Good. Because much as I want to know what's going to happen next -- I know I'm going to miss it when it ends.
Buffista Fic: It Could Be Plot Bunnies
Where the Buffistas let their fanfic creative juices flow. May contain erotica.
It always does, victor, it always does.
Good. Because much as I want to know what's going to happen next -- I know I'm going to miss it when it ends.
Well, I think you've got some time, because it just gets weirder from here.
It always does, victor, it always does.
Ain't that the truth? Probably why I write so little fic--I can't just keep it simple. I always end up going for strange, Byzantine plots and cosmic significance and what not.
I always end up going for strange, Byzantine plots and cosmic significance and what not.
t Looks at own immense, multi-chapter WIPs fondly Isn't that the point?
Isn't that the point?
Sure. Of course, sometimes it would be nice to just tell a simple little story, y'know?
You could take up drabbles...
You could take up drabbles...
I tried that, and it's fun for awhile, but ... well, let's take this current monstrosity.
It started with a single little picture I wanted to paint--Justine as a slayer. In AtS, she was tough and fast--not superhumanly so, but enough that you had to kind of wonder if she had been a potential, too. Why not! So I wrote what became part one of this.
Then I decided I wanted to put her in a story, to explore a bit what had become of her. AtS hadn't ended yet, so I started a story that would involve her and Gunn crossing swords over protecting his old neighborhood. I figured the CoW would come in some where down the road, and I'd not decided what to do with that, but events on the show left me rewriting and changing gears so much that I eventually scrapped the story, except for what's still part one here.
I have one rule that I try very hard to keep to when I write these things, and it's that I don't violate canon. Evidence to the contrary, I don't like to suddenly change characters' personalities, or retcon them for no reason--yeah, I know what's going on with Faith and Willow above, but bear with me. I allow myself to look at things in a different light, certainly, to fill in gaps left over from the shows and such, but I like playing in the framework ME left behind. So eventually I scrapped the story all together, until I knew how AtS was going to shake out. Then I got busy, but the thing still rattled around in my brain.
So the short answer is ... Yeah. Drabbles. Great in concept, but I always want to know what the next thing is.
Yeah...well, I'm a fine one to talk. My last finished fic was forty pages long, and my drabbles always get overlong. But my heart's in the right place.
In the City
Part Seventeen: Past life regression
Connor marveled at how the wind felt against his skin as he leapt from rooftop to rooftop. He’d forgotten it when his memories were rewritten. Come to think of it, he didn’t ever really appreciate it before that, either.
He had the best of both worlds, now. He knew that—just like he knew his parents were home and thinking he was down here in LA visiting friends. Which was, technically, true.
He entered the building through a skylight. Inside, a small coven of scale-faced demons was huddled by a heater. The air smelled like stale feces. “What were these freaks living on?” he wondered. Didn’t matter. He fell gracefully to the floor, landing in a battle crouch, ready to spring.
“The Destroyer!” shouted one, as the others scampered behind him.
“Yeah, right,” said Connor. “The Destroyer.”
“Leave here now or we’ll…”
“Piss yourselves on my shoe?” The demons whispered and conferred in a language Connor didn’t speak, turning again to face him.
“What do you want?” asked the one who was obviously the leader.
“There’s big things happening here in Los Angeles,” said Connor, coolly. “You things are brokers to the netherworld. Small-time, true, but…”
“We’re not small-time, you whelp!” Connor started forward, and they cowered. “Well, OK, there’s bigger.”
“I want to know who’s using Wolfram & Hart’s L.A. resources,” said Connor. “I want to know what happened to Angel.”
Connor had never seen anyone turn greener before. The thing was obviously freaked. He was amazed how easy this part of it was—the memories of being “the Destroyer” were so distant, they seemed like another person.
“I don’t know,” said the leader, after some contemplation. “I don’t know who you’re looking for. There’s rumors of a shaman of some sort, but…”
“Where can I find him?”
“I don’t know.”
“Can you find out?”
“What’s in it for us if we do?”
“You get to live,” said Connor. The thing turned greener still. He could get used to this.
“Come back tomorrow,” and I’ll have information for you.” Said the leader.
“Tomorrow, then,” said Connor. “It’s a date.”
With a bound, Connor leapt through the open skylight into the night sky. This was exhilarating.
“Of course,” said a voice, “When you get here tomorrow, they’ll have all kinds of bad-ass troll thingies and stuff to gang up on you.”
Connor swung around to face the voice, grabbing his knife from its sheathe as he turned. Behind him stood a man with an eye patch in a sharp, black suit.
“Hey, easy on the fisticuffs,” said the man. “I’m a Superfriend!”
“Who are you?”
“I was a friend of your father’s. Well, OK, friend is a strong term. We knew each other, anyway.”
The man stepped forward, and put out his hand.
“My name’s Xander Harris. We should talk.”