XENA: WARRIOR PRINCESS "LIFE FROM DEATH" An Original Xena Story
Copyright 1996 by Patricia L. Ennis Jadzia7627@aol.com
(DAx =/\=)
Katchoo@ix.netcom.com
Okay, here is the usual stuff:
The names and titles in this story are the sole property of MCA. I have
borrowed them
here in an attempt to write fanfiction. No copyright infringement is
intended. The story
itself, and all aspects of it, other than those listed above, belong
to the author, Patricia L.
Ennis. This story may not be sold and may only be archived with permission
or by those
for whom it was written.
Also, this story is intended for mature adults (Over 18) who do not
object to graphic (Well,
semi graphic, maybe...no, it's graphic.) love scenes between partners
of the same sex. If
this offends you, or you are under 18, do not continue.
This is my first attempt at Xena fiction, I primarily write DS9 fanfiction,
so I would greatly
appreciate any comments you might have. Thanks!
This story takes place immediately after the happenings in the Thessalean
Temple, from
the episode "Is There A Doctor In The House?"
May the Prophets Walk With You!
Jadzia7627 AKA DAx =/\=
You can find more stories by Patricia, and a whole lot other authors, at her web site Obsession's Home Page
*************
"Life From Death"
by Patricia L. Ennis
It was nearly dark when Xena glanced up at Gabrielle, trying to make
out her features in
the closing dusk. Taking in the red-golden hair that framed a too-pale
face, she pulled on
Argo's reins, bringing her to a quick stop.
"Hey!" Gabrielle grabbed onto the saddle horn. "What are you doing?"
She tried to
regain her balance and ended up with Xena's hand against her side to
steady her. She
looked at her warrior friend curiously. "I thought we were going to
try for Atwir before
nightfall."
Xena ignored her as she lead Argo off the road and into a sheltering
copse of trees. She
had pulled most of their equipment off and was reaching up for Gabrielle
before she
answered. "You're pale." Her voice was very flat. "You need food, warmth
and sleep."
She looked around the small clearing, cocking her head to one side
to listen to the
steadily increasing night sounds. "Atwir isn't going anywhere. We need
to make camp and
this is as good a place as any." She pointed towards a particularly
dark area about 75 feet
away. "There's a river through those trees, I want to try to catch
some fish tomorrow. Our
dried meat is running low."
Gabrielle sighed, but let herself be lifted from the saddle. As Xena
helped her down, she
smiled reassuringly, a very sweet, but rare, occurrence and Gabrielle
found herself
fascinated by how gentle the woman could be...when she tried. "You
know, Xena," She
made a concerted effort to keep her voice steady. "I'm not a child.
I can get down from a
horse on my own." As she slid to the ground, their eyes met and she
wanted to take the
words back. For a moment, no more than a second, she thought she saw
hurt in those
liquid blue eyes, but then Xena's face hardened, and it was gone.
"You're still hurt, Gabrielle. If I don't try to keep you from killing yourself, who will?"
The young bard nodded silently, angry with herself, and went to pick
up her bedroll. As
she bent down, a hard pain slammed into her abdomen, causing her to
double over and fall
to her knees.
"Gabrielle!" Xena was at her side instantly, grabbing her shoulders
to keep her from
slumping to the ground. "Leave it! I said I would get it for you!"
She took a deep breath
and gentled her voice. "You can't recover from a wound like this in
just a couple of days.
You nearly died, Gabrielle." She swallowed hard when she remembered
that Gabrielle
HAD died. "You've got to take it easy." She picked her up gently and
carried her over to
a fallen tree where she had been planning to build their fire. Leaning
her against it, she
lifted the bandage that bound the bard's abdomen and pulled out a rag
and flask. "You've
torn open the wound." She tugged the dagger out of her bodice and placed
it between
Gabrielle's teeth. "This will hurt, bite down when it does." She pulled
the cork from the
flask and poured a liberal amount of it's contents into the deep cut
in her side, hearing the
bard's sharp intake of breath and the sound of her teeth hitting metal.
Before the initial
pain had even passed, she had pulled out a needle and thread and re-sewed
the opening.
She cleaned the skin around it, and then turned her attention to the
wound on Gabrielle's
neck.
Once again, the gentleness of the warrior astounded her. The wound cleanings
that the
Thessalean Monks had given her had been very thorough, but extremely
painful, almost
to the point of causing her to pass out. The hands that touched her
now were soft, and so
very gentle, causing only the briefest moments of pain in the worst
parts of the wound.
Xena had thrown her hair to one side, to keep it out of her eyes as
she worked, and
Gabrielle found herself studying her face. Her skin was dark from years
in the sun, but it
had a look of softness to it. The dark skin caused her eyes to stand
out even more clearly,
making them almost as blue as the clearest sapphire she had ever seen.
She followed the
line of an adorable nose to the red, full lips beneath it. They were
parted and moved of
their own accord as Xena continued to examine the wounds that marked
her body. She
wondered briefly what they would feel like, what they might taste like,
and then tore her
gaze away. "Well" She thought to herself. "These thoughts are certainly
new." Shaking
her head, she tried to figure out why she felt so nervous. It was just
Xena. Right.
"Am I hurting you?"
"What?" She started, feeling slightly guilty, then shook her head quickly
when Xena
repeated her question. "No, why?"
"You keep shaking your head." She looked at the bard closely. "Are you
sure you're all
right?"
"Yes...I'm fine." She tried to smile. "Just thinking." She picked up
a water skin and took
a drink.
"About what?"
Gabrielle choked. Dropping the skin to the ground, she grabbed her side
as she coughed
violently. The pain was intense and she squeezed her eyes shut against
the tears that
threatened to run down her cheeks. The warrior thumped her lightly
on the back until the
coughing subsided. "I'm okay now." She wheezed.
"What happened?" Xena looked at her in concern. "You're not having trouble
breathing,
are you?" A light fluttering of panic started in the bottom of her
stomach as she studied
Gabrielle's face.
"No." She sighed. "I just...swallowed wrong." She turned her head away
to hide a flush
that crept onto her cheeks.
Xena continued to watch her for a few seconds longer, before retrieving
the water skin
from the ground. She took a long drink, thinking to herself that Gabrielle
didn't lie very
well. She thought briefly about questioning the bard, but decided to
let it go. Enough time
for that when she was feeling better. "I'm going to make the fire and
set up camp. If you
know what's good for you, you'll stay right where you are."
Gabrielle nodded, thinking she had angered her friend enough for one
evening. She
watched as Xena went about her work, wondering if her lie had been
convincing.
Somehow, she knew that it hadn't.
There wasn't much to setting up the camp, and what there was, Xena did
efficiently.
Within an hour, their bedrolls were laid out, the fire was blazing,
and a rabbit was cooking
on a spit. Xena sighed. With the work done, there was nothing to occupy
her mind, which
meant that it would go right back to Gabrielle. As much as she didn't
want to think about
what had happened at the Thestilean Temple, she didn't seem to be able
to keep her mind
from returning there. She had never felt that helpless in her life,
and helplessness was not
a feeling that the warrior princess was used to dealing with. But standing
there, with
her...she paused in her thoughts, wondering what Gabrielle really was
to her. 'Best friend'
didn't even seem close to covering it. But standing there, with Gabrielle
dead in her arms,
she had felt her heart break, something she hadn't experienced in a
very long time. She
glanced over at Gabrielle and thought about all of the times she had
tried to leave her
behind, telling herself it was for the younger woman's own good. But
now, she wondered if
she had really been thinking about herself. By removing the one person
that she knew
could get through her defenses, she would remove the risk of losing
her later on.
She studied the bard's face as though she were a statue, watching the
firelight flicker in
her eyes as Gabrielle watched the flames. There was something so soft
about her, so
trusting, so...touchable. She realized that she wanted to hold her,
to feel her strawberry
blonde hair against her skin, and trace the smooth planes of her face.
Unbidden, the
memories of the Temple rushed in, showing her Gabrielle's face as it
had been, white,
still...splattered with her own blood. She closed her eyes as a wave
of panic ran through
her body, ending in a fierce grip around her heart. She waited for
the feeling to pass,
steeling herself against the sick feeling she knew would follow. Leaning
heavily against a
nearby tree trunk, she breathed in the night air, trying to slow the
pounding of her heart.
Once she had regained her composure, she turned back to the fire and
found Gabrielle
watching her, concern showing plainly in her expressive blue eyes.
"Xena...are you all
right? You look kind of pale."
Xena was silent for a moment, wondering what Gabrielle would do if she
told her the truth.
With a sigh, she headed towards the river. "I'm fine, Gabrielle. I'm
going to take a bath."
"But...what about your armor?" Gabrielle called after her.
"I can manage for one night, Gabrielle. I did have to take it off before
I met you, you
know." The silence that greeted her words made her turn around. The
young woman was
staring at the ground. No emotions showed on her face, but Xena knew
she had hurt her.
With a sigh, she walked back to the camp. "You know," She reach behind
her back and
fumbled intentionally. "These buckles are a lot higher than I remember.
Of course, I'm
also out of practice. Guess I could use your help after all." She sat
cross legged in front of
the bard, turning her back before she could see Gabrielle's grin.
At first, it just felt like tugging as Gabrielle loosened the laces
and buckles that held her
leather tunic together. But as she got further beneath the layers of
clothing, she began to
feel the bards fingers through the thin fabric of her undergarment.
She closed her eyes,
savoring the softness of Gabrielle's hands until they hesitantly reached
to remove the last
of her clothing. "No." Her voice had an edge that she didn't understand.
