Some may take love casually,
But I know what it's worth to me
I would count the steps from here to heaven,
Every heartache I was given,
Tip my hat and walk through fire
To find sure love.
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- "Sure Love," Hal Ketchum
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((OOC: This one's kinda long, but you'll see why I didn't want to split it up.))
"The Angavu seems to desire your presence for the next Synchronizing." The face had been Dar's, but the voice and eyes had been distant, watery somehow.
"Damn if I'm gonna back down now, Janja," she'd said, her jaw jutted out to one side.
The land stretched forever around her. People could talk about endless prairie, and about Boundless Africa, but unless you'd seen it, you just didn't know. Her first impulse was to find a horse and ride, just ride until the grass ended somewhere past forever.
Dar and Billi stood beneath a giant tree, one that stretched toward the sun as if yearning toward a distant lover, so high that the tips of the branches were lost in the glare. From where she stood, it seemed that the tree had caught its prey, the sun resting in the arms of its joyous captor.
"Whoa."
"How ya feel babe?" His voice was uncommonly gentle.
"Ghadhabu's been tough ta keep a hold of. Dunno why. But it feels harder than normal."
They'd stood, her sipping tea and listening to him. His face was so hard to read sometimes, but right then it had shown confusion and...fear? For one of the few times in her life, she got a chill down her spine.
"I think...I think I might try goin' back in again," he'd said.
She had been distantly aware of her glass shattering when it had hit the floor. "Oh God, Dar. You scared me to death last time, babe, are you sure you gotta?" He nearly hadn't come back to her the last time he'd gone to confront the spirits that were hanging around in his mind.
He'd nodded. "I'm sorry, girl, but I don't think I can keep this up."
He'd allowed some silence to spin between them for a few moment before saying, "Hodari said you might be able to help, though."
"Tell me."
"You go in with me."
She hadn't even blinked. "When do we go?"
She looked around now, drinking it all in. She knew that her body was in Ouroboros, sitting comfortably in the crook of his arm in the eternal late afternoon, but she didn't see any of it. She saw only Africa, and the tree, and Dar. "Wow. This is in you? Damn, it's so...everything's in here. It's beautiful."
"At times." She loved the way his face had relaxed; here, he didn't have to put on the mask. She was just about to say something about it when she realized that they weren't alone.
Hodari was tall, reaching almost eight feet, and skinny. His skin was the color of recording tape. Lion skins, heads still attached and roaring silently off his shoulders, were wrapped around his slender frame. He carried a spear and simple shield in one hand, but his vertically-slitted eyes were what pinned her down. Dar glanced at her, and she offered a grin that was almost up to her regular standards. "Fortune favors th'bold, baby."
Dar nodded and demanded Hodari's help, using ritualistic words that resonated through the landscape. Hodari was the easy one; he was bound to Dar somehow in a way the others weren't. The spirit pledged its support in tones that sounded like they'd been formed from an avalanche and then turned loose. Before leaving, though, he turned back to face Billi herself.
"Bwana. We meet face to face for the first time. You are the first of your kind I have laid my eyes upon. The others here will be adverse to your presence. They were there during the War."
Billi nodded, not sure if she should speak. She figured the War was the one the Angavu had fought against her kind so many centuries ago. Hodari stared into her eyes for a few more seconds before taking his leave. He turned and walked around the tree, vanishing around the side. Billi exhaled softly.
Dar said, "He's the easiest."
She squeezed his hand and smiled. "Still here, boy."
The skies darkened, a cataract of clouds spreading over the blue. Lightning flickered, and thunder harrumphed just before the clouds started pouring all over the two of them. Billi lifted her face and laughed at the warm water trickling over it. The laughter withered in her throat when she saw the next spirit coming toward them. Janja the cunning looked like a piece of slow lightning at first, but soon enough he was close enough for her to see him. Janja floated in the air before them, wreathed in lightning and fog. His three skeletal heads hissed, snakelike and fanged. Billi swallowed, but she stood fast.
Janja had chuckled with Dar's voice, the strange echo of a waterfall under the noise. "Fire within you, yes, characteristic indeed. Little wonder why the Angavu finds himself attracted to an age old enemy. Mind you, should you wish to enter his mind, you will be reliant on him for the majority of your protection."
"I trust him." Simple words, and true, and useful for hiding the enormity of what she'd be risking from herself.
