2 - Buffyverse SB (Part 33)
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cliffc999
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Jonathan POV:
"You're back!" Amy said joyously, flinging herself into my arms as Angel and I entered the bomb shelter's 'conference room'.
I hugged her back as tightly as I could, too full of emotion for words. We touched foreheads in lieu of kissing and stepped apart, and I walked up to the folding table and chairs they'd set up as our new conference table.
"How'd you get out?" Buffy was the first to ask, after we'd had greetings and reunions all around.
"The demonic underworld's favorite law firm didn't like hearing about Wilkins' upcoming Ascension." I replied, "so they pulled some strings so I could get back in play. They can't go after him themselves, and they're definitely no friends of ours, but a little indirect help that doesn't cost them anything-" I shrugged. "In the better news department, I got a message from Whistler."
"Graduation Day." Angel said. "That's when it happens. So now we know exactly when to move."
The door slammed open as if kicked and I turned, my sidearm halfway out of the holster before I realized that the person storming in was Cordelia. She was simultaneously both weeping and in a towering rage.
"That miserable bastard!" she was screaming. I confusedly noted that she was dragging a two-wheeled standing suitcase behind her, that she let go of as soon as she was inside the door.
"Cordelia? What's happened?" Giles asked.
"I'm poor!" she cried, slumping despairingly into a seat and slamming her forehead into the table. "We all are!"
"Look, we kinda have other problems-" Xander began impatiently.
"Wait." I said. "Someone robbed you?"
"The IRS took everything." Cordelia said muffledly, her face still planted in her forearms.
"Oh, this suddenly sounds familiar." Angel said darkly.
"INS for me, IRS for you." I said. "First the Mayor takes out the team's ordnance engineer, and now he goes after the cash flow."
"I'm not sure if it even was the Mayor." Cordelia said, finally looking up at us. "From what the agents said, daddy was 'forgetting' to pay his proper taxes for over a dozen years." She sighed. "They took everything. The house, the cars, my clothes-" she sighed. "I barely got to keep enough to fill a suitcase! I don't even have anywhere to live!"
"With either me or Giles." Angel said immediately. "We both have spare rooms."
"I'll have to take you up on that." Cordelia sniffed.
"The mayor didn't actually set up my little immigration situation either." I pointed out. "That was a pre-existing condition. He just dropped the dime on it when the timing was most convenient for him."
"Tell me we've figured out how to kill the bastard." Cordelia snarled.
"Oh, we have." I said. "And ironically enough, you just brought the final piece of the puzzle that we needed."
So I got off the freeway and headed back to LA, where I immediately got to work. One of the first things I did was check in with Lorne- from Whistler's reaction I could infer that Wolfram and Hart hadn't managed to actually get a hook into my soul or anything, but getting a confirming opinion from the guy who could read your aura and at least partly scry your destiny was also good. Plus, as the owner of a 'neutral zone' watering hole for the demon underworld the man would know how to get in touch with the black market.
Lorne also told me that Angel had headed down here himself to try and pick up some 'essential supplies', as without any knowledge of my upcoming release the group had had to continue their preparations without me. So I got in touch with him and he was certainly glad to see me, although I was hardly glad to hear the news about Willow and other things as we each caught up. And then I looked at his plan and acknowledge it, then brought him up to speed on the plan I'd just started working out. Working out how to make the plans synergize with each other took several more days to finish making the arrangements.
So the shipping container full of things that went boom was stacked and ready to load on a coastal freighter and the proper palms were greased. It was all scheduled to arrive at Sunnydale's own maritime facility port shortly before Graduation Day, so that it wouldn't actually be in Wilkins' town to be found until the opportune moment. Meanwhile, the things I'd arranged for and designed would start manufacture at a custom metal fabrication shop as a rush order, to be shipped up to Sunnydale as soon as I could arrange for the proper receiver at their end. We'd spent the bulk of my savings to date on this one big job, but I didn't really need that much to support my lifestyle- especially since I'd be on the road soon- and the next year would bring another installment to the trust fund and start refilling the piggy bank.
And all that having been done and my car having been put into long-term storage so that the Sunnydale PD wouldn't take note of its return, we rented another car and headed back to Sunnydale.
"Yes." Amy said resolutely.
"But doing it that way will-!" Buffy shouted, before cutting herself off. "She's being crazy! Jonathan, tell her!"
"You think I haven't tried?" I said resignedly. "Look, trust me, I'm all for the other way-"
"I'm not." Amy said. "I-" she sighed. "I know what you said. And what Mr. Giles said. And you're right." She sighed. "But I still can't forget that back when I needed help, she was the first one to help me." She shook her head. "Maybe I'm not hard enough to make the hard choices, but that's the point. Ever since we came up with this alternative it hasn't been 'killing Willow is the only way', but 'killing her is the easiest way'. And I can't get started down that road."
"And you can't hang back and let those of us who have already started down it just do it for you." I said. "I understand. Hell, I even agree."
"I'm just glad that we're finding another way at all." Xander said. "Even if-" he swore and kicked a chair. "Even I don't think this is fair!"
"But I can't get hung up on all the things I could do later." Amy said. "That's the sort of numbers game Wolfram & Hart wanted to teach you to play. And, no. Just no."
"I just wish-" I said, waving my hands helplessly. "That- oh, never mind." I swore.
"You're sure you don't want us along." Xander asked.
"Part of how this is going to work is that Willow sees only the two people she hates the worst." I said. "And if this doesn't work, we need to preserve as many people as possible for Graduation Day."
"We could just leave her for until afterwards and deal with her then." Jenny suggested worriedly. "If we don't defeat the Mayor then there's no point."
"Willow's too powerful and too unpredictable." Angel said. "If she's still in play during the final run-up to the big battle, she could potentially wreck what we're doing in any number of ways. She has to be taken out while we still have our window, before the Mayor knows Jonathan's back in town."
"Amy." I said. "It's time."
"It is." she agreed, soberly.
"The best of luck to the both of you." Giles said for everyone, and we left.
On the drive to Willow's apartment, I asked Amy "You're certain this is what you want?"
"It's not what I want." Amy replied. "But it's the only way I can accept."
"I remember when you and I were originally talking about Marcie." I tried to reach Amy again. "You told me that if that had been you, if you'd been driven crazy by your powers and it was just a monster wearing your face, that you'd want me to put you down before you could hurt anyone else."
"We are going to stop Willow before she can hurt anyone else." Amy replied. "And I know what I said, but-" she shook her head. "That was then, and this is now. And this is my choice."
"And I'll respect it." I said quietly, before bursting out bitterly. "It's not fair." I swore. "The fact that you would do this means that you, of all people, shouldn't have to! I certainly wouldn't be making this choice in your shoes!"
"You put yourself down too much." Amy said, squeezing my free hand with her own. "If you were in my shoes, you'd be right here."
Our nondescript van, painted with the logo of the cable TV company, pulled into the underground entrance of the upscale apartment building where the Mayor had set up Willow in her new digs.
"Sentry-spells across the entrance door." Amy murmured as we arrived. "Keyed to detect me."
I reached into the bag and came out with the vial of ashes I'd 'collected' from one of the Mayor's minion vampires earlier tonight. "Here you go."
She took the vial and shook the dust into her hands, then clapped her palms together and rubbed while chanting. The deception-spell - ironically, one of the ones from the Mayor's own grimoire that he'd given Willow, but not one of the ones that required dark magick to use - would now 'see' her as only that vampire and not as herself, thus disguising her own magical aura enough to get it past Willow's own safeguards. Because of course the Mayor's minions would have to be keyed into the wards.
"Do the same for me," I said, pulling out a second vial of ashes. "Even if she was complacent enough to not ward against me, let's act as if she did."
Amy nodded, and I shook the dust out and rubbed it into my palms as she cast. "Done." she murmured.
We got out of the van. Both of us were in blue service coveralls, and I had a big tool bag slung that contained our weapons and gear. No visible guards in the parking garage, and any security cameras would just see a pair of service people. I'd used some hacking earlier today to generate a fake work order in the cable company's systems, so they were expecting us.
"Cable company." I said to the intercom, holding up the forged utility worker ID I'd cut for myself to the camera. It was like the gas company ID I'd cut for Angel when we cased Deputy Mayor Finch's place. Yeah, that little plastic press I'd made earlier this year for faking up various cards was definitely earning its keep.
"Why are you here?" the doorman asked us.
"The penthouse's high-speed Internet connection." I replied. The Mayor had of course set up his new quisling in the poshest digs available here, and Willow would of course want her apartment as wired as possible. "Client wants an upgrade."
"I've got the work order here in my email queue." I heard the doorman reply after a short pause, and the door buzzed open. "Go on up."
"Thanks." I said. "Oh, and I'm going to have to open up the telecom junction box to put this in; you may experience some temporary service interruptions."
"Figures." the doorman grumped quietly. "All right, just make it quick."
I went quickly to the basement utility closet and picked the lock, then popped the panel on the telecom switching panel and ran some jumpers. From this point on any security systems on the top floor would be talking only to themselves, and likewise any security cameras would be looping.
"We're a dead zone." I told Amy.
"Top floor." she agreed, and we headed for the elevator and punched the button. This being an apartment building and not a luxury hotel, the penthouse suite was merely the biggest one on the top floor and not the entire floor, so we let out in a short hallway with the apartment door proper a ways down.
"Is she home?" I asked as we walked to the door.
"Yes." Amy said, casting a passive detection spell and then blinked and frowned. "Her magical aura's there, plain as day. And... I'm also picking up the passive magic of a werewolf. Oh boy."
"Oz." I sighed. "So this is where he went." I shook my head. "I can't find it in me to blame him, but that's really inconvenient."
"You brought the trank gun?" Amy asked.
"And a taser. And a cattle prod." I agreed. "As well as-" I cut myself off as we came up to the penthouse apartment's door. "All right, masks on."
We drew on our headgear and I knocked on the door. "Cable company! We're here to upgrade the T3 line!"
The door unlocked itself and began to swing open with no human hand touching it. Ah, Willow. Always had to show off-
And as soon as the door was open far enough to admit it, I popped the pin on the C-gas grenade I'd had stashed in my bag and tossed it into the apartment. I knew and could readily brew the formula, and using an empty canister from a used tear gas grenade had given me the basic framework to build a new one, so-
After we heard the charge pop we gave the gas a few breaths to work and then I booted the door, cattle prod in one hand and the trank gun in the other. Amy had her hands up and already counterspelling, but we didn't take any incoming spell fire. Either Willow had sucked a lungful down right away or else-
The crash of glass from the balcony told us the 'or else'. Willow, who'd legendarily scorned physical training, had very little chance of reacting quickly enough to the sudden gas attack to hold her breath, let alone of holding it long enough to reach an exterior exit. Oz was an entirely different proposition, and he must have grabbed his unconscious girlfriend and ran. We both broke into a dead run and pursued them out onto the nearby rooftop-
To catch Oz with the unconscious Willow in his arms, standing on the ledge of the roof and looking down at a hopeless drop with nowhere he could possibly leap to. I suppose he'd been going for a fire escape, but there wasn't one on this side of the building. I kept the trank gun trained on Willow- I could hardly shoot Oz at this point without him falling right off and taking Willow with him-
"Oz, please. Step away from the ledge." Amy asked gently, as we both pulled our masks off. The C-gas was in the apartment behind us, not out here, and would safely dissipate in a few minutes anyway.
"Should I?" Oz asked with quiet despair, but turned to face us- and thank God, he relaxed from his desperately taut posture when he saw the particular weapons I was holding. "So. Non-lethal?"
"This isn't an execution party." I agreed. "I admit, I voted for giving her the full Marcie." I nodded at Amy. "I got outvoted."
"... okay." Oz said, stepping down off the ledge and laying Willow gently to the ground. I bent over her, trank gun still ready in my other hand, and checked her heartbeat and breathing. Yeah, she'd gotten a good lungful of the C-gas; she'd reliably be out for long enough to finish this. "Okay. So what happens now?"
"What happened to you?" I asked, looking at Oz. His haunted eyes, his gaunt and haggard expression- my God, if he'd been living here with Willow's full crazy all this while, having to either play up to her delusions or else get his head rewired- what the hell had he endured? "Why did you come here?"
"This is where I needed to be." he said, breathing raggedly. "She didn't get in my head. At least, I think she didn't." he managed to force out. "Thinking that I willingly would go along with her in what she was doing, that was still worth something to her. But-" he shook his head. "I couldn't find any angle. I couldn't make an opening."
"She made her choice." Amy said. "And now we all have to live with it."
"So what are you going to do?" Oz asked us. "You can't keep her locked up forever. That didn't work with your mom. And I think Willow's even further gone."
"I know." Amy said. "But- I worked out the basis of a ritual. Giles and Jenny helped refine it. Jonathan checked our math-" She sighed, and squared her shoulders resolutely. "I can permanently remove all of Willow's capacity to do magic. Make her a normal girl again." She lowered her head and continued sadly. "If I also sacrifice all of mine."
"You'd do that for her?" Oz said, disbelievingly.
