my
best friends being kidnapped, I had stalked a man with an assault rifle-
-and I broke down when I was surrounded by my loved ones in the safety
of my family home. I couldn't help but weep uncontrollably. The pain had
become too great to contain.
Kate pulled me into a fierce hug, and she held me as the sobs wracked my
body. "It'll be alright, Mike," she whispered gently in my ear, making a
point to use my old name. "You'll pull through. You have all of us
standing by your side. We'll never abandon you, you hear me? Never!"
"I can't..." I tried to speak again, but a gasp and a shudder, followed
by more sobs, halted my tongue mid-sentence.
"Shh," she hushed. Kate was crying softly herself. "It'll be okay.
Brother or sister, boy or girl, we're family. Don't you ever forget
that... Don't you ever forget that!"
I longed for a good and refreshing sleep that would allow me to forget
my troubles for a while, but when I went to bed later that night, the
bothersome thoughts refused to leave me alone. I still had an apocalypse
to stop, and on top of that, my family life was becoming more and more
complicated. My road to Master's degree and a career, whether at the
University or outside of it, was probably blocked for good. There was no
one to give me guidance and answers, so I would have to sort this mess
out by myself, and I had no idea how I could accomplish that.
I tossed and turned between the sheets, waiting for exhaustion to come
to my rescue. The general distress condensed into a physical sensation
of cold, and I pulled the blanket to my neck to stay warm but continued
to shiver underneath it. If only this was already over, I said to
myself. If only I knew what to do. Our major problem was the portal, of
course. With any luck, Willow--no, Jake--and Tara might be able to
handle that. What then? Too early to tell. Anyway, if we succeed in
stopping Angronok, maybe I can get my hands on some more of that anti-
skinsuit potion. I have to plan and get more weapons. If I save the
world, will Dad help me with the car? I need to dig it out from the mud
before the North Korean vampires land on the moon so we can get away,
unless that already happened yesterday.
This flow of mismatched and fragmented ideas slowly crystallized and
formed into a restless, nonsensical dream. I was out in the yard of our
home, digging with a tiny toy shovel. My car had sunk into the ground,
and I had to get it out as soon as possible; North Korea was about to
invade, and the car was the only means of escape for me and my family. I
worked feverishly, but time was running out and only the top of the car
was visible. "You'd better hurry," someone exhorted me. "They've already
bombed Missouri!" In desperation, I threw the shovel to the ground and
decided to go indoors to find a better tool and some help.
Once in the house, I found out that we had guests. There was a happily
unconcerned group of people having tea and chatting in our living room.
My both parents, Kate, Cinnamon, Rupert Giles and the militia platoon
commander were gathered around the table, and my mother was showing
everyone an album with pictures of me as a little child. They laughed
and commented on the photographs, paying no mind to the threat looming
over us. I was stunned at their nonchalance, or ignorance.
"Hey, folks," I spoke up. "Could somebody give me a hand, please?"
"Mike," my father said in an annoyed tone, "can't you see we're having a
good time? Don't make a fuss over nothing, son."
"Yeah," Kate accompanied him. "Be a good girl and go make us more tea,
will you?"
"I'm not a damn girl!" I spat out. "Why does everyone insist on treating
me like one?"
"Not a girl," Giles uttered and rose from the sofa. He and the other
people and the room itself grew, or I shrank, until he towered above me.
"Not a girl!" he repeated mockingly and menacingly in a booming voice.
"I'd say 'Don't call me Buffy!' is a rather poor catchphrase, don't you
think?"
The others erupted in evil laughter. I was too shocked and insulted to
protest, so I rushed back outside in blind anger. Let them die, I
thought as I went to get a bigger shovel from the garage. I would drive
away by myself. If they didn't care about their own survival, why should
I? Then, the dream suddenly became a confusing blur of disjointed images
and the previous setting was wiped out.
A little later, as it seemed to me, my sleep was close to ending. With
every second, I was becoming more aware of my surroundings and the fact
that I was in my bed, about to wake up. However, when I opened my eyes,
I realized that I was in a strange, vast room with white walls and
bright lighting. The beginnings of a panic gripped me as I sat up in the
bed, looking nervously around, but just then, a reassuring thought
occurred to me and quelled my fears. This had to be another dream, I
told myself. I was actually still sound asleep where I belonged.
I could hear footsteps slowly approaching, and as I turned my head, I
saw a black figure walk in a weird, jumping gait up to me and stop a few
feet from the bed, which was standing alone in the middle of the
otherwise empty room. I immediately recognized my visitor as someone I
had seen before, at least in a dream: a human being covered from head to
toe by a horse costume, complete with a shiny black bodysuit, a tail and
a mask that hid his face entirely. He had a pair of tall riding boots on
his feet.
"Hi there, horse boy," I hailed him with a wry smile. "Fancy seeing you
again."
"Evening, Mikey," Derry Darkmane replied in his deep masculine voice and
tilted his masked head. "How've you been, pal?"
"You're not catching me at my best," I said. "Anyway, what's the
occasion?"
"I reckon it's pretty much the same as last time. I want to show you
something."
"Sorry, but I'm not decently dressed. Maybe I should change first."
"No worries. Just follow me."
"God does move in mysterious ways," I mumbled to myself. "I've got a
furry spirit guide."
With marked reluctance, I clambered out of the bed and stood on the
floor barefooted. The perfectly smooth stone floor was cold, but not so
much so to make me uncomfortable. Derry turned and began to bounce
forward in his signature goofy gait, and I walked in his wake,
completely naked aside from my boxers. My body was again entirely male
and that of my own, down to my chest hair and the small scar on my left
arm.
The dimensions of the room were impossible to estimate since the walls
and the ceiling were just as featureless as the floor and, on a quick
glance, there appeared to be no furniture or any other objects
whatsoever in this space, apart from my bed. After a while, however, I
saw what seemed like a painting hanging in mid-air a few yards away. A
closer look revealed that it was affixed to the wall. Derry stopped in
front of it, and so did I.