"I mean...I need
to wear something down to the river." She was startled when she saw
something close to
regret flit across Gabrielle's features, but then, she had seen relief
as well. Picking up a
clean tunic, she stood to go.
"Xena?"
She looked back to find Gabrielle holding out her bodice dagger. "Keep
it with you." Her
voice was low, almost husky and the bard's eyes took on a questioning
look. "This area is
free of large predators, but I want you to have some sort of weapon,
just in case."
"Xena?"
"What, Gabrielle?" She was sure her impatience was showing, but she
couldn't help it.
More than anything, she needed to get away and think. A cold river
would do much to cool
her blood, which seemed on fire in her veins.
The young bard flinched and looked away, into the trees. "What about
me?" She
whispered, almost pleading. "I feel so...dirty."
Xena's face took on a much softer expression as she knelt next to Gabrielle
and brushed
fine hairs off of her forehead. "I'm sorry. I should have realized."
She picked up an empty
waterskin and slung it over her shoulder. Finding several large rocks,
she tossed them
into the edge of the fire and smiled. "I'll warm up some water when
I get back. All right?"
Gabrielle smiled, "Thank you."
The warrior nodded and headed down to the river.
Gabrielle watched her until she was out of sight, wondering at the pleasure
she felt in
looking at her friend. It was just as confusing as the thoughts about
her lips. Oh, she had
watched Xena before, but with a Bard's vision. Taking in the events
that she would weave
into tales or studying her to learn how to use a staff or throw a Chakram.
This felt very
different. With a sigh, she closed her eyes and waited.
The water was freezing.
She hadn't checked it before jumping in, and regretted it immediately.
She had wanted
cold, but not this cold! Oh well. Too late now.
With chattering teeth, she submerged herself, rubbing soap into her
hair and over her
body, trying to rush as fast as she could. She had hoped that the water
would calm her
down, but the effect was exactly the opposite. Every inch of her skin
felt alive and every
nerve ending sang as the water caressed her body. After a few minutes
of brisk swimming
to tire herself out, she filled the waterskin and pulled her tunic
on.
When she reached the camp, Gabrielle was asleep. She kicked the stones
out of the fire
and laid the skin on top of it. Shaking the bard's shoulder, she grinned.
"I thought you
wanted a bath."
"I do.." Gabrielle mumbled and began to pull off her shirt.
"Here, let me help." Xena reached down and slowly peeled the shirt away
from her skin,
being careful of the freshly sown wound in her side, then unlaced her
skirt and pulled it
away. She folded the clothes and set them aside. Turning back, she
gazed at the young
woman before her, her breath catching in her throat.
The moon was kind to Gabrielle, or rather, kind to Xena. It was full
and shown down
brightly, causing her pale skin to almost glow. And Gabrielle was beautiful.
Her breasts
were full and very firm, her stomach flat, her hips slender. She had
seen her this way
before, when they would swim together, but somehow, this time it was
different.
She cleared her throat and grabbed a rag and soap, pulling the skin
from the rocks as she
knelt down beside her. She soaked the rag, and rubbed soap into it
until it lathered, then
looked to Gabrielle. "Tell me if I hurt you." She whispered.
She started with her shoulders, rubbing them gently with the cloth ,
then moved down to
her breasts. When she circled around and then finally over them, she
thought she felt
Gabrielle shake.
"That's nice." The bard whispered.
"Mmmhmmm." Xena didn't speak, but hummed under her breath. Her attention
was
entirely on what she was doing, her eyes following the trail of the
rag as she ran it over
Gabrielle's skin. She finished with the bard's upper body and re-soaked
the rag before
running it down her stomach, circling around the wound she had already
cleaned. As she
reached the girl's abdomen, she looked up expectantly, her eyes widening
at what she
saw.
Gabrielle's head was tilted back, her mouth slightly open, her breath
softly ragged. Xena
swallowed, she looked so much like a woman would, as you were making
love to her. She
let her fingers trail up the bard's chest to touch her face, and Gabrielle
immediately
opened her eyes. "I'm sorry!" She rushed. "The water just felt so good..."
She looked at
Xena with fear in her eyes.
"I know, Gabrielle." The warrior sighed. "Do you want me to continue,
or do you want to
do the rest yourself?"
Gabrielle glance down to where Xena's hand rested, against the skin
of her abdomen,
right above her patch of red-blonde hair. Her heart began to pound
as she contemplated
her choices. She knew she would never be able to hide the pleasure
she was feeling if she
allowed Xena to continue her gentle ministrations. But the idea of
stopping was not that
appealing either. "I...can you?" She turned her face away to hide her
flush. "Slowly?"
Xena nodded, astounded that Gabrielle wanted her to continue. She knelt
between the
bard's legs and let water run down her body from the skin. Trying to
be gentle, she
washed her calves and thighs, before moving up to the triangle of pale
hair between her
legs. There she slowed her hand, running the cloth gently over her
sensitive areas. When
she pulled the rag up to re-soak it again, her fingers accidentally
grazed Gabrielle's
swollen clitoris, causing a shudder to run through her small frame.
Xena pulled away,
surprised at the slick warmth that had touched her hand. She looked
into Gabrielle's
panicked eyes and brought her fingers to her lips. She inhaled their
scent deeply and then
slipped them into her mouth.
"Xena.." Gabrielle's voice was husky, and she remembered the way Xena's
had sounded
before she headed to the river. With wild hope, she placed her hand
against the warrior's
chest. "I think I'm in love with you, and I...I want..."
Xena closed her eyes against the words, but knew it was too late. The
little girl she had
saved so long ago was gone. She had been replaced by a young woman
who had stolen her
heart. She couldn't remember exactly when it had happened, she only
had the certainty
that she had loved Gabrielle for quite a while now. She looked down
at the pale skinned
hand that ran in circles over her breasts. "Are you sure, Gabrielle?
I won't be able to
stop, once we begin. I think I've wanted this for too long." She looked
into the bard's pale
blue eyes. "You can't go back, Gabrielle. Just because I'm not a man,
doesn't mean it
won't count."
Gabrielle laughed. "I know that, Xena. Why do you think I have waited
this long? I
wanted it to be you. It's always been you..." A pained look crossed
her face and she
reached to her side. "But.."
"Don't worry," The warrior's smile was private, her voice soft.. "Women
aren't like men,
Gabrielle. Everything is gentle...if we want it to be."
With a nod, Gabrielle laid back and took a deep breath. She thought
briefly about closing
her eyes, but decided against it when Xena pulled her tunic off. She
had seen the warrior
half naked many times, but never completely so, and never for her.
Xena lowered herself on top of her bard, making sure to stay off of
her hurt side. With a
slowness that made the young woman crazy, she brought her lips down
until they tasted
the sweetness of Gabrielle's mouth.
A bolt of desire swept through the bard's body, causing her to push
up against the warrior
as she opened her mouth to taste her tongue. Their first kiss was slow,
long and sweet.
She thought she could never get enough of Xena's lips, until the warrior
trailed them down
her neck and closed them on one of her nipples. It was like nothing
she had ever
experienced. A deep burning ache started in the pit of her stomach,
causing her to raise
her arms and twine her fingers in Xena's hair. With strength built
from pure passion, she
pulled the warriors head against her as she arched her back off the
ground. She could feel
Xena smile against her skin.
"So sweet, Gabrielle." She brought her hand to the bard's other breast,
using her fingers
to pinch her nipple lightly as her teeth bit gently on the other one.
"You have wanted this,
haven't you? But not as much as I have.." She ran her free hand up
Gabrielle's thigh,
bringing it up until it could take the place of her lips on the young
woman's chest. Then
she slid her mouth down, dipping her tongue into her navel as she went.
When she
reached the top of her pale, fragrant hair, she laid her cheek against
it, inhaling the
sweetest scent she had ever known. "Gabrielle..."
"Please..." Was the only word the bard could remember.
With a sigh, she lowered her lips onto Gabrielle, parting her so that
her tongue could
reach into her depths. Her lips found nothing but softness and warmth,
covered in a
sweetness that was like nectar against her tongue. She opened her eyes
to watch the
bard's face as continued to stoke her with her tongue. Gabrielle's
eyes had closed, her
breath was coming in gasps, punctuated with the whispering of Xena's
name. She watched
closely as she brought her hand down, circling the opening that led
inside her. Slowly, she
entered her, being as gentle as she could until the pain left Gabrielle's
face and a look of
wonder replaced it. The look turned to ecstasy as Xena's speed increased
and she
matched the strokes of her tongue with the strokes of her hand. It
was only a few minutes
before Gabrielle's back arched, her hips bucked, and she fell back
gasping.
"Xe..Xena....St..stop...I can't take anymore."
The warrior raised herself up to lay by her side, circling her nipples
with the wetness on
her hand. When she leaned in to kiss her, Gabrielle could smell her
scent on Xena's lips
and touched them slowly, tentatively, with her tongue. After her first
taste, she smiled and
looked into Xena's eyes. "What about you?"
"I'm fine, Gabrielle." Xena laughed tiredly. "In fact, I'm perfect."
She wrapped her arms
around the bard and pulled her close to her chest.
"But, I want to-"
"Shhh." Xena placed her still damp fingers against Gabrielle's lips.
"Enough time for that
later. I'm not going any where," She tightened her embrace. "And neither
are you. Rest,
get your strength back." Her smile lit up the darkness. "Trust me,
you're going to need
it."