"My only other choice is to let Jonathan kill her." Amy said. "But-" she sighed. "If we had no other option, then I could accept that. As is, Willow wouldn't be dying because it was the only way to stop her. She'd be dying as the only way to stop her and let me keep my powers. And if I sacrifice someone else's life for my magic-" she shook her head. "It would taint everything I did from now on." She looked down at the sleeping Willow. "And we all know where that leads."
"I'm still not sure it would work like that." I said stubbornly. Because dammit, Amy deserved more than this.
"You don't want this." Oz said, looking at me perceptively.
"I don't." I agreed.
"Neither do I." Oz said, after a pause. "There's really no other way?"
"The spell won't work without a sacrificial component." Amy insisted. "Balance requires it. And to keep it from being dark magic, the sacrifice has to be a willing volunteer. And while it doesn't have to be a magic potential equal to hers, it still has to be a fairly strong one. That's why we can't use Giles or Jenny- she doesn't have quite enough power compared to Willow, and while Giles just barely does-" She shook her head. "He's the Watcher. He needs everything he has to help Buffy, not just for this but for everything else to come. I might be the most powerful witch in ages, but that doesn't make me... mission critical." she finished resolutely.
"Someone with fairly strong magic of their own, that they're willing to sacrifice." Oz said heavily, and then looked up at Amy with a little grin- oh, hardly a big one, but the first thing remotely resembling a smile we'd seen from him in weeks. "Being a werewolf is fairly strong."
My and Amy's jaws both dropped.
"... you'd help me do this?" Amy asked him wonderingly, and he held out his hand to hers.
"It's not like my magic was really doing me any good." Oz quietly mocked himself, before looking down more soberly at the unconscious Willow. "And neither was hers."
"Oz." I said, drawing him into a manly hug. "Thank you."
"You too." he said. "Because I really wasn't looking forward to-" he shuddered once, before pushing away the horrible thought. "But now I don't have to."
"All right." Amy said. "Let's set this up."
I checked Willow yet again to make sure she wasn't going to wake up soon, then helped lay her out while Amy started the ritual circle. Then her and Oz took up positions at the keystones of the circle, top and bottom, while I stood discreetly back.
Such a relatively brief thing, to be able to destroy so much. The proper components, the proper chant, the proper sacrifice, and after a minute or so of pyrotechnics it was done.
"Amy?" I asked her, to have my heart soar when she did her little floating-ball-of-light trick over her palm in response.
"I'm still a witch." she said, looking down at Willow. "And... she isn't."
"And I'm not a werewolf any more either." Oz said, cricking his neck. "I can feel it."
"Ohhhh..." Willow said, her eyelids fluttering awake. "You-!" she spat at Amy and I, and tried to cast a spell. And then tried again. And again. "What have you done?"
"They saved your life." Oz said flatly.
"Traitor!" Willow raged at him, pushing him away as he reached down to help her up and scrambling to her feet on her own. "Traitors all of you! And you!" she spat, turning to me. "How the hell are you out of jail?!?"
"Lawyers." I said with a smirk.
"You think you've won?" Willow raged. "Just because you've bound my magic again? When the Mayor-"
"Your magic isn't bound, Willow." Amy said. "It's gone."
A dead silence fell across the rooftop at that.
"... no." she said, whispering.
"Permanently." I mercilessly finished. "You'll never cast a spell or a ritual again."
"Not even if you try to tap external sources of power." Amy said. "You're as mundane as Jesse now. As almost everyone else in the world."
"No!" Willow shrieked. "You can't do that! It's not-"
"Fair?" I cut her off. "Was it fair when Kendra died?"
"That wasn't my fault!" Willow shrieked hysterically. "If she hadn't-"
"Hadn't what?" Oz asked quietly. "Caught you hurting Andrew?"
"I had to!" Willow said. "Andrew would've-"
"Told people the truth about what you did, and what you knew you weren't supposed to be doing?" I sighed. "You mindwiped Andrew over trading a pair of black magic books with Tucker. Then you mindwiped Kendra catching you doing it to Andrew-" I sighed. "And that left her wide open for Drusilla to kill. A fine Slayer, and a good person. Dead because, ultimately, you didn't want to be told what you could read." I spat. "All that, and so much more, and over shit that ultimately meant nothing."
"I- I had to!" Willow desperately pressed. "You- you just wanted me to be helpless! You know how dangerous this world is! I needed everything I could possibly get to keep myself and the people I loved-"
"You don't love anyone!" I shouted back, my temper snapping. "You don't even know what love is! The only reason you're even alive right now is because multiple people still loved you enough to care even after you were so far gone that half the team was voting to just air-mail you a bullet at 1100 fps, and you haven't even noticed!" I spat. "Love is when you care. And you don't really care about a single God damn thing outside of yourself, your ego, and your id."
"Definitely not a superego." Oz sighed.
"You helped them do this to me!" Willow shrieked.
"Oz didn't let us in." I said. "And he didn't help set you up. We ambushed you both, and the only thing he did was talk us down from doing something that we weren't looking forward to at all."
"You made this possible?" Willow turned on him, her eyes wild with hate. "You told them to take my magic?"
"I'd have taken it even over Oz' objections." Amy said. She didn't even try to bring up the sacrifice she'd have been willing to make to give Willow a second chance that I still didn't remotely believe would have been worth the price Amy had been willing to pay for it. She knew better than to expect any gratitude.
"And I'll bet you'll just love having all that power!" Willow shrieked. "You're no better than me!"
"It wasn't a power-theft ritual." I sighed. "Unlike the one you just gave away that you were designing for Amy."
"She was." Oz confirmed.
"It was a power draining ritual." Amy confirmed. "I didn't want to steal your magic, and I didn't keep a single bit of it."
"You- you." Willow fumed, and then her eyes rolled up and she began wobbling on her feet. Amy and Oz reflexively stepped forward to help her-
"Watch out!" I yelled, and began moving. Because the instant Amy got within range, Willow stopped faking and her hand came out of her pocket with a sacrificial athame, that also did double duty as a perfectly good stabbing knife. And she'd positioned herself so that Oz blocked my immediate shot, and in the fraction of a second it took me to step aside her knife-
-would come nowhere near Amy as she slapped Willow's eager but clumsy stab aside with a forearm block, trapped her arm, and judo-threw Willow to the floor before kicking her solidly in the armpit. Willow cried out in pain and curled up in a ball, her knife clattering across the ground.
"If you hadn't skipped all those workouts then you might have actually hit me." Amy said vindictively as Willow hit the floor. Yeah, even the patience of a saint had some limits.
"Not fair-" Willow said brokenly, shuddering on the ground. "Not fair-"
"Willow." Oz said, still trying to reach her. "We can still leave. Go take that job offer from Microsoft- live our lives- be rich, be free-"
"Grow old and die!" Willow spat, looking up from her crouched-animal position on the ground. "I could have had it all! Immortality! Power! Godhood!" she shouted at the top of her lungs, her cry echoing out over the city. "And now I'm just-" She spat. "Dust beneath their feet!"
"Who's 'they'?" I asked.
"The people who matter!" Willow shouted back. "The powerful ones, the ones who rule!" She slumped, sobbing. "The ones I'll never join now-"
"Everyone matters, Willow." Amy sighed.
"Quitter talk." she sobbed.
"Willow-" Oz tried again.
"Get out!" she shrieked. "We're done! We're through! If you're not with me-" she broke off. "I hate you! I hate all of you!"
"Willow, he saved your life." I told her flatly.
"Saved it for what?" she spat.
"Oz?" I asked him.
"She said we're done." he said, slumping in despair. "So I can't stay here. Good-bye, Willow."
After giving her a chance to say good-bye that she didn't take I pulled the trigger on the trank gun, and Willow fell unconscious.
"We leave her here in the mood she's in, she'll probably go right off the roof as soon as we leave." I said matter-of-factly. "Oz? Where do you want to go?"
"I'm not sure." he replied, still distraught.
"You can come back with us." Amy said. "At least for tonight."
"Okay." he agreed, and sighed. "You'll need to take Willow's papers and things with you before you go. I'll show you where she keeps them."
"Thanks." I said, and we finished tossing Willow's place and arranging her unconscious body on the couch. "All right. Amy, take Oz to the van. I'll be right down after I make the call." They both nodded and left, and I picked up the phone.
"Mayor Wilkins' office." I heard the secretary answer.
"This is Jonathan Fairchild calling from Willow Rosenberg's apartment." I said. "She needs medical attention and suicide watch immediately. Oh, and make sure to tell Wilkins- one down."
"Wait!" she said as I left the handset off the hook and began to walk away. "Sir? Sir, wait-!" her faint voice trailed off behind me as I left.
Mayor Wilkins POV:
"I'm afraid there's nothing that can be done at present." I told Miss Rosenberg, as she desperately looked up at me from her hospital bed. They had her in the neuro ward, in restraints and under watch due to the strong possibility of self-harm. She'd already made one half-hearted attempt in the several days she'd been in custody, after Mister Fairchild had led the surprisingly effective yet devastating strike against her in her apartment. I hadn't even known they'd known where it was, much less so expertly gotten past the security around it.
"But sir, there has to-!" she begged.
I shook my head. "We're less than two weeks away from Graduation Day, Miss Rosenberg. I don't have the time or the spare resources for a project of this magnitude at the moment."
"Then after you Ascend?" she said eagerly. "When you have so much more power? Could you restore mine?" she begged.
"Something may possibly be done in the fullness of time." I conceded. "But you're going to have to be patient."
"Okay." she said, not entirely believing me but still forcing herself to because what other option did she have at this point? I smiled, nodded, and left.
"Is there something you can do for her?" Alphonse asked me with mild curiosity as they left the hospital.
"She failed." I answered him. "She failed entirely, and despite having been given so many chances and opportunities-" I sighed and shook my head. "Such a disappointment. Well, you don't get something for nothing in this world, and I should have known that anyone who so readily fell into my lap would just as quickly fall out of it."
"Yeah." he chuckled cruelly, and then my phone went off.
"Mayor Wilkins." I answered it cheerfully.
"Sir." Deputy Mayor Finch answered me. "I just had a visitor to my house. They're gone, but you really need to see what they brought me."
"Not on the phone." I answered. "Are you at home?"
"I am." he asked. "Shall I come in to City Hall?"
"No." I said thoughtfully. "I recently had a lesson in how my movements in and out are being surveilled. As it happens, I'm already off-campus; I'll just come to your house."
It didn't take me very long to arrive, and Allan met me and Alphonse and let us inside.
"What is it?" I asked him. "And I certainly hope it's good news, because I haven't been getting much of that recently."
"It's Cordelia Chase, sir." Allan said. "She just approached me."
"She's here now?" I asked him.
"No." he said. "She said she'd seen too much of how memory spells could be used to play with peoples' heads from Miss Rosenberg to want to be near you at all. That's why she came to me."
"And what did she bring us?" I asked mildly.
"She brought this." Allan said proudly, and brought a tape recorder and hit 'Play'. I heard a recording of a meeting of the 'Scooby Gang', discussing their plans for disrupting Graduation Day. Prepositioned explosive charges, a false threat to Principal Flutie to encourage him to run an extra-heavy emphasis on evacuation drills beforehand, pulling the fire alarm at the opportune moment, getting the student body out of the blast radius while blowing me up right as the transformation began- yes, all very clever and straightforward.
"Fascinating." I said. "She thought to record their most recent meeting?"
"Yes." he answered. "And also told me when and where the explosives are coming in." he said. "The evening of the day before graduation, at the shipping terminal. On a coastal freighter called the Kutaya Star." He smiled. "She even got me a copy of the bill of lading." he handed it to me.
"Why did she turn on them?" I inquired.
"Her father's arrest for tax evasion." Allan replied. "She's a pauper now, and looking forward to zero prospects at all without a college education. She said that she was willing to learn how to fight the supernatural to preserve her own life, but she wasn't willing to give her entire future for it. So she sold this information to us."
"How much did you pay for it?" I said, encouraged by what I was hearing. Because, yes, that was certainly a genuine piece of paperwork I was looking at.
"An educational trust for a full-ride tuition package at UCLA, along with a very generous living stipend." Deputy Mayor Finch said.
I laughed out loud. "Oh, now that's just precious! She sold out her friends to buy back the future her father's IRS problems took away from her- without ever stopping to think that it won't be a viable future after I Ascend!" I finished chuckling. "Well, that's certainly a Chase for you- thinking the universe revolves around them, and nowhere near as clever as they think they are." I laughed again. "Just like her father was."
"Should I call the FBI, sir?" Allan asked.
"No, no." I said. "Alphonse, send someone down to LA to make sure the explosives are actually in that shipping container. But discreetly. If the tip turns out to be genuine, then I'll authorize the transfer of funds to set up Miss Chase's educational trust." I thought. "But we hold off on actually making the bust until the very last minute, here in Sunnydale. We'll use our police force, keep control of the entire investigation." I shrugged. "Of course, that close to Graduation Day there'll be little point in actually making a case. The objective will simply to be to allow the Slayer and her compatriots to think that everything is still going their way right up until the last minute, when it'll be too late for them to find a new plan." I shrugged. "So far they've proven amazingly effective whenever they've had an objective to go after. No, no, we'll let the illusion of success keep them in check. Until we no longer need it."