The picture was an extremely lifelike full-body portrait of a young boy,
aged maybe ten. He had light brown hair, roundish cheeks and a bright
smile on his lips. With a surprise, I understood the boy was none other
than me. The face in the painting was a faithful recreation of my class
photo from the fourth grade, with the rest of the body added in.
"See who that is?" Derry asked me.
"I think I do," I responded.
"Good. Hnnrr."
"This is shaping up to be interesting, as far as dreams or
hallucinations go," I added. "Can I ask you something, Derry?"
"Go ahead."
"Is any of this real? I'm pretty convinced you're something my
subconscious has made up, but what about the rest?"
"Do you mean you and me seeing each other here?" he returned the
question.
"That, and the other things--the skinsuits, the wormhole, Sunnydale and
Angronok. Do any of them actually exist outside of my mind?"
"You could ask that about anything and everything, pal. Like I said
before, I'm just a horse and I ain't got all the answers, but if you
want my take on it, chances are they do exist, and not just in your
head. This is darn complicated stuff, with the reality changing and
whatnot, so you oughta be prepared for anything and reckon that things
don't always work like you expect them to."
It was only then that I noticed there was actually a series of paintings
on the same wall. Some ten feet away to my right hung another large
picture. It was also of me, but it depicted the person I had been around
the time of my high school graduation, with closely cropped hair and
lips pursed together. The look in the young man's eyes expressed mild
dismay at having to pose for the photographer or the painter. This and a
few nights spent drinking modest amounts of beer with my friends had
been more or less the extent of my rebelling during my teen years, I
thought with a small smile and a subdued chuckle.
The next painting showed me as I had been about ten years ago, and the
one after that was a splitting image of myself in the present day. These
were followed by the odd one out, Buffy Summers in red faux leather
pants and a black top, staring intently in front of herself. Every
single image was more akin to a photograph than a painting in its
astonishing level of detail and crispness. I even thought I could
discern a measure of depth in each of them, as though they were
holograms of some sort. As I walked slowly past them, the persons in the
frames almost appeared to follow my movements.
Soon, I was hit by another realization. The pictures were indeed not
paintings, but mirrors showing still images of myself. Their surfaces
were metallic and reflective, and although the iterations of me
appearing there didn't move their limbs or change the looks on their
faces, they did follow me with their eyes. A shudder went through my
whole body.
"What's the meaning of this?" I asked Derry pointedly. The horse
fetishist had accompanied me to the Buffy picture and was now standing
by my side stiffly. To my annoyance, the horse mask covered every square
millimeter of his face and made it impossible for me to read his
emotions. "Are all of these images supposed to be me?"
"So I reckon, pal," he said and punctuated his words with a nicker,
"Hnnrr."
"But why? What are you trying to say with this?"
"If I had to guess," he commented, "I'd wager the higher ups are givin'
you another hint here. Like you said, these people are you."
"Yeah? And?"
"Well, faces change and looks deceive, but what's behind can stay the
same. That goes for both you and other people and things."
"That's something of a truism," I pointed out, unsure whether I should
have been amused or frustrated by Derry's roundabout and abstruse
fashion of dispensing information. "Why won't you tell me something I
don't already know?"
"You think you know it," he said, "but you also gotta understand it.
That can pay off in the end, in more ways than one."
"How? What's going to happen?"
Derry merely nickered softly at this and turned to leave. He began to
trot quietly away, and I remained standing in front of the Buffy
picture, fervently trying to decipher and comprehend the meaning of this
vision, dream or whatever it might best be called.
"Hey, wait!" I called after him. Another thought had occurred to me, and
I wanted to hear what he had to say about it before he disappeared.
Derry stopped and pivoted slowly on his heels so he was facing me, and I
was again looking at his unmoving mask that kept his identity and
emotions secret. At any rate, I had his attention, so I asked him,
"Derry, who... Who am I?"
There was a long silence before the man's voice replied,
"You're the experiencer, Mike. You're the narrator."
Derry and the strange white room dematerialized in a flash as I opened
my eyes in my own bed. The transition was more akin to the reality
shifts that I had gone through than the usual process of waking up from
a dream, even though I was certain that I hadn't been physically moved
anywhere this time.
Another point that I grasped without delay was that my original form
being restored to me had only been a pleasant fantasy. The body that got
up from under the blanket and stood on the floor by the side of the bed
was petite, slender, nimble and altogether womanly. It sported long
blond hair, a pair of perky, delectable breasts, a beautiful face, a
flat belly and well-balanced curves, combined with hidden abilities--
agility, reflexes and power--which no mere human could match. However, I
took this predictable disappointment in stride and didn't agonize over
it. Being a man again and free of the madness was too good to be true,
anyway.
I did my morning routine on autopilot. I washed up, brushed my teeth and
my hair and changed into my indoors clothes. Mom was waiting for me with
breakfast (tea and sandwiches, as usual) downstairs, and I dug in
eagerly. It was already a little past 10:30, but because today was a
Sunday, I presumed I could eat in peace and disregard the lateness of
the hour. No pressing engagements were supposed to be on the agenda.
"The weather is incredible, by the way," Mom noted as I was busily
consuming the food and the tea. "The forecast was something along the
lines of rain showers and near-freezing temperatures, but it's well over
50 degrees and bright sunshine out there. You wouldn't believe it's
November already; the air feels much more like in late September."
"It's curious alright," I agreed and nodded, taking a bite of my
sandwich and washing it down with a sip of the sweet tea. It had
occurred to me at once that the unpredicted heat wave might have been
more than a simple freak of nature--that is, literally otherworldly--and
a sign that we would have to hasten our efforts to close the portal.
Regardless, my misgivings did not presently concern Mom, and I
wholeheartedly hoped that they never would.