End Part I
******************************************************
Part 2
Gabrielle let go of sleep slowly, opening her eyes to a sky still dark
blue with the receding
night. She could smell water on the softly blowing wind, and it helped
her to remember
where she was. With a long sigh, she ran her fingers through her hair
and thought about
her dream. Her dream where Xena touched her gently, covering her with
the softness of
her lips...
It took her a few moments to realize that the coolness she felt was
the breeze caressing
her naked skin. Her eyes widened slightly and traveled to the pallet
she was laying on.
Buried beneath a blanket, she saw a few locks of dark chestnut hair
falling across a
beautiful forehead. Her heart began to pound in her chest as she accepted
the fact that
her dream had been real. That Xena had bathed her and made love to
her in the
moonlight.
"I'm not a virgin anymore." She whispered softly, smiling at the absurd
pleasure she got
in being able to say those words. "You were my first."
With a tenderness born of the love in her heart, she leaned down and
briefly touched her
lips to Xena's, running a finger across her cheek before rising to
throw a log on the fire.
She felt a strong rumbling in her stomach and looked at the spit where
a black lump was
still hanging. With a soft laugh, she threw it into the bushes for
the wolves and searched
through their packs for food. She found only a few sticks of dried
meat and looked at them
without enthusiasm. A morning such as this deserved a feast, she thought,
not the dried
remnants of some animals carcass. Digging further, she found her knife
and placed it into
the groove she had cut in her staff, tying a leather thong around it
to hold it in place. She
also found the roots Xena liked to make into tea, and set them in a
pan with some water to
steep while she was gone.
That done, she pulled on Xena's tunic and headed down to the river,
using the same path
the warrior had used the night before, now made visible by the pale
light. When she
reached her destination, she laid down on the riverbank, supporting
her body with her
elbows so that she could turn her face up to the approaching sun. Closing
her eyes, she
thought about the tunic she was wearing and the woman who had worn
it the night before.
When Xena had returned from the river, there had been something in
her eyes,
something...reachable. And somehow, her body had known it. She'd had
no knowledge of
sex, or what to expect, but what had happened had exceeded even her
dreams. She
thought back to the many dreams she had had of her friend, the first
few had been images
of herself saving the warrior's life, of being useful. The other's
had involved them growing
closer, and Gabrielle gasped slightly as she realized that her dreams
had mirrored her
life, only her life had ended up surpassing them, taking Xena as a
lover before she had in
her sleep.
Her musings carried her way beyond dawn and she felt her fair cheeks
begin to heat up in
the morning sun. At least, she thought it was the morning sun. It might
have been the last
few thoughts that had run through her mind about her warrior and finding
out what it might
be like to make love to her, to touch her, to...taste her.
With a sigh, she stood and stripped off the now-beloved tunic, one she
would surely weave
a story around some day, and stepped slowly into the river. She was
able to ignore the
pain in her side until the cold water covered it, then she had to grit
her teeth against the
hard ache that ran through her body. After it had passed, she raised
her staff and stood
very still. Waiting a few minutes, she saw dark shapes begin to move
around her feet. She
let several of the shadows go by, knowing they would not be big enough
and that she
would probably only have the strength to do this once. She had just
started to shiver when
a large shape swam between her calves, grazing the skin on one of them
with it's gill as it
went. With a powerful downward stroke, she slammed the makeshift spear
through it's
body and into the sand underneath.
She smiled slightly, knowing it wasn't really the way Xena did it, but
the result was the
same, if you didn't count the hole. She tried to pull her staff up
but the pain in her side
prevented her. With a frown, she grabbed the fish by the tail and dragged
it out of the
river with her left hand. Reaching the bank, she laid on the sand and
allowed the sun to
dry her skin. When most of the moisture was gone, she slipped the tunic
over her head
and went about cleaning the fish. After removing the skin, bones, and
anything that
resembled innards, she had two very large filets, which she wrapped
in leaves and headed
back to camp. Along the way, she found herbs growing wild and picked
the ones she would
need, being careful to only take the leaves so that the plant itself
would continue to
flourish.
She was surprised to find Xena still asleep when she reached the fire.
Usually by this time
the warrior princess was up polishing her armor or drinking her tea.
Gabrielle took pride
in that, hoping she had some part in her being so tired. She sprinkled
the herbs onto the
fish and re-wrapped them, setting them in the fire to cook. The green
leaves would keep
the meat from burning while the herbs gave it flavor. A wonderful aroma
filled the air and
she had just finished making Xena's tea when the warrior finally awoke.
Gabrielle smiled when Xena looked just as confused as she had felt that
morning. She
laughed out loud when the warrior looked under the blanket at her own
naked body. "It
was real." Her look became tender. "It was too wonderful to be a dream."
"I'm glad you think so too." She stretched, as immodest as ever, and
Gabrielle felt as
though her eyes were unable to move from the soft, tan skin that rippled
over the warriors
muscles. Xena reached out and flipped Gabrielle's hair, which had come
in dangerous
proximity to the fire, back over her shoulder. With a grin, she teased,
"Let me get
dressed before you burn off something we both might miss."
The bard flushed and looked away, a guilty smile playing on her lips.
She still watched the
warrior out of the corner of her eye as she looked around for her tunic
and then realized
that Gabrielle had it on. "Well, I don't think I am going to fit in
your clothes, Gabrielle."
"Find something, because you're not getting this back."
"Really?" The warrior's eyebrow arched. "How many dinars do you want
to bet that I'll
be able to wrestle it off of your body?"
Gabrielle swallowed. "I didn't know you could wrestle..."
"I have many skills."
The lecherous look on Xena's face made Gabrielle laugh. "All right,
you can try after
breakfast. Here, put this on for now." She pulled one of the Warrior's
older shirts from
her pack and threw it to her.
"Hmph." Xena looked at it for a few moments before smiling and tugging
it on. "What
smells so good?"
"Fish!" Gabrielle smiled proudly. "I caught it this morning. While YOU were asleep!"
The smile she had expected did not come, instead there was a look of
anger. "You went
fishing? While I was asleep? Gabrielle, do you have any idea how dangerous
that was?"
"It wasn't that dangerous," The bard shook her head. "There isn't anyone
around here
for miles."
"I'm not worried about people, Gabrielle." The warrior advance on her
and Gabrielle sat
back on her heels. "What about animals? Snakes? What if you passed
out and drowned?"
She knelt next to the bard and pulled her tunic up to examine the wound.
"What if this
gets infected? Have you cleaned it since you went in the river?"
The bard looked at the ground. "No."
Xena sighed softly and stroked the younger woman's drying hair. "I'm
sorry, Gabrielle. I
know you meant well. But water can carry sickness, especially if gets
into an open wound.
Let me clean it for you..."
"After breakfast?" She asked hopefully. "I'm really hungry. In case
you forgot, neither
one of us got to eat last night."
The warrior smiled. "All right. You win. After breakfast."
Gabrielle brightened and pulled her into a sitting position. She poured
tea into two mugs
from her pack and used the end of her staff to push their meal out
of the fire. Opening the
leaves carefully, she slid the fish onto a rock and broke a hunk off,
holding it up to Xena's
mouth. "Try it."
The warrior bent forward and took the morsel, closing her lips around
the bard's fingers in
the process. Gabrielle held her breath until her fingers were released
and then swallowed
hard. "G-good?" Her voice shook.
"Very." Xena nodded and fed a piece to Gabrielle. "You've outdone yourself.
Thank
you." She added after a moments thought.
"You're welcome." She looked at the warrior and smiled. "Anything for you."
Xena looked up quickly but Gabrielle had gone back to eating. She had
been unprepared
for her reaction to the bard's words. She'd had no time to think. No
time alone. She felt a
panic start in her stomach and had to stare at the ground to calm herself.
The oddest thing
was, it was not an altogether unpleasant feeling. She ate the last
few pieces of her meal
quickly and sat back to sip her tea and watch the younger woman brush
her hair.
"Would you like me to brush your hair, Xena?"
"No. I..." She sat her cup down. "Would you like me to brush yours?"
Gabrielle's jaw dropped slightly. "Really?" Her smile was enough to
light up all of the
dark places in the warriors heart, enough to make her think that maybe,
just maybe, she
had a chance at being happy. But then, she had been happy for a while
now. Ever since
she had saved this annoying little bard...
"I'll try it." She moved behind Gabrielle and pulled the brush from
her hand. "Tell me if
I'm hurting you. I don't have a lot of practice."
Gabrielle sat patiently as Xena began to brush her hair, her heart filling
with wonder when
she felt those strong hands tremble against her neck. After a few minutes,
the brush
stilled and she felt Xena's lips against her head.
"Gabrielle..." Her whisper was hoarse, needful.
Turning around she met the warrior's hungry lips with her own, parting
them so that
Xena's tongue could taste her mouth. She let herself be lowered to
the ground, running
her hands under Xena's shirt and pulling it over her head. Her own
tunic disappeared in
the tangle of arms as the warrior caressed her body. Lips touched her
cheek, her throat,
trailed over her breasts, but did not stop until they reached the place
they wanted to be.
Xena's tongue slid over Gabrielle's clit, taking the small nub in her
mouth, grazing it very
lightly with her teeth. While her mouth worked there, her fingers trailed
down and slid
inside. There was no pain this time, only a steadily building wave
of pleasure that started
in her feet and traveled up her body until she thought the top of her
head would come off.
Her hips moved of their own accord, pushing her harder against Xena's
tongue and her
fingers, which had curled inside of the bard and found a high, slick
spot that threatened to
rob her of her senses. Without thought, Gabrielle's hands came up and
wound themselves
through Xena's hair. Unable to speak, they showed the warrior where
and held her there
until her vision blackened and her heart felt as though it would stop.
