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Obsidian Fate (Buffy the Vampire Slayer) [Mass Market Paperback]

Diana G. Gallagher (Author)
3.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (35 customer reviews)


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Book Description

Buffy the Vampire Slayer (Pocket Paperback Numbered) September 1, 1999
Eternal Night

"On the outskirts of Sunnydale, recent rains have uncovered the remains of a five hundred-year-old Spanish expedition. But one of the artifacts, a smoky mirror with an ornately carved obsidian frame, goes missing, along with the history teacher who found it. And when Buffy narrowly escapes the attack of a black jaguar while on patrol, Giles puts the gang into research mode.

An ancient volume identifies the missing mirror as a magical object formed by the Aztec god of darkness. A mortal who looks into the mirror will see his or her fate -- and can be manipulated by the evil god, who is scheming to regain his power. Taking their destinies into their own hands, the Slayer and her friends rush into a ferocious battle between light and darkness in the shadows of a massive Aztec temple, a battle against perpetual night -- and the evil that thrives in the dark hours."



Editorial Reviews

About the Author

Diana G. Gallagher lives in Florida with her husband, Marty Burke, three dogs, three cats, and a cranky parrot. A Hugo Award-winning artist, she is best known for her series Woof: The House Dragon. Dedicated to the development of the solar system's resources, she has contributed to this effort by writing and recording songs that promote and encourage humanity's movement into space.

Her first adult novel, The Alien Dark, appeared in 1990. She and Marty coauthored The Chance Factor, a STARFLEET ACADEMY VOYAGER book. In addition to other STAR TREK novels for intermediate readers, Diana has written many books in other series published by Minstrel Books, including The Secret World of Alex Mack, Are You Afraid of the Dark, and The Journey of Allen Strange. She is currently working on original young adult novels for the Archway paperback series, Sabrina, the Teenage Witch.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.

Chapter 1

Silence stalked the midnight streets of Sunnydale, pervasive and absolute, chilling the dreams of those who slept, sedating those who walked the moonlit shadows.

Buffy Summers listened, wary and waiting.

A heartbeat thundered.

A breath rasped.

A twig snapped.

Buffy whirled, stake drawn back. The quiet was getting on her nerves and she was ready for a fight, anything to relieve the tension that had her poised on the brink of a systems overload and breakdown.

Sitting cross-legged on the grass, Willow tensed. The petals she had picked off a dead daisy from the grave beside her fell from her hand.

"What?" Xander jumped up from his perch on a crumbling headstone. He swallowed hard and anxiously scanned the cemetery, looking for whatever abomination the Hellmouth had finally unleashed. Nothing moved.

Relaxing her stance, Buffy shrugged. "I thought I heard something."

"I didn't hear anything." An uncertain frown skimmed Willow's pixie face. "Did you, Xander?"

"No. Although, I was keenly aware of my toenails growing." Shoving his hands in his pockets, Xander flopped on the ground by Willow. "I hate to say it, but -- I'm bored."

"It has been kind of dull around here lately." Palming her stake, Buffy peered into the night. Too dull for too long. The hypnotic effect was as dangerous as the vampires that had gone to ground. It bred complacency and smoothed the edges of vigilant readiness, an erosion of mental conditioning a Slayer could not afford. Buffy resisted the temptation to let down her guard. Her mom would never forgive her if she checked in at the morgue on her way home.

"I wonder why?" Willow drew up her legs, wrapped her arms around them, and rested her chin on her knees.

Buffy didn't know -- and that's what bothered her. "It's like someone posted those circle signs all over town. With slashes over twin fangs."

"No vampires allowed?" Willow nodded. "Works for me, only...I don't think the vamps would take them seriously."

"Probably not." Shaking her head, Buffy moved closer. If anything threatening lurked nearby, she'd know. All was quiet on the graveyard front.

"Okay, so maybe the local chapter of the Marauding Monsters and Despicable Demons Union went on strike for a shorter work week." Xander's dark eyes narrowed when no one cracked a smile. "It could happen."

Willow laughed softly. "Monsters don't have a union -- do they?"

"Do high school girls date werewolves?"

Point to Xander. Buffy absently followed the banter between her two best friends. Her enhanced Slayer senses were attuned to her surroundings, aware of every nuance. A soft rustle in the grass. A shadow shifting on a crypt. The musky scent of composting leaves. Nothing triggered the inexplicable sixth sense that warned a Slayer of imminent danger. Even so, Buffy could not dispel the feeling that something really bad was brewing underneath the calm.