"You really have to go out today," she suggested emphatically. "There's
no guarantee we'll get days like this anymore before next April or May."
"Where's Dad?" I inquired, changing the topic and attempting not to show
the apprehension that the thought of another less than harmonious run-in
with him aroused in me.
"He and Kate went to see the car she's thinking of buying," she replied
casually. "The seller is in Madison, so they most likely won't be home
until some time in the afternoon."
"What kind of mood was he in? Was he grouchy or depressed?"
"By no means. He was pretty excited about the car, and I also think he
was thrilled to be able to spend a full day with Kate and do something
nice together with her. Not that he said it out loud, mind you, but I
could tell, with that fussing and blathering. That's how he is."
"Did... Um, did the subject of me come up?"
"No. They were both too busy to talk about anything other than the car,
he in particular. He was almost like a kid on Christmas morning and kept
prodding her along so they could get on the road faster. I actually
thought she'd lose her patience with him, but fortunately she didn't. It
was close, though."
Dad was considerably more guarded than Mom or Kate when it came to
displaying emotions openly, and very often he would raise a barrier of
snideness between his inner self and the outside world when he was at a
loss or undergoing turmoil. He might well have been attempting to deal
with his angst about my fate by putting it out of his mind and
concentrating on Kate and the car instead. Nonetheless, I felt a tiny
bit of relief on hearing the news. With any luck, he would be in
reasonably good spirits when the two returned from their trip, and
perhaps he and I could have a fresh start later.
"How come they're going to a faraway place like Madison?" I queried.
"Chesterton and Bedford have a couple of used auto dealerships, if
memory serves."
"It was Dad's idea, actually. Ever since Kate mentioned that she'd like
to have a small, handy car, he's been all over it. He wants to make
absolutely sure no one sells his little baby girl a clunker."
"I have to hand it to him," I commented. "He's been eager to help me too
whenever I've had trouble with my car, and he knows a fair deal about
that stuff. Wonder if that's going to change."
"What do you mean?" Mom asked.
"Well, me," I said. "I'm no longer the son he used to have. He probably
sees me as a total stranger who claims to have been Mike and who's
trying to infiltrate his family. It does sort of make sense, from a
rational point of view. I don't think things will ever be the same
between him and me."
"You know him," Mom reassured me. "He takes his sweet time to come
around to anything new, but he will, in the end. To be frank, I'm not
completely over your change myself. Don't get me wrong; I don't doubt
for a second that you're my Mike deep down and you do make a lovely
girl, but I still have some soul-searching ahead of me before I can
accept it entirely and learn to live with it."
"That goes for me as well. I haven't been able to come to terms with
this damn thing yet, and chances are I never will."
"Then again, given that it's not possible for you to undo the
transformation, it doesn't make much sense to fight back or pretend
nothing has changed. The main thing for me is that you're happy. The
rest is just details to be worked out."
"Like my sex?"
"Yes, like your sex, for example. You're the same person as you always
were, only a woman. I won't let that stop me from loving you, Mike."
"Thanks, Mom," I said and got on my feet to hug her.
Overall, I was extraordinarily, almost incomprehensibly optimistic, at
times outright serene that morning. The unresolved state of affairs
between my father and me was admittedly weighing heavily on me, and the
upcoming quest to close the portal, which might include a pitched battle
versus fearsome monsters from other dimensions, was an even greater
source of disquiet--not to mention the prospect that we could fail and
draw immeasurable destruction upon our unsuspecting world. Regardless,
the previous night had been indescribably cathartic for me. Crying in my
sister's lap and allowing the hurt that had accumulated inside of me to
pour out had done my soul a tremendous amount of good.
Kate had been right from the beginning. The strict control I had
maintained over my emotions, as opposed to letting them run their
natural course, had most likely not been in the best interests of my
mental health. Despite the tears, I had neither devolved permanently
into a hysterical bundle of nerves nor finished the potential transition
into a Buffy Summers who was prepared to put poor Mike Caldwell behind
her without a second thought.
In contrast, I had to concede the battle over my sexual preferences to
my feminine side. The Chad encounter and my reluctance to kiss Faith
would have been pretty persuasive proof of that by themselves, but there
was in addition the indelible mental image of me kissing Angel hungrily
and enjoying every second. As a matter of fact, I would have been
entirely willing to go further with him. The only thing that had
prevented a night of steamy passion was his curse, which would remove
his soul and turn him into a sadistic, bloodthirsty monster if he were
to experience a moment of pure bliss. While it was easy for me to give
credit to Kate for her sound advice, I was loath to admit Faith had been
right as well when it came to my carnal desires. I did want a man, even
needed one in my life.
Nevertheless, this was still a more or less tolerable compromise between
the best and worst outcome: staying as myself and becoming Buffy through
and through, respectively. The Slayer persona had thankfully remained
buried in the background, and it had left me in full authority over my
actions.
A little after dinner, around 1:30 p.m., Mom and I were once more
sitting at the kitchen table. She was doing a crossword puzzle to pass
the time and I was keeping her company by chatting about this and that.
When I happened to glance through the window, I saw movement in the
front yard and a human figure approaching. An instinctive alarm went off
briefly in my mind before I recognized the person. She was Dawn, clad in
her pure white duvet jacket, which shone brightly in the sun and had
first attracted my attention.
"There she comes again," I commented on the observation.
"What?" Mom reacted, raising her eyes from the magazine. "Who?"
"Dawn. Maybe you and Dad should get it over with and adopt her, seeing
as she's hanging here pretty much all the time anyway and eating your
food. Then you'd have the complete collectible set of the Summers
sisters."
"I don't think we have to go that far," she said with a subdued laugh.
"She's a nice girl and always welcome to visit us."