"Yes sir." both my subordinates acknowledged.
I smiled to myself. Yes, even if Miss Rosenberg had proved to be a disappointment- her reach far exceeding her grasp and all that- it was a comfort to know that I could still rely upon good old-fashioned human nature.
Buffy POV:
The bugs that Angel and Jonathan had planted in Deputy Mayor Finch's house earlier had picked up the whole conversation. The plan had worked- Mayor Creepy thought he knew all our plans now, and thought he could put us in checkmate just by stopping the bomb shipment we had coming in on the ship. We had him sucked in.
So, he was just waiting for Graduation Day now, and so were we. Oh, we had Amy- and wow, it had been so lucky that Oz giving up his werewolf-ism worked as well as Amy giving up her magic to stop Willow would have- checking out Jesse and other people to make sure she hadn't hit them up with the post-hypnotic like she'd done Xander, and Jenny prompting Principal Flutie to do 'evacuation drills', and Giles getting himself un-suspended - turns out he'd arranged for himself to get canned in the first place so he'd have more time off-the-books to help the gang set things up for endgame- to give the Mayor someone to watch as he did various diversionary things-
And we were all out networking with the students, getting everybody we could remotely trust prepped for Graduation Day. Jonathan- he'd returned to school after the whole Willow thing was wrapped up- was leading hand-picked peoples in weekend drills, Amy's dad had pitched in along with my mom on various parents' committees to help set things up there- and elsewhere, and we even had time left to get ourselves some nice prom dresses. Cordelia had had to fake a little distance from the team because she was being a fake traitor, but not that much because her whole schtick was the 'they don't know I sold them out' routine.
The only really noteworthy thing leading up to the night of the big dance was the shocking revelation that Jonathan and Amy were breaking up. Oh, not 'We don't like each other' breaking up but 'I have to go and she has to stay' breaking up. After high school he had to get back on the road- both to go answer some things the Powers That Be apparently had for him and because with Wolfram & Hart still trying to get their hooks into him, however indirectly, he had to go drag that tail elsewhere so it didn't stay here and try sticking to any of us. Especially not Amy, who they also apparently wanted to lure to the Dark Side even if they had to do it totally of our own free will. Thank God they hadn't seemed to want Willow for anything. Brrrrrrr.
So, yeah. The pair of folks that were voted "Most Likely To Get Married" by the yearbook committee two years running were the ones whose relationship wouldn't survive going to college, while Xander and me were set to stick together for as long as I could possibly last. Go figure. Amy didn't cry on my shoulder about it as much as I expected, because her and Jonathan had already settled this out among themselves weeks ago even if we'd just found out, but- yeah. Life really wasn't fair sometimes.
Angel would be leaving us after high school as well, although he'd just be down the road in LA and available to come back if we had another Apocalypse. Wolfram and Hart needed to go have someone help make their lives miserable, and if Jonathan couldn't do it himself because of that little blackmail they had on his secret identity then Angel was more than looking forward to the challenge. Plus, people needed saving from demons in LA as well... and with Cordelia going to college down there well, hey, it'd be nice to have another one of the team there to keep an eye on her.
Oz was also leaving after Graduation. He was pretty messed up from the whole Willow thing- not just from seeing it happen and not having any way to stop it, but from the time he'd spent actually living with Crazy McEvil so that he could potentially double agent on her as soon as he had an opening or, God help us, actually give Willow the mercy kill if he couldn't find one. I don't know if he could have actually gone through with it and neither did he, but yeah. Holy yikes. Between all that and Willow's dumping him like a hot rock despite what he'd done to make the option that allowed saving her life happen, he was definitely a guy who needed to put this chapter of his life behind him. Supposedly there was this guy Lorne down in LA who a seer type, who could tell someone about where they needed to go to find what their soul needed or something. I'd maybe have to go visit him myself sometime.
Of course, we had to get past Graduation Day first, but hey, at least we had hope. One of the pieces of info they'd turned up searching Willow's place was exactly which demon that Wilkins would be Ascending to take on the pure aspect of- Olvikan. And Olvikan's physical weaknesses were already on record. In hindsight it was a little sad that we'd sacrificed the explosives as the diversionary element but it's not like it would have worked the other way around- and the primary attack vector should still work just fine, especially now that Jonathan knew to tune it for more heat and less the other thing.
So in the last few days before the big event we had the big dance. Cordelia's recent social fall from grace- what with now being poor- had knocked her right out of the race for Prom Queen, but it was a measure of how deep things had gotten recently that she didn't even really mind seeing Harmony score it. I hadn't hoped to score anything, varsity cheerleader or not, so I just carpe'd that diem with Xander out on the dance floor and we smiled at Jonathan and Amy doing the same. Hey, if it was going to be our last dance then heck yeah, make it a memorable one-
"Everyone?" the other Jonathan, the short one, said from the MC's microphone on stage. "We have a last-minute award. Is Buffy Summers here tonight?"
I raised my hand.
"And Jonathan Fairchild?"
"Yes?" he called out.
"Ah." he said. "Well- this is actually a new category. First time ever. I guess there were a lot of write-in ballots, and, um, the prom committee asked me to read this. 'We're not good friends. Most of us never found the time to get to know you, but that doesn't mean we haven't noticed you. We don't talk about it much, but it's no secret that Sunnydale High isn't really like other high schools. A lot of weird stuff happens here.'"
"Zombies! Hyena people! Vice-Principal Snyder!" the crowd called out cheerfully.
"But, whenever there was a problem or something creepy happened, you seemed to show up and stop it. Most of the people here have been saved by you, or helped by you at one time or another. We're proud to say that the Class of '99 has the lowest mortality rate of any graduating class in Sunnydale history."
The crowd burst out in applause.
"And we know at least part of that is because of everything you two did to protect us, and everything you did to help lead the student body to protect themselves. So the senior class, offers its thanks, and gives you, uh, this." We both stepped up, and Jonathan reached down and hauled up a little trophy for each of us- a multicolored, glittering umbrella with a bronze plaque attached to the shaft. Each of our trophies had our name engraved on it, and the same title- "Class Protector."
And then everybody applauded, and Jonathan and I both looked at each other and had the same thought in exact unison.
"You make the speech." we said to each other in stereo, and then got back to our staredown. Eventually Jonathan sighed and bowed to my will, and he stepped up to the microphone.
"Everyone..." he began.
Amy POV:
We met in the school library for what would probably be the last time, the day before Graduation. We'd finished our classes, had our yearbooks signed, said our goodbyes, and made all our preparations. Jonathan and I had had our prom, and our night afterwards, and it had all been perfect. Even knowing it would be our last one hadn't put a damper on things; oh, it had certainly made things more serious, but we'd both legitimately accepted it as both necessary and the right thing to do. And that meant that while we'd miss our relationship, we wouldn't mourn it. I guess this is what being an adult felt like. Well, there wasn't a more appropriate time than graduation to start feeling that way.
The Kutaya Star would have pulled into port last night, and that would mean that the Mayor would make his move this morning. So really, this meeting of ours was just another part of the whole shadow-play that Jonathan had helped us concoct, and the next move-
"So, this is the inner sanctum." Mayor Wilkins said, striding cheerfully into the library as we sat around the table with all the books and papers. "Willow told me this is where you folks like to hang out, concoct your little schemes. I tell you, it's just nice to see that some young people are still interested in reading in this modern era. So, what are kids reading nowadays?" he smirked, picking up one of the books on the table and starting to recite. "'The beast will walk upon the earth and darkness will follow. The several races of man will be as one in their terror and destruction.' Aw, that's kind of sweet!" the Mayor gushed cheerfully. "Different races, coming together?"
"You never get even a little tired of hearing yourself talk, don't you." Buffy said bitterly.
Mayor Wilkins chuckled. "That's one spunky little girl you've raised." he said to Giles, before his smile turned nasty. "I'm gonna eat her."
Giles, his face a stone mask of rage and despair, snatched up one of the epees from the weapons rack and drove it directly through the Mayor's heart. The Mayor staggered back in shock.
"Whoa!" he said passionately, as he drew the sword from his chest without the slightest sign of pain. "Violent outbursts like that? In front of the children?" he finished condescendingly, as he wiped the sword clean of blood with his handkerchief and tossed it back to Giles hilt-first. "You know, Mr. Giles, they look to you to see how to behave."
"Get out." I said coldly.
"I smell fear. That's smart." the Mayor smirked. "Even smarter given that the police and the Coast Guard just raided the Kutaya Star." he said, and we all made sure to put the appropriate amount of shock and despair on our faces. "Oh, you were clever enough about not leaving any paper trail that led to you, but it looks like you'll be attending Graduation Day without any of the party favors you were planning to bring. And I guess that leaves you out of options." he smiled. "You could forego attending, of course. You'd forfeit your diplomas, but I suppose they wouldn't be worth much after my Ascension anyway." He shrugged. "But I really do hope you'll attend. At least then your deaths will be quick and painless."
"Thanks." Xander snorted derisively. "You're such a humanitarian."
"In the literal sense, I suppose I will be!" Mayor Wilkins laughed affably, and turned to leave. He threw his parting shot to us over his shoulder as he strolled away. "But you really don't want to miss my commencement address. It's going to be one heck of a speech!" he finished, and then he turned the corner into the hallway outside and was gone.
I cast a quick anti-eavesdropping spell before we all breathed a sigh of relief and dropped the act.
"He bought it." Jenny said, grinning. "Trust me, my family taught me how to read a mark before I was ten. He bought it hook, line, and sinker!"
"Good." Jonathan said. "All right, folks. Everybody scatter, go do your thing, live out the next day like it'll be your last." He grinned. "We certainly want him to think so."
"And speaking of that-" I said, jumping up and grabbing my boyfriends'- at least until tomorrow - hand and grinning at him salaciously.
"Well, I did just get out of prison." he joked, to the quiet laughter of everyone else in the room. And on that note we all paired up and headed out.
Tomorrow would be the big finish. But for today, we would live.
Jonathon POV:
"Everything's in position." I said to the group, joining them as we all took our seats at the ceremony, cap and gown and all.
"All the crowd control people know what to do." Cordelia confirmed.
"Weapons teams are set up and ready to move." Buffy agreed.
"Got the fetishes prepositioned and the spells all ready to trip." Amy acknowledged.
"And Giles and all the grown-ups are waiting outside with the reserves." Xander said. "Even that eclipse thing the Ascension will bring will be handy- the Mayor's vampires can come out to play, but so can Angel. So now comes the horrible part."
"The waiting." Buffy agreed, and Principal Flutie and the Mayor got up on stage.
"Congratulations to the class of 1999," Principal Flutie said as he took the microphone. "You've all proven yourself to be fine young men and women, and more than ready for the challenges still ahead of you. This is a time of celebration, so please bear with us as we put the final stamp on your official commencement as the Sunnydale High School Class of 1999. And now I welcome our distinguished guest speaker, Mayor Richard Wilkins the Third." There was dutiful applause.
"Well. What a day this is!" Mayor Wilkins began, as cheerful as ever. "Special day. Today is our centennial the one hundreds anniversary of the founding of Sunnydale, and I know what that means to all you kids: not - a darn thing. Because today something much more important happens: today you all graduate from high school. Today all the pain, all the work, all the excitement is finally over. And what's a hundred years of history compared to that? You know what kids?"
"Oh my God, he's going to do the entire speech." I said in horror.
"Does this man's evil know no bounds?" Xander acknowledged.
"... for all of you it may be that there is a place in Sunnydale's history, whether you like it or not." Wilkins continued. "It's been a long road getting here. For you... for Sunnydale. There has been achievement, joy, good times... and there has been grief. There's been loss. Some people who should be here today, aren't. And some people who are here today arguably shouldn't be." he said, glaring at us- particularly me. "But here we all are. Journey's end. And what is a journey? Is it just distance travelled? Time spent?" Wilkins shook his head. "No. It's what happens on the way. It's the things that happen to you. At the end of the journey you're not the same. Today is about change." He paused and wiped his brow with his handkerchief, then continued. "Graduation doesn't just mean your circumstances change, it means you do. You ascend… to a higher level. Nothing will ever be the same. Nothing." A shadow fell across the ceremony as we all looked up to see the eclipse starting.
"Here we go." Amy said. "I can feel the energies-"
"And so, as we look back on-" Mayor Wilkins continued, before flinching in pain. "-on the events that brought us to this day-" he stopped and winced.
"Come on..." Buffy murmured impatiently.
"We... must all..." Wilkins choked out, before screaming in agony and convulsing once, twice, before regaining possession of himself. "It has begun." he said hieratically. "My destiny. It's a little sooner than I expected... I had this whole section on civic pride..." He coughed, before shouting. "But I guess we'll just skip to the big finish!"
The Mayor twitched, expanded, and bulged from every orifice as his suit split open. He continued expanding, and expanding, and expanding-
"Phase one!" I muttered into my throat mike, and from his position inside the school Angel hit the fire alarm.
"NOW!" Buffy yelled, and the student body shot to its feet as one and started shucking its robes. Over us, the giant towering reptilian form of the snake-demon Olvikan finished coalescing...
