doyle: tardis (jossverse - dawn)
[personal profile] doyle
Title: Shot Through With Green
Author: Doyle
Fandom: Buffy
Pairing: Tara gen. Very minor mention of Tara/Willow, but that’s canon for this time period, etc.
Rating: G
Notes: for [livejournal.com profile] sappho_wilde for the Fem Gen Ficathon; request was for Tara and herbology. After Restless.
Summary: The taking and receiving part – that, she understands. That, she learned with the ABCs, her mother’s hands around hers around the dirt.


The soil’s good today. She holds a handful in her fist, lets it sift through her fingers onto the bed she’s sown. Her first few weeks at college, Tara went through a phase of reading books on magic, just because she could, now, and she remembers a lot about herbs and hands. Only take with your left hand. Only take with your right. One way means you’re taking from the earth and the other is receiving but the books couldn’t agree and she figured the fairest thing was to assume they were both wrong.

Most of the books made her wince for the trees that died to make them, and sigh for the people learning magic from them, but the taking and receiving part – that, she understands. That, she learned with the ABCs, her mother’s hands around hers around the dirt and her mother’s voice dropped to a whisper, telling her secrets. Goddess, magic, earth.

Don’t tell your father.

Fennel and foxgloves growing among the daisies and dandelions, in the neglected beds that Daddy and Donny never noticed. Weeds, Daddy said, so if he asked what they were doing in the garden Mom said weeding and it wasn’t a lie.

You have to give something back, Tara. So it’s an exchange, not just you taking what you need. A coin (she loves the mingled smell of copper and earth, even now, even after watching them put her mother in the ground) or just a thank you.

She went back to the college Wicca group the week they talked about herbs. One of the groups, anyway – by this time they’d schismed, bake sales to one side, cauldrons to the other, with a few confused hold-outs floating between the two. Tara sat in the circle and listened to the nine sacred steps of herb-gathering explained by a girl who had said, a month ago, that magic was metaphorical. Step four was abstaining from sex for a week. Willow laughed out loud and Tara had to cough to cover her giggles and she was so sure that everyone would look at them and know. They left before step five, imaginary homework and imaginary headache winning over the group’s imaginary rules.

Step four’s not a problem tonight. Willow’s been out of town a week, vacation with the parents who have finally remembered they have a daughter. Tara’s surprised to find that she can breathe without her. She hopes (sometimes, when Willow races the magic, goes too fast and doesn’t stop to think of the consequences, she doubts) her mother would like Willow.

Midsummer sunset, far from home, her mother’s gone, now – but closer, here, than she feels anywhere else in Sunnydale. Done for the day, Tara sits back on her heels, closes her eyes. She’d be shy if she thought anyone could see her like this, sitting in the dirt and about to talk to herself, but the garden is secluded. The closest building’s the elementary school and that’s closed for the summer. She wonders whether Sunnydale kids play different to those anywhere else, whether they have vampire games, pretend stakes.

It’s quiet and peaceful and she could hide for a long time here. Sometimes she thinks that if she hadn’t found Willow she would have crawled into the centre of this tiny space of herbs, let the grass grow over her.

“I was thinking about my mother,” she says to nobody, to the air. Easier than talking to people and Tara doesn’t hide behind her hair and wish herself somewhere else, doesn’t stammer, doesn’t trip over the difference between what she means to say and what’s coming from her mouth. “She used to make tea – she was sick, she got… headaches, I remember…” Her mother, holding her head in both hands and twisting on the bed with a noiseless scream of pain; her father, raging about demons; Tara takes a deep breath. Two. “She said the tea helped. In the beginning, anyway. St. John’s Wort and linden flowers, valerian, juniper berries.” She holds the memory for a moment, the colour, the smell; the first taste, slight bitterness giving way to the sweet infusion across her lips.

There’s a tingle at the base of her spine, like the memory of an ice cube held there. The eyebright by her knee stirs in a sudden breeze.

Tara doesn’t ask “Can you hear me?” Doesn’t even think it. The thing that lives in this place – demon or spirit or something she’d never thought of - it’s beyond words. She keeps her eyes closed, keeps remembering her mother’s tea, and now she pictures herself cradling the memory in her hands. Offering it.

When she opens her eyes again, it’s dark, and she’s alone.

And she isn’t.

It’s not a demon, Tara thinks, it’s not something that lives here, it’s the place. It’s the garden.

It’s dark and it’s Sunnydale and Tara isn’t afraid.

The place doesn’t speak but she feels the question in the way the grass curls over her fingers as she strips the herbs, careful to take only what she needs. “It’s for a friend,” she says, and the place doesn’t need the words but she speaks them for herself. “Friend,” she repeats, and fixes Riley’s face in her head; kind of lying, she thinks, because he’s not really her friend, any more than Buffy or Xander, but Willow told her what happened with the Initiative and her mother told her, a long time ago, that if you could help, you should. “He was injured. He’s in pain, and I can help him. I want to help him.”

She says, thinks, feels, “Please.”

Blood-coloured flowers blossom from nothing in the grass like stage magic, rabbits from an impossible hat, and are gone before she can touch them. She wants to laugh, or applaud, or offer to stay forever.

“Thank you,” she whispers, gathering the last of the herbs she needs. No coins, no totems to give in return; she bows her head and offers her respect, and her gratitude, and a last flare of red valerian tells her that this is more than enough.

on 2006-01-07 01:34 am (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] julia-here.livejournal.com
The force that through the green fuse drives the flower...

Lovely piece of writing, reminds me of the stories I've given to my garden, spinning them out in my mind while I read or plant and never getting them written down.