The nice girl in question let herself in without delay. She called out
from the foyer, took off her jacket at the coat rack and walked into the
kitchen, making herself at home straight away. "Hi, guys!" she greeted
us gleefully and went on to hug Mom and then me. I didn't think anything
of this way of saying hello anymore and hugged her back. Joking remarks
aside, having my other sister pay us a call was the highlight of that
day for me.
"How's my newest niece?" Mom asked her.
"No complaints," Dawn said. As she was inclined to do when she was
particularly glad or excited, she swayed slightly on her feet and
simultaneously lifted her shoulders. "I got my sentence commuted."
"Your sentence?"
"The two weeks' grounding for kissing Brett at the mall," she explained.
"My folks finally relented, and so I'm basically free to go where I
want, as long as I'm back at home no later than 11 o'clock every night
and let them know about my plans in advance."
"Are they okay with your plans even if you intend to go chasing boys?" I
chimed in.
"You know my parents," she said with a smile. "They're, like, a bit
overprotective of me and would rather have me under close supervision,
but what they don't know doesn't harm them." In her delight, she had
apparently forgotten that my mother was included in this conversation,
and she hastily added, "Not that I'm planning on doing things they
wouldn't approve of. I only meant that if I really wanted, I sort of
could."
"They're putting their trust in you," Mom pointed out. "You should show
them you're worthy of it."
"Yeah, of course," Dawn agreed. "It's just that I'd like to get out and
have fun when I'm still young and don't have to worry about my studies
or work."
"About that," I said. "Are you going back to school, or is Mandy going
to provide a fake diploma for you?"
"As a matter of fact I am going," she announced with a certain amount of
pride in her voice. "Mandy's contacts are pulling a few strings and
dealing with the paperwork, but when that's sorted out, I'm starting
10th Grade at Greensville High. It'll probably take until after the
holidays, though, but come New Year and the spring semester, they're
going to have one more student in class."
"That's marvelous!" Mom enthused. "I'm positive you made the right
choice. Good for you, Dawn!"
"I was kinda sitting on the fence at first when Mandy and my parents
asked me how I felt about it," the teen said. "Scott went to school and
graduated, so it's redundant, in a way, for me to do the same because I
know everything he did. But then I gave it some more thought and
realized I'd just be hanging around home until I'm eighteen with nothing
much to do if I wasn't enrolled anywhere. What's more, I get to
socialize and make friends with people my own age, which is a big plus,
obviously. And, last but not least, let's not forget the eligible
bachelors to be found in the high school environment." The last point
brought a wide smile on her face.
"Sounds great," Mom commented. "You've got everything figured out, I
see."
"Any news from the home front?" I asked Dawn casually.
"Quiet and routine, for the most part. Erica did drop by a couple of
days ago. She had baby Tom with her, and he was so adorable!"
"How old is he now?" Mom inquired.
"Seven and a half months. I got to hold him and play with him and also
feed him a couple of times, and we got along really well. I could tell
he likes me a lot, and Mom said so too. He's absolutely precious, a real
bundle of joy."
"I can imagine. You've always been in tune with people."
"It's a shame Erica was there only for one night," Dawn continued, and a
crestfallen look came onto her face. "She didn't flat out admit it or
anything, but she cut her stay short because of me."
"What makes you think that?" Mom asked the girl.
"The way she acted when she was around me. She was, like, awkward and
restrained and clearly trying to keep me at an arm's length. She didn't
say that she didn't want me near her and her baby, but it was plain to
see she felt pretty ill at ease when I was there, especially if Mom or
Dad wasn't in the same room with us."
"I'm so sorry for you," Mom expressed her condolences. "Maybe she was
just confused. She doesn't know how to react to the change in you."
"My old man is going through that phase at the moment," I added in hopes
that it would lift Dawn's spirits. "I'm not sure whether or not he
disinherited me yesterday, but other than that, we're close as ever."
"Mike!" Mom admonished me. "It wasn't that bad!"
"You're right, it wasn't. He took it relatively well, considering the
circumstances."
"Look, kids, you have to understand how we as your parents and family
feel about this. We were dumbstruck when we learned that you have
transformed into different people, and we're still only recovering from
that bombshell. Even though we want what's best for you, it will take
time for us to adapt, lots of time. We'll get there, eventually, but not
right away."
"I guess," Dawn sighed. "I'm not holding it against you."
My cell phone interrupted the conversation by sounding out its ringtone.
I needed a few seconds to remember that I had left the thing in my
jacket pocket, so I had to jog to the coat rack to pull the phone out of
its hiding place.
"B--- Mike Caldwell."
"Oh, hi," Willow's voice hailed me from the other end of the connection.
"Are you busy right now, Buffy? Was this a bad time?"
"No, not at all. I'm just hanging around at home, and Dawn's here, too."
"Ooh! That's good!" Jake brightened up. "I just thought I'd tell you the
news. Tara's feeling a lot better, totally okay in fact, and we're ready
to do the portal closing spell."
"Already? That was lightning fast, as far as recoveries from mental
illnesses go."
"Yeah, well, the healing spell kinda did the trick," he reminded me. "In
any case, she's completely lucid and knows who and where she is. She
remembers this Cadrian ritual, called Telf Neid Faruuth Dool, and says
it should work if we cast it together, she and I."
"Excellent."
"There's just one teeny catch, though. We have to be as close to the
portal as we can when we do it. The spell won't work from a distance."
"I don't see how that presents a problem. We'll meet up, drive to the
woods, and I'll protect you against anything coming through the portal
while you cast the spell with Tara."
"Right. Could we ask Faith and Riley to come along too? I-it's not that
I don't think you can basically handle any baddie, but if there are
several attacking us at once, it would be better to have more slaying
power available."
"Sure, why not. I'll see you in half an hour, okay?"
"Okay, fantastic! Bye!"
"Bye, Jake."
I slipped the phone back into the jacket pocket and returned to the
kitchen. Before I could give my report, Mom asked, "Who was it?"
"Jake," I said. "He invited me over to their house."
