
Lost
By Dan Joslyn
"Lost"
By Dan Joslyn
Disclaimer: Most of the characters, etc., contained
herein belong to Joss Whedon, Mutant Enemy, 20th Century Fox, the WB, UPN, et
al., because they are so clever. Rowena and a few other characters belong to the
wonderful staff of "Watchers", which I am weirdly now a member of, but
they really belong to CN and Susan, so they get the credit. Any original
characters belong to yours truly.
Rating: PG-14
Pairings: Watchers canon, post-S2
Distribution: Ask me first, but I'm having trouble
thinking why anyone would want to...
Summary: Kennedy is forced to deal with her post-Mia
issues in an interesting way. More would be cheating. :-)
Spoilers: Up to end of S2
Note: The teaser for this episode was part of my
application for the Watchers staff. Because I'm anal about stuff like
that, I broke an entire episode so I could write the teaser. Since I've finished
my first episode of Watchers and am looking at a little downtime
writing-wise, I thought it would be fun to actually attempt to write the episode
I had the story for. Yes, I'm a staff member, but this story was made up prior
to my joining the staff and will contain no spoilers for S3.
"LOST"
TEASER
FADE IN:
EXT.
ALLEY - NIGHT
With a squelch, Faith pulled her axe free of a large,
brown-scaled demon. She frowned as she inspected the blade.
“Dented,” she sighed. “You know, Slick, you’re
wasting all my good weapons.” She looked over to where Kennedy leaned with her
back against the wall of the alley, breathing hard. “You gotta watch your
back.”
“Will do... don’t worry... just gotta work on...
turning my head... all the way around,” Kennedy managed between gasps. “He
came outta nowhere.”
“No, he came from behind you. Which is usually where
demons come from when they’re about to attack you. Where’s your head at?”
Kennedy took one more deep breath and seemed to regain
her equilibrium. “Still attached, thanks to you. Nice one, Faith.”
Faith walked over to her friend and put her hand on
her shoulder. “Look, I might not be here next time. I’m worried about you,
Slick. Your ass-kicking has definitely had more ass and less kick lately.”
Kennedy scoffed, a hurt look on her face. “Has
not!”
“Has too,” Faith insisted, taking her hand off
Kennedy’s shoulder and walking over to inspect the demon’s corpse. “Look,
I know that you’ve maybe been a little distracted lately with the whole Mia
thing...”
“Whoa, hold up!” Kennedy protested. “I am not
distracted. Just a little...”
“Attention-deficient?” Faith volunteered.
“No! Look, Mia and I...” Kennedy bit her lip,
seeming to search the air over her head for the right words. “Mia and I loved
each other. Our lives just... took different paths. It was her decision, and
I’ve accepted it.”
“So why did tall, dark, and ugly here get the jump
on you, then?” Faith asked, pointing at the demon’s body. A beat of tension
passed between the pair, as Kennedy remained silent and glared at her companion.
At that moment, a purple and red blur dropped from one
of the sides of the alley. Both Slayers instantly raised their weapons, Faith
bringing her axe to a fighting position while Kennedy whipped a stake from one
of the inner pockets of her jacket. In one smooth motion, Faith swung the axe at
the intruder, but her opponent grabbed it with both hands and stopped her cold.
“Boy, Faith, I’m glad to see you, too,” Vi said
through gritted teeth. Faith relaxed and lowered the axe, taking a breath.
“So?” she said, turning back to Kennedy.
“Maybe I was a little startled,” Kennedy answered.
“Jeez, Vi, you almost gave me my second heart attack in less than five
minutes. Use your radio next time.”
“I was in the neighborhood, and I heard yelling.
What happened?”
“Brat here got ‘startled’ by a Regnath demon,
that’s what happened,” Faith replied.
“Fortunately, Faith came through in the clinch,”
Kennedy added.
“Yeah. Right,” Faith said while fishing her radio
out of her back pocket. “Slayer One to base. Do you copy?”
“We copy. This is Robin,” came over the radio.
“Hey, sweetie. We just bagged a Regnath demon in an
alley off East Ninth between St. Clair and Euclid. We need a clean-up squad.”
“A Regnath?” Robin answered. “That’s strange.
They’re usually pupating this time of year.”
“Yeah, well, that’s your department,” Faith
replied. “I just pound ‘em, you Watcher types do the research.”
“We’ll get right on it.” Robin said.
“Don’t wear yourself out. I’m expecting you to
have some energy left when I get back. Slayer One out,” Faith smiled, and put
the radio back in her pocket. She looked up to find the other staring at her.
“What?”
Vi blushed. “Can you and Robin still... I mean...”
“Do you guys still have sex now that he’s only got
one leg?” Kennedy finished succinctly.
“Thanks,” Vi said, relieved.
“No problem,” Kennedy replied.
“Hey guys, me and Robin are cool,” Faith
explained. “He’s handicapable.”
“Uh-huh.” Vi tried to change to change the
subject. “So, what’s been up with you lately, Ken? It isn’t like you to
get blind-sided like that.”
“Arrgh!” Kennedy growled, exasperated. In a huff,
she turned and walked out of the alley.
Faith turned to Vi. “Guess I’m not the only one to
notice then, huh?”
“Nah. Hey, maybe her power was in her hair!” Both
girls laughed.
CUT TO:
EXT.
STREET OUTSIDE ALLEY - SAME TIME
Kennedy walked down the sidewalk, arms crossed against
her chest. She turned her head and heard the others laughing. A pained
expression crossed her features for a single moment, before she set them in
stone and walked on.
V.O.
“I’m worried about Kennedy,” Willow said.
CUT TO:
INT.
FANCY RESTAURANT - NIGHT
Willow and Rowena sat across from each other in a
small, atmospheric restaurant, reading their menus by romantic candlelight.
Rowena looked slightly put out.
“Willow, look around. We’re in a cozy French
restaurant with nothing between us but a silk tablecloth and a flickering
candle. We are preparing to spend heaps of money on food whose name I can’t
pronounce. It took us forever to get a night we were both free and could spend
quality time,” Rowena said, agitated. “Do we have to spoil it by bringing
your Ex into it?”
“I wasn’t spoiling,” Willow defended. “I was
just pointing out that maybe we should be worried if the work of one of our best
Slayers takes a major down-turn.”
“I’m sure she’ll be fine,” Rowena assured her,
turning her own attention back to her menu. “Should I have the escargot or the
filet mignon?”
“Ro, it’s not like she’s a car salesman who
didn’t meet her quota,” Willow insisted. “When a Slayer gets distracted,
its not just inefficient, its dangerous.”
Rowena sighed and returned her gaze to Willow. “So,
what do you think we should do about it? I don’t know if you remember what
happened the last time Kennedy was suspended, but it was sort of like spraying a
black eye with mace... or something. Not that I’ve ever... tried that...”
“No, nothing like that. I don’t know what to
do,” said Willow, sounding frustrated. “But I think that ever since Mia
left, Ken has felt really... alone. And when you’re alone, you wonder whether
that feeling is ever going to go away. You think that maybe you’ll never find
anybody ever again. And when you feel alone... you start to think that maybe you
can’t do this by yourself. That’s when you need other people the most.”
Willow stopped to see Rowena looking at her intensely. “What?”
“I’ll never let you be alone again,” Rowena said
sincerely. “Never.”
Willow smiled. “I know, sweetie. I know.” The pair
slowly leaned over the table. Their lips almost touched when they heard someone
clear their throat. They looked up to see a stereotypical French waiter with a
thin mustache, wearing a tuxedo. Both his eyebrows were raised. Willow blushed
and sat back down, and Rowena coughed and looked away while doing the same.
“And what will you ladies be having tonight?” the
waiter asked, scorn in his voice.
“I’ll have the filet mignon, medium, and a glass
of white Zinfandel,” Rowena said, handing her menu to the waiter. He turned to
Willow expectantly. She still had a sheepish look on her face. “And for you,
madame?”
“Um... it’s been forever since I took French,
sorry... what’s this word?” She looked up and saw a look of pure loathing on
the waiter’s face. After a moment, she melted under the pressure. “Or I
could just have a salad.”
CUT TO:
EXT.
BEHIND ABANDONED BUILDING - NIGHT
Kennedy continued to patrol alone, her arms crossed.
She heard something creaking, and whipped her head around to see what it was.
All she could see was an empty back street, graffiti covering the wooden,
boarded up windows and empty plastic bags blowing across the asphalt. Kennedy
shrugged, and turned around again. She shivered, her thin jacket not holding up
against the Cleveland night breeze. She heard another noise of uncertain origin,
and stopped again, listening. There was nothing but the wind.
At that moment, a huge, brown, scaly demon,
downward-pointing horns sprouting from its cheeks, leaped right through one of
the boarded-up windows and grabbed Kennedy. It was another Regnath demon. The
pair rolled, and then both bounced up to their feet.
“Damn, you guys sure are sneaky,” Kennedy said,
reaching inside her jacket and pulling out a nasty-looking dagger. “Maybe a
little warning next time?” Seemingly in response, the Regnath let loose with a
deafening roar. Kennedy made a swipe with her dagger, but the demon dodged and
the blade just whistled through the air. Off balance, Kennedy was caught by a
back-hand from the Regnath and smacked into one of the surrounding buildings
with a groan. The demon advanced, but Kennedy managed to recover in time to
catch it in the stomach with a back-kick. She spun around and punched the demon
again as it staggered back, but when she tried another swipe with the dagger,
the Regnath just caught her hand. Kennedy struggled to loosen its grip, but it
was to no avail. Slowly but surely, the demon started to guide the knife back
towards Kennedy. She gasped under the strain, trying to desperately to reverse
the process. Soon, the demon had the knife at her throat.
Then, the Regnath just stopped. Kennedy, a confused
look on face, looked from the demon to the knife. She squirmed in an attempt to
get free or move the knife, but it still wasn’t working. Looking around,
Kennedy saw a mysterious, hooded figure emerge from a patch of shadows to her
right.
“What the hell is this?” she asked nervously.
Suddenly, the demon holding the knife to Kennedy’s
throat was thrown into a nearby lamp post. Kennedy dropped to the ground,
shaken. Faith kicked the demon while it was on the ground, and it went flying
again, this time into a wall. It recovered quickly, however, punching Faith and
causing her to stumble. Meanwhile, the figure from the shadows approached
Kennedy as she tried to get to her feet.
“Look, I don’t know who you are or what you want,
but I don’t take kindly to someone trying to stab me. Even if they...” Bolts
of what might have been pure energy flew from the outstretched hands of the
hooded figure, striking Kennedy all over her body. They looked like bright green
lightning.
The demon stepped menacingly towards Faith as she
stood up. Before it could get to her, though, Vi stepped in and punched it,
hard, sending the Regnath flying back up against the wall. Before it could
recover, Vi whipped a crossbow off her back and shot the demon in the chest. The
Regnath looked down at the arrow in its chest, seemingly confused, and then
collapsed to the sidewalk, dead. Vi turned to Faith, gleeful.