"Only me. As far as I know," Willow said, answering Xander's question. "Except -- I don't go out with Oz when he's a werewolf. I, uh -- lock him in a cage."

"A technicality," Xander countered.

"Yeah, but -- " Willow's pensive frown deepened. "That doesn't explain what's been happening."

"Nothing's been happening. No fresh graves to stake out. No newbie vampires making their debut." Xander shifted nervously. "So why am I worried?"

"Because it's creepy." Willow glanced at Buffy. Her large eyes reflected a genuine innocence, astonishing in an age of millenium madness and social disintegration, unbelievable considering the damning evils she had encountered and survived. Most relinquished their souls without a second thought.

"Definitely creepy." Buffy frowned. "Whenever the demons and walking dead guys take a break, it usually means all hell is gonna break loose. For real."

"Thanks for that reminder, Buff." Xander's sarcastic tone indicated that he was anything but grateful. "I almost forgot that the forces of evil lie low before a full-scale Armageddon assault."

"Maybe that's it and -- maybe not," Willow said hopefully. "I mean, I think I'm just getting, you know...anxious about M.I.T."

"M.I.T.?" Xander asked without the veneer of a joke to disguise his dismay. "You're going to M.I.T.?"

"You've been accepted?" Buffy tried not to show her distress, either. She had consciously not been thinking about life after graduation. It wasn't written in stone that all her friends would leave for distant universities and colleges, opting for higher education and a daily routine that didn't include actively trying to stay alive. They might decide to stay in the most dismal, dangerous town on the face of the Earth. And so what if that wish reeked of denial and delusion? It cushioned a reality she couldn't conveniently ignore. As long as evil threatened the world from the Hellmouth in Sunnydale, she wasn't going anywhere.

"Nothing! Uh-uh. No, I -- " Catching her lower lip in her teeth, Willow looked from Xander to Buffy and winced. "I, uh -- just sent a query letter. That's all. Honest."

"That's all?" Xander sputtered. "We're talking a major mileage differential here, Will. The Massachusetts Institute of Technology isn't just around the corner."

"But I haven't been accepted," Willow protested. "I, uh -- haven't even heard back!"

"Like there's any doubt?" Xander scoffed. "Every top university in the country is begging you to sign on the dotted line."

"Except M.I.T.," Willow clarified, pouting.

"Face it, Will. Unless you've been subjected to some irreversible brain drain, there is no question." Falling back on his elbows, Xander threw back his head and stared at the sky. "You'll be accepted."

"But that doesn't mean I have -- " The rest of Willow's sentence dangled unspoken, when Buffy looked up suddenly.

"Who hit the mute button?" Xander asked.

Buffy held up a hand, silencing further comment while she honed in on the barely perceptible sound she had heard this time. Someone was moving through the brush along the fence enclosing the cemetery...or something. Whatever it was, it wasn't concerned with stealth. A solid thud brought Willow and Xander to their feet.

"Okay." Dusting dry grass off the seat of his pants, Xander whispered, "Did I say bored? I didn't mean bored, I -- "

Willow nudged him and hissed at Buffy. "What is it?"

Buffy shrugged, and with a slight shake of her head adjusted her grip on the stake. She wasn't sensing anything that gave her a clue, which was a little disconcerting. Maybe there was nothing to be alarmed about, but that was no reason to toss caution aside. Especially given the recent lull in evil doings in and around town.

Motioning Willow and Xander to advance from the right, Buffy crept forward. Instinctively stepping over the flat stone grave markers hidden in the grass, she silently steered a course around the larger upright headstones, guided by a persistent rustling sound. She moved in, drawn to a park bench bathed in the glow of a nearby streetlight, nervously aware that no inexplicable rush of warning raised the fine hairs on the back of her neck. When she found and confronted the culprit, she realized that nothing in her Slayer experience could have prepared her.

A few seconds later, Xander and Willow paused just beyond the circle of light cast by the street lamp.

"Buffy?" Willow asked tentatively. "What's in there?"

Buffy stared at the captive in the metal trash container. "Well, it's got fangs and it's wearing a black mask."

"What?" Xander gasped. "Some creep turned the Lone Ranger into a vamp?"

"I don't think so, but I'm open to a second opinion." Suppressing a grin, Buffy stepped aside as Xander and Willow cautiously came forward.

"Hey!" Willow jumped when the trapped creature snarled.