An echoing cry broke
from her lips and scared the birds from the trees. Panting, she pulled
her lover's head
away and collapsed back onto the ground.
"That...that was fast." She whispered.
"Well, you're new." Xena smiled as she traveled up the bard's body to lay in her arms.
Gabrielle laughed weakly and kissed her. The taste and scent of her
mouth tore through
her senses, sending her hand wandering down the warriors side.
Xena caught it in her own and pulled it back up between them. "Time
enough for that
later." She kissed Gabrielle one last time and then moved away. "It's
well beyond
morning. We need to clean your wounds and get moving. We'll need some
salve from
Atwir, to make sure you don't get an infection, and I need to..." She
looked at the bard, an
unreadable expression on her face. "I'm going to take a bath," She
smiled. "I need it. I'll
bring back water for you too."
Gabrielle watched her go, confusion apparent on her face. Her heart
and mind were
warring with each other, one trying to piece together what had just
happened, while the
other was lost in the feelings and emotions running rampant in her
young body. She loved
Xena. Xena had to love her too, she felt it whenever the warrior's
hands touched her
body.
"It's just going to take some time." She said to herself. "Give her some time."
Laying back, she studied the sky and waited, thinking she had been doing
a lot of that
lately.
*****************************************************
An hour later they were on the road. Xena had broken camp quietly, packing
everything
together and strapping it to Argo without saying a word. She had insisted
that Gabrielle
ride the horse, to save her strength, and walked beside her, navigating
Argo around the
many rocks and holes in the road. Gabrielle watched her, wondering
what was going on in
her mind. Xena had never been the talkative type, but this was too
much silence, even for
her. "What's wrong?" She felt her heart leap into her throat when Xena's
clear blue eyes
turned in her direction. She choked back her fear and whispered, "Do
you regret it,
Xena?"
"No, Gabrielle." The warriors voice seemed very tired. "I don't regret
it. I'm
just...thinking." She turned her gaze back to the road, but not before
Gabrielle had seen
the look in her eyes.
She could have sworn it was sadness.
You said you would give her some time remember? Gabrielle chided herself.
"How long
before we reach Atwir?"
"We'll be there by tonight." She looked up at the bard and sighed. "I
was thinking about
you, Gabrielle. About when you died."
Gabrielle was speechless for a moment, but that didn't last long. "Hypocrites
said that
you cried. Is that true?"
Xena laughed quietly. "I don't think 'cried' is exactly the word for
what I did." She pulled
off her Chakram and tied it to Argo. She didn't really have a reason
to, but her hands
needed the busy work. They kept trying to reach for the bard. "I raged,
Gabrielle. I think
I would have destroyed the temple, if you hadn't come back."
"Really?" Gabrielle's eyes were wide.
Xena nodded. "I don't know....I guess I had never thought of you...being
gone. I mean
really gone. I wasn't ready for that. I don't ever want to be ready
for that."
Gabrielle reached down and touched the warriors cheek, feeling her heart
ache when
Xena closed her eyes and leaned into her palm. She didn't pull back
until Argo stumbled
slightly. With a sigh, she grabbed onto the saddlehorn as Xena turned
her attention back
to the road. "I guess we should talk about it later, when we reach
Atwir."
The warrior nodded. "I've heard there's a good inn there." She smiled
up at her. "They
have a performance area. I believe they have a tournament this time
of year."
"For bards?" Gabrielle's voice filled with excitement. "Do you think I could...?"
"Well, you're certainly good enough. I won't try to stop you, as long
as you promise not to
tire yourself out."
"I promise!" Her smile was that of a child. No, Xena corrected herself.
Her smile was
that of a beautiful young woman, confident of her talent.
Xena laughed and quickened their pace. "We'll see."
******************************************************
Part 3
The air had just begun to cool with the approaching evening when they
entered the
Village of Atwir. Gabrielle turned her head from side to side, looking
into each of the open
storefronts that lined the main pathway and smiled in delight. She
looked down and caught
Xena watching her, an indulgent grin on her face.
"What's so funny?"
"Nothing...nothing," The warrior looked like she wanted to laugh. Slowing
her pace, she
moved behind the horse. "I just want to get out of the way in case
you decide to ride Argo
in to shop."
Gabrielle laughed in spite of herself, "Very funny. But you don't have
to worry. All I want
right now is a hot bath and a soft pallet."
"That's all, huh?" One of Xena's eyebrows quirked up and a sensual smile
played briefly
on her lips.
Gabrielle blushed to the roots of her hair, bringing another soft laugh
from the warrior.
"Sorry." She grabbed onto the saddlehorn with nervous hands. "I guess
I'm not used to
you looking like that...about me.." Her voice was so filled with gentle
wonder that it made
Xena's heart ache. Without thinking, she reached up and touched the
bard's leg lightly.
The smile she earned with that one small touch felt like sunlight after
a cloudy day.
A second later, her face went cold and her hand dropped to her side.
For a moment,
Gabrielle thought she had done something wrong, until she followed
Xena's gaze as it
passed her and settled on three men coming towards them. They had been
looking at the
bard with unsettling appreciation, an appreciation that turned businesslike
when Argo
turned away from them and they caught sight of the warrior.
Xena gave them one, discouraging glance before turning to Gabrielle.
"Go on ahead to
the inn. Find someone to talk to, preferably someone big, and wait
for me." Before the
bard could speak, she slapped Argo on the flank, pushing her lightly
in the direction of the
inn. It was all Gabrielle could do just to hang on.
She didn't watch her go, but instead leveled a steady gaze on the advancing
men and
shifted her scabbard lower on her back, making it easier to reach her
sword. They wore
the insignia of some lesser army, but she knew them for what they really
were,
mercenaries....willing to sell themselves to any cause, as long as
they were paid.
When they were within ten feet of her, two of them hung back while the
third advanced, an
ingratiating smile on his face. She didn't move or flinch as his eyes
raked over her in a
vulgar display of interest, but something in her eyes went stony, and
it caught him dead in
his tracks less than three feet away. He cleared his throat and squared
his shoulders,
whether for her benefit, or the benefit of his men, she didn't know.
"Warrior." He inclined
his head slightly in greeting, hardly able to lift his eyes above her
chest. "I'd like to
discuss...business."
"Business?" Xena smiled coldly, one eyebrow arching up into her bangs.
"What business
would that be?"
"The blonde," The soldier continued, too dumb to have seen the look
of warning. But
then, he hadn't been watching her face. "How much?"
"How much for what?" The smile left her face and her jaw clenched reflexively.
"A night, a week," His face brightened as he finally looked up. "Unless
you're willing to
sell her outright. I could offer you a handsome sum."
Xena stared into his eyes as the smile returned to her lips. "I'll tell
you what...uhm," She
cocked her head to one side. "What did you say your name was?"
"Kyldus."
"Well, Kyldus, I'll make you a deal." She shifted her body into a fighting
stance. "If you
can kill me, you can have her."
The mercenary's jaw dropped slightly, then lifted into a feral grin.
"All right, girl, if that's
the way you want it."
"Wouldn't have it any other way." She stood her ground as he advanced,
pulling his
sword from its scabbard as he came. They circled each other for a few
moments before he
shouted and raised the sword above his head for a powerful downward
blow that never hit
it's mark. He sliced into empty air as Xena launched herself over his
head, flipping in
midair to come down hard on the back of his neck. She felt bones crunch
beneath her
boots, then flipped on final time to face the other two men coming
towards her. They didn't
think before they attacked, they simply ran straight for her, swords
outstretched, each
hoping to impale the warrior before she could get into the air again.
Xena obliged them, standing with a smile on her face, hands outstretched
and beckoning.
At the last moment, she jumped straight up, kicking out with both legs
in time to catch
each of them in the face. They were both face down in the dirt by the
time she touched the
ground.
"Hmph." She snorted and strode over to their leader. With a quick jab
of her fingers, she
shoved his vertebrae back into position and slapped him awake. He looked
up at her with
a mixture of fear and respect, not to mention a good dose of hate.
"Now listen to me, little
man." She ripped the insignia from his shoulder and held it up in front
of his eyes. "The
name's Xena," she waited as his eyes went wide. "The girl is not for
hire, the girl is not
for sale, and you can't win her. So, if I ever see you near her, if
I ever even see you look
at her from a hundred paces away, I will destroy your lord's entire
army, and place the
debt on you." She waved the scrap of leather in his face. "Then I'll
watch as they flay
your carcass." She smiled. "Do we have an understanding?"
Kyldus nodded, wincing as his damaged spine ground against itself.
"Good." Xena tucked the symbol into her bodice. "Now get out of here."
She looked at
the other men, who were just beginning to stir. "And take your trash
with you." She
slammed him into the ground and walked away without a backwards glance.
Walking as slowly as she could, Xena willed herself to calm down. Gabrielle
hadn't been
hurt, but the rage she felt burned as deep as when Marcus had died.
She realized with a
start that the bard had stolen more than her heart, she had taken her
soul as well.
By the time she could see the inn, her heart had ceased it's pounding
and she was able to
force a smile onto her lips...a smile that quickly died when she caught
sight of Gabrielle.
The bard's back was turned to her as she conversed with a lovely young
woman, a
barmaid by the look of her. She tried to swallow the sour taste in
her mouth, but felt it
strengthen when the woman placed a hand on Gabrielle's arm, laughing
and pointing
towards the inn. An instant later the maid swallowed hard, having caught
sight of Xena
and the look on her face. Waving goodbye to Gabrielle, she hurried
off.