“Did you see that! Straight through the heart, first
try,” she gloated. “Come on, who’s your daddy?”
“You can be my daddy anytime, Vi,” smiled Faith.
“Beats the hell out of my real one.”
“Another Regnath, huh?” Vi observed. “How’d
you find it?”
“Ken was in trouble,” Faith explained, stretching
her neck after the fight, “And she needed my help.”
“Uh, Faith?” Vi looked nervous. “Kennedy’s not
here.”
“Of course she is, she’s right...” Faith looked
around her at the street, which seemed to be completely empty except for her and
Vi. “That’s weird. Kennedy?” There was no answer.
“KENNEDY?” yelled Vi, her voice just echoing off
the walls.
“SLICK?” tried Faith. “BRAT?” She, Vi, and the
dead demon were the only ones in the alley.
“This is bad, isn’t it?” Vi ventured.
CUT TO:
EXT.
UNKNOWN DIMENSION - DARK
A flickering red light illuminated Kennedy’s
unconscious face, lying awkwardly on a black rock. With a slight flutter, she
began to open her eyes.
“Boy, Mia, I’ve must have drank too much...” she
muttered, wincing as she tried to move. As she began to sit up, Kennedy suddenly
came to her senses, bolting fully upright. “Whoa.”
Kennedy looked around her to see a vast, boiling
landscape of jagged black rocks like the one she was standing on, cris-crossed
by boiling orange and red rivers of molten rock. Above her, several impossibly
tall volcanoes belched lava and ash into a dark sky. It might have been day or
night, since the sky seemed to be permanently covered by a massive black cloud.
There was no sign of life anywhere.
“I hate magic.” Kennedy said.
FADE TO BLACK
END OF TEASER
"LOST"
ACT I
FADE IN:
EXT.
UNKNOWN DIMENSION - CONTINUOUS
The black sky disgorged a single jagged bolt of
lightning, which struck the side of a volcano and set huge black rocks flying
into the air. Another volcano set glowing molten rock back into the sky, as
orange magma roiled down its slopes. Kennedy observed all this with a
disoriented skyward stare.
"We're not in Cleveland anymore," she
observed shakily. "Is it getting hotter, or is it just..." Kennedy
glanced down at her feet. Her eyes widened as she realized that the patch of
bare rock she was standing on was slowly getting swallowed up by the rising lava
that surrounded it.
"Perfect."
Panicked, the slayer looked around for somewhere safe.
Her eyes fixed on her only avenue of escape, the steep lowest edge of the
closest volcano. The black wall rose from molten rock about 20 feet from where
Kennedy's patch of temporary safety ended. The panic slowly ebbed from Kennedy's
features then, until there was nothing left but her hard, slayer exterior.
Biting her lip in concentration, she carefully sized up the distance to solid
ground. The lava continued to rise until there was only a few square feet of
rock left. Kennedy crouched and then jumped, letting out a yell of sheer effort.
"Oof!" was all Kennedy managed when her body
slammed hard into the side of the slope. Spread-eagled and winded, she tried to
take a moment to catch her breath. That was when the slayer slowly started to
slip back down towards the boiling molten rock. Kennedy's hands scrabbled
against the side of the rock, searching for anything to grap onto. At the last
moment, her left hand caught a sharp edge, and with a cry she came to a stop.
Kennedy's feet were almost touching the lava, however,
and at that point her white tennis shoes caught on fire from the sheer heat of
the molten rock. Kennedy yelled and, with a desperate heave, she pulled grabbed
her handhold with her right arm as well. With extreme effort, the slayer then
proceeded to pull her body upward, away from the intense heat. Then she caught a
higher ledge with her left hand, then a grabbed an even higher handhold with her
right, willing herself upward. Kennedy beat her shoes against the wall until the
flames subsided.
The slayer looked up at the volcano she was clinging
to. The sheer face of it rose thousands of feet into the sky. Kennedy sighed as
well as she could without really catching her breath. With that, she reached up
once more with her left arm, searching for the next handhold.
CUT TO:
INT.
WATCHERS COUNCIL LOBBY - NIGHT
The front doors burst open forcefully as Faith strode
through them without slowing down, followed by Vi.
"Holy dramatic entrance, Batman!" Andrew
exclaimed from behind the reception desk, tearing off his head-set. "You
girls have radios, you could have warned me!" The pair ignored him.
"What do you think happened?" Vi asked.
"I mean, I never even saw Kennedy."
"I don't know," Faith replied, "but I'm
gonna find out." By this time she had reached the reception desk.
"What's going on?" Andrew asked. Without a
word, Faith reached over the desk and opened a small black plastic hatch,
revealing a small red button. "Hey," Andrew said, "you can't just
press the red button. I'm home base, it's my job."
"Watch me, pipsqueak," Faith said, and
slammed her palm down on the button. A loud, persistent alarm sounded, and
Andrew gave a resigned sigh as he sat back down.
"Nobody ever lets me press the red button,"
he said quietly, readjusting his headset. "I'm sorry Mr. Giles, I don't
know exactly what is going on," he said into the mouthpiece. "Faith
just showed up and started acting all Scott Bakula in the third season of
'Enterprise'. I'm sure if you would come down to the lobby, she'll be able to
tell you all about it."
Faith had already shifted her attention back to Vi.
"I saw Kennedy there, about to get stabbed in the neck by that demon, but
they weren't the only ones there. There was this other guy, he was wearing this
robe with a hood. Black, I think."
"When we looked afterwards, there wasn't anybody
else on the street," Vi supplied. "So we're thinking, what, that this
robe guy's a teleporter?"
"Dunno," Faith said. "I mean, guy
dressed in all black, he coulda just gotten outta there real fast."
Meanwhile, Xander walked briskly into the lobby.
"I was in the workshop working on that crossbow project. What's up?"
"Slick's gone," Faith said matter-of-factly,
glancing over her shoulder.
"Hold up," Xander said, gesturing with both
hands, "gone... gone in what way? Gone as in run off, or gone as
in..."
"We have no clue," Vi interrupted. "We
were there fighting a demon, and there was a weird guy in robes..."
"I guess it could have been a chick..."
Faith thought out loud.
"And then no Kennedy, no robe dude," Vi
finished.
"I mean, you really couldn't tell in that
get-up..." Faith continued.
Dawn and Skye appeared at the top of the stairs,
wearing matching nightgowns. "Hey, what's with the sirens?" Dawn
called down.
"You like it?" Andrew answered, pulling his
mouthpiece away from his face, "I just installed the new system. It's very
Anne Frank." The two girls shared a look. Andrew went back to his
conversation, "No, Dr. Miller, I don't think we have immediate need of your
services, thank you."
"Or it could have been a demon..." Faith
pondered.
"Are you OK?" Xander asked Vi, reaching out
to rest his hand on her shoulder.
"I'm good," Vi answered quietly. "It's
just... I wasn't even paying attention. I never saw what happened."
"We'll get her back," Xander assured her.
A running Jeff crashed into Dawn and Skye where they
had stopped at the top of the stairs, sending all three stumbling in an attempt
not to fall over. "Oof!"
"Watch where you're going!" Skye admonished,
rubbing her hip.
"Sorry," he replied, "I just heard the
alarms and thought that maybe I could... are you guys naked under there?"
Skye looked particularly disgusted. Dawn just raised
an eyebrow and matter-of-factly stated "Yes." Jeff gulped.
"I mean, demons wear robes all the time,
right?" Faith considered.
Giles appeared at another of the entrances to the
lobby. "Where's Faith?"
Vi raised her hand over Faith's head and pointed
downwards, the dark-haired slayer all the while remaining oblivious. "But
why would a demon need to work with another demon like that...?" Faith
murmured, in her own little world.
"Good," Giles said, and walked towards the
group.
"No, Tracey," Andrew was saying, "I
know I set the alarm system to automatically page you when activated, but that
was, y'know... in case of possibly culinary emergencies, not for monster
stuff... not that you're not great with the monster stuff..."
Skye and Dawn made their way down the stairs, with
Jeff trailing behind them looking embarassed. "We need to get an intercom
in your room," Skye said. "Then we'll be able to find out if an alarm
is worth interrupting...," she glanced back at Jeff, "studying for my
psych test."
"Right," Dawn replied with a slight smile,
"studying."
"Faith," Giles said, bringing the slayer out
of her own little world, "what's happened?"
"We were fightin' this Reggie demon, me and
Slick," Faith said.
"Regnath," Giles corrected. Faith continued
without listening.
"And then there's this... dude slash chick slash
demon in these robes,"
"Black," Vi supplied, "or possible dark
brown."
"But Vi shows up and kills the demon, and when it
kicks it we look around and there's no Kennedy and no robe... thing."
"Well, I'm glad your description doesn't match
pretty much every supernatural villain ever," Xander said, his voice
dripping with sarcasm.
"Faith, do you have any idea what might have
happened to Kennedy?" Giles asked reasonably.
"Well, they coulda swiped her, I guess,"
Faith replied, "but I probably woulda noticed a fight. You don't just
kidnap a slayer without makin' a sound. And she coulda run off, she was actin'
kinda twitchy earlier... or she could be..."
"So that'd be a no, then?" Vi interrupted.
"Her radio's off-line," Andrew reported.
"Off-line?" Dawn asked, appearing on the
scene.
"Yeah, it's not sending out a signal," he
explained. "That could mean she's turned it off, which would be against
regulations, but then again, Captain Picard never really followed regulations
either..."
"Or..." Faith prompted.
"Right," Andrew said, getting back on track,
"or it could mean her radio's been destroyed, or that it's no longer within
the signal radius."
"How big's the signal radius?" Skye asked.
"I always wondered about that..." Vi said to
herself.
"The continent of North America," Andrew
answered. Off everyone's incredulous looks, he added "We have really good
radios."
"So where's Ace?" Faith asked. "Woulda
thought he'd hear the alarm... oh." Faith looked uncomfortable when she
realized why her lover had failed to appear.
"He went upstairs a half hour ago," Xander
supplied. "It takes him a while to..."
"Right," Faith said.
"So... where to next, boss?" Vi asked,
breaking the uncomfortable silence.
"Well," Giles said, "obviously this
robed fellow is somehow related to Kennedy's disappearance. I suggest we pursue
that avenue."
"Sounds like a plan," Dawn said.
Xander pulled Faith aside. "Look, Faith, I know
you know what you're doing. But have you considered the possibility that maybe
Kennedy ran off on her own, no foul play involved? I mean, she's really being
taking this whole thing with Mia pretty hard."
"You don't know Slick like I do, or you wouldn't
ask that question," Faith said. "She might have some issues she needs
to work out, sure, but she'd never abandon us like that. Even if she needed a
break, she'd never ask for it. That guy did something to Kennedy."
Xander nodded. "So what are you gonna do
now?"
"I'm gonna do something to him."
"And someone find Willow and Rowena," Giles
was saying. "We're going to need them."
CUT TO:
Ext.
Outside French Restaurant - Night
"Willow, wait!" Rowena called, hurriedly
donning her jacket as she followed her lover out of the french restaurant's
front doors. "What's going on?"