"DRILL A!" Cordelia and Xander both yelled at the tops of their lungs, hitting their feet. "DRILL A! EVERYONE MOVE!" Prompted by both Principal Flutie's recent emphasis on fire drills and the weekend drills I'd led our pre-selected crowd control people through, everybody fell back.
The Mayor shrieked in fury and hunger, and began to lower its head to the attack-
"Phase two!" I called, and Amy cried out an incantation and the several dozen pre-enchanted fetishes we'd scattered and prepositioned all across the lawn and grounds combined with one of her most powerful barrier spells to throw up a force-field between the ranks of chairs where we'd been seated and the Mayor. His first rush bounced off of it and stopped.
"That's five minutes!" Amy called, falling back with the rest of us while the Mayor continued battering against the barrier, desperate to reach the students he needed to consume to start stabilizing the transformation.
"DOWN THE STEPS!" Xander called, pulling out his axe and stake from where he'd been wearing them slung around his neck under his graduation robes. Next to him Oz did the same. "STAY IN FORMATION!"
"FLAME UNITS!" Cordelia cried, snatching up her flamethrower from where we'd hidden it nearby in the bushes the night before under a camouflage tarp and the dozen or so auxiliaries- Jesse, Jonathan, and Andrew all among them- I'd spent the past couple of weekends training with them likewise. "FOLLOW ME!" she cried, and led them down the steps in a wave ahead of the evacuating students, to hit the line of vampires that had moved in to cut off our retreat and pen us in like a battering ram. They shrieked, ashed, and fell back out of the way, and the fleeing student body broke past the bottleneck on the steps, to stop when confronted by the dozens more vampires that the Mayor's minions had rounded up from all the vamps in town for extra muscle.
"Water gunners!" I called. "Ready!" Giving actual weapons to a mob of untrained and excited teenagers was begging for dozens of friendly fire casualties, but handing out Super-Soakers full of holy water wasn't a danger to anyone but the vampires. The only thing that a missed shot would do is get someone wet. Angel was the only person on our side potentially at risk here, and since Amy had helpfully cast a rainproofing spell on him earlier even he wouldn't. "FIRE!"
And with most of the entire graduating class drenching every vampire present with holy water, they were easy meat for the trained fighters of the Scooby Gang, backed up by our partially-trained auxiliaries drafted both from the more athletic students and the more reasonable and trustworthy parents that Buffy's mom and Amy's dad had been able to network with, as well as Giles, Jenny, and Angel themselves leading them. And with the holy water barrage disrupting the vamps, the skilled fighters dusting the stragglers and herding the rest, and the flamethrower artillery toasting any massed concentration of them with jets of concentrated propane- we'd made sure to give the civilian model burners only to the amateurs- we weren't losing a single student.
"Barrier's about to drop!" Amy called out from where she was at my side during the melee. "Fifteen seconds!"
"Oh, very nice!" the Mayor's voice boomed out from where Olvikan had just about finished smashing through the barrier. All of our casters, backed up by as many student pracitioners like Michael Csajak and Jonathan Levinson and suchlike that we could recruit to help, had spent days charging those barrier-tokens and even starved and almost entirely out of mana the Mayor had still needed only several minutes to tear through it. Yeah, we couldn't let him start feeding the final step of the transformation cycle. "Yes, starving after the transformation is the same way Lo-Hash died, wasn't it? But it's not going to work!"
And so here we were. Endgame. The Ascension had already started, the bank of accumulated Hellmouth energy the Mayor had painstakingly built up for a century had already been depleted, Whistler's warning was no longer operative, and it was perfectly safe to kill him. And we were totally going to kill him.
We'd all had our favorite weapons stashed underneath our graduation robes, and I'd brought a special one just for the occasion. A modified speargun with an amplified pneumatic charge, this thing would be just what we needed to put the final nail in the Mayor's coffin. Almost literally. Buffy had one as well, as did Angel and Xander. Amy, Giles, and Jenny also each had a spell pre-prepared that would suffice, but we hadn't taken any casualties and didn't need all the redundancies.
So the instant the barrier went down I leveled my launcher and took my shot simultaneously with Buffy's own, and both metal rods flew straight and true over a hundred meters to stick directly into the Mayor's hide.
"Spears?" Mayor Wilkins mocked, as the giant serpentine form of Olvikan began to flow down the steps towards us-
"BACK! FALL BACK!" Buffy said, not that she needed to urge people as they were already clearing out as fast as they could move.
"Those aren't spears." I said triumphantly. "Those are lightning rods."
Now warned of the danger, the Mayor immediately turned away from the crowd and headed back towards the school building to try and find cover- which is why I'd told him, of course. I wanted us all as far out of the potential blast radius as possible. And... just about... now!
I pulled the flare gun out of my waistband and fired it straight up, and the brilliant green magnesium charge popped at several hundred feet. It would be clearly visible from anywhere within over fifteen miles. Similar flares rocketed up from all the other Scooby Gang members as soon as they saw me fire mine- again, redundancy.
And with those flares, the final key player of our piece knew when to make his move. Mr. Madison was a senior shift supervisor at the electric company, and he'd made damn sure to be on-shift today- just as he'd made sure to help us gin up the paperwork for those certain pieces of custom metalwork I'd had made in LA, to have them shipped up here unobstrusively and even more unobstrusively installed by me supervising a hand-picked work crew. Installed at the base of the electrical high-tension tower with the best line of fire available down off the nearby hillside and into the school campus.
A line of fire for the Wulfenbach-Fairchild Mark II Shock Cannon I'd built a reproduction of, one of the Empire's most reliable and useful pieces of vehicle-mounted lightning artillery. This was the siege-class variant- something you mounted on a giant walker unit or a small airship for artillery fire vs. particularly obnoxious targets. Such as small hills, or large fortifications. Or giant rampaging monsters.
But that was when they were fueled by Europan powerplants. This particular shock cannon had been spliced directly into the main trunk line for the entire town of Sunnydale, the high-tension line running upstate to the main power grid intended to supplement the local power plant in overload situations. And with Mr. Madison having rerigged the switchboard, we momentarily browned out several surrounding counties with all the draw we'd spliced to the one cannon alone.
And so the single biggest goddamned lightning bolt that anyone had ever seen crashed down once, twice, three times before the terminally overloaded Shock Cannon we'd prepositioned it as a disposable piece of remote-controlled artillery finally gave up the ghost and melted itself, and the Mayor and everything within a hundred feet of him was blasted into free-floating particles.
The blast only barely missed incinerating any of us thanks to the distance between us and the target, the precision with which it had homed on the keyed and primed Sparkwork disposable target designators we'd stuck in the Mayor's hide, and the fact that a second line of pre-enchanted fetishes - these being for a protective spell to safely short electrical discharges to ground - had been worked into the sidewalk in front of the school, so that none of the corona effects would actually reach out into the courtyard or street where we were.
Silence fell over the entire battlefield. What very few vampires hadn't been dusted were now running for their lives, and nobody could even see the Mayor anymore. Or much of anything else, until the spots from that flash all faded from our eyes.
"Did we get him?" Buffy asked as everyone present stared at the cratered and burning school building in awe. "Please tell me we got him."
"He's gone." Giles said, him and Jenny and Amy having all simultaneously cast their detection spells to make sure. "We've won."
"WE GOT HIM!" Cordelia yelled from where she was standing triumphantly on top of a nearby car, and the entire class roared as one.
Amy POV:
And just like that, it was over.
The Battle of Graduation Day hadn't seen a single friendly casualty. Not a student, not a teacher, not anyone. It had been a masterpiece of precision tactics, as set up and executed by one of the Wulfenbach Empire's most experienced military officers just like he'd coordinated a hundred other battles vs. mad scientists and giant monsters. Not that he could ever explain that to anyone except me or Angel.
But right now it didn't matter how he'd come to us, or why. What mattered is that he'd been here when we needed him. When I'd needed him. I'd tried to tell him several times on prior occasions just how much he'd done for me, and all he'd done was smile and say that that was nothing as compared to how much we'd all done for him. Of course he'd say that.
"I can't believe how lightly we got off." Xander said as we all drew together after the immediate response by all the vehicles with sirens, and questions, and being checked out by EMS, and everything. We each sat or stood on the nearby curb looking at all the commotion as the high school kept burning, and let it all sink in.
"And the young man who helped us achieve it all... we'll have to learn how to do without him from now on." Giles sighed. "I've taken extensive notes on this campaign, everything we achieved and the methods by which we formulated it- the Council really needs to analyze them and start refining how we approach strategy and tactics."
"Where'd he even get that giant lightning gun?" Cordelia asked curiously.
"An experimental weapons design." Angel said truthfully but incompletely. "From where he was before. Not practical for routine field use here, but..." he shrugged. "This wasn't routine."
"And so the freak occurrence here has a freak natural explanation that will help it be memory-holed." Buffy said. "Certainly beats trying to hush up a giant terrorist incident."
"Explosives as diversion." Cordelia chuckled.
"The best cons work by showing the mark exactly what he expects to see and thinks he understands." Jenny acknowledged.
"Guys." Oz said into the silence. "Take a moment and realize. We survived."
"We sure did." Buffy agreed companionably.
"Not the battle." Oz said with just a tiny trace of his old quiet humor. "High school."
"Where's Jonathan?" Buffy asked, suddenly looking around. "He didn't take off already, did he?"
"We'd already all said our goodbyes." I said quietly. "And... he was really tempted to stay."
"Rip the band-aid off fast." Xander agreed, giving me a searching look. "You'll be okay?"
"I will be." I agreed. "Maybe I'll sulk a little in the days to come, but-" I nodded. "We knew this had to be done, and that we could do it."
"I will cheerfully enable all of the sulking and chocolate therapy that you care to indulge in." Buffy said compassionately to me. "And we are totally roomie'ing it up at college. I call dibs right now."
"Thanks." I said to her. "I wouldn't know what I'd do without you guys."
"A whole lot less." Cordelia said cheerfully. "Now me, I'm off to college in LA what with what we so cheerfully scammed out of that creep before we fried him-" she grinned wickedly, before continuing on in a friendlier tone of voice. "But don't you be strangers, okay? I won't be."
"Certainly not." Angel agreed.
"I've got to go find a few things I lost." Oz said quietly. "Don't know how long it'll take me. But I'll be back."
"We'll be here." Xander said.
(*cue mood music*)
Some instinct prompted me to turn around, and the sounds of the friendly discussion faded out as I turned to see Jonathan standing in the distance next to one of the fire trucks. Even at all this distance we still could stare directly into each other's eyes.
I cheated, just a little, just a tiny little, and cast the same connection-spell that I'd used once when captured by the Delta Zeta Kappas, and our hearts connected again.
Longing. Affection. Resignation. And... I smiled, and felt him smile along with me. But there wasn't any despair, not from either of us.
And there still was-
I love you. I thought to him, and saw him nod.
I love you too. he thought back, and then my view of him was momentarily cut off by several firemen walking around the truck. And after they'd passed by, he was gone.
I dropped the spell and turned back to Buffy and my friends, smiling sadly to myself. I didn't know if I'd see Jonathan again before the jump was over, but at least I knew that he'd be fine. And so would I, eventually.
"All right, guys." I said to them all. "Let's go home."
Author's Notes: And so season 3 comes to an end, and Jonathan leaves Sunnydale at least. The jump isn't over, but we will start moving into more summarized than episodic adventures after this. So yeah. It took us 33 parts to cover 3 years... the remaining years will use less parts.
So, who here called Willow permanently losing her magic but being left alive? I don't think anyone did. Because that part was planned- I had it pencilled in from the beginning of the Dark Willow subplot. She sold out everything she ever had for power, and now she has to live the rest of her life without it. And while I'd originally planned a big dramatic witch-on-witch showdown... I realized that one, Amy had already gotten that versus her mother and two, that's just not remotely how Jonathan fights and he'd be massively OOC if he did.
I'd like to think author Jeconais in his 'Broken Faith' fanfic on FFA for coming up with the 'Everybody gets a squirt gun full of holy water' tactic to get around the usual side effects of giving several hundred highly excited and untrained teenagers unfamiliar weapons while still getting an effective anti-vampire combat tactic out of them.
So no. Jonathan didn't forget he was a Spark. And no. He wasn't busting it out to trivialize every problem and kill all the drama. He used it when he felt it appropriate to use, and 'appropriate' is a thing highly dependent on context. (Hell, note the effort he went to here to disguise his attack as a 'freak lightning strike'. An obvious laser cannon would have drawn far too much DoD attention he didn't want.)
Those who have watched canon will note that several scenes from canon were kept in practically word for word. You're goddamn right they were. Moments that good deserve the homage.
And yes, Jonathan and Amy totally got the same goodbye scene that Buffy and Angel got in canon s3. Although with less angst, and slightly more empathy spells.
"You're back!" Amy said joyously, flinging herself into my arms as Angel and I entered the bomb shelter's 'conference room'.
I hugged her back as tightly as I could, too full of emotion for words. We touched foreheads in lieu of kissing and stepped apart, and I walked up to the folding table and chairs they'd set up as our new conference table.