"Are you continuing to play the role game? Does this have to do with
that?"
"Yes, sort of. I'll help Jake with something and check up on Tara."
"You mean Jud?" Mom queried keenly. "Is he doing any better?"
"Apparently she--uh, he is. A great deal better. I don't know what
happened, but it seems he's fine now, by and large. So, anyway, I'll get
changed and go there right away."
"I'm coming too," Dawn announced. "This is going to be so cool!"
I went up to my room, and Dawn simply followed me there. Evidently the
idea that I might like some privacy hadn't occurred to her, and I was
too polite to tell her to wait for me downstairs. She was indeed a sweet
and lovely girl who had made her affection for me abundantly clear, and
I found it difficult to deny her anything. In the past, her puppy dog
eyes had been the undoing of a critical plan by Jake and me, and it was
hardly unimaginable that these events might repeat in the future.
Most of my Buffy clothes were still in the moving boxes Amanda Elkins
had brought them in, and the boxes entirely occupied one of the corners
of my room. Due to its modest size, the room had the shortcoming of not
having proper storage space for clothing, and the majority of my
wardrobe had usually been kept in the big closet of the master bedroom
or elsewhere in the house up until this point. There were only socks,
underwear and a bare necessity collection of jeans and sweaters in the
multipurpose cabinet, on what I called the "ready rack", with typically
some more piled in a carefree manner on the swiveling chair when I was
at home. This had worked tolerably well so far, but a young woman's
extensive clothing collection could simply not be accommodated in this
way. However, solving the problem properly required cooperation and
input from Mom and Dad. They naturally had a say in any major
rearrangements since the house was theirs.
Dawn looked around and ran her fingertips lightly along the backs of the
books in the cabinet. Scott had been to my room on countless occasions,
but I didn't recall him ever showing that much interest in the furniture
and decor specifically. "You've got all of Mike's old stuff," she noted.
"Have you considered revamping and cleaning out?"
"Haven't really had the time," I said succinctly, lifting another pile
of trousers out of the box and racking my brain to decide what to wear.
"Yeah, I understand," she responded and sat on the bed, leaning back.
"But you've got to get around to it at some point. Take this bunk of
yours, for example. It's ridiculously narrow and uncomfortable."
"I beg to differ."
"I mean, I guess it's fine for someone like a teen boy, but a woman
needs more luxury. Besides, when you bring a guy in here, you'll both
get bruised or fall off if you try to cuddle with him on this. There's
not enough room for two."
"I haven't gotten around to that, either."
"You will. Speaking of beds, I already asked my dad to get me a new
double size one, and he promised I'll have it before December begins.
Then I'll invite Brett over, and we'll make out on my new bed. And if he
gets too shy, I use that leg trick Faith taught me and totally have my
way with him!"
In a shock, I dropped the pair of trousers that I was holding in my
hands. "What!? What did you say?"
"Just kidding!" she giggled. "Got your attention, though, didn't I?"
An open-necked sweater, lavender pink in color and with a sequined hem,
was lying on the top of the pile of shirts in the next box over, and it
promptly caught my eye. A small shiver raced down my spine as I
recognized it. I had worn a garment exactly like it on the Breakers
Woods mission to save Dawn, the very same girl who was now lounging on
my bed in my room in Greensville. Although there was probably nothing
more to this discovery than Amanda's meticulousness with detail and her
having chanced upon a sweater that was a precise match to one that
existed in the TV Buffy's wardrobe, it nevertheless further emphasized
the surreality of my recent experiences.
In the end, I decided on the lavender sweater and a pair of blue jeans.
I took off the sweat pants, the flannel shirt and the white t-shirt of
my casual outfit and changed into a spaghetti-strapped top before
pulling on the jeans and the sweater. Perhaps the latter worked as a
good luck charm, I thought with an internal chuckle. I had emerged from
the confrontation with the vampires and demons almost unscathed, and if
my hunch was correct, anything to give me an advantage, no matter how
theoretical or unlikely, would soon be in high demand yet again.
"Hey!" Dawn spoke up with a smile and got on her feet. "We've got
matching pants!" Apart from the jeans, which really were similar to
mine, she had selected a gray light sweater with navy blue sleeves from
her closet and added a white beaded necklace to fill the need for
accessories.
"Good thing the weather's so fine," I noted. "What Mandy gave us would
be ideal if we actually lived in California or if it was summer here all
year round, but we probably have no choice but to hit the clothing
stores in earnest before snow starts to fall."
"Yeah," she voiced her agreement. "Hooray for the November dog days!"
Dawn went quiet, and her expression became pensive and serious. She
spent a few seconds staring into distance with her head turned to the
side, searching for the words to convey her feelings. "This could be it,
right?" she spoke in a steady but low voice. "The end of the world. If
we don't succeed, we could get killed and the Earth could be destroyed."
"We don't know that," I argued. "The portal is a threat while it's open,
true, but I'm not sure how likely a real demon invasion is."
"You don't have to sugarcoat it for me," Dawn said. "I understand what
we're up against and what the stakes are, and I also know it has to be
done so we and everybody else on this planet could hope to live. I don't
have a problem with that. It's just so unfair, if you ask me. We should
have our lives ahead of us, but they could be over in a matter of hours.
I... I haven't even lost my virginity yet."
"Neither have I."
"Buffy," she continued and looked me in the eyes, "you must promise me
something. If we get through this, I want you to live your life to the
fullest. Make every single day count. And if you find a man who deserves
you and who is good and kind to you, don't push him away and run from
love only because you were a man yourself once, long ago. No matter what
happens, I want you to promise and remember this."
"Carpe diem," I quoted. "It's a good philosophy, regardless of what body
I end up staying in."
"What's that supposed to mean?" she asked.
"I'd still change back into a man if I could."
"But why?" Dawn exclaimed in disbelief. "What's the point? It doesn't
make any sense!"