Willow didn't answer at first, instead waving down the
valet. "Black Astro, coat of arms on the side," she told him.
"Hurry if you can." The young valet nodded and walked briskly away,
leaving the pair standing alone under the tasteful dark blue awning of the Chez
du Lac. Cars whizzed by on a busy street.
"Will?" Rowena prodded.
The redhead sighed. "I'm not completely sure, to
be honest. Andrew was sorta frantic when he called. But, apparently, Kennedy's
gone missing."
Rowena looked somewhat put out. "You interrupted
our romantic evening because your brat of an Ex went AWOL again?"
"I though you and Ken were getting along better
these days?" Willow asked, a little confused.
Rowena only softened slightly. "Well, maybe a
little, sure, but... look, Will, you said yourself Kennedy's been having a hard
time since Mia left. What makes you think she didn't just decide she needed some
time alone? You know slayers, no matter how many there are, they always think
they have to fight alone."
"Ro, you were Kennedy's watcher, weren't
you?" Willow argued. "I mean, I know that didn't turn out too well,
but you've gotta know she wouldn't do that without asking."
"Because she definitely asked before deciding to
keep that vamp off the street by making out with it," Rowena said
pointedly.
"I don't understand where all this is coming
from," Willow said. "There was an alarm, we got called back to the
Council. This happens all the time."
Rowena shuffled her feet. "I dunno... just,
y'know, highly planned romantic evening, I guess."
"Well, we'll have to get back to the drawing
board on that one," Willow smiled wanly, as the Council van pulled up
behind her. "I think maybe I might be able to get a night off three weeks
from Tuesday..." She liberally tipped the valet, who grinned widely and
thanked her.
Rowena pulled open the passenger side door. "Does
Giles know we took one of the Council vans for this?"
"Rowena, when will you learn?" Willow
admonished, getting in on the driver's side. "What Giles doesn't know
doesn't get us in trouble."
CUT TO:
EXT.
UNKNOWN DIMENSION
For a moment, there was nothing. Beyond the edge of
the broad rock ledge there was nothing but black fields of solidified lava as
far as the eye could see, under a dark gray, completely clouded-over sky. Then a
flash of lightning lit up a hand rising above the ledge. It came down and,
vise-like, gripped a jutting rock. Then came another hand, which grabbed another
rock. Then Kennedy's head appeared above the edge of the rock platform. Her face
and arms were heavily scratched up and covered in ash. With a groan, she pulled
her entire body up and onto the ledge, which was rougly rectangular and about
five strides square. Kennedy glanced up, seeing nothing but another, even
sheerer cliff of black rock.
Completely without slayer grace, Kennedy collapsed on
the platform, staring up at the lightning-streaked sky. Her breath came in
sporadic gasps; her pupils were unfocused. Around her, the nearby volcanoes
seemed to be dormant, no longer spewing lava into the sky. After a few seconds,
she seemed to snap out of it with a shake of her head. With great effort, she
brought herself to a sitting position.
"OK, Ken, think," she said to herself.
"One minute your in downtown Cleveland. Next you're... somewhere
else." She glanced around. "Obviously, this is another dimension. So
what do we do when we're trapped alone in another dimension?" Kennedy
thought for a moment before sighing. "Guess I missed that day of slayer
school."
A blast of thunder shook the mountainside, and the
slayer suddenly burst out into giggles. "Right, Ken, let's talk to
ourselves. That'll solve the problem. Guess there's no one around to hear."
She wildly scrabbled over to the side of the ledge and looked down out over the
abyss.
"HELLO!" she yelled out to the void.
"Bad-ass slayer here! I'll kick all your asses! " Her words echoed
softly back to her before being carried away by the wind. Kennedy let another,
somewhat crazy-sounding laugh.
The laughter stopped abruptly when Kennedy saw the
opening into the mountain. It was only slightly shorter than human height, and
there seemed to be a faint red light coming from it. "Which one of these
things is not like the others..." she sang, before letting out another
cackle.
CUT TO:
INT.
INNER CHAMBER
Kennedy peeked through the opening to see a chamber
seemingly carved out of the solid black rock, widening only slightly from the
small doorway to form a tiny room. At the opposite end, a single torch was set
into the wall. It illuminated a carved symbol in the rock above it, a sort of
wheel with four spokes.
"Well, this is weird," Kennedy said, letting
the understatement hang there in the thick, sulfuric air. She wrested the torch
free of the wall and held it up to the symbol, examining it closely before
stepping back.
"Where's a watcher when you need one?" she
said. Taking another step back, she almost slipped backwards. Kennedy threw
herself forwards to escape a possible fall, and looked back at where she'd been
standing. There was a hole there in the floor, black and deep. She thrust the
torch down into the hole, revealing a seemingly endless stairway into the bowels
of the volcano. A few pebbles that Kennedy's near-fall had loosened were
bouncing down into the darkness.
"Well," Kennedy observed, "I guess I
really don't have anything left to lose." She stepped onto the first stair,
then onto the second, until soon even the light of her torch disappeared from
view.
CUT TO:
INT.
STAIRWAY
Kennedy held the torch in front of her, trying and
failing to light the way more than a few feet ahead. The dark seemed thicker
than usual, as if the air had been painted black. After a moment, the slayer's
feet reached a sort of landing. She sighed.
"OK, are we there yet?" she asked, but some
searching with the torch revealed more stairs ahead. "Right, well, let's do
this, then." As she began to take the first step, something gray and
approximately person-shaped flew out of the pitch darkness behind her. Kennedy
let out a yell and dropped her torch as the thing crashed into her and she lost
her footing. Both the slayer and her attacker disappeared down into the
darkness.
FADE TO BLACK
END OF ACT I
"LOST"
ACT II
Fade In:
Int.
Video Store - Night
With a loud crash, a furry demon that looked
suspiciously like a humanoid weasel slammed into a rack holding copies of the
latest Hilary Duff film. A sign reading "The Scariest Movie of the
Year!" clattered to the ground. With one hand, Faith held the demon against
the wall by its throat as its whiskers quivered in agitation.
"Hey, c'mon girls!" called the Vl'hurg
behind the counter. "You're gonna scare away the customers!"
"Oh, don't worry, K'resk," Faith said, never
taking her eyes from the demon she was throttling. "Vinnie here's about to
become really cooperative, in an extra-special kinda way, and I won't have to
resort to violence." She punched the demon hard in the snout with her free
hand. "... Much."
"I swear on my mother's tail, I don't know
anything!" the weasel demon gasped. "I don't even know what you're
talking about."
"Wrong answer," Faith replied, and punched
the demon again.
"Faith, is this truly necessary?" Rowena
asked, sounding bored as she nonchalantly examined a copy of "House of 1000
Corpses" in the "Family Films" section a few rows away before
returning it to the shelf.
"Blondie," Faith answered, sounding annoyed,
"just sit back and let the master work." Rowena shrugged. The slayer
still hadn't looked away from her victim. "Now, Vinnie, everybody knows you
hang out down in those alleys off Prospect."
"It's near the stadium," Vinnie defended.
"I like all the peanut shells, you know how it is."
"So you would have been there earlier tonight,
before you came here?"
"Maybe," the demon replied. "What's it
to ya?"
Faith pulled Vinnie off the wall slightly before
slamming him back against the shelves. "Somethin' happened to a friend of
mine down there tonight. I figure, you bein' such a fan of George Washington
Carver, maybe you saw what went down. Big fight, possibly a Regnath demon. Ring
anything?"
The demon looked confused. "George Washington
Carver?"
"Famous inventor guy, came up with ways people
use peanuts, right?" Faith's head turned to Rowena for confirmation.
The blond just shrugged. "Canadian," she
reminded the slayer.
Faith let out an exasperated grunt. "Am I the
only one who watched the History Channel during Black History Month?" She
turned back to Vinnie? "So anyway, Regnath demon, fight?"
"Hey, I told you, I didn't see anything,"
the demon answered. "Besides, everyone knows Regnaths pupate over the
summer." Faith gave Vinnie a long, hard stare. His whiskers quivered even
more if that was possible.
"Fine," she eventually said, letting him
down off the wall. The demon, looking slightly embarassed, tried to readjust his
shirt collar, then attempted to exit the store while it still retained some
small thread of dignity. At the end of the row of videos, however, Vinnie
encountered Rowena, who stood calmly in his way.
"Hey, Vinnie, how's it going?" she asked
innocuously.
"Um, fine, thank you," he replied nervously,
his eyes flicking towards the exit.
"We met at that mixer Brell hosted last month,
remember? You were the one who loved peanut shells, weren't you?
The demon just nodded. From a distance, Faith looked
on with interest.
"I've just been wondering, you know, since we
met, if you love them so much, why just live nearby the stadium? I mean,
wouldn't there be many more shells inside the stadium itself?"
"Well, of course," Vinnie answered, much of
his skittishness seemingly forgotten. "But you wouldn't believe the
security they have there. I mean, I'd be doing them a favor, cleaning the place
up, y'know, but I don't think they're big fans of non-humans."
"You know what?" Rowena said, as if the idea
had just occured to her. "There's a gate worker at Jacobs Field who lets us
know at the Council if something's up down in that area. I could maybe talk to
him, get him to let you in after the game."
"Really?" Vinnie asked hopefully.
"That'd be really great! I mean, sure, I've been doing OK in the dumpsters
outside, but that would be such a time saver... Maybe I could get home in time
for 'Dancing With the Stars'!"
Rowena just smiled. "I'm sure it would be. It
can't be easy, living down in that neighborhood."
"You have no idea," Vinnie said. "Just
earlier tonight, there was this big fight down in one of those alleys off
Prospect. Scared the crap out of the neighbors. I think there was a Regnath
there."
"Don't they pupate this time of year?"
Rowena asked.
"That's what I said," Vinnie nodded.
"What's the world coming to, y'know? Anyway, there was this girl there,
right, and this guy comes out in a hood. I was at my window, y'know? The view's
pretty good, nothing special. I tried to keep a geranium there, but it up and
died on me. And this guy, he shoots these, like, purple lightning bolts out of
his fingers, and then this girl just disappears."
"What do you mean she disappeared?" Rowena
prodded.
"I mean she was there one second and gone the
next. I'd never seen anything like it before."
"So where did the man in the hood go?"
"Ah, he just turned around and left the alley,
all sneaky." Vinnie answered. "But the thing is, I called my cousin
Ronnie, y'know, who lives down on East 50th near Rockefeller Park, right? And I
think my neighborhood is bad... Anyway, so he says he's been seeing these hood
guys all over the place down there. Figures they've got some kinda base nearby.
I'm telling ya, sometimes the Hellmouth thing is just more trouble than it's
worth, y'know?"
Rowena smiled pleasantly and nodded. "Well, see
you around, Vinnie."
"See ya," said the demon, and walked out of
the store. Faith came up beside Rowena and watched him leave.
"What the hell was that?" Faith asked,
incredulous.
"Sometimes," Rowena said, "you just
have to act friendly." She turned to look at the slayer. "Demons are
people too, you know."