The bard turned, a confused look on her face, then smiled when she saw
the warrior.
"Xena!" She called. "I'm glad you're okay. Did you have much trouble?"
"No." She said simply. "I thought I said 'someone big'."
"Yes, well," The bard's smile was bright. "Delphi found me sitting out
here. There was no
one else around, and since her father owns the inn, I thought I would
be pretty safe with
her."
Xena snorted and looked at the sign above the tethering post. "Inn of
the Three
Daughters." She shook her head. "Stupid name for an inn. Did you meet
the rest of the
daughters?"
Gabrielle looked at her in confusion, unable to understand the hostility
in her lover's
voice. "No...no. There aren't any other daughters. Delphi said that
her father thought Inn
of The Daughter was a pretty dumb name, so he did the best he could."
"Oh...Delphi said, did she?" The warrior turned to pull their bags from
Argo, knowing she
was being unreasonable, but not really caring at the moment.
Gabrielle stared at Xena's forbidding back for a few moments, and then
decided on a
lighter approach. "She said there are rooms available at the inn."
She came around the
warrior to smile up into her face. "Should I get one or two?"
Xena looked down at her, her face made of stone. "Whatever we can afford."
The bard's jaw dropped as the warrior went back to tending her horse.
Without another
word, she headed inside. Once she had gone, Xena's shoulders slumped
and she leaned
her head against Argo's neck. "What in Hades did I do that for?" Argo
snorted in reply.
She didn't understand it either. Xena reached down to grab their packs,
but another hand
beat her to them. She looked up into clear green eyes and had to bite
back a hostile
remark as Delphi stood, shouldering their supplies.
"My father sent me to get these." Her tone was cool, but nothing more.
"I'll send the boy
out to stable your horse. We don't expect guests to do those things.
Please, follow me."
She walked back to the inn without waiting to see if Xena would follow
or not. After a few
moments, she did.
The mood inside the inn was surprisingly pleasant. It was brightly lit,
and looked fairly
clean, the benches and tables were flat and smooth from years of polishing,
and the
fireplace was free of old ashes and the other debris that usually littered
the hearth in such
places. Xena didn't kid herself though. She recognized several of the
faces behind mugs of
mead as dangerous men who would attack without provocation. After a
final glance into
the common area, she looked towards the bar, surprised to find Gabrielle
looking down
into a flagon of ale. Moving to her side, she touched her lightly on
the shoulder and
smiled, trying to hide her embarrassment when she turned around. "Gabrielle,
I-"
"I could only get one room." The bard lied. They had five rooms open,
but she'd be
damned if she'd let Xena get away with this. "I'm afraid you'll have
to share it with me."
"I'm not afraid of that." The warrior smiled and reached for her hand.
Before she could grab it, Delphi was standing between them. "We've taken
your tuck up
to your room." She smiled at them both, but Gabrielle in particular.
"We're drawing water
for your baths and laying clean sheets. If you would like, we will
gladly serve you
evenmeal while you're waiting."
Xena gave her a look of pure ice but nodded, allowing the barmaid to
lead them to a table
in the far corner. Putting her back against the wall, Xena stared out
into the room as
Gabrielle took her seat.
"Will there be bards tonight?" she asked Delphi.
"Unfortunately, no. Our local bard was injured in a riding accident
yesterday." She
looked Gabrielle up and down with an appreciative eye. "You look like
the bardly type.
Perhaps you could..."
"Bardly?" Xena whispered to herself. "That's not a real word."
Gabrielle ignored her and smiled. "I am a bard. I'm rather tired though.
Maybe tomorrow
night."
"Good timing. The competition starts tomorrow."
"Could we get some food?" Xena interrupted.
"Of course." The barmaid grinned. "We have salt pork, mutton, and a
nice lamb stew.
There are vegetables, fruit, and bread too." She glance at the warrior.
"You look like the
hungry type. I'll bring a bit of everything." With a lilting laugh,
she headed off to the
kitchens.
She knows, Xena thought to herself. Damn her.
"Xena?"
The warrior dragged her attention to the young woman before her. "What Gabrielle?"
"What's wrong?"
Xena shook her head. "I don't know." She realized what a poor answer
that was and
quickly looked into the bard's eyes. "You have to be careful, Gabrielle.
There are people
who will want you...and they won't be nice about it."
"Like those men at the market?" Her eyes sparkled in the candlelight
and Xena found it
very distracting.
"Exactly like those men in the market. They saw a piece of property
they might like to
own." She touched the bard's cheek lightly. "I don't want you to get
hurt, Gabrielle."
As if on cue, a large, foul smelling man stepped up to their table,
draping an arm around
the small blonde and breathing rancidly into her face. "Hello girlie.
What's say you and
me have a good time?"
"I say.." Xena began to rise but was stopped in her tracks when a pan
met quite solidly
with the back of the ruffian's skull, sending him sprawling over their
table. She stared
down at him in shock and then up into the Delphi's laughing green eyes.
"Mendices!" The barmaid called to a giant of a man who was lounging
in the corner. "Get
rid of this dung. And, before he steps foot in this Inn again, make
sure he knows the
rules."
Mendices nodded and grabbed the would-be Romeo under the arms, dragging
him from
the inn. After a few moments, she heard the sound of a body landing
in a water trough.
"Sorry 'bout that." Delphi reached behind her and took their food from
a servant. Setting
the platters in front of them, she sent Xena an amused glance before
heading off to tend
bar. The warrior watched after her for a few moments before starting
to pick at her food.
After a few bites, she realized she had lost her appetite and settled
back to watch
Gabrielle eat everything she had been given, and most of what was one
her plate as well.
"Aren't you hungry?" She managed between bites of food.
"Not at the moment." Xena drawled. "maybe later."
"In that case..." Gabrielle took the bread and salt pork from her plate,
as well as the
fruit, and stuffed them into her pouch. "I'll save it for you until
you want it."
Xena felt her heart soften with that one small gesture. She had just
reached out to touch
her again, when Delphi slammed two mugs down between them.
"Can I get you anything else?" She asked sweetly.
"No!" The warrior's tone was firm as she stood and pulled Gabrielle
to her feet. "We'd
like to go to our room now."
Delphi looked down at the bard, waiting for her to nod her acquiescence
before leading
them up the stairs and leaving them at their door.
Xena slammed through it and then slammed it behind them. "Go ahead and
bathe. I'll wait
till your done." She started to unbuckle her breastplate, brushing
Gabrielle's hands away
when she tried to help.
"What is wrong?" The bard's tone was demanding.
"What's wrong?" Xena repeated, looking down at the back and breastplates
in her hands.
"What's wrong?" With a laugh that turned into a fierce cry, she hurled
the armor at the
far wall, shattering a small mirror that had been hanging there.
Gabrielle took a step back, frightened. "Xena?"
The warrior's mouth made a perfect 'O' as she stared at what she had
done. "Oh,
Gabrielle, I'm sorry." She looked at the bard and felt her heart shrink
in her chest, She
thinks I'm going to hit her! "Please don't look at me that way. I will
never hit you."
Gabrielle relaxed slightly, reaching out to touch her arm. "Can you
tell me what's
wrong?"
"No." She whispered. "Well, aside from Delphi."
"Delphi?" Gabrielle looked confused. "What about her?"
"I see the way she looks at you Gabrielle. I know how much she...wants you."
"Wants ME?" The bard tried to remember any specific look or words and
couldn't.
"She's just being friendly."
"Yeah, a little too friendly." Xena sighed. "You just don't see it."
'Well, what if I did? What difference does it make? The way I see it,
loyalty would have to
do with me, not her. Are you worried that I might..."
"Gabrielle.." She placed a hand on her arm.
"That's it isn't it? You're worried that I'm going to want to be with
someone else." She
brushed the warrior's hand off as a hurt look crossed her face. Hurt
and anger. "Is that
how little you think of me?
"No, I.."
"Well, I think it is." Gabrielle's face flushed. "For your information,
I've had lots of
chances to be with people, and still do, but I never have. I wanted
to be with you."
Xena's ears heard nothing but that one phrase, 'and still do'. Her eyes
squeezed shut as a
hand closed around her heart, crushing it within her chest. "You still
do, huh? Like Delphi
I suppose?"
Gabrielle felt tears form in the corners of her eyes. "Yeah...I guess so..."
"So why are you here?" Xena felt each word like a knife in her heart.
Oh well, she
thought. Hell and too late to go back now. "Get out of here. Go find
someone you can
touch. Go on!!" She shoved the bard towards the door.
Gabrielle pressed one hand to her mouth, trying to keep herself from
sobbing. With a
strangled cry, she threw the door open and fled.
Xena sat very still, waiting for the ache in her heart to pass. When
it didn't, she sighed
and went about removing her boots. By the time she had removed the
second guard, she
was regretting everything she had said and done. Throwing them onto
the bed behind her,
she opened the door and looked down the hallway. Gabrielle's name died
on her lips.
At the far end of the hall, she could see them. Delphi had her arm around
the bard, trying
to talk to her as the blonde's small frame shook with her tears. After
a few moments, she
placed a small kiss on Gabrielle's brow and led her into a nearby room.
Xena was rooted
where she stood until she heard the bolt catch, then a frightening
anger swept through her.
