Mal: And I never back down from a fight. Inara: Yes, you do! You do all the time!

'Shindig'


Buffista Fic 2: They Said It Couldn't Be Done.

[NAFDA] Where the Buffistas let their fanfic creative juices flow. May contain erotica.


Typo Boy - Dec 03, 2008 5:48:53 pm PST #542 of 1103
Calli: My people have a saying. A man who trusts can never be betrayed, only mistaken.Avon: Life expectancy among your people must be extremely short.

( continues...) injury. (Only Blood knows Arabella is one of those enemies.) Blood announces that since Bishop suffered in defense of her, she feels honor bound to accept his offer of marriage. The envoy says he needs to find a replacement for Bishop as Governor. Arabella says that would be poor reward for his bravery. There is an old family knocking code by which Bishop can communicate with her. She will teach it to Phiala, and he can continue to rule through the two of them.

The last scene is after the wedding. Phiala asks Arabella when she will teach her the knocking code. "What knocking code?" replies Arabella. Both laugh, hold hands, and look into each others eyes as the Colonel stares at them, hating and helpless.


SailAweigh - Dec 03, 2008 5:54:53 pm PST #543 of 1103
Nana korobi, ya oki. (Fall down seven times, stand up eight.) ~Yuzuru Hanyu/Japanese proverb

Typo, that is awesome!!


Typo Boy - Dec 03, 2008 7:19:46 pm PST #544 of 1103
Calli: My people have a saying. A man who trusts can never be betrayed, only mistaken.Avon: Life expectancy among your people must be extremely short.

Thanks Sail. I would love to see someone take this and actually write the Fic. Obviously whoever wrote it would alter things to their own taste. Fay?


Fay - Dec 03, 2008 10:06:10 pm PST #545 of 1103
"Fuck Western ideologically-motivated gender identification!" Sulu gasped, and came.

...shamefully, despite my well-known pirate fetish, I have not seen Captain Blood.

Or rather - I very probably have, during my misspent youth (ie spent watching old movies rather than kicking a ball around or climbing trees), but I didn't register which of the gazillion OldSkool pirate movies it actually was - they all sort of melt into a blur of big white shirts and heaving cleavage. Um.

But this plot of yours is absolutely for the win, Typo, fwiw, and I think you should write it!


Liese S. - Jan 07, 2009 4:27:57 pm PST #546 of 1103
"Faded like the lilac, he thought."

Since I'm in a lj crossposting frenzy, I thought I'd post this old lyric of mine I discovered that I'd written for Ianto & Jack. I originally chickened out of posting it anywhere, but what the hell, right?

Feedback & critique totally welcomed.

Ianto's Song

i know you've got your devils
i know you've run your grifts
i know you try every taste comes by
till you find the one that fits

you go running
i know you'll go running
you go running every time
you go running
i know you'll go running
running away into the night

but here i am and i'm
stuck loving a half-hearted man
here i am and dare i try
living with a half-hearted man

maybe the one that's your one true
has got heart enough for the both of you
but your hand's in mine and i won't ask why
but i'm ready to see it through

so here am i and i'm
stuck loving a half-hearted man
here am i and dare i try
living with a half-hearted man

all i know is that in your eyes
is a universe i'd like to fly
i can meet your needs you can make me scream
so let's try it if you've got the time

here i am and i'm
stuck loving a half-hearted man
here am i and dare i try
living with a half-hearted man

so go running
i know you'll go running
but if you've got the time...


Beverly - Jan 07, 2009 10:57:40 pm PST #547 of 1103
Days shrink and grow cold, sunlight through leaves is my song. Winter is long.

I love the rythm and the rhyme, Liese. The words just roll on, forward movememt. It sings. And now I'd love to hear it set to melody.


Fay - Jan 07, 2009 11:30:25 pm PST #548 of 1103
"Fuck Western ideologically-motivated gender identification!" Sulu gasped, and came.

I have to say, I think it fits just as well to Jack addressing the Doctor. (Particularly if you ship Doctor/Master. And especially the hand!)

Liked it a lot - would love to hear it set to music, as Beverly said.