"No they're not," Faith replied.
"They're demons. As in, non-people."
"Well," Rowena said, "sometimes they
just want to be treated like non-people. So, having been handed a lead despite
your own narrow-mindedness, are you up for a trip to the east side?"
Faith sighed. "Yeah, whatever."
Cut To:
Int.
Stairway Inside Volcano
A sputtering torch lay on its side, dimly illuminating
a small circle of black stone. The stone seemed to soak up the light like a
sponge, as if it wished to get back to the pitch blackness to which it was
accustomed. Within the circle of light lay a single, unmoving human hand. For a
full five seconds, the hand was still.
Then first one finger jerked a tiny bit, then another,
then a spasm of life ran through the entire hand. It lifted and grabbed the
torch, lifting it off the cold, bare stairway to reveal Kennedy's face, a large
red welt dominating the right half of her forehead. She was not happy.
"Where the hell are you!" she yelled,
whipping the already sputtering torch around wildly. For a moment of sheer
panic, it completely went out, but the light returned after about a second.
"I've had about enough of this crap! Do you have any idea..."
Kennedy whipped the torch around once again and
revealed a gray-skinned creature standing about six inches away from her. The
normally together slayer screamed in shock.
At one glance the thing seemed almost human, but at
the next it certainly did not. It's eyebrows were too prominant, with small
protuberances that might have been an attempt at a pair of small pitiful horns,
and it's eyes were a sort of pale, unnatural pink. The skin seemed a little too
pallid, even for a gray demon, as if it had not seen the sun in a very, very
long time. It was slightly shorter than Kennedy. The thing smiled, in a not
entirely sane-seeming way.
"Hay-lo," it almost sang, in a strange,
grating voice that might have been either male or female.
Kennedy punched the thing, full in the face.
"OWWS!" the creature cried. "What's dat
for?"
"What's that for!?!" Kennedy yelled, her
voice just perhaps a little on edge. "WHAT'S THAT FOR!?!?! I'm in the
middle of a volcano, in some sort of hell reality, on a endless stairway down
into nothing, when I get tackled by... something, and fall down more flights of
stairs than I've seen total in my entire life pre-now!" She brought the
torch very close to her attacker's face. "Saying that today is a bad day is
like saying the Mona Lisa is a painting, so you better explain yourself right
the hell now." She cocked one eyebrow threateningly.
" 'pologies!" the demon bleated. "Can't
be sure! Can't ever be sure!"
"Be sure of what?"
"Good or bad, happy or sad," it sang.
Kennedy grabbed the demon by its neck, slammed it up
against the jagged black wall, and held it there with a forearm. The creature
squealed.
"This is probably not the best time to try
riddles on me," she said.
" 'pologies!" came the gasping reply.
"Here so long, brain all twisted. Left is right, right is left, down is up,
up is..." A hard slap from Kennedy brought silence in its wake.
"You got a name?" she asked.
"Name is missing, lost," the thing said.
"Had one once, not now."
"You remind me of somebody," Kennedy said.
"Sometimes," it replied, "world runs
out of ideas."
Cut To:
Ext.
Cleveland Street - Night
The building used to be a bar, by the unlit neon sign
hanging from the front. The windows were boarded up behind a set of metal bars.
In front of this former establishment was parked an old Chevy pick-up with
obvious rust issues and a large dent in the passenger side door. Behind the
truck, two slayers looked uncomfortable as they crouched in the gutter.
"How did I get this duty again?" Heli asked
in her Scandinavian accent. "In Finland, we don't have neighborhoods like
this. We have trees."
"Well," Faith replied, "Slick is
obviously not available, and I asked both Blondie and Red where Miss Hat was,
but they hadn't seen her."
"So I guess I'm the highest ranking person
without a nickname available," Heli commented.
"But you're right, Arnold," Faith continued,
"the Near East Side ain't Beverly Hills. Kinda flashin' back to my
childhood here."
Heli did a double take. "Wait a second! My
nickname is 'Arnold'?!?"
"Yeah," the Head Slayer defended. "Y'know,
'cause of Arnold Schwarzenegger. 'Cause you both kinda sound the same... when
you talk."
"Arnold Schwarzenegger is from Austria,"
Heli said flatly. "I'm from Finland."
"Whatever, same continent," Faith said
without really listening. She was peeking over the top of the truck-bed.
"Don't know what you're complainin' about. I mean, he's Governor of
California, ain't he?"
Heli was too flustered to talk.
"Hey, there's something goin' on," Faith
said. "Let's check it out." She snuck out around the edge of the
truck. Heli watched her go for a moment, then sighed and followed after her
superior.
Cut To:
Ext.
Building Across the Street - Same Time
From behind a lamp-post, the two slayers watched a
hooded figure approch another seemingly abandoned building and rap sharply once
on the door. An eye-level slot in the door opened briefly and then closed again.
Then the entire door opened, momentarily revealing a lit interior before the
hooded figure entered and the door closed behind him.
"That your guy?" Heli asked.
"Same outfit, anyway," Faith answered.
"I think it's time we paid these assholes a friendly visit, don't
you?" She moved to walk towards the building, but Heli grabbed her arm.
"Faith!" the blonde whispered fervently.
"How do we know these guys won't just zap us into oblivion or something,
like they did with Ken?"
Faith smiled and reached into her cleavage, pulling
out a pair of smelly burlap bags on strings.
"How much crap do you keep down there?" Heli
asked. Faith ignored her.
"These are our protection," she explained.
"I think Red called 'em Spatulas. I wasn't really paying attention.
Basically, just put one 'round your neck, should keep away the bad mojo."
Heli took one of the bags and hung it around her neck
while looking somewhat skeptical. She looked down at herself. "Oh yeah,
next year in Paris this is definitely gonna be the look."
Cut To:
Int.
Council Holding Cell
An large, unconscious brown demon lay prone on the
white floor of an otherwise pristine (almost a little too pristine) holding cell
somewhere in the depths of the Council basement. Vi cocked her head as she
looked through metal bars. Xander appeared beside her.
"I see we've meet our friend comfortable,"
he said.
"I've never seen that much sedative in my entire
life," Vi remarked. "It probably would have downed an elephant... not
that I've participated in an elephant sedation during my long and varied
life." She attempted a smile, but it didn't quite work.
The pair stood at the end of a row of several cells.
An incoherent shriek sounded from somewhere. "I didn't know we were keeping
anybody here permanently," Xander said.
"I think anything would be more correct...
mostly," Vi replied, though she sounded like her mind was somewhere else.
"It's kinda creepy; dirty little secrets, under our feet, all the
time."
"We'll get Kennedy back," Xander said,
seemingly out of nowhere. "There's nobody on Earth more qualified to find
her than the people upstairs."
"Yeah, our track record is spotless," Vi
quipped, her eyes fixed on the sleeping demon.
"Hey, world's still here, right?" Xander
answered, his voice a little too chipper. Vi didn't respond. Softly, Xander
placed his hand on her shoulder. "What's up, Vi? You can talk to me."
"Kennedy and me, we were... are the last ones
left from Sunnydale," she said evenly.
"Hey!" Xander exclaimed. "That's not
true! What about Faith and Robin and Giles, and a whole bunch of other people
upstairs... not to mention yours truly."
"You know that's not what I mean."
"I do?" Xander looked a little confused.
The redhead sighed. "It was different... we were
all sitting there, scared, in the basement of a girl who was, to all
appearances, slightly insane, with nothing to do but think about how we were all
going to die," she sighed, hesitated, "But..."
"But you knew, somehow, that you wouldn't,
right?" Xander interrupted. "That, in the end, you could handle
it?"
"Yeah," said Vi, impressed. "How did
you...?"
"Oh, I understand slayers better than most
men," he replied. "It's kinda my thing." She smiled, more
genuinely this time. "And hey," Xander continued, "you should
call up Chao-Ahn in Hong Kong sometime on the council dime. I hear her English
has improved."
Vi looked like she wasn't sure how to ask the question
she wanted to. "Xander... when you were in Sunnydale all those
years..."
"Yeah?"
"... were you, y'know, attracted to...
"Willow? I knew you were gonna ask that. There
was just that time with the formal wear and then with the impending death
we..."
"I was gonna say Buffy," Vi said evenly.
"Because you've obviously got a thing for slayers... not that I
mind..."
Xander was turning red. "Oh, um, hmm... well,
kinda?"
"I thought so," Vi said, turning her face
back towards the resident of the cell. There was a moment.
"Wait, you and Willow... ?"
Cut To:
Int.
Same Building - Moments Later
Hearing a single, sharp knock on the door, someone
wearing a long, dark cloak walked to the door and slid open the slot at
eye-level. This revealed two young women, one dark-haired, one blonde, standing
outside expectantly, smiles on their faces.
"Yes?" the figure asked succinctly in a
deep, gravelly voice.
"Hi, my name is Cruella and this is my colleague
Natasha," Faith said, poking a thumb in Heli's direction. "We're from
Villains Monthly."
"What?"
"We just wanted to congratulate you on winning
this year's 'Most Generic Bad Guy' award and were wondering if we could ask you
a few questions," Faith continued.
The person in the cloak slammed the slot shut. A
second later, the door flew open, knocking its guardian unconscious to the floor
and landing on top of them. Faith lowered her leg and walked through the
opening, quickly followed by Heli. Both just stepped right over the fallen door
and the figure pinned beneath it without hesitation.
The pair edged carefully through the old, decrepit
building, which might once have been an office of some kind. Half-glued flyers
for different events from years past hung raggedly from white walls with chipped
paint.
"Where are we go..." Heli began, but
suddenly Faith grabbed the Finnish slayer and pulled her flat against the wall,
silently raising a finger to her lips to quiet her companion. After a tense
moment, a man wearing yet another long cloak with a hood emerged from a room
next to where the slayers had tried to make themselves two-dimensional. He began
to go the opposite direction down the hall, but then he stopped. Turning, his
found himself looking straight into the eyes of a silent Faith.
His hood flew off when Faith slammed him up against
the wall, revealing a pretty normal looking guy with a five o'clock shadow...
except for pure black eyes.
"So, I've got this friend," Faith began,
"and she seems to have gone missing. Last time I saw her, one of you guys
was on the scene in a big way. Know what I'm talkin' about?" The
dark-haired slayer raised one eyebrow. The dark pools of the man's eyes just
gazed at her silently.
"You better talk," Heli threatened, "or
she'll give you a nickname."
"You speak of the gypsy we exiled," he said
finally. It wasn't really a question.
"Gypsy? Oh, you mean 'cause of... Yeah, we speak
of her," Faith replied. "Where the hell is she?"
"You seek substance where there is only
nothingness, slayer," the man said, his voice free of emotion. "You
will not find her, here nor anywhere. That is why we chose this method."
"Look," Heli said in frustration,
"there has to be some way to get her back from wherever she is. Can't the
Coven do a locator spell, teleport her back... something."
"Your magicks will not avail you, nor are they
more powerful than those we possess here," the black-eyed man replied.