"How'd you get out?" Buffy was the first to ask, after we'd had greetings and reunions all around.
"The demonic underworld's favorite law firm didn't like hearing about Wilkins' upcoming Ascension." I replied, "so they pulled some strings so I could get back in play. They can't go after him themselves, and they're definitely no friends of ours, but a little indirect help that doesn't cost them anything-" I shrugged. "In the better news department, I got a message from Whistler."
"Graduation Day." Angel said. "That's when it happens. So now we know exactly when to move."
The door slammed open as if kicked and I turned, my sidearm halfway out of the holster before I realized that the person storming in was Cordelia. She was simultaneously both weeping and in a towering rage.
"That miserable bastard!" she was screaming. I confusedly noted that she was dragging a two-wheeled standing suitcase behind her, that she let go of as soon as she was inside the door.
"Cordelia? What's happened?" Giles asked.
"I'm poor!" she cried, slumping despairingly into a seat and slamming her forehead into the table. "We all are!"
"Look, we kinda have other problems-" Xander began impatiently.
"Wait." I said. "Someone robbed you?"
"The IRS took everything." Cordelia said muffledly, her face still planted in her forearms.
"Oh, this suddenly sounds familiar." Angel said darkly.
"INS for me, IRS for you." I said. "First the Mayor takes out the team's ordnance engineer, and now he goes after the cash flow."
"I'm not sure if it even was the Mayor." Cordelia said, finally looking up at us. "From what the agents said, daddy was 'forgetting' to pay his proper taxes for over a dozen years." She sighed. "They took everything. The house, the cars, my clothes-" she sighed. "I barely got to keep enough to fill a suitcase! I don't even have anywhere to live!"
"With either me or Giles." Angel said immediately. "We both have spare rooms."
"I'll have to take you up on that." Cordelia sniffed.
"The mayor didn't actually set up my little immigration situation either." I pointed out. "That was a pre-existing condition. He just dropped the dime on it when the timing was most convenient for him."
"Tell me we've figured out how to kill the bastard." Cordelia snarled.
"Oh, we have." I said. "And ironically enough, you just brought the final piece of the puzzle that we needed."
* * * * *
About a dozen miles into my dramatic return drive to Sunnydale I'd realized that I was being stupid. As far as the Mayor knew I was still in jail, so why the hell should I turn down the gift of an opportunity to work while still unsuspected and unobserved?So I got off the freeway and headed back to LA, where I immediately got to work. One of the first things I did was check in with Lorne- from Whistler's reaction I could infer that Wolfram and Hart hadn't managed to actually get a hook into my soul or anything, but getting a confirming opinion from the guy who could read your aura and at least partly scry your destiny was also good. Plus, as the owner of a 'neutral zone' watering hole for the demon underworld the man would know how to get in touch with the black market.
Lorne also told me that Angel had headed down here himself to try and pick up some 'essential supplies', as without any knowledge of my upcoming release the group had had to continue their preparations without me. So I got in touch with him and he was certainly glad to see me, although I was hardly glad to hear the news about Willow and other things as we each caught up. And then I looked at his plan and acknowledge it, then brought him up to speed on the plan I'd just started working out. Working out how to make the plans synergize with each other took several more days to finish making the arrangements.
So the shipping container full of things that went boom was stacked and ready to load on a coastal freighter and the proper palms were greased. It was all scheduled to arrive at Sunnydale's own maritime facility port shortly before Graduation Day, so that it wouldn't actually be in Wilkins' town to be found until the opportune moment. Meanwhile, the things I'd arranged for and designed would start manufacture at a custom metal fabrication shop as a rush order, to be shipped up to Sunnydale as soon as I could arrange for the proper receiver at their end. We'd spent the bulk of my savings to date on this one big job, but I didn't really need that much to support my lifestyle- especially since I'd be on the road soon- and the next year would bring another installment to the trust fund and start refilling the piggy bank.
And all that having been done and my car having been put into long-term storage so that the Sunnydale PD wouldn't take note of its return, we rented another car and headed back to Sunnydale.
* * * * *
"Wait, you're sure this is the only way?" Buffy asked incredulously. I knew exactly how she felt. It had taken me a couple days after my return to Sunnydale, which I still hadn't publicly announced yet, to help set up our latest play. Which I still couldn't entirely believe I was going along with."Yes." Amy said resolutely.
"But doing it that way will-!" Buffy shouted, before cutting herself off. "She's being crazy! Jonathan, tell her!"
"You think I haven't tried?" I said resignedly. "Look, trust me, I'm all for the other way-"
"I'm not." Amy said. "I-" she sighed. "I know what you said. And what Mr. Giles said. And you're right." She sighed. "But I still can't forget that back when I needed help, she was the first one to help me." She shook her head. "Maybe I'm not hard enough to make the hard choices, but that's the point. Ever since we came up with this alternative it hasn't been 'killing Willow is the only way', but 'killing her is the easiest way'. And I can't get started down that road."
"And you can't hang back and let those of us who have already started down it just do it for you." I said. "I understand. Hell, I even agree."
"I'm just glad that we're finding another way at all." Xander said. "Even if-" he swore and kicked a chair. "Even I don't think this is fair!"
"But I can't get hung up on all the things I could do later." Amy said. "That's the sort of numbers game Wolfram & Hart wanted to teach you to play. And, no. Just no."
"I just wish-" I said, waving my hands helplessly. "That- oh, never mind." I swore.
"You're sure you don't want us along." Xander asked.
"Part of how this is going to work is that Willow sees only the two people she hates the worst." I said. "And if this doesn't work, we need to preserve as many people as possible for Graduation Day."
"We could just leave her for until afterwards and deal with her then." Jenny suggested worriedly. "If we don't defeat the Mayor then there's no point."
"Willow's too powerful and too unpredictable." Angel said. "If she's still in play during the final run-up to the big battle, she could potentially wreck what we're doing in any number of ways. She has to be taken out while we still have our window, before the Mayor knows Jonathan's back in town."
"Amy." I said. "It's time."
"It is." she agreed, soberly.
"The best of luck to the both of you." Giles said for everyone, and we left.
On the drive to Willow's apartment, I asked Amy "You're certain this is what you want?"
"It's not what I want." Amy replied. "But it's the only way I can accept."
"I remember when you and I were originally talking about Marcie." I tried to reach Amy again. "You told me that if that had been you, if you'd been driven crazy by your powers and it was just a monster wearing your face, that you'd want me to put you down before you could hurt anyone else."
"We are going to stop Willow before she can hurt anyone else." Amy replied. "And I know what I said, but-" she shook her head. "That was then, and this is now. And this is my choice."
"And I'll respect it." I said quietly, before bursting out bitterly. "It's not fair." I swore. "The fact that you would do this means that you, of all people, shouldn't have to! I certainly wouldn't be making this choice in your shoes!"
"You put yourself down too much." Amy said, squeezing my free hand with her own. "If you were in my shoes, you'd be right here."
Our nondescript van, painted with the logo of the cable TV company, pulled into the underground entrance of the upscale apartment building where the Mayor had set up Willow in her new digs.
"Sentry-spells across the entrance door." Amy murmured as we arrived. "Keyed to detect me."
I reached into the bag and came out with the vial of ashes I'd 'collected' from one of the Mayor's minion vampires earlier tonight. "Here you go."
She took the vial and shook the dust into her hands, then clapped her palms together and rubbed while chanting. The deception-spell - ironically, one of the ones from the Mayor's own grimoire that he'd given Willow, but not one of the ones that required dark magick to use - would now 'see' her as only that vampire and not as herself, thus disguising her own magical aura enough to get it past Willow's own safeguards. Because of course the Mayor's minions would have to be keyed into the wards.
"Do the same for me," I said, pulling out a second vial of ashes. "Even if she was complacent enough to not ward against me, let's act as if she did."
Amy nodded, and I shook the dust out and rubbed it into my palms as she cast. "Done." she murmured.
We got out of the van. Both of us were in blue service coveralls, and I had a big tool bag slung that contained our weapons and gear. No visible guards in the parking garage, and any security cameras would just see a pair of service people. I'd used some hacking earlier today to generate a fake work order in the cable company's systems, so they were expecting us.
"Cable company." I said to the intercom, holding up the forged utility worker ID I'd cut for myself to the camera. It was like the gas company ID I'd cut for Angel when we cased Deputy Mayor Finch's place. Yeah, that little plastic press I'd made earlier this year for faking up various cards was definitely earning its keep.
"Why are you here?" the doorman asked us.
"The penthouse's high-speed Internet connection." I replied. The Mayor had of course set up his new quisling in the poshest digs available here, and Willow would of course want her apartment as wired as possible. "Client wants an upgrade."
"I've got the work order here in my email queue." I heard the doorman reply after a short pause, and the door buzzed open. "Go on up."
"Thanks." I said. "Oh, and I'm going to have to open up the telecom junction box to put this in; you may experience some temporary service interruptions."
"Figures." the doorman grumped quietly. "All right, just make it quick."
I went quickly to the basement utility closet and picked the lock, then popped the panel on the telecom switching panel and ran some jumpers. From this point on any security systems on the top floor would be talking only to themselves, and likewise any security cameras would be looping.
"We're a dead zone." I told Amy.
"Top floor." she agreed, and we headed for the elevator and punched the button. This being an apartment building and not a luxury hotel, the penthouse suite was merely the biggest one on the top floor and not the entire floor, so we let out in a short hallway with the apartment door proper a ways down.
"Is she home?" I asked as we walked to the door.
"Yes." Amy said, casting a passive detection spell and then blinked and frowned. "Her magical aura's there, plain as day. And... I'm also picking up the passive magic of a werewolf. Oh boy."
"Oz." I sighed. "So this is where he went." I shook my head. "I can't find it in me to blame him, but that's really inconvenient."
"You brought the trank gun?" Amy asked.
"And a taser. And a cattle prod." I agreed. "As well as-" I cut myself off as we came up to the penthouse apartment's door. "All right, masks on."
We drew on our headgear and I knocked on the door. "Cable company! We're here to upgrade the T3 line!"
The door unlocked itself and began to swing open with no human hand touching it. Ah, Willow. Always had to show off-
And as soon as the door was open far enough to admit it, I popped the pin on the C-gas grenade I'd had stashed in my bag and tossed it into the apartment. I knew and could readily brew the formula, and using an empty canister from a used tear gas grenade had given me the basic framework to build a new one, so-
After we heard the charge pop we gave the gas a few breaths to work and then I booted the door, cattle prod in one hand and the trank gun in the other. Amy had her hands up and already counterspelling, but we didn't take any incoming spell fire. Either Willow had sucked a lungful down right away or else-
The crash of glass from the balcony told us the 'or else'. Willow, who'd legendarily scorned physical training, had very little chance of reacting quickly enough to the sudden gas attack to hold her breath, let alone of holding it long enough to reach an exterior exit. Oz was an entirely different proposition, and he must have grabbed his unconscious girlfriend and ran. We both broke into a dead run and pursued them out onto the nearby rooftop-
To catch Oz with the unconscious Willow in his arms, standing on the ledge of the roof and looking down at a hopeless drop with nowhere he could possibly leap to. I suppose he'd been going for a fire escape, but there wasn't one on this side of the building. I kept the trank gun trained on Willow- I could hardly shoot Oz at this point without him falling right off and taking Willow with him-
"Oz, please. Step away from the ledge." Amy asked gently, as we both pulled our masks off. The C-gas was in the apartment behind us, not out here, and would safely dissipate in a few minutes anyway.
"Should I?" Oz asked with quiet despair, but turned to face us- and thank God, he relaxed from his desperately taut posture when he saw the particular weapons I was holding. "So. Non-lethal?"
"This isn't an execution party." I agreed. "I admit, I voted for giving her the full Marcie." I nodded at Amy. "I got outvoted."
"... okay." Oz said, stepping down off the ledge and laying Willow gently to the ground. I bent over her, trank gun still ready in my other hand, and checked her heartbeat and breathing. Yeah, she'd gotten a good lungful of the C-gas; she'd reliably be out for long enough to finish this. "Okay. So what happens now?"
"What happened to you?" I asked, looking at Oz. His haunted eyes, his gaunt and haggard expression- my God, if he'd been living here with Willow's full crazy all this while, having to either play up to her delusions or else get his head rewired- what the hell had he endured? "Why did you come here?"
"This is where I needed to be." he said, breathing raggedly. "She didn't get in my head. At least, I think she didn't." he managed to force out. "Thinking that I willingly would go along with her in what she was doing, that was still worth something to her. But-" he shook his head. "I couldn't find any angle. I couldn't make an opening."
"She made her choice." Amy said. "And now we all have to live with it."
"So what are you going to do?" Oz asked us. "You can't keep her locked up forever. That didn't work with your mom. And I think Willow's even further gone."
"I know." Amy said. "But- I worked out the basis of a ritual. Giles and Jenny helped refine it. Jonathan checked our math-" She sighed, and squared her shoulders resolutely. "I can permanently remove all of Willow's capacity to do magic. Make her a normal girl again." She lowered her head and continued sadly. "If I also sacrifice all of mine."