"Oh, look. It's a warm fuzzy varmint vamp." Xander snarled back at the frightened raccoon.


Daniel Coltrane parked by a battery-powered camp light sitting on a sawhorse, doused the headlights, and turned off the engine. The motor in his old Dodge Colt hatchback sputtered, clunked, then rumbled before falling silent. Grabbing a flashlight and reference book off the passenger seat, he opened the door to slide out.

"Who's there!"

Through the windshield, Dan saw Lucille Frank at the top of the path leading to the dig site. Shielding her eyes with one hand, she held a camp lantern high with the other. "It's just me, Lucy! Dan Coltrane!"

"Kind of late to be dropping by, isn't it, Dan? Don't you have school tomorrow?"

"Yeah, but I'm the teacher!" Dan stepped out and slammed the car door. Bits of rust and flakes of red paint dislodged from the door panel and floated to the ground. "No one's gonna complain if I fall asleep in class. It'll just reinforce the teenage perception that history really is boring."

Lucy's laugh rippled through the stillness. "Well, can't say I'll mind the company. Get your butt on over here. I'll start another pot of coffee."

"Be right there!" As Lucy left for the large tent that served as dig headquarters, Dan reached through the back window of the Colt for his jacket. He had been warm in the heated car, but needed protection against the midnight chill at the archaeological site, especially since he intended to do a bit of digging on his own. If his theory proved correct, he had no intention of letting Lucy's boss, the pompous and much-published university professor Dr. Garret Baine, identify or remove it.

Tucking the book under his arm, Dan snapped on the flashlight to guide him up the path, around equipment, and along the edge of a deep gully. Baine wasn't the only one who'd fly into a rage if he slipped and fell into the dig area, crushing a rusted metal shield or splintering a brittle bone. Lucy would send him packing with no arguments and no hope of return.

The existence of the buried Spanish expedition on the outskirts of Sunnydale had remained the earth's secret for almost five hundred years. A recent extended period of heavy rain had eroded the gorge through a level stretch of terrain at the base of Coyote Rock Hill. Hikers had discovered the protruding tip of a sword scabbard at the bottom of the wash. They had reported the find when they realized the scabbard was belted around a human skeleton. Dr. Baine had immediately been appointed to supervise the excavation.

Dan glanced up the incline on his left. Standing three quarters of the way up the gradual slope, Coyote Rock stood in solitary vigil. The towering rock formation had been spared when a natural disaster, presumed to be a flash flood, had taken the Spanish soldiers by surprise. The sedimentary nature of their tomb had preserved everything that was not subject to deterioration from rot. Baine's crew of university students and Sunnydale Historical Society volunteers like himself had only begun to uncover the artifacts that had lain undisturbed for centuries. Most of them were Spanish in origin -- swords, shields, buckles, coins, field kits, and armor. However, despite Lucy's opinion to the contrary, the piece that had attracted his attention that afternoon was not Spanish.

It was Aztec.

And tonight he was going to prove it to her.

Slim, with dark brown eyes and dark hair blunt-cut just below her ears, Lucy Frank had a confident, fiery nature that was in direct opposition to his quiet, easygoing personality. Which was probably why he found her so fascinating. Dan grinned, feeling foolish about his infatuation with a graduate student ten years younger than his thirty-five. But not so foolish he would pass up an opportunity to take her out to dinner, if such an opportunity ever presented itself. So far, none had. Although Lucy hadn't said or done anything to make him think she might be interested beyond their mutual love of the past, she hadn't done anything to discourage his hope for a more personal relationship, either.

A low rumbling sound impacted the primal centers of Dan's brain, jarring him from his thoughts. A jolt of instinctive fear brought him up short. The flashlight beam shimmied in his shaking hand as he targeted the rock shelf that undercut the slope. The light glinted off boulder and brush and a stand of scrub trees where the stone shelf burrowed back into the ground. Nothing stirred -- except the tent flap Lucy flipped aside.

"Just because I have all night doesn't mean you have to keep me waiting."

Dan's uneasiness dissolved in the warmth of Lucy's impish smile and teasing demeanor. Shrugging off the ominous sound, he ducked into the warm tent and pulled up a folding chair. He set the flashlight and pre-Columbian reference book aside. They had another matter to settle before he confronted Lucy with his incredible theory and findings.

"Okay, I give." Letting the flap fall closed, Lucy picked up two mugs from a metal shelving unit and eased past Dan to the propane camp stove. "What brings you all the way out here in the middle of the night?"