Julia, anything Tara is good; Tara from you is delightful

on 2006-01-07 01:55 am (UTC)
seraphcelene: (Default)
Posted by [personal profile] seraphcelene
Soft and beautiful. Great job.

on 2006-01-07 02:42 am (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] cindershadow.livejournal.com
Beautiful and haunting. I love how you do this!

on 2006-01-07 02:52 am (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] a2zmom.livejournal.com
This is so lovely, poetic almost.

I'm a gardener and the thought of Tara communing with the earth, taking and receiving, loving and being loved by nature is very true to the character. You've captured her inner spirit. And I like that Tara has the slighest of doubts about Willow and the way she approaches magic on occassion.

on 2006-01-07 03:32 am (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] cindergal.livejournal.com
Lovely and gentle like Tara, but also showing that underlying strength of character.

on 2006-01-07 03:40 am (UTC)
ext_7696: (Default)
Posted by [identity profile] mosca.livejournal.com
This is stunningly beautiful. I love the interplay of rules vs. real magic, chosen family vs. blood family, and totems/"magic feathers" vs. items with real magical significance. All of these are themes that run through Tara's arc, and you've brought them out in this piece -- lovely work.

on 2006-01-07 04:27 am (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] spuffyduds.livejournal.com
A softspoken but steely fic--much like Tara. Good on you.

on 2006-01-07 04:31 am (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] ros-fod.livejournal.com
This is so incredibly lovely. And lovingly written. You make me fall for Tara here, help me to understand her a little better. And there's a mellow, leisurely rhythm to your words that fits her perfectly.

Just beautifully done.

on 2006-01-07 01:00 pm (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] cesario.livejournal.com
gosh, it's been ages since I last saw a good piece of Tara fic. This is just beautiful.

on 2006-01-07 02:52 pm (UTC)
beccaelizabeth: my Watcher tattoo in blue, plus Be in red Buffy style font (Default)
Posted by [personal profile] beccaelizabeth
this is good. this is right.

on 2006-01-07 03:38 pm (UTC)
Posted by (Anonymous)
I love Tara.

And I love your story.

Beautiful.

on 2006-01-07 03:40 pm (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] fresleyforever.livejournal.com
Sorry-the above post was mine!

I forgot I wasn't logged in!

on 2006-01-07 06:51 pm (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] pinkdormouse.livejournal.com
Lovely Tara there.

Gina

on 2006-01-07 08:52 pm (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] profshallowness.livejournal.com
Lovely, thoughtful piece, that's so very Tara. I very much like how you stayed with the echo of her mother in the garden instead of going for a more explicit reunion, with Tara knowing that the garden is separate from the woman she remembers and yet it is all much parter of a larger whole for her.

on 2006-01-07 09:47 pm (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] zgirl714.livejournal.com
Oooo. I liked this a lot.

on 2006-01-07 10:00 pm (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] darkpoole.livejournal.com
Wow.

Truly, truly beautiful. Magical, even. I teared up a little toward the end.

Just amazing work.

on 2006-01-07 10:08 pm (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] lillianmorgan.livejournal.com
Oh. That was so beautiful. To think that Tara is willing to help Riley, even when he might not do the same in return. I love the way you portray her selflessness here, and how everything feels linked for her – the earth, her Mother, Willow, the magic, healing.
Tara’s surprised to find that she can breathe without her. She hopes (sometimes, when Willow races the magic, goes too fast and doesn’t stop to think of the consequences, she doubts) her mother would like Willow.
I really liked that, equal helpings of caution and love.
Beautiful story.

on 2006-01-08 12:47 am (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] midnightsjane.livejournal.com
Very nice. I love Tara's strength, and I love the connection she has to the earth. I'm a gardener, and even without any magic of my own, I have felt the magic of the earth.

on 2006-01-08 01:07 am (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] alixtii.livejournal.com
A lovely look into Tara.

on 2006-01-08 04:07 am (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] hobviously.livejournal.com
This is lovely and befitting her gentle nature. Thank you.

on 2006-01-09 05:30 am (UTC)
zulu: Carson Shaw looking up at Greta Gill (Default)
Posted by [personal profile] zulu
Oh, man, you make me want to write Tara. You have a great voice here, soft and well-written and very much incorporating all her important aspects. Great read.

on 2006-01-13 07:53 am (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] kindkit.livejournal.com
This is wonderful. Tara is probably the most poorly developed major-ish character on the show, and you've given her such depth here. And I love what you've done with the magic--it's earthy and natural but not New Age twee.

on 2006-01-19 11:39 pm (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] teenygozer.livejournal.com
This brought tears to my eyes by the end of it!

on 2006-01-20 04:39 pm (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] hermionesviolin.livejournal.com
> but the books couldn’t agree and she figured the fairest thing was to assume they were both wrong.

*giggles*

> You have to give something back, Tara. So it’s an exchange, not just you taking what you need. A coin (she loves the mingled smell of copper and earth, even now, even after watching them put her mother in the ground) or just a thank you.

zomg, love this so much


And oh, what a lovely ending.

on 2006-01-28 01:54 am (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] tinpanalley.livejournal.com

An absolutely gorgeous piece of writing!

Fic: Shot Through With Green

on 2006-01-30 02:10 am (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] secondsilk.livejournal.com
Beautiful.
Tara and Willow at the meeting, and the imaginary rules were sweet.
And Tara thinking of her mother, and in thegarden with the spirit, quietly moving.

on 2006-02-21 06:21 pm (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] callmesandy.livejournal.com
So very pretty and awesome.

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doyle

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