"You'd do that for her?" Oz said, disbelievingly.
"My only other choice is to let Jonathan kill her." Amy said. "But-" she sighed. "If we had no other option, then I could accept that. As is, Willow wouldn't be dying because it was the only way to stop her. She'd be dying as the only way to stop her and let me keep my powers. And if I sacrifice someone else's life for my magic-" she shook her head. "It would taint everything I did from now on." She looked down at the sleeping Willow. "And we all know where that leads."
"I'm still not sure it would work like that." I said stubbornly. Because dammit, Amy deserved more than this.
"You don't want this." Oz said, looking at me perceptively.
"I don't." I agreed.
"Neither do I." Oz said, after a pause. "There's really no other way?"
"The spell won't work without a sacrificial component." Amy insisted. "Balance requires it. And to keep it from being dark magic, the sacrifice has to be a willing volunteer. And while it doesn't have to be a magic potential equal to hers, it still has to be a fairly strong one. That's why we can't use Giles or Jenny- she doesn't have quite enough power compared to Willow, and while Giles just barely does-" She shook her head. "He's the Watcher. He needs everything he has to help Buffy, not just for this but for everything else to come. I might be the most powerful witch in ages, but that doesn't make me... mission critical." she finished resolutely.
"Someone with fairly strong magic of their own, that they're willing to sacrifice." Oz said heavily, and then looked up at Amy with a little grin- oh, hardly a big one, but the first thing remotely resembling a smile we'd seen from him in weeks. "Being a werewolf is fairly strong."
My and Amy's jaws both dropped.
"... you'd help me do this?" Amy asked him wonderingly, and he held out his hand to hers.
"It's not like my magic was really doing me any good." Oz quietly mocked himself, before looking down more soberly at the unconscious Willow. "And neither was hers."
"Oz." I said, drawing him into a manly hug. "Thank you."
"You too." he said. "Because I really wasn't looking forward to-" he shuddered once, before pushing away the horrible thought. "But now I don't have to."
"All right." Amy said. "Let's set this up."
I checked Willow yet again to make sure she wasn't going to wake up soon, then helped lay her out while Amy started the ritual circle. Then her and Oz took up positions at the keystones of the circle, top and bottom, while I stood discreetly back.
Such a relatively brief thing, to be able to destroy so much. The proper components, the proper chant, the proper sacrifice, and after a minute or so of pyrotechnics it was done.
"Amy?" I asked her, to have my heart soar when she did her little floating-ball-of-light trick over her palm in response.
"I'm still a witch." she said, looking down at Willow. "And... she isn't."
"And I'm not a werewolf any more either." Oz said, cricking his neck. "I can feel it."
"Ohhhh..." Willow said, her eyelids fluttering awake. "You-!" she spat at Amy and I, and tried to cast a spell. And then tried again. And again. "What have you done?"
"They saved your life." Oz said flatly.
"Traitor!" Willow raged at him, pushing him away as he reached down to help her up and scrambling to her feet on her own. "Traitors all of you! And you!" she spat, turning to me. "How the hell are you out of jail?!?"
"Lawyers." I said with a smirk.
"You think you've won?" Willow raged. "Just because you've bound my magic again? When the Mayor-"
"Your magic isn't bound, Willow." Amy said. "It's gone."
A dead silence fell across the rooftop at that.
"... no." she said, whispering.
"Permanently." I mercilessly finished. "You'll never cast a spell or a ritual again."
"Not even if you try to tap external sources of power." Amy said. "You're as mundane as Jesse now. As almost everyone else in the world."
"No!" Willow shrieked. "You can't do that! It's not-"
"Fair?" I cut her off. "Was it fair when Kendra died?"
"That wasn't my fault!" Willow shrieked hysterically. "If she hadn't-"
"Hadn't what?" Oz asked quietly. "Caught you hurting Andrew?"
"I had to!" Willow said. "Andrew would've-"
"Told people the truth about what you did, and what you knew you weren't supposed to be doing?" I sighed. "You mindwiped Andrew over trading a pair of black magic books with Tucker. Then you mindwiped Kendra catching you doing it to Andrew-" I sighed. "And that left her wide open for Drusilla to kill. A fine Slayer, and a good person. Dead because, ultimately, you didn't want to be told what you could read." I spat. "All that, and so much more, and over shit that ultimately meant nothing."
"I- I had to!" Willow desperately pressed. "You- you just wanted me to be helpless! You know how dangerous this world is! I needed everything I could possibly get to keep myself and the people I loved-"
"You don't love anyone!" I shouted back, my temper snapping. "You don't even know what love is! The only reason you're even alive right now is because multiple people still loved you enough to care even after you were so far gone that half the team was voting to just air-mail you a bullet at 1100 fps, and you haven't even noticed!" I spat. "Love is when you care. And you don't really care about a single God damn thing outside of yourself, your ego, and your id."
"Definitely not a superego." Oz sighed.
"You helped them do this to me!" Willow shrieked.
"Oz didn't let us in." I said. "And he didn't help set you up. We ambushed you both, and the only thing he did was talk us down from doing something that we weren't looking forward to at all."
"You made this possible?" Willow turned on him, her eyes wild with hate. "You told them to take my magic?"
"I'd have taken it even over Oz' objections." Amy said. She didn't even try to bring up the sacrifice she'd have been willing to make to give Willow a second chance that I still didn't remotely believe would have been worth the price Amy had been willing to pay for it. She knew better than to expect any gratitude.
"And I'll bet you'll just love having all that power!" Willow shrieked. "You're no better than me!"
"It wasn't a power-theft ritual." I sighed. "Unlike the one you just gave away that you were designing for Amy."
"She was." Oz confirmed.
"It was a power draining ritual." Amy confirmed. "I didn't want to steal your magic, and I didn't keep a single bit of it."
"You- you." Willow fumed, and then her eyes rolled up and she began wobbling on her feet. Amy and Oz reflexively stepped forward to help her-
"Watch out!" I yelled, and began moving. Because the instant Amy got within range, Willow stopped faking and her hand came out of her pocket with a sacrificial athame, that also did double duty as a perfectly good stabbing knife. And she'd positioned herself so that Oz blocked my immediate shot, and in the fraction of a second it took me to step aside her knife-
-would come nowhere near Amy as she slapped Willow's eager but clumsy stab aside with a forearm block, trapped her arm, and judo-threw Willow to the floor before kicking her solidly in the armpit. Willow cried out in pain and curled up in a ball, her knife clattering across the ground.
"If you hadn't skipped all those workouts then you might have actually hit me." Amy said vindictively as Willow hit the floor. Yeah, even the patience of a saint had some limits.
"Not fair-" Willow said brokenly, shuddering on the ground. "Not fair-"
"Willow." Oz said, still trying to reach her. "We can still leave. Go take that job offer from Microsoft- live our lives- be rich, be free-"
"Grow old and die!" Willow spat, looking up from her crouched-animal position on the ground. "I could have had it all! Immortality! Power! Godhood!" she shouted at the top of her lungs, her cry echoing out over the city. "And now I'm just-" She spat. "Dust beneath their feet!"
"Who's 'they'?" I asked.
"The people who matter!" Willow shouted back. "The powerful ones, the ones who rule!" She slumped, sobbing. "The ones I'll never join now-"
"Everyone matters, Willow." Amy sighed.
"Quitter talk." she sobbed.
"Willow-" Oz tried again.
"Get out!" she shrieked. "We're done! We're through! If you're not with me-" she broke off. "I hate you! I hate all of you!"
"Willow, he saved your life." I told her flatly.
"Saved it for what?" she spat.
"Oz?" I asked him.
"She said we're done." he said, slumping in despair. "So I can't stay here. Good-bye, Willow."
After giving her a chance to say good-bye that she didn't take I pulled the trigger on the trank gun, and Willow fell unconscious.
"We leave her here in the mood she's in, she'll probably go right off the roof as soon as we leave." I said matter-of-factly. "Oz? Where do you want to go?"
"I'm not sure." he replied, still distraught.
"You can come back with us." Amy said. "At least for tonight."
"Okay." he agreed, and sighed. "You'll need to take Willow's papers and things with you before you go. I'll show you where she keeps them."
"Thanks." I said, and we finished tossing Willow's place and arranging her unconscious body on the couch. "All right. Amy, take Oz to the van. I'll be right down after I make the call." They both nodded and left, and I picked up the phone.
"Mayor Wilkins' office." I heard the secretary answer.
"This is Jonathan Fairchild calling from Willow Rosenberg's apartment." I said. "She needs medical attention and suicide watch immediately. Oh, and make sure to tell Wilkins- one down."
"Wait!" she said as I left the handset off the hook and began to walk away. "Sir? Sir, wait-!" her faint voice trailed off behind me as I left.
* * * * *
Mayor Wilkins POV:
"I'm afraid there's nothing that can be done at present." I told Miss Rosenberg, as she desperately looked up at me from her hospital bed. They had her in the neuro ward, in restraints and under watch due to the strong possibility of self-harm. She'd already made one half-hearted attempt in the several days she'd been in custody, after Mister Fairchild had led the surprisingly effective yet devastating strike against her in her apartment. I hadn't even known they'd known where it was, much less so expertly gotten past the security around it.
"But sir, there has to-!" she begged.
I shook my head. "We're less than two weeks away from Graduation Day, Miss Rosenberg. I don't have the time or the spare resources for a project of this magnitude at the moment."
"Then after you Ascend?" she said eagerly. "When you have so much more power? Could you restore mine?" she begged.
"Something may possibly be done in the fullness of time." I conceded. "But you're going to have to be patient."
"Okay." she said, not entirely believing me but still forcing herself to because what other option did she have at this point? I smiled, nodded, and left.
"Is there something you can do for her?" Alphonse asked me with mild curiosity as they left the hospital.
"She failed." I answered him. "She failed entirely, and despite having been given so many chances and opportunities-" I sighed and shook my head. "Such a disappointment. Well, you don't get something for nothing in this world, and I should have known that anyone who so readily fell into my lap would just as quickly fall out of it."
"Yeah." he chuckled cruelly, and then my phone went off.
"Mayor Wilkins." I answered it cheerfully.
"Sir." Deputy Mayor Finch answered me. "I just had a visitor to my house. They're gone, but you really need to see what they brought me."
"Not on the phone." I answered. "Are you at home?"
"I am." he asked. "Shall I come in to City Hall?"
"No." I said thoughtfully. "I recently had a lesson in how my movements in and out are being surveilled. As it happens, I'm already off-campus; I'll just come to your house."
It didn't take me very long to arrive, and Allan met me and Alphonse and let us inside.
"What is it?" I asked him. "And I certainly hope it's good news, because I haven't been getting much of that recently."
"It's Cordelia Chase, sir." Allan said. "She just approached me."
"She's here now?" I asked him.
"No." he said. "She said she'd seen too much of how memory spells could be used to play with peoples' heads from Miss Rosenberg to want to be near you at all. That's why she came to me."
"And what did she bring us?" I asked mildly.
"She brought this." Allan said proudly, and brought a tape recorder and hit 'Play'. I heard a recording of a meeting of the 'Scooby Gang', discussing their plans for disrupting Graduation Day. Prepositioned explosive charges, a false threat to Principal Flutie to encourage him to run an extra-heavy emphasis on evacuation drills beforehand, pulling the fire alarm at the opportune moment, getting the student body out of the blast radius while blowing me up right as the transformation began- yes, all very clever and straightforward.
"Fascinating." I said. "She thought to record their most recent meeting?"
"Yes." he answered. "And also told me when and where the explosives are coming in." he said. "The evening of the day before graduation, at the shipping terminal. On a coastal freighter called the Kutaya Star." He smiled. "She even got me a copy of the bill of lading." he handed it to me.
"Why did she turn on them?" I inquired.
"Her father's arrest for tax evasion." Allan replied. "She's a pauper now, and looking forward to zero prospects at all without a college education. She said that she was willing to learn how to fight the supernatural to preserve her own life, but she wasn't willing to give her entire future for it. So she sold this information to us."
"How much did you pay for it?" I said, encouraged by what I was hearing. Because, yes, that was certainly a genuine piece of paperwork I was looking at.
"An educational trust for a full-ride tuition package at UCLA, along with a very generous living stipend." Deputy Mayor Finch said.
I laughed out loud. "Oh, now that's just precious! She sold out her friends to buy back the future her father's IRS problems took away from her- without ever stopping to think that it won't be a viable future after I Ascend!" I finished chuckling. "Well, that's certainly a Chase for you- thinking the universe revolves around them, and nowhere near as clever as they think they are." I laughed again. "Just like her father was."
"Should I call the FBI, sir?" Allan asked.
"No, no." I said. "Alphonse, send someone down to LA to make sure the explosives are actually in that shipping container. But discreetly. If the tip turns out to be genuine, then I'll authorize the transfer of funds to set up Miss Chase's educational trust." I thought. "But we hold off on actually making the bust until the very last minute, here in Sunnydale. We'll use our police force, keep control of the entire investigation." I shrugged. "Of course, that close to Graduation Day there'll be little point in actually making a case. The objective will simply to be to allow the Slayer and her compatriots to think that everything is still going their way right up until the last minute, when it'll be too late for them to find a new plan." I shrugged. "So far they've proven amazingly effective whenever they've had an objective to go after. No, no, we'll let the illusion of success keep them in check. Until we no longer need it."