"In his mindscape, your powers will be useless, save any mental strength you have. You will also be able to see our true images. Steel your mind before agreeing to enter. Lesser beings have lost themselves in such an attempt."
She'd grinned. "Did they now."
Janja's voice sounded like a rain-swollen river. "Angavu, and the Bwana. Welcome you to our residence."
Some response seemed called for. "Thank you, Janja. Your welcome is most gracious." She'd been to enough military formal functions to at least pretend to have manners.
The three heads stared at her for a moment, and then the right-most one struck like a snake. Billi hadn't even started to pull back before Dar's arm was between her and the spirit, the snake fangs sunk deep into his thick muscle. "You will NOT hurt her," he snarled in a commanding voice.
The middle head watched while the left head spoke. The damn thing looked amused somehow, but the right-hand one kept its fangs buried in Dar's arm. "She is a Bwana. She defiles this place."
Dar made a noise that was half snarl and half gasp at the pain. "This place is my own. She does not defile it. She graces it. And you will acknowledge that, Janja."
"Curious indeed. Do you protect her because you feel you must? Or is it because she provides you with balance? Could it be that you keep her around simply because it helps you to focus?"
"I protect her because I love her. There is no other reason that is needed. My reasons are beyond you, spirit. I am human. You are not. You do not understand humanity."
The middle head snickered while the left one spoke. "So you say. I am Janja the Cunning. I have been analyzing and playing with human minds since memory began. I know how all minds work, even your philosophies, as wild and varying as they are. You are not unique. I know you and your reasons."
Dar frowned, giving up a step as Janja continued to press his attack. "Is this all of your vaunted humanity, Angavu? Blind courage and a desire to hold onto that which provides most for you? Your favorite tool?"
Dar looked at her then, and she saw doubt and fear in his eyes. A thrill tore through her, seeing how vulnerable he was in front of her. He had brought her here, into this place that no one else had ever seen, because he trusted her as much as she did. He trusted her enough to be scared in front of her. Billi did the only thing she could do. She put her hands on his huge shoulder and gave the support he needed with her touch, her eyes. He drank it in, and his legs stopped trembling. He took a deep breath and responded.
"I am Darweshi Brown. I love this woman for who she is. Not what she does. I love her for her smile, her laugh, her presence. The emotions between us are our own and nothing you can manipulate or twist with half-truths and lies. I know your game Webweaver. You speak like the Morningstar. You will give me your power because I know your truths from your lies. You will give me power because I am the Angavu and I command it from you. I do not fear you. Nor do I conceed to your lies."
Billi stood tall, staring down the spirit that dared to question what they had. Almost inaudible, she whispered, "Get thee behind me..."
Dar put his free hand over the leftmost head and there was a bright flash of light. The head tore from the spirit's neck and fell off his arm, which started leaking blood into the rain that still washed over them all. Janja didn't react, until Dar said, "Your power is mine Janja. I am the Angavu and I am in need of it to protect the lives of those dear to me. Including this woman."
Janja made a sound like a snake that had learned to chuckle, and then it whipped around and slithered into the clouds. Billi reached over and clamped down on Dar's arm, wishing like fire for her ice powers to provide a temporary bandage. Hell, she didn't even know if any of this was actually happening. She finally resorted to tearing a strip off the bottom of her t-shirt and tying it around his forearm. A metaphor to bind a metaphor, she didn't even care anymore.
"Yer doin' good, babe. Easier ways t'get me to strip, though." She offered a grin, but he only sighed and watched his blood soaking into the rapidly drying ground.
The air around them started to darken, except for flashes of a sickly green and red that were coming from the ground underneath their feet. She knew what was coming, and so she stood and tugged on his arm. "Come on, babe. Face 'im on yer feet."
They sat on the warm grass on one of the islands floating in the middle of nothing above Ouroboros's ocean. "If we're in my head...then your ice ain't gonna do anythin'...ya know?"
Billi grinned. "I got the armor a God, then. You ever hear about that?"
He shook his head no, and she said, "Right there in the Book, babe. Helmet, sword of the Spirit, shield of Faith, Breastplate of Righteousness, all of it. I been prayin' ever since I knew what we were gonna do, and even though I ain't been to church in a while, I'm still Baptist."
She tucked her hand underneath his chin and pulled his face up to look into her eyes. "I pray. I believe. That's gotta count for some."
She grinned. "And I'm Billi by-God Ivey. I trust you an' God, an' love you both, an' that's what counts here."
