Your Wesley's fabulous, though, which is amazing considering how little interest you have in him as a character... oh, wait.
Snerk. I have no idea what you mean.
Yeah, I was going for a hunting theme, and wound up with something more christmas-y.
Will rework it at home.
Skye and P.M.... read your alley-way moments and they were terrific, both. Believe me when I say I understand how stubborn some characters can be.
I would really like it if, say, Connor and Wesley would stop with the talking for a minute.
And I'd like it very much if Gunn could break free enough of his Fred love to take Lilah up on her offer.
I can't believe I'm writing Gunn/Lilah.
New fic! Getcher new fic here!
Three days after her visit from Giles, Joyce Summers went home. Xander drove the Land Rover, as Buffy was bouncing a little too much for reliable command of a vehicle.
She hung over the back of her seat to talk to her mother in the rear. "And we've moved your bed down to the dining room for now, until you can handle the stairs. Don't worry, we packed everything up real careful. And there are nice heavy curtains on all the windows, so you'll have privacy.
Joyce only blinked at her daughter. "That's very nice, dear."
Xander glanced at her in the rearview mirror. "That's what happens when you've got a Slayer for a daughter. She sees a problem, she slays it."
"Obviously." Joyce looked over at Dawn, who sat next to her mother clutching the bags of personal effects and prescription drugs. "How are you, sweetie?"
"I'm fine," she shrugged.
Joyce raised her arm carefully and put it around Dawn. "I know you are. My brave baby." Dawn burrowed in tight, hiding her face from the others. Buffy blinked several times, then took the hand Joyce held out to her.
Xander kept his eyes on the road, letting the Summers women have some privacy. Weird, though, his allergies didn't usually show up till high summer, but here he was all sniffley in the spring.
"Here we are," he announced, turning onto Revello. "La Casa Grande de La Senora y Las Senoritas Summers."
Joyce looked out nervously, remembering the modifications. "Xander, I thought you were putting in a ramp."
He beamed with pardonable pride. "Yep, from the front walk up to the porch."
"But I don't see it."
Buffy bounced out of the car and ran to the back to get the wheelchair. "He did such a great job, Mom! He moved some of the bushes, put the ramp in at a 90-degree angle, then it turns to go up to the porch. You can hardly tell there wasn't a gap in the railing before."
"But--I was expecting ..."
Xander held Dawn's door for her as she hopped out. "Some plywood nailed any old how to the front steps? Not from the Xander Harris Construction Company."
Joyce looked at him sternly. "It must have cost a fortune."
"A fortune? A fortune? You have no idea how sloppy construction accounting can be. A few dozen yards of concrete, hardly enough lumber to qualify as scrap . . ."
"Xander ..."
"Honestly, Mrs. Summers, the foreman at the site happened to mention that lost and damaged materials made a great tax write-off, and if said damaged materials disappeared instead of taking up space in the dumpster, he saved money. And he was very helpful with the design when I said I was working on a wheelchair ramp."
"I'm fairly sure that comes under the heading of kickbacks or bribes."
"Probably," he grinned.
Buffy appeared at her mother's side with the wheelchair. Joyce glared at it. "I know the walker's back there. I can manage that."
"You can manage that on level floors . Ramps, by definition, are not level.." She shook the chair pointedly. "Come on, hop on out." A fleeting look of panic went over her face. "Um, if you're up to it, of course--"
"It's all right, honey." In no way did Joyce regret being home mostly under her own power, but her daughters looked older than their years. Even without the Slayer complications, having to take care of an invalid mother was something they shouldn't have to deal with so young. "The chair will be fine." She climbed carefully out of the car and sat in the chair.
"And it's not like you're going to need it that long, right?" Dawn said. "You're going to be walking in no time."
Joyce took Dawn's hand as Buffy pushed her up the walk. "If I keep up with my physical therapy, probably so."
"Can I help?"
Buffy concentrated on turning the chair onto the ramp without jarring Joyce. "She might need someone who can catch her if she loses her balance. I don't think you're that strong, Dawnie."
"I will need someone to help me keep my balance, someone to lean on," Joyce added quickly, seeing Dawn's face close up. "And someone to be stern when I don't want to do the exercises."
"I can be stern," Buffy protested.