"I suddenly had this uncontrollable craving for a cup of camp coffee." Dan took the mug she held out and inhaled deeply. "Perfect."

"Right." Eyeing him curiously, Lucy swung a long leg over another folding chair and sat with a heavy sigh. "Actually, I don't care why you came, Dan. I'm glad to see you."

"You are?" Dan looked up too quickly, startled by the sincerity in her low, husky voice. Cursing himself for acting like a love-sick teenager, he raised an eyebrow to cover his pleased discomfort.

"Absolutely." Lucy leaned forward, gripping her coffee mug in both hands. "Do you have any idea how boring all-night guard duty is?"

"Let me guess." Dan frowned thoughtfully. Fearing theft and vandalism, Baine had delegated the overnight watch responsibility to Lucy and two undergraduates on a rotating basis. Occasionally, the professor took a turn, but not with any regularity. "It's so tedious you don't mind having coffee with a short, stocky, hopelessly dull guy, huh?"

I didn't just say that. Yes, I did. Inwardly, Dan groaned. He would have rolled his blue eyes if Lucy hadn't been staring directly into them.

"Who said you were dull?" Lucy asked indignantly, not expecting an answer. "I wish I had had high school teachers as enthusiastic about their subjects as you are, Dan. My American history teacher, Mr. Chapman? He was so dull he collected cobwebs in his beard during class, time slowed to such a crawl."

"I can't imagine."

"I know." Sitting back, Lucy blew on her steaming coffee. "So what's so important it couldn't wait until tomorrow?"

Dan hesitated, smoothing back his blond hair and shifting into a more serious tone and manner. "For one thing, the History Club field trip is on for this weekend. I'll be here with my students and their gear Friday after school."

"Oh, boy." Lucy sagged and shook her head. "You know how Dr. Baine feels about that. He'll be furious."

"How the good professor feels about it isn't a factor, Lucy -- unless he makes trouble. If Baine refuses to cooperate or prevents my kids' from working on the dig, Mayor Wilkens has assured me he'll be replaced."

Lucy sensed he wasn't kidding and just nodded. No one knew the identity of the person or persons funding the excavation, with the exception of Richard Wilkens III. The site was on undeveloped city property, and the mayor had had no trouble convincing the City Council to approve the project, since the expenses wouldn't be coming out of municipal coffers. Consequently, whatever conditions the anonymous benefactor chose to impose were accepted without question. And he, she, or they had chosen to encourage local participation, especially that of Sunnydale's student population.

"Maybe I'd better tell him, Dan. I've had a lot more practice weathering his lordship's tirades."

"You sure you want to go out on that limb?" Dan's concern for Lucy was not unfounded. Baine perceived her -- and anyone else with a potential for brilliance -- as a threat to his undisputed reputation as the foremost authority on southwestern U.S. and Central and South American cultural anthropology. She was writing her doctoral thesis on pre-Columbian myth and prophecy as they related to the coming of the Conquistadors. Being part of the Coyote Rock dig could be extremely beneficial to her career. Baine, however, could dismiss her at any time -- for any reason.

"Not a problem." A sly smile enhanced the sparkle in Lucy's dark eyes. "I'll just hint that if he's removed, I'm the most likely candidate to take charge of the project."

Dan started to laugh, then caught the subtle shift in Lucy's expression. Her jaw clenched and the sparkle in her eyes hardened to a glint. She would, he realized, like nothing better than to supervise the excavation in Baine's place.

"What's the second thing?"

"Hmmm?" Dan drew a momentary blank, then remembered the primary reason for his midnight visit. He picked up the reference book, flipped it open to a bookmarked page, and held it out to her. "I found something I think will interest you."

Lucy frowned, puzzled by the photo of a beaded cloak. "This was probably worn by someone in the Aztec aristocracy, but I don't understand the significance."

Dan pointed to a pattern in the center of the cloak, a black circle framed in turquoise and gold. "I think that's a representation of Tezcatlipoca's smoking mirror. Look familiar?"

"I don't recognize -- " Lucy's head snapped up. "You don't think -- "

"That the mirror is buried roughly a hundred feet from where we're sitting?" Dan nodded. "And if I'm right, it's got to be buried again. Some place where it will never be found."

Lucy stared at him as though he'd completely lost his mind. "No way. Dr. Baine knows we've found something unusual. He won't stand by doing nothing if it suddenly turns up missing."

