ext_257908 (
a-pretty-fire.livejournal.com) wrote in
taxonomites2010-05-09 11:26 am
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Entry tags:
007: A Bit of Earth [Accidental Visual / Location: The Playground]
There were a lot of things that Drusilla didn’t like about Taxon, but the silence was the thing that she hated most of all. The stillness. It didn’t matter that the playground – the trees that swayed slightly in the breeze and the swing that creaked slowly backwards and forwards – was bathed in soft silver moonlight. It didn’t matter that the city seemed to be singing. There was nobody for her to hunt and nobody to hunt with her.
It was all wrong. The wrong Slayer, the wrong Spike, the wrong Dawn Bird. They’d taken her daughter and the wonderfully wicked chaos mage. It was all wrong and it wasn’t fair.
Sitting beneath the trees that fringed the playground, Drusilla buried her fingers in the soil. The words were hers, though she didn’t choose them. The music seemed to be coming from inside the soul she didn’t have.
“A bit of earth,
She wants a little bit of earth,
She'll plant some seeds.
The seeds will grow,
The flowers bloom,
Their beauty just the thing she needs.
She'll grow to love the tender roses,
Lilies fair, the iris tall.
And then in fall, her bit of earth
Will freeze and kill them all.
How can she chance
To love a little bit of earth?
Does she not know
The earth is old
And doesn't care if
One little girl wants things to grow?
She needs a friend.
She needs a father,
Brother, sister,
Mother's arms.
She needs a home.
She needs so many things
They cannot give.
Instead she asks
A bit of earth
To make it live.”
The silence that followed the song seemed emptier than ever.
OOC: The song is a modified version of ‘A Bit of Earth’ from The Secret Garden musical. A great big thank you to Spy for introducing me to it! ♥
It was all wrong. The wrong Slayer, the wrong Spike, the wrong Dawn Bird. They’d taken her daughter and the wonderfully wicked chaos mage. It was all wrong and it wasn’t fair.
Sitting beneath the trees that fringed the playground, Drusilla buried her fingers in the soil. The words were hers, though she didn’t choose them. The music seemed to be coming from inside the soul she didn’t have.
“A bit of earth,
She wants a little bit of earth,
She'll plant some seeds.
The seeds will grow,
The flowers bloom,
Their beauty just the thing she needs.
She'll grow to love the tender roses,
Lilies fair, the iris tall.
And then in fall, her bit of earth
Will freeze and kill them all.
How can she chance
To love a little bit of earth?
Does she not know
The earth is old
And doesn't care if
One little girl wants things to grow?
She needs a friend.
She needs a father,
Brother, sister,
Mother's arms.
She needs a home.
She needs so many things
They cannot give.
Instead she asks
A bit of earth
To make it live.”
The silence that followed the song seemed emptier than ever.
OOC: The song is a modified version of ‘A Bit of Earth’ from The Secret Garden musical. A great big thank you to Spy for introducing me to it! ♥
[ voice ]
Congratulations. You just took the meaning of the word 'creepy' to a whole new level.
[Visual]
"Didn't you like it?"
[ voice ]
[Visual]
It was a pointed reply. A reminder that the Seer wouldn't live forever, no matter how loved she was. There conversations were always a competition. Despite the common thread of the visions, the two Seers were as different as blood and water.
[ voice ]
Hello! Comes with being alive, in the first place. [ which was also a reminder that the vampire, on the other hand, wasn't. ]
[Visual]
"I was, once."
[ voice ]
[Visual]
"He made a wonderful mess," she mused, addressing herself as much as Cordelia. The blades of grass broke beneath her fingers. "I didn't think Anne had so much blood in her."
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of my glass and still chamber,
On the empty shell
of my writing desk,
I carve a name,
through ink and linen.]
En-Doul is unable to speak aloud, but the tablet is doing a good job of translating his signing into speech.
[Visual]
"Oh," she breathed, rapturous, "What a beautiful poem! Did you write it?"
[visual]
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"We're not," she corrected, "The songs are in love with us."
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Which made you wonder, really, what made them so delicious.
[visual]
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Drusilla had tried to do that, once upon a time, but she hadn't succeeded. She gave her heart away too freely. To Daddy and Darla, to William, to the Slayer. (To the Master and Morgana, perhaps? She'd have to wait and see.) Vampires could love. They could. They'd loved well, even if they didn't love wisely.
"I don't think I have one."
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[ location: aliens calling ]
It might have always been there, or it could be new, or maybe it belongs to someone. The red paint is shiny, the glass is clear and inviting. Come in, come in, the door is untouched and open and waiting, patiently, for Drusilla to step through it.
There's business to be done. Happy business!
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Still, there was something terribly compelling about the phone booth. It was new and bright. The red paint was the colour of freshly spilled blood. With her palms stained with soil, Drusilla ran a hand - curious and exploratory - over the wooden paneling. It had a warmth to it, a life to it.
In the end, she didn't have a choice. She had to step inside.
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The startling is all saved for when the vid screen (set up where a phone ought to be) flicks on to show a dapper hamster waving delightedly at her.
"Hello, hello! What brings you here, pretty lady?" With that, it leans forward and whispers, paw set coyly to the side of it's hamster mouth, "Don't worry, I already know. But there's always formalities, you see. I'm sure you understand."
Then it leans back again and claps its paws. "And don't forget to speak clearly dear."
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"You. You brought me here."
But it didn't mean to Taxon, did it?
"To the city?" she asked, "Or to your box?"
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"The box, yes! Keep up, I'm on a tight schedule."
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"You called me in," she said, "You put it in my playground."
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There would be giggling, but the hamster manages to compose its furry self before it starts. Besides, the time had come to get the show on the proverbial road.
"Missing anything lately?" The phrase could, in some other time or place, be a threat. Here, though, it's an offer, all furry sweetness and backscratching of mutual benefit. "Little, tiny thing," and it's voice gets even higher in pitch as it gestures something it thinks translates as 'small' with its paws, "teeny someone, yes?"
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"Miss Edith."
Not a question, a statement. It was the only person it could be.
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