The two of them watched the beast drag himself from the earth, heavy plates clashing and eyes glowing red. It was twice as tall as Billi, and when it roared it shook the ground. The face was alien, but Ghadhabu was obviously male. Billi swallowed, her knees weak but DAMN if she was going to show it. The monster took a step forward and inhaled deeply, stirring the grass around them with the force of the breath. "It is humorous, Angavu," it said, "Humorous to know that of all the Angavu I have been witness to, you are, by far, the weakest of them all."
Billi kept hold of Dar's shoulder while the beast rattled on about other Angavu that had been part of "another tribe" and had died out. "You are weak, Angavu. You are weak because you let your feelings get in the way of your progress. You follow a weak path of protection....of kindness...and of mercy."
The beast reached out with one three-fingered hand and crooked one claw under Billi's chin. Billi's breath hissed at the touch; the monster was hot, burning like lava pumped through its heart instead of blood. It kept speaking to Dar, never looking at her. "The Bwana knew that, Angavu. They used that against the old Angavu. They would prey on their weakness. Target family, friends. Lovers. The Bwana, like your mate, knew how to be merciless. How to be strong."
It suddenly looked at her, its burning eyes searching hers while its hideous face twisted into what probably passed for a smile. "And that is why, you need to survive. I miss those days."
Billi knew this song. The monster had spoken through Dar before. It wanted Billi to live so that she could produce others of her kind, and so on, so that the monster would have something challenging to kill again. She was about to say something that might get her hurt when Ghadhabu turned to Dar again and seized him in one hand. She heard his breath get pushed out of him when the beast squeezed, and she looked around frantically for something she could do. While it roared on about Dar having strength and making others scared, she forced herself to think. Blood started to trickle down the monster's hand, and Dar writhed in its grip.
Billi took off her belt and wrapped it around her fist twice, the bright metal of the buckle glinting at the end of the strap. Then she hooked the fingers of her left hand and went right for the monster's eyes. Ghadhabu saw her coming and lowered his horns, but she just grabbed one of those and used it as a solid foundation for rearing back and popping her belt forward like a whip, right at its eye. She saw the buckle snap against the eye's closed lid, leaving a scratch in the chitin, but she didn't stick around to see what effect she'd had.
She dropped and darted around the monster, using the distraction to go for the tree. There were some low branches growing, and she put her boot against a dead one, straining until it snapped off in her hands. She turned and saw it standing in the same spot, holding Dar up toward her. It squeezed and Dar cried out weakly, the trickle of blood having become a flow.
"Drop him, monster!" she yelled. A stray thought wandered through her mind, wondering what kind of money she could make if she was able to film this scene. She shook it off, recognizing the hysteria, while Ghadhabu replied.
"Monster? Ha. No my sweet. I am the epitome of your kind. I am the spirit that they viewed as an equal. That they respected. I am a creature that got respect and pride because of my rage. Until the Angavu recognizes his own rage, he will never gain my power."
Billi stared into its murderous eyes...and laughed. "You got nothin', boyo. You don't know a thing about rage, 'cause you don't know a thing about love!"
The beast lashed out, grasping her with its other hand, pinning her club to her side and squeezing. "Love is a fallacy!"
"The best rage...the most anger, the hate...gah...is when someone you love...is threatened...ahg!"
The monster roared. "Come now Angavu! make a choice! Give into your rage! Save your love if you can! Show me this "rage of love" that your Bwana wench crows about!"
Billi looked over at Dar and for the first time in her life understood what people meant when they said that their blood ran cold. Dar's face was different, all planes and angles, and he'd gained a couple feet in height. He was bigger overall, and in his eyes she could see just the fainted tinge of a red glow. "I'll kill you Ghadhabu. I'll kill you...and everyone else..." he snarled, slowly forcing the beast's fingers apart. His face changed even more, and Billi saw him becoming a mirror of the monster that held him.
"Dar!" she yelled, "yer better than this thing! Dar! Don't forget who you are! Don't forget me an' your mama an' dad!" She felt Ghadabu's claw start to squeeze the breath out of her again, and she forced herself to use up her remaining air. "The man you are! The man I love!"
A burst of light, the same like that had burned Janja, surrounded Dar. When she could see again, Ghadabu's hand was broken, the claws bent outward and burned. The light coalesced into a bright blade that sheared the monster's hand from its wrist. Roaring in pain, the beast threw Billi away from itself and stumbled. It froze when it realized that Dar held the blade to its neck.