"I think preserving the world as we know it is a little more important than the potential repercussions, don't you?"

"Come on, Dan!" Lucy laughed. "Tezcatlipoca's smoking mirror is a myth! And even if it isn't, there's no chance it's that artifact out there. We're fifteen hundred miles north of any Aztec Empire territory -- "

A clatter of rocks cascading down the nearby slope aborted Lucy's argument. Hushing Dan with a finger to her lips, she gave the book back, stood, and picked up the camp lantern.

"Where are you going?" Dan hissed as Lucy moved by him toward the opening in the tent.

"It's probably nothing, but I've got to check it out. Don't worry. I'm loaded with mace." Lucy patted a small aerosol spray can stuffed in the back pocket of her jeans.

"I'm coming with you." Dan picked up his flashlight.

Lucy hesitated, then shrugged. "You take the front. I'll circle around back. Can't hurt to be cautious, I guess." Then she disappeared into the night.

Dan paused to grab a trowel off the metal shelves and ducked out after her with an expanded agenda. Sunnydale at night was not midnight-stroller-friendly. People had mysteriously vanished or died at an alarming rate, a fact that didn't seem to bother the local police and residents of the town as much as it did him. He wasn't worried about the History Club camp-out that weekend. He and four Historical Society members would be supervising the students at night, and there was safety in numbers. However, although it was probably the rain-soaked, settling ground or a prowling coyote that had dislodged the rocks, he wanted to be on hand should teenaged vandals or someone with more malicious intent be on the property tonight.

Secondly, it had become clear during Lucy's argument that he couldn't ask her to help dispose of the artifact. Even if she believed him and was willing, her reputation and career aspirations would be ruined with a felony accusation on her record. He was prepared to risk his job and imprisonment for grand larceny to insure that the obsidian mirror of Aztec legend was lost forever.

A quick scan of the area between the tent and his car revealed nothing usual. Behind the tent, Dan could see the glow from Lucy's lantern. She was moving at an unhurried pace in a systematic patrol pattern and obviously didn't sense any danger. Still, he held his breath when the light disappeared behind the large water tank that stood to one side behind the tent, and breathed easier when it emerged again. Satisfied that Lucy was safe and the site secure, Dan headed toward the gully.

The crevasse carved by floodwaters rushing through the original shallow wash measured six to ten feet across, from three to ten feet deep and ran for several hundred yards along the base of the slope. The excavation had been confined to the area in front of the protruding rock shelf, where skeletal remains and equipment seemed concentrated. The golden edge of the unique artifact had been uncovered a short distance from the initial find.

Scrambling down a short metal ladder, Dan quickly made his way over the drying mud with the flashlight beam aimed low. He had to remove and hide the mirror before Lucy wondered where he had gone. He expected her to tell Baine and the police of his intentions when the theft was discovered tomorrow, to prove her innocence -- and because she might feel betrayed. He just didn't want anything to interfere right now. Besides, his suspicions might very well be wrong, and it would be tragic to spoil his slim chances of a dinner date for nothing.

When Dan had counted eighteen paces, he shined the flashlight on the mud wall to his right and quickly found the edge of the gold object. He carefully dug a hole in the opposite bank, shoved the end of the flashlight inside and adjusted the beam to light the work area. Oddly, more of the object was exposed than he remembered from when they had shut down the dig at dusk. Only a crescent of black glass was visible below the etched gold frame with inlaid turquoise, but it was enough to confirm his theory. The object was identical -- down to the last beaded detail -- to the image in the book.

Tezcatlipoca's smoking mirror.

"Dan! Where are you?"

Thrilled and anxious, Dan ignored Lucy's call and brushed more of the dirt away with his fingers. He started when a large chunk of dried mud fell off and the loosened sediment gave way beneath the mirror. Reacting on reflex, he squatted with his hands out to catch the obsidian-and-gold treasure, but it didn't fall. It dangled, clutched in the death grip of a white, skeletal hand.

Sitting down, Dan struggled to catch his breath and calm his pounding heart. His pulse was still racing when he heard a low, predatory growl above him. On the edge of the gully, silhouetted in moonlight, a black jaguar with glittering gold eyes stared back at him.

Dan Coltrane's terrified shriek froze in his throat and the mud wall collapsed as the huge cat sprang.

Copyright © 1999 by Twentieth Century Fox film Corporation. All rights reserved.