"Yes sir." both my subordinates acknowledged.
I smiled to myself. Yes, even if Miss Rosenberg had proved to be a disappointment- her reach far exceeding her grasp and all that- it was a comfort to know that I could still rely upon good old-fashioned human nature.
* * * * *
Buffy POV:
The bugs that Angel and Jonathan had planted in Deputy Mayor Finch's house earlier had picked up the whole conversation. The plan had worked- Mayor Creepy thought he knew all our plans now, and thought he could put us in checkmate just by stopping the bomb shipment we had coming in on the ship. We had him sucked in.
So, he was just waiting for Graduation Day now, and so were we. Oh, we had Amy- and wow, it had been so lucky that Oz giving up his werewolf-ism worked as well as Amy giving up her magic to stop Willow would have- checking out Jesse and other people to make sure she hadn't hit them up with the post-hypnotic like she'd done Xander, and Jenny prompting Principal Flutie to do 'evacuation drills', and Giles getting himself un-suspended - turns out he'd arranged for himself to get canned in the first place so he'd have more time off-the-books to help the gang set things up for endgame- to give the Mayor someone to watch as he did various diversionary things-
And we were all out networking with the students, getting everybody we could remotely trust prepped for Graduation Day. Jonathan- he'd returned to school after the whole Willow thing was wrapped up- was leading hand-picked peoples in weekend drills, Amy's dad had pitched in along with my mom on various parents' committees to help set things up there- and elsewhere, and we even had time left to get ourselves some nice prom dresses. Cordelia had had to fake a little distance from the team because she was being a fake traitor, but not that much because her whole schtick was the 'they don't know I sold them out' routine.
The only really noteworthy thing leading up to the night of the big dance was the shocking revelation that Jonathan and Amy were breaking up. Oh, not 'We don't like each other' breaking up but 'I have to go and she has to stay' breaking up. After high school he had to get back on the road- both to go answer some things the Powers That Be apparently had for him and because with Wolfram & Hart still trying to get their hooks into him, however indirectly, he had to go drag that tail elsewhere so it didn't stay here and try sticking to any of us. Especially not Amy, who they also apparently wanted to lure to the Dark Side even if they had to do it totally of our own free will. Thank God they hadn't seemed to want Willow for anything. Brrrrrrr.
So, yeah. The pair of folks that were voted "Most Likely To Get Married" by the yearbook committee two years running were the ones whose relationship wouldn't survive going to college, while Xander and me were set to stick together for as long as I could possibly last. Go figure. Amy didn't cry on my shoulder about it as much as I expected, because her and Jonathan had already settled this out among themselves weeks ago even if we'd just found out, but- yeah. Life really wasn't fair sometimes.
Angel would be leaving us after high school as well, although he'd just be down the road in LA and available to come back if we had another Apocalypse. Wolfram and Hart needed to go have someone help make their lives miserable, and if Jonathan couldn't do it himself because of that little blackmail they had on his secret identity then Angel was more than looking forward to the challenge. Plus, people needed saving from demons in LA as well... and with Cordelia going to college down there well, hey, it'd be nice to have another one of the team there to keep an eye on her.
Oz was also leaving after Graduation. He was pretty messed up from the whole Willow thing- not just from seeing it happen and not having any way to stop it, but from the time he'd spent actually living with Crazy McEvil so that he could potentially double agent on her as soon as he had an opening or, God help us, actually give Willow the mercy kill if he couldn't find one. I don't know if he could have actually gone through with it and neither did he, but yeah. Holy yikes. Between all that and Willow's dumping him like a hot rock despite what he'd done to make the option that allowed saving her life happen, he was definitely a guy who needed to put this chapter of his life behind him. Supposedly there was this guy Lorne down in LA who a seer type, who could tell someone about where they needed to go to find what their soul needed or something. I'd maybe have to go visit him myself sometime.
Of course, we had to get past Graduation Day first, but hey, at least we had hope. One of the pieces of info they'd turned up searching Willow's place was exactly which demon that Wilkins would be Ascending to take on the pure aspect of- Olvikan. And Olvikan's physical weaknesses were already on record. In hindsight it was a little sad that we'd sacrificed the explosives as the diversionary element but it's not like it would have worked the other way around- and the primary attack vector should still work just fine, especially now that Jonathan knew to tune it for more heat and less the other thing.
So in the last few days before the big event we had the big dance. Cordelia's recent social fall from grace- what with now being poor- had knocked her right out of the race for Prom Queen, but it was a measure of how deep things had gotten recently that she didn't even really mind seeing Harmony score it. I hadn't hoped to score anything, varsity cheerleader or not, so I just carpe'd that diem with Xander out on the dance floor and we smiled at Jonathan and Amy doing the same. Hey, if it was going to be our last dance then heck yeah, make it a memorable one-
"Everyone?" the other Jonathan, the short one, said from the MC's microphone on stage. "We have a last-minute award. Is Buffy Summers here tonight?"
I raised my hand.
"And Jonathan Fairchild?"
"Yes?" he called out.
"Ah." he said. "Well- this is actually a new category. First time ever. I guess there were a lot of write-in ballots, and, um, the prom committee asked me to read this. 'We're not good friends. Most of us never found the time to get to know you, but that doesn't mean we haven't noticed you. We don't talk about it much, but it's no secret that Sunnydale High isn't really like other high schools. A lot of weird stuff happens here.'"
"Zombies! Hyena people! Vice-Principal Snyder!" the crowd called out cheerfully.
"But, whenever there was a problem or something creepy happened, you seemed to show up and stop it. Most of the people here have been saved by you, or helped by you at one time or another. We're proud to say that the Class of '99 has the lowest mortality rate of any graduating class in Sunnydale history."
The crowd burst out in applause.
"And we know at least part of that is because of everything you two did to protect us, and everything you did to help lead the student body to protect themselves. So the senior class, offers its thanks, and gives you, uh, this." We both stepped up, and Jonathan reached down and hauled up a little trophy for each of us- a multicolored, glittering umbrella with a bronze plaque attached to the shaft. Each of our trophies had our name engraved on it, and the same title- "Class Protector."
And then everybody applauded, and Jonathan and I both looked at each other and had the same thought in exact unison.
"You make the speech." we said to each other in stereo, and then got back to our staredown. Eventually Jonathan sighed and bowed to my will, and he stepped up to the microphone.
"Everyone..." he began.
* * * * *
Amy POV:
We met in the school library for what would probably be the last time, the day before Graduation. We'd finished our classes, had our yearbooks signed, said our goodbyes, and made all our preparations. Jonathan and I had had our prom, and our night afterwards, and it had all been perfect. Even knowing it would be our last one hadn't put a damper on things; oh, it had certainly made things more serious, but we'd both legitimately accepted it as both necessary and the right thing to do. And that meant that while we'd miss our relationship, we wouldn't mourn it. I guess this is what being an adult felt like. Well, there wasn't a more appropriate time than graduation to start feeling that way.
The Kutaya Star would have pulled into port last night, and that would mean that the Mayor would make his move this morning. So really, this meeting of ours was just another part of the whole shadow-play that Jonathan had helped us concoct, and the next move-
"So, this is the inner sanctum." Mayor Wilkins said, striding cheerfully into the library as we sat around the table with all the books and papers. "Willow told me this is where you folks like to hang out, concoct your little schemes. I tell you, it's just nice to see that some young people are still interested in reading in this modern era. So, what are kids reading nowadays?" he smirked, picking up one of the books on the table and starting to recite. "'The beast will walk upon the earth and darkness will follow. The several races of man will be as one in their terror and destruction.' Aw, that's kind of sweet!" the Mayor gushed cheerfully. "Different races, coming together?"
"You never get even a little tired of hearing yourself talk, don't you." Buffy said bitterly.
Mayor Wilkins chuckled. "That's one spunky little girl you've raised." he said to Giles, before his smile turned nasty. "I'm gonna eat her."
Giles, his face a stone mask of rage and despair, snatched up one of the epees from the weapons rack and drove it directly through the Mayor's heart. The Mayor staggered back in shock.
"Whoa!" he said passionately, as he drew the sword from his chest without the slightest sign of pain. "Violent outbursts like that? In front of the children?" he finished condescendingly, as he wiped the sword clean of blood with his handkerchief and tossed it back to Giles hilt-first. "You know, Mr. Giles, they look to you to see how to behave."
"Get out." I said coldly.
"I smell fear. That's smart." the Mayor smirked. "Even smarter given that the police and the Coast Guard just raided the Kutaya Star." he said, and we all made sure to put the appropriate amount of shock and despair on our faces. "Oh, you were clever enough about not leaving any paper trail that led to you, but it looks like you'll be attending Graduation Day without any of the party favors you were planning to bring. And I guess that leaves you out of options." he smiled. "You could forego attending, of course. You'd forfeit your diplomas, but I suppose they wouldn't be worth much after my Ascension anyway." He shrugged. "But I really do hope you'll attend. At least then your deaths will be quick and painless."
"Thanks." Xander snorted derisively. "You're such a humanitarian."
"In the literal sense, I suppose I will be!" Mayor Wilkins laughed affably, and turned to leave. He threw his parting shot to us over his shoulder as he strolled away. "But you really don't want to miss my commencement address. It's going to be one heck of a speech!" he finished, and then he turned the corner into the hallway outside and was gone.
I cast a quick anti-eavesdropping spell before we all breathed a sigh of relief and dropped the act.
"He bought it." Jenny said, grinning. "Trust me, my family taught me how to read a mark before I was ten. He bought it hook, line, and sinker!"
"Good." Jonathan said. "All right, folks. Everybody scatter, go do your thing, live out the next day like it'll be your last." He grinned. "We certainly want him to think so."
"And speaking of that-" I said, jumping up and grabbing my boyfriends'- at least until tomorrow - hand and grinning at him salaciously.
"Well, I did just get out of prison." he joked, to the quiet laughter of everyone else in the room. And on that note we all paired up and headed out.
Tomorrow would be the big finish. But for today, we would live.
* * * * *
Jonathon POV:
"Everything's in position." I said to the group, joining them as we all took our seats at the ceremony, cap and gown and all.
"All the crowd control people know what to do." Cordelia confirmed.
"Weapons teams are set up and ready to move." Buffy agreed.
"Got the fetishes prepositioned and the spells all ready to trip." Amy acknowledged.
"And Giles and all the grown-ups are waiting outside with the reserves." Xander said. "Even that eclipse thing the Ascension will bring will be handy- the Mayor's vampires can come out to play, but so can Angel. So now comes the horrible part."
"The waiting." Buffy agreed, and Principal Flutie and the Mayor got up on stage.
"Congratulations to the class of 1999," Principal Flutie said as he took the microphone. "You've all proven yourself to be fine young men and women, and more than ready for the challenges still ahead of you. This is a time of celebration, so please bear with us as we put the final stamp on your official commencement as the Sunnydale High School Class of 1999. And now I welcome our distinguished guest speaker, Mayor Richard Wilkins the Third." There was dutiful applause.
"Well. What a day this is!" Mayor Wilkins began, as cheerful as ever. "Special day. Today is our centennial the one hundreds anniversary of the founding of Sunnydale, and I know what that means to all you kids: not - a darn thing. Because today something much more important happens: today you all graduate from high school. Today all the pain, all the work, all the excitement is finally over. And what's a hundred years of history compared to that? You know what kids?"
"Oh my God, he's going to do the entire speech." I said in horror.
"Does this man's evil know no bounds?" Xander acknowledged.
"... for all of you it may be that there is a place in Sunnydale's history, whether you like it or not." Wilkins continued. "It's been a long road getting here. For you... for Sunnydale. There has been achievement, joy, good times... and there has been grief. There's been loss. Some people who should be here today, aren't. And some people who are here today arguably shouldn't be." he said, glaring at us- particularly me. "But here we all are. Journey's end. And what is a journey? Is it just distance travelled? Time spent?" Wilkins shook his head. "No. It's what happens on the way. It's the things that happen to you. At the end of the journey you're not the same. Today is about change." He paused and wiped his brow with his handkerchief, then continued. "Graduation doesn't just mean your circumstances change, it means you do. You ascend… to a higher level. Nothing will ever be the same. Nothing." A shadow fell across the ceremony as we all looked up to see the eclipse starting.
"Here we go." Amy said. "I can feel the energies-"
"And so, as we look back on-" Mayor Wilkins continued, before flinching in pain. "-on the events that brought us to this day-" he stopped and winced.
"Come on..." Buffy murmured impatiently.
"We... must all..." Wilkins choked out, before screaming in agony and convulsing once, twice, before regaining possession of himself. "It has begun." he said hieratically. "My destiny. It's a little sooner than I expected... I had this whole section on civic pride..." He coughed, before shouting. "But I guess we'll just skip to the big finish!"