She slammed her armor back on, strapping on her sword and chakram as
she slid into her
shin guards. Throwing open the window, she dropped onto the ground
below, not trusting
herself to walk through the riffraff gathered in the common room. She
sent one hurt filled
glance towards the room Gabrielle had entered, and then went silently
into the night, her
heart raging as her long legs ate the distance beneath them.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
"I...d-don't understand." Gabrielle's voice caught as she paced back
and forth, tears
streaming from her eyes. Delphi took her by the shoulders and tried
to steer her towards
the bed, but the bard was too worked up. Feeling the flushed skin of
her own face, she
walked over to the window and threw it open, wanting to feel the coolness
of the night air.
Glancing down, she saw the pale oval of a face looking up at her, and
the brief look of
pain that flashed across it. "Xena!" She yelled, leaning further out.
But the warrior was
already gone, the softly swaying bushes the only evidence she had been
there at all.
Gabrielle felt a surge of panic run through her and started to climb
out of the window
before she noticed Argo being led into the stables by one of the inn
workers. With a sigh,
she glanced in the direction that Xena had gone. She didn't like anything
that had
happened, but at least she knew she'd be back. Wiping her eyes, she
turned back to
Delphi. "Thanks." She tried to smile. "I really appreciate you listening
to me."
"Hey," Delphi touched her gently on the arm and smiled, making Gabrielle
wonder if
Xena had been right after all. "I just want to help you."
Gabrielle looked up at her with shy eyes. "Is that all?"
"Well," The barmaid sighed and slumped onto the bed. "That wasn't all,
not at first.
When I saw you outside, you looked so sweet, and so lost. I thought
it might have been
nice to...well...you know." She ran her hands through her hair, and
then pulled at the chain
around her throat, rubbing her fingers against the symbols carved into
it. "And then I saw
your big friend, and well, I thought she had purchased you or had taken
you by force.
Especially because of the way she was acting. Now I know I was wrong.
The way I acted
was wrong. I have a husband," She hung her head slightly as though
she was ashamed of
herself. "I love him very much, but he's away fighting with his lord
and I take a lover from
time to time. Always women, it's simpler that way. But I never considered
that a woman
could truly love another woman. I was wrong." She touched Gabrielle's
face lightly. "I
know all of this is my fault. Tell me how I can help."
Gabrielle smiled at her. "Well, I am flattered." She sniffled. "But
I would have said no. I
do love her, Delphi."
"I know." she smiled. "I can see it in your eyes...when they're not swollen that is."
"But I don't think it was all your fault. You made her jealous, yes,
but..." Gabrielle
chewed her lower lip.
"But what?"
The bard stood and began to pace again. "She said something strange.
She said for me to
go and find someone that I could touch."
"You've never touched her?" Delphi's eyes grew wide in disbelief.
"Oh, well," Gabrielle stammered. "I've touched her...but I guess I haven't
ever REALLY
touched her. Not like...well, not like that."
"Why not?"
"I don't know." She sat down heavily. "Every time I tried, she either
told me to rest
or...well..." She blushed again.
"You're too easy, Gabrielle." Delphi laughed. "You'd never last a minute
working in a
tavern! But you are right about one thing, there's more to this than
jealousy." She put her
arm around the bard and squeezed with friendly affection. "Still, there's
nothing you can
do until she decides to tell you what is going on. No sense in making
yourself sick about
it."
"What else am I going to do?" She smiled half-heartedly.
The barmaid got an evil gleam in her eye. "I have an idea..." She grabbed
Gabrielle by
the hand and pulled her up.
"Uh...Delphi?" A timid half smile played on her lips. "Whatever it is,
it's not going to
make Xena angrier...is it?"
"Well," Delphi said matter of factly. "That depends on how she feels about sharing you."
She laughed out loud at Gabrielle's look of horror as she dragged her out of the room.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Everything was out of focus, the forest, the ground. Everything seemed
darker as well,
although she knew that was just a trick her eyes were playing on her.
No wonder, there
wasn't a drop of moisture left in them. She had been running for almost
an hour, crying
softly the whole way. With a bone rattling sigh, she pulled up short
beside a huge oak
tree. Laying her hands against it's trunk, Xena tilted her head back
and screamed her
rage at the now-full moon. It did nothing to ease the ache in her chest,
only serving in
making her throat hurt as well. She tried to tell herself that most
of the ache was over
exertion, but she knew better. That kind of ache had a peace to it.
This ache was the
worst she had ever known.
Running her hands over her face, she shoved them into her thick, chestnut
hair, yanking it
back severely and tying it into a ponytail with a piece of rawhide.
When she pulled her
hands away, she studied them in the moonlight, remembering how they
had looked against
Gabrielle's fair skin., how they had had trembled beneath the bard's
gentle gaze. With a
small cry, she slid down the tree to sit in the dirt, her knees drawn
up, her chin atop them.
She had been a beast, she knew that. She had treated Gabrielle as though
everything was
her fault when, in fact, none of it was.
She turned her face up to the moon and thought about her options. She
could leave, take
Gabrielle back to Potedeia, or better yet, Athens, and continue on
alone. Not an appealing
idea. Or, she could keep Gabrielle with her and just take their relationship
back they way
they had come. They could go back to being friends. She snorted. Yeah,
right. There was
one thing she had to do, no matter what else followed. She had to tell
her the truth. She
would wait a little longer, until she was done....with whatever. The
thought of what the
'whatever' might be sent a bolt of pain through her chest. She closed
her eyes to allow it
to pass and felt a searing pain shoot through her arm, accompanied
by an angry grunt.
She was on her feet in an instant, senses alert, eyes aware of her surroundings.
There was
nothing but the wind and the nightbirds. With a grimace of pain, she
twisted to examine
her arm. There was a long gash above her left elbow. It wasn't very
deep, but it bled well.
She was reaching for a needle from her pouch when the grunting came
again and
something slammed into her legs, knocking them from beneath her. Flat
on her stomach,
she looked up to see the creature that had attacked her.
It was an enormous boar, with tusks well over a foot long, standing
at least four hands tall.
It looked at her with wild, feral eyes and charged again. She reach
up quickly and grabbed
it by the tusks, struggling to rise to her knees as the animal squealed
and twisted in her
grip. Something about the animal brought out her rage again, and she
fought back with a
strength that surprised her. She felt no remorse for her anger, as
the animal was trying to
kill her. Even when she had pushed his head back to the point of breaking
it, he tried to
lunge at her, gauging one of her hands with the tip of his tusk. With
a final surge of
strength, she pushed back all the way, hearing bone snap beneath her
hands. She sat like
that for a few moments, trying to calm the pounding in her heart, then
released the
creature, watching as it's head slumped onto the ground.
Xena stood slowly, wiping her hands on her leathers as she pulled the
sword from her
back. She ran a finger down the blade, testing it's sharpness as an
idea formed in her
mind. Raising her nose to the air, she inhaled deeply, smiling at the
scent of water.
"Well," She whispered to the animal. "At least you won't have died in
vain," She flexed
her arms and began to slash at the fallen boar, cutting through fat
and muscle to reach the
organs beneath. She wrapped her prize in a piece of leather and wiped
her blade on the
animal's hide before sliding it into it's scabbard. "Thank you."
Tucking the package into her pouch, she ran towards the water. As she
did, she felt her
rage begin to resurface. But this time the rage was not directed at
Gabrielle, nor was it
directed at herself. This rage was for the Gods alone.
And one God in particular.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
"Are you sure this is a good idea, Delphi?" Gabrielle asked skeptically.
The barmaid put an arm around her shoulders. "I think it is a wonderful
idea." She
started to pull her along and Gabrielle gave up struggling. After all,
it was something that
she wanted too.
Delphi didn't release her until they had reached the stage, then she
deserted her, leaving
her trying to smile down at a group of people who looked every bit
as rough as any she
had ever seen. She knew her worry showed plainly on her face and she
didn't think she
would be able to come up with a story when her heart was out in the
darkness with Xena.
She had just opened her mouth to apologize when a mocking voice came
out of the crowd.
"Come on! Get the little girl off the stage, so a real bard can get
up there." The man
stood when several of his comrades started laughing. "Everyone knows
girls can't be
bards! All they want to talk about is flowers and love."
There was more laughter and Gabrielle steeled herself against it as
a story surfaced in
her mind. "Oh, you think so, do you?" She smiled. "Well, let me tell
you a story that I not
only know, it's a story that I lived as well." She waited until the
room had quieted
somewhat. "The forest was filled with a fine smoke, that smelled of
burning wood and
destroyed lives, as Xena and I made our way through the woods that
make up the border
between Thessaly and Mitoa-"
"Wait a minute!" The same man cut in. "Xena? The Warrior Princess? You
must be
joking! Everyone knows she's just a myth!"
"No, I'm not joking." Gabrielle stood as straight as she could. "And
she's no myth. I was
going to tell you how she saved a temple full of soldiers and stopped
the
Mitoan-Thessalean war, but if you don't want to hear it..." She started
to leave the stage.
Her heckler was immediately grabbed by one of his friends and slammed
down into his
seat. "Be quiet, 'Tires. I want to hear this story." He looked up at
Gabrielle with a smile.
"I've wanted to hear it for a while now. I am Dophycles. My brother
was in that temple.
He said there was an incredible woman there, who saved his life. He
also said that she
traveled with a small blonde bard named Gabrielle. He tried to tell
me what happened, but
he was always a few apples short of a bushel, and the knock he took
in that battle shook
most of what sense he had left right out of him. Please, tell it."
She turned her head to the side to consider his request, then smiled
when the rest of his
group joined in the encouragement. "All right. But you have to listen."