Billi watched Dar finally step back and put his hand down, the light falling away from him. "I'm no executioner. You don't control me. I...
we are more powerful than you."
"Mercy. Weakness. These are the words that describe you," Ghadhabu grated.
"Says the mutant rhino with one hand," Billi spat.
Ghadhabu didn't bother to reply. "You will have my power, for now. But know this. I will not stop teaching you. Not now, not ever. You will see it my way." With that, it raised one foot and stomped, splitting the ground open and allowing itself to be pulled into the healing darkness beneath. Billi enjoyed lying on her back for a moment while the darkness cleared, and then she stood up to go help Dar.
He was almost completely limp, slumped on his knees, covered in blood, and his breathing had a labored, rasping quality that scared her. She touched his shoulder and said, "Three down, baby, we got this. You wanna take a break, come back fresh? Can we do that?"
He shook his head weakly. "Tired...just need to bre...breathe, babe..."
She wanted to do something for him, but there was almost nothing she
could do. She wiped off some of the blood with the cuff of her shirt, but there wasn't much left of that after making the bandage earlier. She looked up when she realized that the darkness was being banished by a warm, gentle light. Soon the entire area was suffused with that light, giving a tender feeling as if snuggling under a warm blanket.
Wisps of mist formed out of the air, gradually taking the shape of an enormous steer with long thick horns. It walked toward them, unhurried, and Billi stood.
Cows, she thought.
I done dealt with cows before. She kept one hand on Dar's shoulder and the other pressed into her side while the final spirit approached. She'd always liked Busaru, but in this place she wasn't sure what he would do.
His voice was warm. "Billi, of the Ivey clan, dost thou fear for thy love? Or dost thou fear for thyself?"
She forced her voice to be steady. "I do, Busaru. I fear fer him."
The steer nodded and stepped forward, pushing Dar's head back with its nose so that it could look into his eyes. Billi could feel the power in the being before her. "And thou, Angavu? Who dost thou fear for?"
Dar's voice was even weaker. "...do.n...don'...touch...'er..." He moved, finally, weakly trying to put himself between Billi and Busaru. Billi increased the pressure on his shoulder and whispered soothing words while the steer obligingly took a few steps back.
"Dost thou believe thy wounds exist?" it said.
Billi was surprised. "Me? Yeah," she said.
"Which...which wounds?" said Dar.
"The hurt from Ghadhabu. An' the gun scars. An' the heart in his heart, an' mine. It's all wounds, Busaru."
"Dost thou believe that is all of thy wounds? Wouldst thou be wiser than all to know the answer to that?"
She thought about Thanksgiving, about the pain from the glances and the whispers at the church. She thought about feeling like an outsider even in a crowd of people with powers. She thought about Westlake's paranoid eyes and the ache of missing home, and the fear and pain a little girl had suffered at the hands of three drunken morons with a gun. "Nope. Guess all I can know are the ones I can see. Or feel."
The steer seemed satisfied. "Willst thou care for him?"
"I'll care for him. Any way I can, any way he needs."
Busaru huffed warm air over the pair of them and stepped forward, putting his head under her hand. She scratched him in that spot that cows like, and she swore that he groaned slightly in appreciation. "Willst thou tell him he hast done well this day?" She nodded, and he stepped back, fading into the darkness that was growing around them.
The darkness spread, engulfing them, until she fluttered her eyes and found herself back in Ouroboros with Dar. All their wounds were gone, though she felt really tired. She rolled over onto her back, lying next to him on the warm grass. "So how'd it go? Did...it help?"
His breathing was easy, though he also looked tired. "It did. I almost lost it there, with Janja and Ghadhabu. It was a lot better than last time, though."
"Jesus, really? Damn, boy, no wonder you didn't come back for a few days." She enjoyed the sunlight for a few minutes before tenatively asking, "Hey, you, um, you mean all that, you said in there? 'Bout you an' me?"
"Why would I lie?"
She grinned a little. "Naw, I ain't sayin' that, it's just...a girl likes to hear that kinda thing sometimes, is all."
He rolled over and put one arm around her shoulders, pulling her close to him in a tight hug. He held it for a few seconds before releasing and saying, "I love you, Billi."
She rubbed his shoulder. "Love you too."
"I'm so tired, baby."
"Geez, me too. Come on, hero. Walk ya home."