"We've been over this, Dawn. I'm not happy as a girl, like I've told you
multiple times. It's---"
"I'm not buying that," she contended. "No way. You just think you're
supposed to hate being a girl, and the more you keep telling yourself
that, the more you actually hate it. How about you stop, look on the
bright side and see where that takes you?"
"If only it was so simple for me, Dawn."
"It is! You're the one who's making it complicated."
I failed to come up with a suitable and appropriately inoffensive
counter, so I let the matter drop. We headed for the upstairs bathroom,
where I applied some eyeliner, mascara, lipstick and perfume. In
addition, I gave my hair another cursory brushing. Meanwhile, Dawn
rifled through my stash of cosmetics, commented on the items and
borrowed the lipstick tube to coat her own lips as well.
My intention had been to talk her into staying at our house or
alternatively offer to drop her off at the Anderson residence on my way
to Jake's, but she tagged along and shrugged off my suggestions. "I'm
not missing this for the world!" she said and sat down on the right
front seat of my car. "Nothing interesting ever happens around these
parts anyway, so if there's going to be some action, I want to see it."
"It would be a lot safer for you to stay away from Ground Zero," I
remarked as I started the engine and put the car in gear. "You shouldn't
risk your life for no reason."
"I've got you to protect me," she responded and smiled. "By the way, who
else will be there? Willow and Tara, I'm guessing, and you and me, but
is that everyone?"
"Jake told me he would call Faith and Riley to ask them if they can
come."
"Oh yeah, Faith," Dawn mused. "Two Slayers are better than one,
probably, if worst comes to worst. Anyhow, she does freak me out a
little as a person. She's got this attitude thing that could get her
into major trouble someday, and she's... I kinda admire her confidence,
but she takes it way far."
"To be blunt," I commented, "she's a loon, and no different from Larry
Simmons in that respect, but I agree it's better to have her inside the
tent pissing out than the reverse, like the other Scooby Gang did."
After a leisurely drive through the town, I turned onto the Whites'
driveway. I parked in front of the house, conscientiously making sure to
leave plenty of room for the Whites and possible other guests to come
and go with their vehicles, and walked up to the main door with Dawn in
tow. I pressed the doorbell button and heard the bell chime inside the
house.
Footsteps approached on the other side of the door, and the lock let out
a series of metallic clicks. The door swung open, and we found ourselves
face to face with Tara Maclay. For a split second, before she recognized
us for certain, her expression and slightly hunched posture signaled
diffidence and even a measure of nervousness, but they instantly changed
into relief and content. She didn't go so far as to initiate the
conversation, however, and instead waited for us to introduce ourselves.
"Hi!" I greeted her. "I'm Mike, and this is Dawn. You must be Tara, am I
right?"
"Yeah," she replied cheerily, but suddenly her prow furrowed and a
puzzled look crossed her features. "I-I'm sorry, I must have misheard
you or s-s-something. What did you say your name was again?"
"Uh, it's... Buffy," I corrected myself and drew my lips into a smile
that was perhaps not completely genuine.
Tara's bewilderment melted away, and she perked up instantly. "That's
what I thought," she said. "I remember you. Willow's in the living room,
so if you... Come on in."
At least outwardly and on a quick glance, she was restored to normal
functioning. Her eyes were focused and lively, without the feverish
glint that had been shining in them, and her movements were purposeful
and coordinated. Her general appearance had undergone a marked change
for the better as well. She was wearing makeup and a new outfit that
consisted of a turquoise long-sleeved shirt with sequins arranged into
the shape of a flower or a leaf on the front, a purple ankle-length
skirt and a pair of clunky-heeled boots. A beaded necklace was the icing
on the cake. Her long hair was up and neatly arranged with bobby pins.
With Tara leading the way, we entered the foyer and took off our
jackets. She hovered nearby, undoubtedly pleased to see us, and even
gave Dawn a little hug, which the teen girl returned. Both curiosity and
politeness compelled me to broach the topic of Tara's mental health,
although I was fully aware that I would have to choose my words
carefully.
"So, Tara," I began, "I was told that you had... that you were not
feeling all that well recently."
"It's true," she confirmed with a nod. "I don't know what happened
exactly. The last couple of days are a blur to me. I can only recall a
few random images and faces and something else, but other than that,
there's just this... disarray. Darkness. But that's behind me. I've
found my way back. My mind's totally clear, thanks to Willow and you
guys. She said you cast a spell together and it cured me."
"Good thing it worked," Dawn interjected.
"Yeah, definitely. I never want to go through something like that again.
I was shattered to pieces."
The fact that she had plainly regained her sanity and was feeling fine
soothed my guilty conscience over having helped trick the unwary and
gullible Bucko into the Tara skin. The sense of exoneration, although
not quite complete, was in any case so great that when I next opened my
mouth, I blurted out something that would have been preferable to leave
unsaid:
"Talk about a career change. Mister Judson Griffin, student, has hereby
officially joined the ranks of the Greensville Scooby Gang!"
The confounded expression returned to Tara's face immediately, and it
also stifled my premature, out-of-place levity. "Who?" she asked. "What
do you mean, Buffy?"
Jake came into the room right when the resulting awkwardness had reached
its peak and I was fumbling for an explanation or an excuse. "Oh, you're
here," he said with a warm smile as he laid his eyes on Dawn and me.
"This is great! We can get to work now." Jake, like Bucko, was a picture
perfect representation of his character. Every detail from his makeup
and hair to his clothing was very much in keeping with Willow's style.
His outfit for that day consisted of a pink sweater with white
horizontal stripes, khaki pants and green-gray sneakers, all of which
could have been taken straight from her collection in Sunnydale.
"By the way, Dawn," Tara interjected, "Willow told me you're interested
in magic and spells. Would you like to see what we've put together for
this mission?"
"Sure!" the girl said excitedly. "Count me in!"