Product Details

  • Mass Market Paperback: 304 pages
  • Publisher: Simon Spotlight Entertainment (September 1, 1999)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0671039296
  • ISBN-13: 978-0671039295
  • Product Dimensions: 6.6 x 4.2 x 0.9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 6.4 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 3.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (35 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,635,782 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

 

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35 Reviews
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Another great Buffy book, January 8, 2000
By 
This review is from: Obsidian Fate (Buffy the Vampire Slayer) (Mass Market Paperback)
When I bought this book from the bookstore, I thought it was just another good book about the Slayer. I learned quickly that books aren't always what they seem after reading Obsidian Fate. The relationship with Buffy and Angel was dipicted in a way that I could have never thought posible. She really expressed what I wanted to see happen with their on/off relationship. The plot of the book kept me on the edge of my seat until the end. Aztec ruins, a magick mirror, having the Scooby gang get captured, all of it was really thrilling. And seeing Oz and Willow's relationship grwo though it all was amazing. I hope she will continue to write Buffy books.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars A good time waster, December 15, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Obsidian Fate (Buffy the Vampire Slayer) (Mass Market Paperback)
Despite some of the fairly negative comments from other reviewers, I enjoyed this book. The plot's a little flimsy, and Gallagher can overwrite just a wee tad. But on the positive side, Gallagher shows every sign of actually having watched the TV series and of having some knowledge of the characters she's supposed to be writing about (unlike some other Buffy authors). She's very good at capturing Buffy, Angel and Giles, and her Cordelia -- despite having somehow slipped back into first series le bitche grande mode -- is a high point. Her Willow is not as good. (It's strange how Buffy novelists have so much trouble capturing the wily Willow charms. Perhaps it's because Willow, more than any other character, really needs Alyson Hannigan's flittery speech patterns to bring her fully to life.) I'm unlikely to read this again, but it did pass a quiet Sunday afternoon very pleasantly indeed.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Aztec Antics Appealing, July 18, 2000
By 
Ann E. Nichols (Sierra Vista, AZ United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Obsidian Fate (Buffy the Vampire Slayer) (Mass Market Paperback)
This book sets the scene with a nice historical prologue. Given Diego's thoughts before he falls under the spell of the mirror, I couldn't summon up a drop of pity for his ugly fate. Besides, he was supposed to die horribly to set the stage, like all those unknowns in the teasers for "The X-Files" episodes. As such, he did his job. Early on we have a brave history teacher who knows the deadly threat the mirror poses and is prepared to risk everything to end that threat. Does he stand a chance? Is his name Buffy? We are given plenty of hints that Dr. Blaine is a pompous jerk before he even shows up, and the obnoxious doctor lives down to his billing. I'm a little sorry that the author didn't write the details of the scene where the Mayor takes the doctor down a peg because it would have been fun to read. Does Blaine deserve what happens to him? You decide. Before the book reaches its climax, the Scooby Gang and assorted extras will be subjected to the mirror's power. It's interesting to see why some sucumb and some hold firm. I've been interested in the Aztecs since I first read an article about them in "National Geographic many years ago, so I liked the glimpses into Aztec life and religion. Of course we know that all of the regulars have to come out of this alive, so there was absolutely no suspense over Buffy's prophetic dream about Angel. However, I thought the author picked an ingenious way out. Certainly the scenes of everyone trying to escape destruction would have looked good on the show. (I laughed aloud at the crack about the "USS Banquet Table"). Similarly, knowing what was to come in the episodes added a little spice to Cordelia's bragging about Stanford and Mr. Trick's assumption that he'll last through the ages. I had no trouble believing in Dem. I was amused by the way he saw Giles as creepy and laughed heartily at the chapter where Dem puts two and two together and gets one. I wasn't disappointed by his fate. I'd rate this a good adventure. Random comments: Except for p.111, every mention of Angelus is incorrectly spelled "Angeles". Why? Loved having the author remember that Giles goes for jelly doughnuts. Was even happier to see the correct date for the 3rd millenium [01 Jan 2001] given. The end of chapter three was quite spooky. Chuckled at Buffy's imaginings about Giles dealing with Ms. Frank, who looks so much like his lost Jenny, on p.125. The description of Cordelia's fighting method was good, too. It may be only a coincidence about scientist Lucy Frank's name, but in the late 18th-early 19th century there was an improving book for children called HARRY AND LUCY by the Edgeworths. Their daughter continued their work and a boy named Frank was added. It was nice to see Joyce in the swing of things.
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