Liese S. - Jan 08, 2009 1:28:22 pm PST #549 of 1103
"Faded like the lilac, he thought."

Thanks!

And especially the hand!

And, hee! Yeah, I can see that.

Didja get the bit about the "heart enough for the both of you" re: the Doctor? Heh. I had fun trying to fit in fannish stuff in a lyric that would still sound universal.

It does have a melody, but I haven't done anything with it as far as putting in the instruments behind it.


Fay - Feb 21, 2009 5:18:39 am PST #550 of 1103
"Fuck Western ideologically-motivated gender identification!" Sulu gasped, and came.

Hmm. I had a kind of a plot bunny, but then it ran away, leaving me with just a beginning and no clear idea of where the story is going. So I hope you don't mind, but I'm going to post it here and see what you reckon? (I'm thinking that although I like the idea in theory, in execution it's not particularly gripping. I need some perspective.)

* * *

Obviously, afterwards it was easy to see where Dean had gone wrong. But by then it was entirely too late.

* * *

Sam's late getting back from the library, and he's feeling pretty pissy about having to walk through the rain, even if it's only three blocks. He'd tried calling Dean, but the cellphone was just going to voice mail. Damn it. Which probably just means he's busy with some waitress, or that he's dropped his phone, but Sam's still relieved as hell to see the Impala in the parking lot as he splashes back to the motel. You never can tell.

He bangs on the door. “Dean?” The rain is still pounding down, grey and dreary and inescapable, and water is trickling down the back of Sam's neck. His bangs are sodden. This is not a great moment for Dean to be in the john. He hunkers closer to the door, the peeling blue paint inches from his nose, and tries to find a little shelter from the driving rain. “Dean? I don't have a key. Let me in already!”

“Sam?” And that - that doesn't actually sound anything like Dean. What the hell? “I've got – I've kind of got a problem.” And Dean's still not opening the door – if it even is Dean. Sam's getting a bad feeling about this.

“Okay,” he says evenly. “Well, why don't you just open the goddamn door and tell me about it? I'm getting drowned out here!

“Yeah. Yeah, okay.” It's like Dean's doing some kind of joke voice or something. Or else – and this thought has Sam flexing his fingers and steadying his pulse, reaching for the calm and the stillness that he needs to control his powers – or else it just isn't Dean. “But – you've got to promise not to laugh, okay?”

And – huh. It might not sound a lot like Dean's voice, but that sure does sound like his brother. Weirdly. What the hell? “Oookay,” says Sam, warily.

“Promise?”

Sam pounds on the door. “I promise to kick your ass if you don't let me in out of this rain right now. Quit messing around, Dean!”

“Right. Yeah. Okay.”

Sam bites his lip. He can't sense anything demonic, and he's gotten pretty good at feeling for this stuff these days. Still – something is very definitely out of whack. He's actually starting to feel pretty worried when the door finally opens, and his muscles are tensing, ready for – oh. Actually, as it turns out, not ready for anything. Ready for a vampire, or a werewolf, or a demon or something, but not so much ready for the sight of a scowling nine year old boy peering out from under Dean's jacket, with Dean's t-shirt hanging almost to his pasty little knees and Dean's jeans and shoes in a crumpled heap on the carpet next to his feet. He's wearing a pair of socks that are about ten sizes too big. Sam's jaw drops. The kid glares up at him. For a tiny person, he's packing an impressive amount of irritation into a fairly small amount of space.

“How – what – who?” says Sam weakly, but he knows the answer to at least part of that perfectly well. Sure, in Sam's memory the face was bigger, but he looks just like all the photos.

“Shut the fuck up,” says the kid, and Sam is shocked afresh, because that's just wrong coming from a nine year old.

“Don't say the f wor...” he begins, scandalised, and then bites his tongue as the kid raises a fist and punches him in the solar plexus. It's quite a good punch, for a small kid, and Sam doubles over and makes wheezing noises for a moment.

“Shut the fucking fuck up, you fuckwit,” the kid snarls, like he's been raised by wolves on the set of Deadwood. Like he's got to make up for his lack of stature by shrinking his vocabulary to match.