"Yeah, well... We've got the stuff over here," she explained and led
Dawn into the kitchen. Whether this was an intentional ploy to give Jake
and me a moment in private or merely a convenient coincidence, we took
advantage of it and went into the living room, where I had chatted with
Mrs. White during my previous visit. That day, though, there was no
large woman lying on the sofa, bemoaning the various unconventional
adversities she was forced to grapple with.
"Is your mother home?" I asked Jake offhandedly.
"She's... out," he said tersely, and the dejected look in his eyes
convinced me not to pry any further. Bucko, however, appeared to be a
more approachable topic, and I brought him up next.
"End of the road for the Buckster, I reckon. He's completely gone, isn't
he?"
"That's how it seems to me," Jake confirmed. "The spell may have
something to do with it, and some of the stuff she's forgotten may come
back to her later. I don't think she'll ever want to return to being a
man, though."
"I suppose things could be worse," I remarked and wondered in passing
who would have the questionable honor of breaking the news to Bucko's
parents. "He does come across as pretty well adjusted to being Tara, and
we have a mystical dimensional gateway to shut down, so that much the
better."
"Yeah. It's one of these peachy win-win situations where you get what
you want and the world at large gets what it wants, which in this case
means saving it with our awesome witchy superpowers."
"About that," I said and steered the conversation towards more
interesting territory. "Of course, it's way too early to tell how
everything will turn out, but let's assume for the sake of argument that
we manage to pull this off and close the wormhole and beat the daylights
out of the Big Bad if he shows. I'm thinking we should do more detective
work and find out if anyone else has some of that skinsuit antidote. The
fake Tina had a bottle of it, so there's got to be more out there. Then
it's time for another road trip adventure."
"Didn't you hear what Mandy told us?" Jake rebuked me. "The antidote's
poison. I-it will kill us if we use it!"
"Most likely not, if we know the right dosage."
"No, Buffy!" he burst out in an almost anguished tone, as though my idea
had thoroughly scared him and he were unconditionally determined to
convince me not to go through with it. His reaction was such a surprise
to me that I didn't even pay attention to the name he had referred to me
by. "It won't work, and I'm not coming on a stupid a-and insane and
dangerous and fruitless, fear-and-loathing kinda outing with you!"
"You didn't have a problem with it just a few days ago," I reminded him
and went on, "But if you'd rather cast a gender changing spell on us,
feel free to do that instead. Totally okay by me. I'm under the
impression you've got Willow's powers, and I'll take whatever I can
get."
"No. I won't do that either."
Alarm bells were now going off in my head; something was seriously amiss
with him. "Jake," I addressed my girl-shaped male friend. "What's wrong,
buddy? You sound---"
"It's Willow, if you don't mind," he said quietly and cast his eyes
down.
The whole excruciating truth finally sank in at that moment. It was like
a hard hit to my gut, shocking me to muteness. I had deluded myself into
believing that despite everything, my best friend Jake White was still
alive inside this young, attractive woman and that the instances of her
feminine, in-character behavior were, in the end, nothing but isolated
moments of the skinsuit influencing him when he was distracted. I had
been wrong. The person standing in front of me was not Jake White, a he,
but Willow Rosenberg, a she.
The last of my friends, and the last of my trusted comrades-in-arms in
the battle to retain our own personalities, was irrevocably gone. He had
left me just as Charlie, Scott and Larry had. I was alone, helpless,
betrayed and devastated.
I knew I was supposed to say something to her, but I had lost my ability
to form intelligible speech, so Willow assumed the task of carrying on
the conversation:
"I know this is going to be a lot to take in for you, but... it's for
the best. I'm happy the way I am. It's as if I was always meant to be
her--meant to be Willow. Me. Maybe this is my calling. And there's
something else too."
"Something else?" I uttered haltingly.
"Yeah. Me and Tara... You see, now that she's got her marbles back, we
get along really well. She's this wonderful, sweet person who's
everything I'd ever want in a girlfriend, a-and if I'm not totally
mistaken, she might like me back. I don't know if we'll work out or not
in the end, but I want to give it a shot. I hope you understand, Buffy."
"Don't call me..." I began instinctively but trailed off. A heavy lump
had formed in my chest.
"Call you Buffy?" she completed my sentence for me. "I-I don't want to
hurt your feelings or anything, but you are her. You are Buffy Summers,
and you should be. The world needs you, as her."
Tara peered into the living room a few seconds later, before I had time
to form a half-way sensible reply. "Hey, guys," she said. "I think we,
uh, should be going. I've got our things ready, and Riley just messaged
me that they are there."
"Okay," Willow agreed. "We'll be right along."
The two Wiccans put on their coats and, assisted by Dawn, loaded an
assortment of magical items (candles, jars with whitish powder inside, a
wooden ornament of some kind) into the trunk of my car. My part was
limited to watching the excited bustling and trying to reconcile myself
to how things evidently stood now.
The ride to the roadside park was both short and uneventful. Willow and
Tara, who sat in the back, chatted casually with each other and Dawn.
They studiously avoided mentioning the momentous task ahead of us and
talked about everyday matters, which only added to the eminent sensation
of unreality. I was taking three Buffy the Vampire Slayer characters in
my car to close a magical portal in the woods near my hometown on a warm
and beautiful November day.
I was virtually oblivious to their chatter and remained silent for the
whole time. Being forced to face the completeness of Jake's mental
transformation had undermined my tranquility, and it had been replaced
with a roiling mix of predominantly negative emotions that threatened to
go out of control. As if by some miracle or through the intervention of
some unseen, external benefactor, I nevertheless managed to rein them in
for a while; and when the roadside park came into view, they begun to
form into a kind of grim resolve. I would see this through and do what I
could to save the world. The hurt I would deal with afterwards. If I was
to die today, it was infinitely better to go down fighting with
determination and fury than cowering in the background, feeling sorry
for myself.