"From where we have sent the Gypsy, no being has ever returned, and none
shall. There is no returning."
"So you, what, sent her to Hell?" Faith
wondered.
"No," the man said. "Sometimes things
come back from Hell."
Cut To:
Int.
Bottom of Stairway Inside Volcano
"Oh, look," Kennedy said, in a tone that
told the world just how far beyond sarcasm she was at this point, "it's
another creepy tunnel. Wasn't I just saying how much another creepy tunnel would
make my day?"
"But to go forward is better than to go
down," said her pallid companion. "Any spawn knows that."
The pair stood in a tall, arched opening, the upper
edge of which was illuminated by the slayer's torch. Behind them the foot of the
tall, dark stairs from which they had descended rose.
"Well," Kennedy admitted, "it is better
than walking blindly further into the bowels of the Earth, which has kinda been
my plan up to this point."
"Look!" the gray creature squealed.
"The Previous, they made these!" It pointed to the edge of the
doorway. Kennedy walked held her torch closer. The entire door was framed with
carved glyphs and symbols, some of which seemed to be vaguely humanoid-shaped.
She ran her hand over a carving that seemed to depict a horned demon breathing
fire.
"The Previous?" the Slayer queried.
"What, 'The Old Ones' was taken?"
"Yes," the creature said simply. Kennedy
just shook her head.
"And how do you know about these
'Previous'?"
"The stones whisper tales," it replied, in
an excited whisper of its own. "Long ago there was a dream. The Previous
were the dreamers. Fire, stone, thunder bent to their will. Then the wind
whispered, and vanished."
"Look, I don't care, crazy monkey demon
man," Kennedy said. "I am trying to get home. I don't have time for
cryptic history lessons."
"Oh, no, there is no home," the creature
said anxiously. "Only the dream."
"Of course there's a home, dumbass," Kennedy
insisted. "And it's full of friends who talk behind your back and
girlfriends that leave you and little snot-nosed kids who are just freakin'
annoying, and I am going to get out of this hole and back there if it's the very
last thing I do, do you understand."
The creature laughed, long and loud. It was a hideous,
screeching thing, sounding as if it was born out of pain rather than mirth.
"What's so funny?" Kennedy asked harshly.
"What I said, hundreds of thousands of days
ago," it explained. "You said it again."
"OK, then," Kennedy pushed, "if there's
no way out of here, then how did I get here? Generally, when there's a way into
something there's a way out."
"Oh, indeed, always must be," said the
thing. "Of course there is a way, always a way. But it cannot be
done."
"Cannot is... a lengthening of a four-letter
word!" Kennedy snapped. "If you aren't going to help me, I suggest you
get the hell out of m way." With that, she started down the tunnel, her
foot-steps echoing off the rocks.
"The stones sang it to me," the creature
called out to her. "The way is only open to a Kresnik."
Kennedy stopped.
FADE OUT
END OF ACT II
“LOST”
By Dan Joslyn
ACT III
Fade In:
Int.
Council Meeting Room - Morning
“Kol-Mar?” Rowena asked, disbelief in her voice.
“Are you sure he didn’t say Kal-Mor or Kel-Mat?”
“That’s what the black magic man said,” Faith
confirmed. “Heli even made him spell it.”
“She has this whole thing about how the National
Spelling Bee would be more interesting if the spellers had a finger broken every
time they got a letter wrong,” Vi explained. “I tried to tell her that
you’re eliminated on the first mistake, but I don’t think she gets it.”
“Well, she’s from Finland,” Xander offered, as
if that explained everything.
Giles, Rowena, Faith, Vi, Willow, Xander, and a
wheel-chair bound Robin surrounded a conference table in comfortable, swiveling
chairs.
Giles sighed and leaned forward in his seat. “As
fascinating as this discussion is, can we steer back to Kennedy’s sudden
disappearance?”
“So what’s the deal about this calamari dimension,
Ro?” Xander asked. “You look like you’ve got a case of the worries.”
“Yeah, what is there, too many shrimp?” Willow
interjected, smiling at her own pun.
“It’s Kol-Mar, not calamari,” Rowena said,
“and the problem isn’t shrimp.”
“Then what is it?” Faith asked, “Too many
monsters? ‘Cause we can handle monsters.”
“Well, for one thing, I’d been told it was a myth
by my Hell Dimensions professor at the Academy,” the blond watcher answered.
“It appears he was wrong.”
“Or our black-eyed baddie lied to us,” Vi said.
“Wait, you had ‘Hell Dimensions’ class?”
Xander blurted after a moment. “How come I got stuck with Trigonometry?”
“I don’t think that he did,” Rowena replied,
ignoring the carpenter. “According to several Assyrian codices I read while
attending the Academy, Kol-Mar was once the seat of a race of advance beings
known only as ‘The Previous’. They were able to bend time and space to their
will. But a world can only take so much magical restructuring before it begins
to rip apart, so Kol-Mar’s surface was destroyed by volcanic activity and the
Previous were unable to survive. This process also corrupted the dimension’s
mystical borders, completely preventing all portals or dimensional holes to and
from Kol-Mar. It’s harder to get into than Quor-Toth.”
Giles raised an eyebrow at this. “Really? What class
at the Academy did you read these codices for?”
The blond looked slightly sheepish. “Well, um, none,
actually.”
“You read Ass-ran books on hell dimensions for
fun?” Faith asked.
“Assyrian,” Rowena corrected defensively. “And I
didn’t have much to do. That was before Xena.”
“So if calamari-world is so impossible to get to,
how did our big bad manage to send a slayer there?” Xander questioned.
“I don’t know,” Rowena replied, “but I think
the bigger question is how are we going to manage getting a slayer back from
there.”
Cut To:
Int.
Black Rock Tunnel
The dark, dirty faces of Kennedy and her companion
were lit only by torch light. The beautiful girl and the homely creature seemed
more alike then different amidst a darkness that seemed ready to swallow them
whole. Ebony stone rose into a neat arch above them, while half-seen runes and
scratchings passed by on the walls.
“Must have taken a long time to hollow this out,”
Kennedy remarked quietly.
“A few minutes,” the gray creature corrected. At
Kennedy’s look, it continued. “The Previous commanded magic as a Durna Beast
commands the Marsap Tree.”
“Magic, right,” Kennedy said unhappily.
“Figures.”
“The pulse that binds all,” it agreed, as the pair
continued walking. “Shimmering, it catches all in its web and reshapes,
grows.”
“That’s pretty much what Willow always said,”
Kennedy said, her face expressionless. “Magic connects us all through the
Earth, and the energy is all around us, or whatever. It’s all nonsense, fairy
tale crap.”
“Nonsense is that magic is nonsense,” the creature
corrected. “Nothing can be without it.”
Kennedy sighed and stopped beneath a large engraving
of a battle between human-like figures and something that might have been a
dinosaur.
“Can we stop here?” she asked. “Even bad-ass
slayers can’t walk thirty miles without sitting down for while.”
“When you have plenty of time, you can take as much
of it as you want,” the creature said.
Kennedy waited for it to finish the thought, then said
“Yeah” with a sigh and sat down with her back against the wall of the
tunnel.
“Y’know, you’d think I’d get it, what with the
sleeping with witches and living at the beautiful North Coast’s magic
central,” the slayer began, “but I really don’t.”
“We don’t get magic,” the creature offered
helpfully, “it gets us.”
“I’m with ya there,” Kennedy agreed. She looked
over at her companion, who was crouched against the far wall in an
uncomfortable-looking position. “So... you’re not from around here, are ya?”
The gray creature just looked quizzically at Kennedy
out of the corner of one of its wide, yellow eyes.
“I just mean, you’ve been all helpful and
everything,” she continued, “but I don’t know anything about you. You
can’t be from this hellhole, because everything here seems kinda dead. So I
figured you must’ve got whisked here like I did.”
“I...” the creature looked confused, it’s
eyebrows scrunching together. “I... there was a home. It had children, and
parents, and gurba weeds growing between the stones of a path.”
“Whatever floats your boat,” Kennedy said, a ghost
of a grin briefly crossing her features. “So how’d you end up here in
wonderland?”
“A wizard I knew,” it replied. “Friend, I called
him. Black Scimitar.”
Cut To:
Int.
Council Library - Morning
“Which would be a what?” Faith asked, pacing
between tables in the Council Library.
“Ancient order of dark warlocks,” Dawn explained
from her seat at one of the tables, turning the book she’d been reading around
so that Faith could see it. “They’re a mystical pan-dimensional order. Big
into keeping things running smoothly.”
Skye sat next to her girlfriend. “The Black Scimitar
protect the boundaries of the spirit world. They’re like the gatekeepers,”
she said.
Faith stopped, confused. “But they don’t sound
like, y’know...”
“Bad guys?” Dawn offered.
“Yeah,” Faith agreed. “So what are they doin’
sending the number two slayer at the council to Hellsville?”
“Well,” Skye explained, “the Scimitar tend to
have an ‘ends justify the means’ kind of mentality.”
“Meaning?” Faith prompted.
“So when someone violates the laws of the spirit
realm, they tend to...” Skye broke off.
“What?”
“Overreact,” Dawn finished.
Cut to:
Int.
Black Rock Tunnel
“My mother,” the creature said. “She had left my
home for another. One where I could not...” It’s voice broke, and the
pitiful gray thing choked back a sob. “I couldn’t find her,” it wailed.
“Oh...” said Kennedy quietly. “You mean...”
“After the third sun had risen and the first had
set,” it continued, somewhat managing to get ahold of its emotions, “In the
food-hall I found her. Raiders had passed, taken nothing... but her.”
“Damn, that sucks,” Kennedy said. “So you...
what exactly did you do?”
“The wizard, nearby, his arts I’d studied,” the
creature said. “I knew of a spell, to give back breath, soul...”
“You tried to resurrect her,” Kennedy translated.
“Materials I gathered, stone and herb, but as I
began the Black Scimitar entered,” it continued. “He saw what I meant to do.
And I was here.”
“Y’know...” Kennedy began, “my mother was
killed too.”
“Knew you of a spell?” the creature asked
curiously.
“No, I don’t really know anything about magic,”
Kennedy answered. “Besides, she died when I was very little. I never really
met her.”
“A mother is the most perfect love,” the creature
said. “How did you replace it?”
“Replace what?” Kennedy asked, puzzled.
“Love,” it elucidated, as if it should be obvious.
“I didn’t... replace,” Kennedy said slowly.
“There were girls, but it was never about... love. I mean, I thought Willow
and I... but I don’t think she ever really felt that way, about me I mean.
I’ve loved people... but I don’t think anyone’s ever loved me...
perfectly.”
“So you have a hole,” the creature said. “How do
you fill it?”
Kennedy just looked at her companion, her jaw set.
Cut To:
Int.
Council Computer Lab - Morning
“C’mon, Red, gimme somethin,” Faith said as she
walked into the main Council computer lab.
“Good morning to you too, Faith,” Willow quipped,
putting her coffee mug down next to her keyboard after taking a sip.