She looked
pointedly at the heckler. "Otherwise you might miss something."
She almost laughed when they nodded in agreement. How very much like
boys these men
were. But then again, it was rare that she had met a man who did not
act like a child in one
way or another. "Okay, where was I? Oh, yes...that's right." She crouched
slightly,
extending her hands in front of her. "The air was filled with a fine,
mist-like smoke that
smelled of burning wood and destroyed lives. Xena and I were trying
to make our way
through the forest that separates Mitoa and Thessaly. The southern
route would have
been safer, but much longer. And, as you all know, Xena feels no fear.
We had just
outsmarted a group of ravenous Thessalean soldiers when we heard a
moan off to our
left..."
Delphi smiled as Gabrielle got into the story. The young bard was an
incredible story
teller, and an incredible woman. She sighed, pushing away her regret,
and began to refill
glasses.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Xena's rage carried her beyond the river and into a glade flanked by
a row of tall trees.
Her eyes darted from one side to the other until she found what she
was looking for. With
a dark grin, she headed towards the grove.
Her eyes had almost passed over it, only catching on the slight glimmer
of the moons
reflection on it's surface. "Give me water, grass and Trees," She mumbled
under her
breath. "And I'll find you an altar." She forced herself to slow to
a walk, holding the
precious bundle in her hands carefully.
The altar had been long forgotten, she could tell that much by the length
of the grass.
Another sign of it's abandonment was the irregularity of the blood
marks. The grooves
made by the athames had long ago been sanded down, by time or wind,
or both, and the
bloodstains had settled deep, creating an almost marbled appearance
in the moonlight.
She brushed the leaves and dust away, and cut down the grass with her
sword.
Afterwards, she laid the sword lengthwise along the altar's top and
opened the leather she
had wrapped around the still-warm heart of the boar. She slid the bloodied
mess along the
blade of her weapon, and then set the heart down beside it. Xena frowned
as she worked.
She had always hated this foolishness, but the God's demanded what
the God's
demanded.
That done, she threw her head back and howled towards the waning moon,
her voice
taking on the eerie note of a dying wolf as it trailed into nothingness.
Crossing her arms,
she waited.
She didn't have to wait long.
A golden shimmer appeared behind the altar, strengthening until she
was unable to look
directly at it. She turned her head to the side until the flame was
gone. When she could
see again, a beautiful dark-haired woman stood before her.
"Well, well, well." The woman moved gracefully from behind the
altar. "Xena, the
Warrior Princess....whatever can I do for you?"
Her note of playful ignorance angered Xena, who curled her fingers into
fists and tried not
to lose her temper. "You know damn well what I want, Athena."
"Do I?" The God walked around her slowly, clucking as she took
in the warrior's
appearance. "Is it possible?" She laughed, a light, silvery
sound. "That you are actually
MORE attractive than the last time we met? When was that, Xena?
How long ago?"
"Seven years." Xena's voice was flat, she didn't want to betray anything
that she was
thinking. "It's been seven years, Athena. It's been long enough."
"Has it?" The Goddess lost her playful tone as her anger got
the best of her. "Do you
think so?" She turned back towards the altar. "I don't."
"Wait!" The warrior grabbed her lightly by the arm, then pulled her
hand back quickly at
the jolt of power that stung her fingertips. "'I...I'm..."
"Don't tell me that you are trying to apologize!" Her lips quirked
into a sneer. "Not you!
Not the 'Warrior Princess'!" Her eyes narrowed in interest.
"What's happened,
Xena...have you gone and fallen in love?"
Xena knew she had flinched, her eyes had betrayed her. She steeled herself
against the
anger she expected to come.
But the goddess only laughed. "How fitting." Once again, she turned to go.
"You don't understand!"
The look in her eyes would have killed Xena, had it been a sword. "I
don't understand?"
The goddess advanced on her. "Wait..." Her eyes took on a faraway
look and her tone
got slightly sarcastic. "I remember the story you told me that night....after
I had found
you, after I had healed you." Her jaw tightened. "After I
had allowed you to make love to
me and lay spent in your arms, wanting only to touch you in return.
You wouldn't let me,
but instead told me this wonderful little story. About a girl...oh,
what was her name?
Anenome? Persephonon?"
"Asephony." Xena's voice was very low. "'Seph."
"Ah, yes." Athena grinned. "Asephony." She walked over
to the altar and lifted Xena's
sword, her hand absorbing the blood as she ran it along the blade.
She looked at it
thoughtfully before picking up the heart, which vanished in a tendril
of smoke as she
smiled thinly. "You cheated, Xena. That was not a wolf's heart."
"I know." She was getting tired of the goddess' banter. "I couldn't
see wasting a perfectly
good wolf."
"But a boar is fine?"
Xena shrugged. "It attacked me."
Athena nodded and, after taking a final look at the sword, threw it
to Xena. "It's nice to
see that you're still using it."
"My father did give it to me, Athena."
"Yes, but I blessed it. As did Ares." She laughed ruefully. "Poor
Ares, he is so enchanted
with you....and you...you would reject all the gods wouldn't you?
But, that is not the
point we are trying to get at, is it? Where were we? Ah yes, Asephony."
She unstrapped
her shield and let it fall to the ground, where the Gorgan's head that
adorned it shined
clearly in the moonlight. "I don't have to dress for this do I?"
She didn't wait for Xena's
answer. "So there I was, laying in your arms, my heart open to you,"
She pulled a silver
thunderbolt from it's quiver on her back and threw it into the ground,
causing the earth to
shake. "And what did you do?" She shook her head. "You rejected
me. And all because
of some little human."
"She was not just some little human!" Bitterness crept into Xena's voice. "She was-"
Athena held up her hand. "Spare me," She threw her helm onto
the ground. "You already
told me. She was your light, she was your dream....she was your
life..." She waved her
hand in the air. "And she was enough to make you turn down the love
of a goddess. Even
though she was dead."
The warrior clenched her hands into fists again, feeling her short nails
cut into the
toughened skin, trying to steel her heart against the memories.
"She died because of you, didn't she?" The goddess smiled sweetly.
"And even with all
your skills and all your powers, you couldn't fix that...could you?"
She waited until Xena
shook her head. "Her family killed her....because she loved an unclean
woman. There she
was, all set to marry a prince, and then you come along, the dreaded
warlord, stealing her
heart and taking her virginity. What's a family to do?"
"Enough!" She placed the back of her hand against her mouth, trying
to stave off the
lump she could feel growing in her throat.
"But, Xena," The goddess touched her lightly on the cheek. "You're
asking for my help. I
need to make sure I remember everything...clearly." She slinked
back to sit atop the altar.
"You said you could never allow yourself to be loved by another
woman, isn't that true?"
"Yes." She raised her eyes to meet the God's. "But that was a long time
ago. Let me
go."
"All I did was give you what you wanted." She smiled. "The
enchantment doesn't even
affect you, Xena. Only the woman who would dare go where a goddess
was denied. None
may live who attempt such a thing!"
"And I have lived by that," Xena said fiercely. "I have lived my life,
content with the love
of men even though it was never enough, knowing I could never love
another woman the
way I loved Asephony." She swallowed. "But I was wrong. "
"So," The goddess' face contorted into something between rage
and laughter. "I was
right. You have fallen in love." She placed a hand upon her
chin. "Whoever could it be?
That mousy little bard perhaps?" She laughed at the warrior's
surprise. "Did you really
think I would ever forget about you? I have watched you ever since
that day, in one form
or another. Did you think it coincidence that all you have loved,
fell by the sword?
Gabrielle will be no different." She waved a hand at her armor
and it disappeared.
"Goodbye, Xena."
"Wait!!" The warrior rushed forward. "Haven't you forgotten something?"
The goddess turned to look into Xena's smiling face, a frown upon her own. "What?"
"I called you and you came, I gave you sacrifice. You owe me an answer."
"You did not follow the rules, Xena." Athena protested. "That was not a wolf's heart."
"It doesn't matter," Xena smirked. "You accepted it. You came, even
if it was just to
gloat. By your own law, Athena, you owe me an answer."
The goddess growled, wondering where Xena had learned of the sacrificial
oaths she had
made to her favored subjects and that, whether she was angry with her
or not, Xena was
one of them. "Ask your question, insolent woman."
"How can I free myself from your curse?"
Athena laughed. "You cannot."
"Come on, 'Thena." She used the pet name that had always grated on the
goddess, even
when she had been in favor. "Every curse has a condition. Something
that makes it
work," She smiled, realizing her mistake. "Or not work. I will rephrase
my question. How
can I be freed?"
The goddess' face contorted in rage as she picked up her thunderbolt.
With a snarl, she
flung it into the trees, catching one dead center, causing it to burst
into flames. "A pox on
you, Warrior!" Her voice was malevolent.
"Answer the question."
Athena glowered, whispering through gritted teeth, "You would try
to outsmart me? The
goddess Athena? I sprang full grown and armored from my father's
brow. I am the virgin
goddess of war!"
Xena's left eyebrow lifted slightly at the mention of the word 'virgin'
and Athena slammed
her fist onto the altar, cracking it into two pieces.
"You..." She raised her fist, then dropped it slowly, knowing
she could not kill her. Ares
would not be happy, which, in turn, would anger Aphrodite. She cared
little for Ares...his
disdain for women did not make him a favorite. But Aphrodite...to anger
the beautiful
goddess was something she would not do. "All right." She turned
her back to try and
handle her anger. A mortal should not have this affect on a god.