Amanda Elkins' car was parked there, and when I pulled up next to it,
Faith and Riley got out of the Jaguar. The latter had exchanged his
biker jacket and trousers for a green wool Army sweater, camouflage
pants and a utility belt, a more appropriate attire for going into
battle. I also noticed that he had a pistol in a holster on his belt.
Where and how he had gotten hold of an actual firearm would have been
interesting to know, but I decided to save my questions regarding the
weapon for later.
"Evening, guys!" he hollered to us as Faith collected a pair of axes
from the trunk of their vehicle and handed one to me. "Looking to join
the party?"
"We wouldn't miss it for anything," Willow declared on behalf of the
four of us. "We figured it's high time to set things right."
"Couldn't agree more," Riley concurred. "Great to have you on board."
I was gripped by a sudden, irresistible impulse to say something, and so
I cleared my throat. "Guys... friends; I think I can call every one of
you my friend, no matter what differences there were between us in the
past." I paused and looked at the others, privately satisfied and
delighted to see that I had their undivided attention. "It's probably no
secret that I hate this. I hate to have to be here, I hate to have to be
in this body, and I hate that the fate of the world is in our hands, for
real. It's a mystery to me why we, of all the people on the planet
Earth, were chosen. Possibly we'll never know. But the important thing
is that we're ready. We have a chance to finish the threat that's
attempting to devour us and destroy the very reality around us. I
believe we can do it--I need to believe that, and so do you. Angronok
wants to fight? Fine, we'll give him a fight. We will fight him wherever
he attacks, be it in these woods, out there in a cornfield, on the
streets, on a mountaintop, or in another solar system, anywhere. We will
go on to the end, no matter what the cost is going to be."
There was a short, respectful silence. The little oration had surprised
me nearly as much as it had the others, and I had no idea as to where
the thoughts or the words had actually come from. Nonetheless, they were
relevant and well-chosen in my opinion, and none of the others seemed to
disapprove of them, either.
"Inspiring," Tara commented courteously.
"I'm not sure if I'd rate that one alongside the classics by Winston
Churchill or JFK," Willow added with a half-smile and in a manner and
words that perhaps carried one last echo of good old Jake White, "but it
wasn't too shabby."
I turned my attention to my sister. "Dawn," I addressed her in a final
attempt to persuade her not to accompany us to the portal site, "I
really think you should stay here and guard the cars, or something. We
may want to leave this place fast."
"Don't worry, Buffy," she said in a cheerfully carefree manner.
"Nothing's going to happen to us. We'll win and live forever. I just
know that."
"I wish I had your confidence, Dawnie."
The dimensional portal and the clearing in the woods had not changed
visibly since my previous visit. The ghostly pale blue ring of light was
hovering in the air quietly and steadily as before, ominous in its
extreme unnaturalness and strangeness. It was hardly any less eerie to
behold in full daylight than in total darkness, I thought as we reached
the opening.
Because of the rough terrain, it was most convenient to walk in single
file, and so Faith and I had been leading our group, Dawn and the pair
of witches had followed us, and Riley had served as the rear guard to
protect us from that direction. Once in the open, we spread out, with
the three fighters taking up positions in front of the mouth of the
portal, some ten or fifteen yards away from it, and Willow and Tara
setting up their magic circle further back. They put a blanket on the
ground to stay dry, knelt on it and started placing their arcane items
on it.
I glanced uneasily over my shoulder at Dawn, who stood beside the
Wiccans, eager to see what they were doing. It had definitely been a
serious lapse of judgment to allow her to join us. She wouldn't be able
to help and was merely another person whom we would have to shield from
demon assaults. If our attempts were to fail spectacularly and result in
the worst possible outcome, her being here instead of having stayed at
home would make little difference, but even so, I would have been able
to breathe much more easily if at least a few miles had separated her
from this cursed location.
Riley unholstered his sidearm and pulled back on its receiver to cock
it. It was certainly a pistol of some kind, but I couldn't recognize the
type as it had peculiar ridges of plastic around the barrel, in addition
what seemed like an oversized accessory rail below it. "Any second now,"
he said and took up a wide, prepared stance. "If they're going to
attack, it happens as soon as they notice someone is interfering with
the gate."
"Let 'em come," Faith commented briskly and smirked. "We're ready here.
Whoever tries to get through is in for one wicked ass-kicking."
Tara began an incantation in a low, steady voice and a language that was
alien to me, and then Willow joined in. I resisted the temptation to
look at them, keeping my eyes firmly fixed on the portal, but I noticed
a rush of warm air from behind me. The blue light of the outline of the
gate wavered and flickered slightly. A fast ripple seemed to move around
the circumference clockwise, followed by another and soon yet another.
Straining my vision, I thought I could see that the light ring was
beginning to shrink, almost imperceptibly gradually. Willow and Tara
continued chanting, and their voices blended together into a monotonous
melody in my ears.
Suddenly, a blinding glow of electric blue light shone from the portal
and filled the entire ring. In the center, my eyes caught a large moving
shape, lit from behind by the harsh glow of the wormhole. The object was
nothing but a fuzzy silhouette at first, but it promptly resolved into a
humanoid monster, and then the dread creature barged out of the gateway
and emerged fully. Countless other shapes were milling around in the
light behind it.
"Watch out!" Faith cried out, and I raised my axe to take on the first
attacker. It was only a few yards from me, almost within striking range.
Just then, to my abject horror, my strength drained from my limbs. I
stood immobilized, and time itself appeared to decelerate and stand
still with me. The demon's movements slowed down until the being was
only barely inching forward. The horrendous sight of its open mouth and
crooked fangs filled my mind, and there was nothing else in the world.
I never made contact with it. A fraction of a second before either its
bite or my axe would have found its mark, my consciousness drifted away.
For a heartbeat, I thought I could see myself and the others from the
vantage point of an observer floating high above the battlefield, but
then the vision shrunk and collapsed into nothing.