Sam stands up straighter, raising his hands placatingly. “Dean?” he says, (continued...)


Fay - Feb 21, 2009 5:18:50 am PST #551 of 1103
"Fuck Western ideologically-motivated gender identification!" Sulu gasped, and came.

( continues...) weakly. “Really?”

The kid – Dean – shrugs, and kicks the floor with one bare foot. “It wasn't my fault,” he mutters. “How was I supposed to know?”

”Dean?” repeats Sam, shaking his head incredulously.

“That's my name, Sammy. Don't wear it out.” Dean sits down on the edge of the bed and his toes don't quite reach the carpet any more. He looks sideways at Sam, still glowering, and heaves a huge, irritated sigh. “Go on. You know you want to,” he says, giving Sam the stink eye.

“What happened?” Sam asks, sitting down hard on one of the wobbly wooden chairs and staring at his newly little brother. “This is – how – seriously, dude! What happened?”

“I found the shop,” says Dean, gruffly.

“You – that's great!” Sam says. Then his face falls. “Except – oh, crap. You mean you fell for it too? Dean!”

“Shut up!” snaps Dean, red-faced. “It wasn't my fault. The damn thing changes.” Sam blinks. “I mean, we were looking for a junk store, right? Something like that? Wacky antiques, secretly cursed objects, something with dark corners and some creepy old guy, right?”

“That's what Mrs Parker described,” agrees Sam slowly.

“Thank you!” And it's just so weird watching Dean's gestures and hearing his intonations coming from somebody who ought to be in third grade doing spelling tests. Sam's staring like an idiot, which is kind of rude but, man, he really can't be blamed for it, surely? This is pretty damn Twilight Zone, even for the Winchesters. “So I looked everywhere for this mysterious disappearing reappearing junk shop of doom. Everywhere. Every damn street, every alley, you name it. And maybe it kept popping out of existence as soon as I arrived and reappearing when I was gone, I don't know. But – no damn shop. So in the end I gave up.”

“You gave up? I thought you said you found it?”

“That was later.” He waves his arms for emphasis, but the effect is kind of ruined because Dean's hands are buried somewhere up inside the arms of his jacket, and it occurs to Sam quite suddenly that this is Dad's jacket, and that he can remember Dean pulling it around him just like this when they were little, and when Dad was off on another hunting trip. And – shit, man. Dean was as little as this – hell, littler – back in Sam's earliest memories, when it was Dean who made him breakfast and nagged him to brush his teeth and told him bedtime stories and cleaned up his spilled juice. It's kind of like a punch to the gut. Sam had always felt pretty safe in spite of everything, when he was little, had always known that Dean would look out for him, even if Dad wasn't there. But, Jesus – Dean was just a little kid himself, back then. How safe did he feel, stuck in a motel room with his baby brother, not knowing if their dad was going to come back alive? Jesus! What the hell had Dad been thinking, really, to leave them alone like that? To put all that on a kid's shoulders? That wasn't right.

“Are you even listening?” yells Dean, his voice shrill and furious. And it's funny, it should be funny, to see Dean reduced to this small red-faced bundle of anger and frustration with Dad's jacket draped over him like Batman's cape, but Sam feels kind of choked instead.

“Yes!” Sam feels weirdly guilty and protective at the same time.

Dean regards him narrowly. “Really? Then what did I just say?”

“That you were hungry,” says Sam, who is good at multitasking.

“Huh.” Dean nods grumpily. “Okay. So – there was this bakery, see. With this real hot chick behind the counter. And the sign said 'Grand Opening: Free Pie'.”

Sam groans. “Oh, Dean!”

Dean glowers at him. “”Well how was I supposed to know, Sammy? It was pie! A hot chick giving away free pie!”

“Free evil pie.”

Pie, Sammy,” protests Dean, plaintively. “Pie!” he sounds like he's been betrayed by his one true love.

Sam looks him up and down. “So it didn't take effect straight away, then? 'Cause you clearly managed to drive back to the motel okay.”

Dean shrugs. “Only because I am a totally (continued...)