Faith brushed off the sarcasm. “Don’t have time
for pleasantries. Clock’s tickin’ and Slick’s stuck in volcano central.
You found anything?”
“Well, to be honest, I have no idea how the Black
Scimitar pulled this off,” Willow answered. “I mean, I’m one of the most
powerful beings ever on this plane and I don’t have close to enough power to
open the lid on Kol-Mar.”
“So, what’s that mean?” Faith asked, running her
hand through her dark hair. “We back to square one?”
“Well, I personally have no clue, but I was thinking
that I might know a guy who does.”
“What, some warlock. A spooky mystic?”
“Not exactly.”
Cut
To:
Int.
Walgreen’s Drugstore - Morning
Faith looked around at her surroundings, Walgreen’s
Drugstore. It was essentially the missing link between Wal-Mart and a
convenience store. She listened to the generic muzak playing through
tinny-sounding speakers. Then she looked over at Willow, who was looking around
the store for something as the pair walked down the cosmetics aisle.
“So, there’s someone around town more powerful
than you, and we’re gonna find him here?” Faith asked, trying to understand.
“Not more powerful,” Willow said absent-mindedly.
“That would be pretty hard...”
“Then, would you care to tell me what we’re doing
in a Berea drug-store at nine o’clock in the morning?”
Willow sighed, and looked at her companion. “Casey
isn’t more powerful than me, but he is more experienced in this area.”
“What area?”
“Specialized interdimensional magicks,” Willow
replied.
“Wow,” Faith said, sounding impressed. “With a
degree like that, you’d think he’d be working somewhere better than this.”
“He got the experience fleeing through dimensions
from his homeworld’s version of the FBI,” Willow told her. “Now he’s
trying to lay low here on Earth.”
“So, ya think he’ll be pleased to see us?” Faith
asked. At that moment a light skinned man, his blond hair pulled back into
dreadlocks, appeared at the far end of the aisle Willow and Faith were standing
in. He wore a red Walgreen’s vest. For a moment, he and the two women locked
eyes. Then the man took off running.
“You go that way, I’ll go this way,” Willow told
Faith hurriedly, pointing the slayer in the opposite direction from that where
Casey had appeared. Faith obeyed at full speed. “But don’t hurt him, I just
need to talk to him!” Willow called, but Faith had already disappeared. With a
sigh, Willow took off in the opposite direction.
Faith ran through the front of the store, nearly
toppling a elderly woman buying a lottery ticket.
“Kids today,” the woman admonished, as the South
Asian clerk just shrugged his shoulders.
Willow skidded to a halt at the far end of the
cosmetics aisle, looking around for any sign of Casey. She couldn’t find one.
Huffing in frustration, she picked a direction and ran that way.
Faith reached the far end of the store, along which
stood a row of refrigerated units holding soda and frozen dinners. Casey was
running up the same aisle. Seeing the slayer, he reversed course as fast as he
could, momentarily slipping in the process. Faith pursued and soon had almost
caught him, her slayer speed paying off. Willow appeared at the end of the
aisle.
“Casey, stop!” she yelled.
Faith used a display of Little Debbie products to
launch herself through the air, destroying the display in the process. Faith
came down on Casey’s back, knocking both pursuer and pursued to the ground in
a particularly ungainly fashion.
Her face inches from the blond-haired man, Faith said
simply, “I win.”
“Hey, I don’t know what’s up with you guys,”
Casey said, getting to his feet as Faith let him up. Now that the slayer had the
chance to inspect him closely she could see the leopard-like dark spots on the
back of his neck, which were mostly covered up by his dreadlocks. “I just got
here for my shift and...”
“Casey, shut up,” Willow said wearily. “I just
need your help is all.”
“Help with what?” he asked uneasily.
“A friend of mine is trapped in another
dimension,” Faith said. “Red here tells me that we can’t get in on our
own. That’s where you come in.”
“So tell me,” Casey asked, gaining confidence,
“why should I help you? I’ve been keeping my nose clean. Getting mixed up
with the Council could get pretty high profile. That’s not my thing
anymore.”
“You’ll help us,” Willow elucidated, “because
getting caught by the Mareanite Investigatory Force for dealing the white stuff
is worse than anything WE can do to you.”
“You wouldn’t!” Casey said, disbelieving.
“I helped put together the largest human-demon
coalition in the history of the universe, you don’t think I can call the right
people to...”
“Okay, I’ll do it,” Casey interrupted quickly.
“But no guarantees. If you can’t crack it, I don’t have too much
confidence I can.”
“Wait, you guys know each other?” Faith queried,
her eyebrows raised.
“Long story,” was all Casey said.
“So what’s the story on this guy, Red?” Faith
pressed. “He some kinda demon coke dealer or somethin’?”
“Sugar,” Willow stated.
“What?”
“Sugar,” Willow repeated. “He was a sugar
dealer. Highly illegal in some parts of the demon world. Not to mention
addictive.” Faith looked like she was having trouble dealing with this. “And
here,” Willow continued, turning to look at the demon, “he can conveniently
have all the sugar he wants for nothing. And if he wants it to stay that way,
he’ll help.”
“Right,” Casey confirmed. “So this friend, where
exactly is she? It isn’t Quor-Toth, is it, because there was this whole thing
with a British guy...?”
“She’s in Kol-Mar,” Willow said.
“Seriously?” Casey asked, his voice high-pitched.
“I dunno, I mean, that’s some heavy stuff, and the side-effects alone could
be...” Willow was just looking at him, her gaze level. “I’ll give it a
try,” he finished, faking a smile.
“Good,” Faith replied.
Cut To:
Int.
Somewhere Beneath Kol-Mar
Kennedy’s head lay on a sharp black rock, the tunnel
roof not more than five feet from her on all sides, her only cushion her cropped
brown hair. She looked worn, her face blackened with ash and dust.
“Are we, like, experiencing time differently or
something?” she asked.
“Whatsis?” her gray companion squeaked, his voice
echoing from the dark corner where he was curled up.
“I’m bored,” Kennedy stated, “and when I get
bored I think of things. My Watcher used to say that I had my own special brand
of paranoia.” A faraway smile crossed the slayer’s lips. “He taught me
that in some dimensions time moves differently. Some places you can get old and
die before anyone even knows you’re gone... and other places ever second is a
year back home, and you get back to find out that everyone you’ve ever known
is long dead and the Cubs are defending champs.”
“Do... not know,” the creature admitted slowly.
Kennedy’s expression didn’t really change, but her
big brown eyes lost a little bit of shimmer for a moment. “Andrew would love
that,” she said quietly. “Someone goes away for a day, returns to find
it’s the year 2200. Flies around in some cars. Sweeps the girl off her feet.
Frees the proletarian slaves. Or something.”
“What means?” her companion asked after a silent
moment.
“When I get bored, I also get weird,” Kennedy
explained. “I probably should have explained that.”
For several seconds, the tunnel was quiet. The slayer
started up a stones so black they looked slick. Cracks from some ancient,
miles-distant volcanic eruption spider-webbed out of a corner, disrupting the
ceiling’s unnatural smoothness just enough to let one know that this place
really existed.
“This plan of yours,” Kennedy asked, “the
Kresnik plan, is it going to work?”
“Never tried it,” was the reply. “Never had a
Kresnik before.”
Kennedy rolled her eyes, but didn’t comment on the
response. “So we get to the magic room or whatever, then what? Do I just walk
through the door and into my living room?”
“Have to make the door first,” the gray creature
said.
“Make the door,” Kennedy repeated. She raised her
head a few inches off its stone pillow. “With what? A chain-saw? Helpfully
provided by the magic room?”
“With magic. Your magic.”
“Of course,” Kennedy sighed, letting her head fall
back down with a loud clunk. “Ow.”
Cut To:
Int.
Council Lobby - Day
Faith, Willow, and Casey entered the large, white
Council lobby. Faith roughly pushed the demon in the direction of the Coven
room. “You. Go spell,” she stated. Casey glanced at Willow, who displayed a
rueful grin but nodded her head in assent. She set off for her headquarters, and
he followed.
Faith watched the pair leave, then noticed Rowena
nearly hidden behind the front desk. The slayer walked over to the blond woman.
“Whatcha doin’ here, Blondie? Thought you were supposed to be researchin’
up a storm.”
“I am,” Rowena responded, holding up the thick
leather-covered volume she was reading. “I just needed to get out of the
library.”
“Thought that was your natural habitat,” Faith
said, surprised. “Aren’t you chosen to become one with the words or
whatever?”
Rowena looked unsure for a moment before putting her
book down on the desk. She kept her voice low. “Okay, look, don’t tell
anyone but... well, is it just me, or is, you know, the next generation...
really annoying. Especially when Starbucks take-out is involved?”
“You mean Dawn and the gang?” Faith asked. Rowena
nodded. “I don’t know what you mean, Blondie, they’re the most... yeah, I
know what you mean.” The watcher and slayer shared a small smile. “So you
find anything during your time flyin’ solo?”
“Well, not ‘find’ as such,” Rowena answered,
“but I think I might have realized something. You know how these Black
Scimitars police the boundaries of the Spirit World, and punish violators of
that boundary?”
“Yeah,” Faith replied, “but I’m still not sure
what that has to do with Slick.”
“You said the member you spoke to called Kennedy
‘the Gypsy’?” Faith nodded. “Well, it occurred to me that, well, Kennedy
IS a Kalderash. Ancestrally, at least. And, from a certain point of view,
possibly the most magically powerful member the clan has seen.”
“And this clan’s idea of revenge is bringing
vampire souls back from the spirit world.” Faith finished. “Got it. So,
what, they just deport Slick on principle?”
“The Black Scimitars are magically powerful,”
Rowena pointed out. “They may believe Kennedy is destined to do something that
would violate that boundary.”
“You mean... in the future?” Faith and Rowena just
looked at each other for a long second before the slayer shook her head.
“Whatever. Let’s get her back first.”
“Agreed,” Rowena nodded.
Cut To:
Int.
Coven Room - Day
Casey nervously paced the length of the Coven Room,
glancing occasionally at Dawn, Skye, Jeff, and Andrew as they set up a sacred
circle in the middle of the floor. Willow reviewed some notes she had taken in a
large, red chair off to the side of the room.
“So what we’re really doing here is focusing all
the energy inside the circle to create a doorway.” The redheaded witch looked
to the blond man for confirmation.
“Yeah,” Casey agreed, “basically. Look, I’m
kinda nervous about this. Kol-Mar is blocked off. There’s a reason Kol-Mar is
blocked off. It’s unstable.”
Willow reached into a bag and pulled out a
chocolate-chip cookie, tossing it to the skittish demon. He hungrily bit into
the cookie, his eyeballs rolling slightly towards the back of his head in
pleasure.
“Okay, I think we’re good,” Jeff announced, as
Skye placed the last chalky white stone of seven on the boundary of the sacred
circle. The four younger coven members sat down around the circle, leaving one
spot open. Casey moved to sit down, but Willow got up from her chair in the
corner to shoo him away.