The Mayor twitched, expanded, and bulged from every orifice as his suit split open. He continued expanding, and expanding, and expanding-
"Phase one!" I muttered into my throat mike, and from his position inside the school Angel hit the fire alarm.
"NOW!" Buffy yelled, and the student body shot to its feet as one and started shucking its robes. Over us, the giant towering reptilian form of the snake-demon Olvikan finished coalescing...
"DRILL A!" Cordelia and Xander both yelled at the tops of their lungs, hitting their feet. "DRILL A! EVERYONE MOVE!" Prompted by both Principal Flutie's recent emphasis on fire drills and the weekend drills I'd led our pre-selected crowd control people through, everybody fell back.
The Mayor shrieked in fury and hunger, and began to lower its head to the attack-
"Phase two!" I called, and Amy cried out an incantation and the several dozen pre-enchanted fetishes we'd scattered and prepositioned all across the lawn and grounds combined with one of her most powerful barrier spells to throw up a force-field between the ranks of chairs where we'd been seated and the Mayor. His first rush bounced off of it and stopped.
"That's five minutes!" Amy called, falling back with the rest of us while the Mayor continued battering against the barrier, desperate to reach the students he needed to consume to start stabilizing the transformation.
"DOWN THE STEPS!" Xander called, pulling out his axe and stake from where he'd been wearing them slung around his neck under his graduation robes. Next to him Oz did the same. "STAY IN FORMATION!"
"FLAME UNITS!" Cordelia cried, snatching up her flamethrower from where we'd hidden it nearby in the bushes the night before under a camouflage tarp and the dozen or so auxiliaries- Jesse, Jonathan, and Andrew all among them- I'd spent the past couple of weekends training with them likewise. "FOLLOW ME!" she cried, and led them down the steps in a wave ahead of the evacuating students, to hit the line of vampires that had moved in to cut off our retreat and pen us in like a battering ram. They shrieked, ashed, and fell back out of the way, and the fleeing student body broke past the bottleneck on the steps, to stop when confronted by the dozens more vampires that the Mayor's minions had rounded up from all the vamps in town for extra muscle.
"Water gunners!" I called. "Ready!" Giving actual weapons to a mob of untrained and excited teenagers was begging for dozens of friendly fire casualties, but handing out Super-Soakers full of holy water wasn't a danger to anyone but the vampires. The only thing that a missed shot would do is get someone wet. Angel was the only person on our side potentially at risk here, and since Amy had helpfully cast a rainproofing spell on him earlier even he wouldn't. "FIRE!"
And with most of the entire graduating class drenching every vampire present with holy water, they were easy meat for the trained fighters of the Scooby Gang, backed up by our partially-trained auxiliaries drafted both from the more athletic students and the more reasonable and trustworthy parents that Buffy's mom and Amy's dad had been able to network with, as well as Giles, Jenny, and Angel themselves leading them. And with the holy water barrage disrupting the vamps, the skilled fighters dusting the stragglers and herding the rest, and the flamethrower artillery toasting any massed concentration of them with jets of concentrated propane- we'd made sure to give the civilian model burners only to the amateurs- we weren't losing a single student.
"Barrier's about to drop!" Amy called out from where she was at my side during the melee. "Fifteen seconds!"
"Oh, very nice!" the Mayor's voice boomed out from where Olvikan had just about finished smashing through the barrier. All of our casters, backed up by as many student pracitioners like Michael Csajak and Jonathan Levinson and suchlike that we could recruit to help, had spent days charging those barrier-tokens and even starved and almost entirely out of mana the Mayor had still needed only several minutes to tear through it. Yeah, we couldn't let him start feeding the final step of the transformation cycle. "Yes, starving after the transformation is the same way Lo-Hash died, wasn't it? But it's not going to work!"
And so here we were. Endgame. The Ascension had already started, the bank of accumulated Hellmouth energy the Mayor had painstakingly built up for a century had already been depleted, Whistler's warning was no longer operative, and it was perfectly safe to kill him. And we were totally going to kill him.
We'd all had our favorite weapons stashed underneath our graduation robes, and I'd brought a special one just for the occasion. A modified speargun with an amplified pneumatic charge, this thing would be just what we needed to put the final nail in the Mayor's coffin. Almost literally. Buffy had one as well, as did Angel and Xander. Amy, Giles, and Jenny also each had a spell pre-prepared that would suffice, but we hadn't taken any casualties and didn't need all the redundancies.
So the instant the barrier went down I leveled my launcher and took my shot simultaneously with Buffy's own, and both metal rods flew straight and true over a hundred meters to stick directly into the Mayor's hide.
"Spears?" Mayor Wilkins mocked, as the giant serpentine form of Olvikan began to flow down the steps towards us-
"BACK! FALL BACK!" Buffy said, not that she needed to urge people as they were already clearing out as fast as they could move.
"Those aren't spears." I said triumphantly. "Those are lightning rods."
Now warned of the danger, the Mayor immediately turned away from the crowd and headed back towards the school building to try and find cover- which is why I'd told him, of course. I wanted us all as far out of the potential blast radius as possible. And... just about... now!
I pulled the flare gun out of my waistband and fired it straight up, and the brilliant green magnesium charge popped at several hundred feet. It would be clearly visible from anywhere within over fifteen miles. Similar flares rocketed up from all the other Scooby Gang members as soon as they saw me fire mine- again, redundancy.
And with those flares, the final key player of our piece knew when to make his move. Mr. Madison was a senior shift supervisor at the electric company, and he'd made damn sure to be on-shift today- just as he'd made sure to help us gin up the paperwork for those certain pieces of custom metalwork I'd had made in LA, to have them shipped up here unobstrusively and even more unobstrusively installed by me supervising a hand-picked work crew. Installed at the base of the electrical high-tension tower with the best line of fire available down off the nearby hillside and into the school campus.
A line of fire for the Wulfenbach-Fairchild Mark II Shock Cannon I'd built a reproduction of, one of the Empire's most reliable and useful pieces of vehicle-mounted lightning artillery. This was the siege-class variant- something you mounted on a giant walker unit or a small airship for artillery fire vs. particularly obnoxious targets. Such as small hills, or large fortifications. Or giant rampaging monsters.
But that was when they were fueled by Europan powerplants. This particular shock cannon had been spliced directly into the main trunk line for the entire town of Sunnydale, the high-tension line running upstate to the main power grid intended to supplement the local power plant in overload situations. And with Mr. Madison having rerigged the switchboard, we momentarily browned out several surrounding counties with all the draw we'd spliced to the one cannon alone.
And so the single biggest goddamned lightning bolt that anyone had ever seen crashed down once, twice, three times before the terminally overloaded Shock Cannon we'd prepositioned it as a disposable piece of remote-controlled artillery finally gave up the ghost and melted itself, and the Mayor and everything within a hundred feet of him was blasted into free-floating particles.
The blast only barely missed incinerating any of us thanks to the distance between us and the target, the precision with which it had homed on the keyed and primed Sparkwork disposable target designators we'd stuck in the Mayor's hide, and the fact that a second line of pre-enchanted fetishes - these being for a protective spell to safely short electrical discharges to ground - had been worked into the sidewalk in front of the school, so that none of the corona effects would actually reach out into the courtyard or street where we were.
Silence fell over the entire battlefield. What very few vampires hadn't been dusted were now running for their lives, and nobody could even see the Mayor anymore. Or much of anything else, until the spots from that flash all faded from our eyes.
"Did we get him?" Buffy asked as everyone present stared at the cratered and burning school building in awe. "Please tell me we got him."
"He's gone." Giles said, him and Jenny and Amy having all simultaneously cast their detection spells to make sure. "We've won."
"WE GOT HIM!" Cordelia yelled from where she was standing triumphantly on top of a nearby car, and the entire class roared as one.
* * * * *
Amy POV:
And just like that, it was over.
The Battle of Graduation Day hadn't seen a single friendly casualty. Not a student, not a teacher, not anyone. It had been a masterpiece of precision tactics, as set up and executed by one of the Wulfenbach Empire's most experienced military officers just like he'd coordinated a hundred other battles vs. mad scientists and giant monsters. Not that he could ever explain that to anyone except me or Angel.
But right now it didn't matter how he'd come to us, or why. What mattered is that he'd been here when we needed him. When I'd needed him. I'd tried to tell him several times on prior occasions just how much he'd done for me, and all he'd done was smile and say that that was nothing as compared to how much we'd all done for him. Of course he'd say that.
"I can't believe how lightly we got off." Xander said as we all drew together after the immediate response by all the vehicles with sirens, and questions, and being checked out by EMS, and everything. We each sat or stood on the nearby curb looking at all the commotion as the high school kept burning, and let it all sink in.
"And the young man who helped us achieve it all... we'll have to learn how to do without him from now on." Giles sighed. "I've taken extensive notes on this campaign, everything we achieved and the methods by which we formulated it- the Council really needs to analyze them and start refining how we approach strategy and tactics."
"Where'd he even get that giant lightning gun?" Cordelia asked curiously.
"An experimental weapons design." Angel said truthfully but incompletely. "From where he was before. Not practical for routine field use here, but..." he shrugged. "This wasn't routine."
"And so the freak occurrence here has a freak natural explanation that will help it be memory-holed." Buffy said. "Certainly beats trying to hush up a giant terrorist incident."
"Explosives as diversion." Cordelia chuckled.
"The best cons work by showing the mark exactly what he expects to see and thinks he understands." Jenny acknowledged.
"Guys." Oz said into the silence. "Take a moment and realize. We survived."
"We sure did." Buffy agreed companionably.
"Not the battle." Oz said with just a tiny trace of his old quiet humor. "High school."
"Where's Jonathan?" Buffy asked, suddenly looking around. "He didn't take off already, did he?"
"We'd already all said our goodbyes." I said quietly. "And... he was really tempted to stay."
"Rip the band-aid off fast." Xander agreed, giving me a searching look. "You'll be okay?"
"I will be." I agreed. "Maybe I'll sulk a little in the days to come, but-" I nodded. "We knew this had to be done, and that we could do it."
"I will cheerfully enable all of the sulking and chocolate therapy that you care to indulge in." Buffy said compassionately to me. "And we are totally roomie'ing it up at college. I call dibs right now."
"Thanks." I said to her. "I wouldn't know what I'd do without you guys."
"A whole lot less." Cordelia said cheerfully. "Now me, I'm off to college in LA what with what we so cheerfully scammed out of that creep before we fried him-" she grinned wickedly, before continuing on in a friendlier tone of voice. "But don't you be strangers, okay? I won't be."
"Certainly not." Angel agreed.
"I've got to go find a few things I lost." Oz said quietly. "Don't know how long it'll take me. But I'll be back."
"We'll be here." Xander said.
(*cue mood music*)
Some instinct prompted me to turn around, and the sounds of the friendly discussion faded out as I turned to see Jonathan standing in the distance next to one of the fire trucks. Even at all this distance we still could stare directly into each other's eyes.
I cheated, just a little, just a tiny little, and cast the same connection-spell that I'd used once when captured by the Delta Zeta Kappas, and our hearts connected again.
Longing. Affection. Resignation. And... I smiled, and felt him smile along with me. But there wasn't any despair, not from either of us.
And there still was-
I love you. I thought to him, and saw him nod.
I love you too. he thought back, and then my view of him was momentarily cut off by several firemen walking around the truck. And after they'd passed by, he was gone.
I dropped the spell and turned back to Buffy and my friends, smiling sadly to myself. I didn't know if I'd see Jonathan again before the jump was over, but at least I knew that he'd be fine. And so would I, eventually.
"All right, guys." I said to them all. "Let's go home."
* * * * *
Author's Notes: And so season 3 comes to an end, and Jonathan leaves Sunnydale at least. The jump isn't over, but we will start moving into more summarized than episodic adventures after this. So yeah. It took us 33 parts to cover 3 years... the remaining years will use less parts.
So, who here called Willow permanently losing her magic but being left alive? I don't think anyone did. Because that part was planned- I had it pencilled in from the beginning of the Dark Willow subplot. She sold out everything she ever had for power, and now she has to live the rest of her life without it. And while I'd originally planned a big dramatic witch-on-witch showdown... I realized that one, Amy had already gotten that versus her mother and two, that's just not remotely how Jonathan fights and he'd be massively OOC if he did.
I'd like to think author Jeconais in his 'Broken Faith' fanfic on FFA for coming up with the 'Everybody gets a squirt gun full of holy water' tactic to get around the usual side effects of giving several hundred highly excited and untrained teenagers unfamiliar weapons while still getting an effective anti-vampire combat tactic out of them.
So no. Jonathan didn't forget he was a Spark. And no. He wasn't busting it out to trivialize every problem and kill all the drama. He used it when he felt it appropriate to use, and 'appropriate' is a thing highly dependent on context. (Hell, note the effort he went to here to disguise his attack as a 'freak lightning strike'. An obvious laser cannon would have drawn far too much DoD attention he didn't want.)
Those who have watched canon will note that several scenes from canon were kept in practically word for word. You're goddamn right they were. Moments that good deserve the homage.
And yes, Jonathan and Amy totally got the same goodbye scene that Buffy and Angel got in canon s3. Although with less angst, and slightly more empathy spells.