“Your energy’s too unfocused for energy
focusing,” she said. “You’ve done your part. Now it’s time for me to do
mine.” Casey moved to the opposite corner of the room as Willow took her place
in the circle. Unable to stand still, he began to shift his weight repeatedly,
from one foot to the other.
Willow closed her eyes long enough to take one deep,
calming breath, then slowly opened them again. “Everybody ready?”
“All systems go,” Andrew breathed. Willow glanced
at Jeff out of the corner of her eye, and he nodded slightly.
“All things are nothing, all things are
everything,” he began.
“All places are nowhere, all places are
everywhere,” Dawn continued.
“The universe is ungoverned, and yet all bends
before the great rule,” Skye intoned.
“All worlds are one and the same, for saying makes
it so,” Andrew said.
“Kennedy we seek, Kennedy we find,” Willow
breathed urgently. “She is no longer there, she is now here.” Willow closed
her eyes, tighter this time, and the rest of the group followed suit. In a
moment, a faint blue light began to glow in the center of the circle. It
increased in intensity and strength exponentially, soon growing large to engulf
the circle and its occupants.
“Guys,” Casey urged, “I think... I think it’s
getting too big.”
“We’re almost there!” Jeff shouted.
“I’m telling you,” Casey yelled, “it’s
unstable! Someone’s going to get...”
With a crack like lightning, a blue dagger of energy
sliced across the room, straight at Casey. Before the demon could dodge, it
seemed to enter his chest, throwing him against the wall with its sheer force.
Dawn and Willow leapt to their feet, breaking the circle and causing the energy
to pull back into itself and disappear. Skye was the first to reach Casey. His
once-blonde dreadlocks had become black, and a sickly smoke was coming from
them. She reached for his neck to feel a pulse, and pulled back because her
fingers were burned.
“He’s dead,” she announced unnecessarily. Quiet
descended on the Coven Room for a few seconds.
“What do we do now?” Jeff asked quietly.
“Well,” Willow answered, “for starters, I
don’t think we’re getting Kennedy back any time soon.”
Fade to Black
End of Act III
“LOST”
ACT IV
Fade In:
Int.
Main Conference Room – Day
“So you’re telling me there’s nothing we can
do?” Faith asked, the volume of her voice rising over the course of the
sentence. “And you just… accept that? You know the spell, you said it was
working!”
Willow, Rowena, and Giles sat around the conference
table, a Watchers Council crest projected on the screen behind them as a screen
saver.
“Faith, Willow has determined that the spell is too
risky,” Giles said, attempting to soothe the angry slayer, “and I believe
that she may be correct.”
“I can’t believe this!” Faith fumed. “I know
you guys broke up, Red, but that’s cold. Or maybe the ice queen here is
rubbing off on ya…”
Rowena looked offended and opened her mouth to defend
herself, but Willow silenced her girlfriend with a look and a hand on the arm.
Then the witch turned her attention to Faith.
“I understand how you feel,” she began, “I
shared all of myself with Kennedy. I’ve never been more intimate with anyone
in my life.” Rowena fidgeted uncomfortably with her coffee cup, but said
nothing.
“If there was anything I could do,” Willow
continued, “but that dimension is being torn apart by magical forces. It’s
simply not accessible. Unless we find a new spell, I’m not trying it again.”
“But you said you had it!” Faith insisted. “We
can get her back!”
Willow sighed and picked up the remote control sitting
on the table in front of her. She pointed it at the screen at the head of the
conference table and pressed a button. The screensaver vanished and was replaced
with a rather graphic photograph of Casey after his death.
“Faith, this is what the energy from Kol-Mar does to
people,” Willow said. “The dimension is being ripped apart by magicks.
It’s unstable. Very unstable.”
“He was a demon drug dealer,” Faith said quietly.
“Yes, Faith, he was,” Willow said. “And maybe he
wasn’t about to win the Presidential Medal of Honor. But this could have just
as easily happened to any of us. To me, or Jeff, or Skye… or Dawn. You want to
explain to Buffy how we got her little sister burnt to a crisp.?”
The conference room was silent for a moment. Giles
quietly took a sip of his tea.
“No,” Faith finally sighed. “But I refuse to
accept that Kennedy’s gone. You said yourself, Calimari…”
“Kol-Mar,” Rowena half-heartedly corrected. Faith
ignored her.
“… is being torn apart my too much magic. Kennedy
is there. In the being-torn-apart place. I know Slick can take care of herself,
but that’s a lot to ask. If we don’t do something, she’s gonna die.”
Giles placed his tea-cup down with a clink. The three
women looked at him.
“We will make every effort to recover Kennedy,” he
said. “But we may have to face the fact that, in this fight, it is inevitable
that we will experience losses.”
“Losses?” Faith nearly yelled. “LOSSES!?!?
You’re talking like she’s already…”
“Dead?” Giles interrupted. “Yes, I am, Faith.
This is not easy for me. Kennedy was a vibrant, promising young woman. The idea
that I have now somehow failed both mother and daughter has indeed occurred to
me. But I will not allow others to die in a futile attempt to save her life.
Now, we will continue our research, and I pray that we will find another way,
but we will not attempt to access Kol-Mar in that manner again.”
Faith set her jaw and glared at the older man for a
moment, but he didn’t give any ground. With a huff, she got up from the
conference table and left the room. In her wake, the door swung closed with a
bang. The remaining trio looked at each other.
“So that’s it?” Rowena asked. “Giles, you know
we’re at a dead end in the research. Are we really just leaving Kennedy for
dead?”
“I am afraid we are,” he said slowly.
At that, Willow’s business-like wall came crashing
down, and she let out a loud sob. Rowena put her arm around her lover’s
shoulders.
“It’ll be okay, baby,” she assured Willow.
“It’ll be okay.”
“No,” Willow managed through the tears. “It
won’t be okay. She’s gone. She’s really gone.”
Giles looked on as Willow buried her head in Rowena
shoulder.
“She’s really gone.”
Cut To:
Int.
Tunnel Beneath Kol-Mar
A low rumble caught Kennedy’s attention as she
walked down yet another branch of the tunnel through the rock. The rumble became
a roar, and then the ground beneath the feet of the slayer and demon began to
shake.
“What the hell?” Kennedy wondered, shielding her
head from falling rocks with hands.
“All things fall apart,” the creature shrieked,
dodging a falling stalactite. “Some things sooner, some things later.”
“Is this tunnel one of the sooners?” Kennedy
yelled.
“Maybe,” came the reply.
“Okay,” Kennedy shouted, trying to make herself
flat against the wall to avoid the falling ceiling. “I’m a slayer. We’re
trained to think clearly in stressful situations. I have plan. The first thing
we have to do is… RUN!!!
The slayer took off full speed down the shaking
tunnel, and her companion followed as well as he could. A few turns later, the
demon launched himself at Kennedy from behind.
“LOOKS OUT,” it yelled, as it pulled Kennedy away
from a huge boulder that fell where she had just been.
“Oof,” Kennedy exhaled as she hit the ground with
the creature on top of her. At that moment, the shaking stopped as quickly as it
had begun. A last few stray rocks clattered to the floor. The slayer looked
around cautiously. “Is that it?”
“More later,” the creature assured her, as if she
should look forward to the next earthquake, “Don’t worry.”
“Oh, I’m not worried,” Kennedy said, getting to
her feet. She stopped when she saw what lay beyond where she had fallen.
The tunnel opened out into a huge cavern. Huge murals
covered the walls, faded colors depicting ancient battles. Grotesque creatures
three times their original size tore each other to pieces. In the center of the
floor, there was the faint white outline of a wheel with four spokes. It was the
same symbol Kennedy had seen carved at the top of the stairs.
“Definitely not worried,” she continued, a nervous
smile briefly crossing her face.
Cut To:
Int.
Slayer Exercise Room - Evening
Faith stood still in the dark. Her face betraying
little, she fixed her gaze on her favorite punching bag. She didn’t move when
the voice came from behind her.
“Thought I might find you here,” Robin said,
standing in the doorway, silhouetted by the light from the hall. “I expected
the bag to be a little more pummeled by this point, though.”
“I thought I wanted to,” Faith answered without
turning, “and then I realized that I didn’t really want to do anything,
y’know? I just came here ‘cause I felt like I should. It’s what I do.”
“It isn’t your fault, you know,” Robin said.
“So you know what’s happening.” Faith turned to
look at her lover. Robin took a slow, labored step into the room, aided by his
cane.
“Yeah, I know,” he confirmed. “Place like this,
word always gets around. Did you know we have an intercom in our room?” Faith
didn’t respond or change her expression. “It isn’t your fault,” he
repeated.
“Isn’t it?” Faith asked flatly. “I was there,
I was in the alley, but I let that thing distract me.”
“You were doing your job,” Robin said, “just
like Kennedy was.”
“Did you know the demon knocked me down?” Faith
queried. “Vi had to finish it off. And when I got up… she was just gone.”
“I know you and Kennedy were close…” Robin
began, taking another uncertain step towards the slayer.
“Close?” Faith snapped. “CLOSE? She was my best
friend, Robin. She could be such a brat sometimes, but what am I, perfect?”
Faith paced a few steps back and forth, gesturing wildly with her hands.
“We’re out there every day, risking our necks for mankind, and there we are,
two wild and crazy kids. We both screwed things up left and right, but neither
one of us would give up on the other.”
Faith stopped her constant movement. Slowly, she
swallowed, her voice cracking. “I’m sorry, Ace, but nobody got me like she
did.”
“I know,” he said quietly. There was a moment in
the dark where neither person seemed to want to look at the other. Faith ran a
hand slowly over the rough leather surface of her favorite punching bag.
“I’m talking about Slick in the past tense,” she
breathed softly. “Never thought that’d happen.”
“She had a dangerous job,” Robin said.
“Yeah, but I was the one who took all the risks,”
Faith told him. “Who woulda thought she’d kick it before I did?”
“We don’t know Kennedy’s dead,” Robin tried to
assure her.
“If she isn’t yet, she will be soon,” Faith
said, a little louder. “Ro says we’re looking, but…” she trailed off,
shaking her head.
For a moment Faith just stood there. Then she suddenly
grabbed a large weight off a nearby rack and, with a pain-filled yell, threw it
at the large mirror lining the far wall of the exercise room. The panel the
weight hit shattered into hundreds of pieces, which fell to the floor with a
crash.
Faith’s breaths came hard, as if she’d just run
several miles. She walked over to the remains of the mirror and knelt on the
floor. Deliberately, she picked up a long, sharp piece of glass in one hand,
examining it closely.
“It’s all in pieces,” she said finally.
“I know, baby,” Robin said, “I know.”
Cut To:
Int.
Large Chamber Beneath Kol-Mar
A bruised, bloody, dirty Kennedy knelt awkwardly in
the center of the wheel symbol, the vast cavern rising around her like the belly
of a whale she’d been swallowed by.
“You’re sure this is the place?” she asked,
sounding uncertain.
“Only place there is,” came the somewhat crazed
reply from the gray creature, which was circling her with its typical ungainly
gait.
“Right,” she said. “Keep in mind I’m not
exactly magic gal, so I may need instructions from time to time here. Why do we
have to do this here?”
“This place is falling apart, outsides in, insides
out,” it told her. “Magic rips, tears, grabs. But not here. Because magic
has to come from somewhere.”
“So you’re saying we have to do this here because
this chamber is the center, the source of whatever’s causing this dimension to
be unstable?”
“Yep.”
“So wouldn’t that make this the most dangerous
place to do magic of all?” Kennedy asked, still nervous.
“Most danger, yes,” it said, “But magic is only
strong enough here.”
“Right,” Kennedy said with a sigh. “Double or
nothing.” She closed her eyes and took a deep breath.
“Let’s do this, then.”
Cut
To:
Int.
Watchers Council Lobby – Night
With both hands, Rowena pushed her blond hair back,
away from a face that spoke of the stress she had been under the past few days.
Her eyes were tired. She sighed and cleared her throat.
She sat behind the reception desk in the Council
lobby. Giles leaned on the desk across from her, watching his protégé with
interest. His posture was casual, but from his lined face this was more out of
exhaustion than anything else.
Rowena cast a glance in the direction of the hallway
that led to the library. “I should be in there,” she said.
“You’re no use to us if you work yourself to
death,” Giles told her. “We have the best staff in the world looking into
this.”
“The trail’s gone cold,” Rowena remarked.
“We’re not going to save her.”
“No, we’re not.”
“It’s time, then.”
Giles simply nodded. Rowena leaned forward and pressed
one of many buttons on the desk, opening a channel that let her be heard all
over the building.
“Attention all Council personnel, this is Rowena
Allister,” she began. “I’m sorry, I know it’s late, but I felt that
everyone should be told as soon as possible. As many of you know, the slayer
Kennedy has been marooned in the Kol-Mar dimension.” The watcher took a deep
breath.
“Efforts to retrieve her have failed.”
Cut To:
Int.
Slayer Rec Room – Same Time
“It has been determined that the risks in taking any
rescue attempt forward at this time are too great,” Rowena’s voice said over
the intercom. “As Kol-Mar is in the process of being destroyed by magical
forces, we can only assume that if Kennedy is not dead already, she will be
before any safe attempt can be made to save her.”
Vi and Xander looked at each other for a moment as
they sat on the couch near the television. She snuggled closer to him, laying
her head on his shoulder. He stroked her hair soothingly.
Cut To:
Int.
Dorm Room – Same Time
Shannon and another girl her own age sat up in their
beds and looked at each other. The faces of Johnny Depp and Orlando Bloom were
half-lit on the dorm-room walls.
“Kennedy was one of our finest slayers,”
Rowena’s voice continued. “She touched all of us in her own way, and she
touched the world with her courage.”
Cut To:
Int.
Council Library – Same Time
“She was both passionate and intelligent,” she
said over the speaker, “and I feel no reservation in stating that she had more
potential than any other slayer I have ever met.”
Dawn, Skye, and Jeff were among a slew of researchers
who stopped their work to hear the announcement. Books were piled high on every
available table, even on every available chair.
Cut To:
Int.
Council Computer Lab – Same Time
Andrew and a few other watchers were listening to
Rowena’s announcement, taking a break from looking up references to Kol-Mar in
the database.
“It is no secret that Kennedy and I weren’t the
best of friends. But that doesn’t mean I didn’t know her, didn’t care
about her.”
Cut To:
Int.
Hallway Outside Exercise Room – Same Time
“There is an old saying that says one should keep
one’s friends close, but one’s enemies closer. I think in a way that’s
what I did, though Kennedy wasn’t my enemy.”
Faith and Robin were in the middle of a long,
desperate kiss. A single tear rolled down the slayer’s cheek.
Cut To:
Int.
Willow’s Room – Same Time
Willow had curled up under the covers of her bed. Her
pillow was wet with tears.
“We were a lot alike, her and I. We both made
mistakes over the years, ones we needed to forgive each other for. Most of all,
we had the same love, and there can be no greater bond than that.”
Cut To:
Int.
Council Lobby – Same Time
“We were a lot alike.” Rowena paused and leaned
forward over the intercom. Her face betrayed little, though her eyes were
glistening. “If it wasn’t for her, I wouldn’t be here now. A lot of us
wouldn’t be here.” The blond watcher paused for another breath. “The first
time I met her, Kennedy pointed a cross-bow at my forehead and asked me who the
hell I was. I’m still trying to figure out the real answer to that question,
but I think I know who the hell Kennedy was. She was a hell of a slayer, and a
hell of a person. Good night.”
She pressed the button to close the channel, and
looked up at Giles.
“That was well said,” he told her quietly.
“Thank you,” she replied with a sigh. “I can’t
shake the feeling though…”
“What feeling?”
“The feeling that Kennedy just might find her way
back on her own,” Rowena elucidated. “If anyone could, it’s her.”
The two watchers shared a wan smile. In the lobby of
the Council of Watchers, it was dead quiet.
Cut To:
Int.
Large Chamber Beneath Kol-Mar
Sound was everywhere. Kennedy’s scream was drowned
out by the roar. Several thousand tons of rock was tearing itself apart at the
seams. Something purple coursed from her fingertips, viscously floating in the
air like the contents of a lava lamp.
“Yessss!” the gray demon yelled, clapping its
long-fingered hands.
Kennedy managed to make herself heard above the noise.
“This…HURTS!”
A very large, jagged chunk of the ceiling fell nearby,
sending the creature sprawling.
“Get over here!” Kennedy shouted.
The demon clambered to its feet. “Why?”
“Come…with me,” Kennedy answered.
“Only rooms for one,” the creature replied.
Another huge rock dropped near Kennedy, pitching her forward. The purple stuff
stopped emanating from her hands.
“What? You mean, you’re staying here?!”
“Nowhere else.”
“This place won’t last much longer,” Kennedy
yelled above the noise. “You’ll never make it out of here!”
“Been here long enough,” was the demon’s
enigmatic reply.
Wide-eyed, Kennedy stared directly into its eyes for a
full second. Then she looked up to the ceiling. The parts that had not yet
fallen shook loosely. Cracks were now making their way down the walls of the
chamber, splitting the silent faces of the painted warriors into two. She saw
that the purple substance had formed a ring around her in the air, floating
about a foot and half above the ground.
She looked back at her friend. “What do I do now?”
“You know.”
Kennedy’s brow furrowed. “The hell I…”
Then her pupils went unfocused. Slowly and
deliberately Kennedy stood up. Her back was straight, her forehead held high.
She brought her arms up from her sides, and, as she did, her feet lifted off the
ground. From the ground the gray demon watched the Kresnik glide majestically
upwards, her arms held straight out at the shoulder. As Kennedy rose into the
air, so did the purple ring, maintaining its relationship to the slayer.
The ceiling began to collapse in earnest. It was
difficult for the creature to maintain its balance as the entire world shook.
Kennedy’s ascent stopped about twenty meters above the floor, closer to the
ceiling than to the ground. For a moment, she simply hung there, as if from an
invisible string. Kennedy allowed herself a glance around.
The purple ring surrounding her began to spin
counter-clockwise, slowly at first, but gradually increasing in velocity until
the individual specks of the stuff blurred. Kennedy looked down at the gray
demon on the floor, somehow still standing despite ever-thickening deadly black
rain.
The noise in the chamber had increased, if that was
possible. It was impossible for the demon on the ground to hear Kennedy, no
matter how loud she screamed. But it could see her mouth form the words “Thank
you.”
Then, in one swift movement, the purple ring around
Kennedy collapses inwards, and in sudden glare of white and violet lights she
disappeared. In a moment, the light was gone. Then, with one great tremor, the
ceiling finally and fully descended, and all was dark.
BLACK OUT
Fade In:
Ext.
Behind Abandoned Building – Night
The back alley where Kennedy had been taken was empty
except for the whistling wind. Somewhere, a dog barked.
Then, with the same white and violet flash, Kennedy
appeared in mid-air above the street. She hung in the air for a long moment.
Kennedy glanced around with a smile. “This is neat,” she observed.
Then, like a snapping cable, whatever was holding
Kennedy in the air was gone. With a shriek, she plummeted to Earth. The slayer
disappeared into a large garbage dumpster with a thud.
A long moment later, a dirty, rumpled Kennedy climbed
awkwardly out of the dumpster, not looking too pleased. She shook off a plastic
bag that had caught on her sleeve. With a heavy sigh, she fished her radio,
looking pretty beat-up in its own right, out of her pocket and turned it on.
Miraculously, it was still in working order.
“Base, this is Kennedy,” she said into the device.
“I repeat, this is Kennedy, do you copy?”
“OH MY GOD, KENNEDY!” Kennedy winced and held the
radio away from her ear at Andrew’s screamed response. “IS THAT YOU?”
“Yeah, it’s me,” Kennedy said shortly.
“We thought you were dead,” Andrew told her,
quieting down only a little. “Wait…are you dead? Am I having a “White
Noise” moment?”
Kennedy put a hand to her forehead. “I don’t know
what that would be, but I’m not dead, so…I doubt it.”
Cut To:
Int.
Watchers Council Front Lobby – Later
Kennedy walked through the front door of the Watchers
Council to find the lobby packed with people. The thirty or so most important
council members had all turned out to welcome her home. For a moment after her
entrance, the place was silent. Kennedy glanced around the room, picking out
various faces, and then she smiled.
“Rumors of my death are greatly exaggerated,” she
announced. Then Willow, standing directly in front of Kennedy, brought the
slayer into a big bear hug, and the lobby erupted with cheers.
Her eyes glistening, Willow released Kennedy. Seeing
Giles nearby, Kennedy strode over and hugged him. A small smile on his face, he
affectionately ran his hand through the slayer’s hair until she loosened her
hold. Kennedy turned around to find Faith standing in front of her.
“Do we…hug?” Kennedy asked.
“Hell yes,” Faith replied, grabbing her friend.
“Don’t ever do that to me again, ya hear me?” she whispered into
Kennedy’s ear.
Willow grinned as the pair separated. “Faith almost
killed me with her bare hands when we stopped looking. You have a good friend,
Ken.”
Kennedy smiled. “I know.”
“Shoulda known you wouldn’t let a little thing
like dozens of massive volcanoes stop you.” Faith slapped Kennedy on the
shoulder. “So, how’d ya pull it off?”
But Kennedy’s attention was on the blonde woman who
had approached her.
“Sorry about the small turn-out,” Rowena told her.
“It’s the best we could do at three in the morning.”
Kennedy glanced around the room. It didn’t really
seem possible that more people could be fit into the lobby. “Trust me, I’m
happy.”
“Good,” Rowena said. She looked uncomfortable for
a moment. Then she too leaned forward and embraced Kennedy.
For a moment, the slayer had a surprised look on face.
Then her arms rose from her sides and she returned the watcher’s hug.
“You can’t go,” Rowena said. “This place needs
you. WE need you.”
Kennedy just smiled.
THE END
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