When she had herself under control, she glanced back to Xena and smiled
sweetly. "You
must take what you do not want, from the one who would give you
everything."
Xena's forehead furrowed in confusion. "What I do not want? I don't understand."
"That is not my concern, mortal." Athena began to fade. "I
have given you your answer.
The rest is yours to solve." She smiled. "Remember, Xena,
I am a god. One day you will
have to pay for your insolence."
It only took her a moment to fade away, leaving only the echo of her
voice as proof she
had been there at all. Xena found herself staring at the shattered
altar. She looked briefly
at her sword before putting it away and was surprised to find words
etched along the blade
where the goddess' hand had touched. It was in a language she did not
know. She slid it
into it's scabbard and headed back towards the inn.
She may not be able to read it, but Gabrielle surely could.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
"...And so Marmax sent his men to stop the attack and take word to the
Thessaleans that
he would speak to them at last." Gabrielle finished the story with
such passion that the
room erupted in cheers. She blushed slightly and mumbled, "Thank you."
She started to leave the stage, accepting their praise with a smile,
when Dophycles stood
and blocked her way. "Wait." He took her hand and led her back to the
center of the
platform. "You left something out."
"I did?"
He nodded slowly. His voice was soft, but carried easily over the now
still room behind
him. "Your story matches what I could piece together from my brother's
babbling, so I
know you are telling the truth. But you left out one part of the story.
The only part my
brother could remember with any clarity, because it affected him so
profoundly." He
released her hand and sat down. "You died, Gabrielle. Isn't that where
the story really
ends?"
Every head in the room turned to Gabrielle, accompanied by the sound
of breaking
pottery as a mug slid from Delphi's hand. The barmaid gave up any pretense
of cleaning
up the shards and came around the bar to watch the Bard intently. "You
died?" The
words were flat, unbelieving.
Gabrielle studied their faces for a few moments before nodding and turning
her attention
to the floor. It was a long time before she looked up again. "Yes,
I died. I left the temple
to try and help a boy that had been left behind during a battle," Her
face was red and
Delphi thought her heart would break to look at this courageous woman,
who would sing
the praises of another, but never one about herself. "I was attacked
by a Mitoan, I guess
he thought I was the enemy, and I was wounded, here," She stretched
to show the wound
she had been hiding beneath the top of her skirt. "And here." She pointed
to an angry red
line at the base of her neck. "I died right after Marmax declared the
war over, and sent
his men to stop the killing." She looked out above their heads, staring
at nothing. "I went
to a place," Her eyes filled with wonder. "It was incredible. Every
loved one I had ever
lost to death, was waiting there for me. The sky was blue, the air
was warm, and the smell
of hyacinth was everywhere. They pulled me to them, and held me close,...and
I knew the
joy of the Elysian Fields." The memory receded and she looked at their
faces. "It was
beautiful."
"Why did you come back?" The voice belonged to Delphi. "How did you
come back?
Hades would never let you go."
Gabrielle laughed softly. "There are those on earth that even the immortals
owe in one
way or another." Her smile became private. "Through all the joy of
the Elysian Fields, I
heard something that touched my heart. I heard something more beautiful
than the
heaven I was standing in."
"What was it" Dophycles asked when the bard fell silent for a few moments.
"A voice." Gabrielle swallowed hard as her heart began to ache. "It
was her voice.
Screaming out for me not to go. And it was almost like...like.." She
clenched her fist as
she tried find the right words. "It was almost like I could hear her
heart break," She
looked up, but didn't see the tavern. Instead, her eyes saw Xena's
face as it had come to
her in the fields. "She was crying...for me to wake up." Her expression
took on a far away
look as memories that she shouldn't have had finally came to light.
'Don't you leave me!
Wake up! Wake up! Wake up!'. She came back to the present and realized
that she had
said those words out loud. Every eye was one her. Every breath was
held. "And then I
was awake. My chest hurt horribly, lungs burning on the inside from
lack of air, and body
aching on the outside from her rage."
The crowd was silent, completely spellbound. Except for one. The one
who hadn't believed
her in the first place. 'Tires stood up. "You want us to believe that
you left the Elysian
Fields? To come here?" He looked around in disgust, his tone mocking.
"Why would
anyone do that?"
"Because," Gabrielle smiled down at him, her eyes soft. "She is the
sun on my face after
a long, cold night. She is the truth in my stories, the courage in
my heart, and the hero in
my dreams. She is my warrior, strong as ten men, who can hold me more
gently than
anything I have ever known. She is everything to me. The Elysian Fields
paled next to
that." Gabrielle took a deep breath. "And finally I knew. She cried
for me. She raged for
me....she needs me."
"The WARRIOR?" He laughed. "You're talking about Xena, aren't you?"
He turned to
his men and pointed at Gabrielle. "This worthless little bard would
have us believe that
the Warrior Princess needs her." His eyes swung back to her, full of
contempt and a
hatred that she didn't understand. "Why would a warrior need you?"
He sneered. "Why
would Xena cry for a useless thing like you?"
"Because she loves her." Came a voice from the back of the tavern.
All eyes turned to Delphi, who shook her head quickly and gestured to
the area beneath
the stairs, where the torch light didn't reach. A figure sat there,
back against the wall, a
slightly darker shape amidst the indistinct shadows.
The figure rose in silence, getting to it's feet without making the
slightest sound. Every
breath in the room was held as she stepped into the light.
There was no mistaking the thick, black mane, no denying the sky blue
eyes. "Xena."
She heard her name travel the room on the breath of a whisper, recognition
striking fear
and awe in even the most stalwart of the those present. She ignored
their stares and
headed to the stage where the bard still stood, quiet and unmoving.
Her only thought was
to reach her and take her somewhere private, somewhere they could talk.
Gabrielle watched her come, unable to move, paralyzed by the words she
had just heard
Xena say. At least, she thought the warrior had said them.
Xena had almost reached the platform when the idiot who had been taunting
Gabrielle
stepped out in front of her, blocking her path.
"The mighty Xena," He snickered. "Gone soft, eh? I heard you had become
a do-gooder.
Well, don't worry, I'll put you out of your misery...and then I'll
see what's
so...special...about your girl."
She didn't even blink as her fist slammed out, connecting with the side
of his head before
he could think to block it. His body crumpled without a word.
She moved her eyes to rest on Dophycles, some part of her wondering
what he would do,
but he merely smiled, nodding to himself in approval. "He's had it
coming for a while now,
Xena. I will not fight for a fool."
She nodded almost imperceptibly and dismissed him as harmless, and brought
her
attention back to Gabrielle. She reached the stage, looking up at pale
blue eyes and
strawberry hair. Without speaking, she held out her hand.
"What did you say?" The bard whispered.
Xena looked behind her, discomfort playing largely on her features.
With a resigned sigh,
she opened her mouth to speak, only to have Gabrielle still her lips
with a finger against
them.
"Don't." She smiled gently, understanding Xena's reticence. The Warrior
Princess was
not supposed to have emotions., to show them in public would be considered
a weakness.
"Later."
The warrior's relief was apparent in her eyes. "Please, Gabrielle. Come
with me. We
need to talk."
She nodded and Xena reached up, placing large, gentle hands around her
waist, lifting her
off the stage and to the floor. They left the tavern quietly.
Dophycles watched them go and then stood over his fallen comrade. He
waved two others
forward. "Dump him in the horse trough. Make sure he knows that he
is no longer
welcome to travel with us."
He waved to Delphi for another drink and sat down to think about Gabrielle's story.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Gabrielle studied Xena intently. They had been sitting like this, across
from each other on
the bed, but not touching, for the better part of an hour. The warrior
had started to speak
several times, only to shake her head in frustration and turn her eyes
away. "What is it?
Tell me."
The gentleness in her tone brought a smile to Xena's lips. Reaching
out, she took the
bard's hand and looked into her eyes. "I'm so sorry, Gabrielle. The
things I said, they
weren't fair. None of this is your fault." She pulled off her armbands
and Gabrielle
noticed the stitches near her elbow.
"What happened?" She leaned forward and saw blood hiding in the creases
of her
breastplate. "Xena, what happened to you?"
"I'm all right, Gabrielle. Just hear me out." She pulled off the breastplate,
dropping it to
the floor beside the bed with a quiet promise to herself that she would
polish it as soon as
she could. Her eyes followed it as she began. "Seven years ago, I was
leading raids
against the villages that lined the southern coast. We were working
our way towards
central Greece, destroying anything in our path." She untied her hair
and brushed her
fingers through it. "We came across a village there, nothing large,
about the size of
Potedeia. It's name was Krylos."
Gabrielle looked confused. "I've studied a lot of maps, but I've never heard of that one."
Xena looked at the floor, the walls, anywhere but Gabrielle's eyes.
"That's because it
doesn't exist anymore."
The bard shivered involuntarily, and knew by the slight slump of her
shoulders that Xena
had scene her. The warrior didn't mention it though. She simply continued.
"I went ahead to scout the land, to find out if they had any defenses."
She gave a short
laugh. "They didn't even have doors on most of their buildings. But
a village was a
village." She swallowed, a look of pain on her face. "On my way out,
I saw a young
woman with a large pack stealing quietly down the back road, away from
the town. I
thought maybe she had seen my army and was running to get help, so
I grabbed her and
dragged her into the woods. By the time I stopped, she was shivering
and crying. I don't
know what came over me, but I actually felt bad for her. I started
a fire and gave her
some food. After she had eaten, she told me who she was, and what she
was doing." She
sighed. "Her name was Asephony. She was a beautiful girl, barely seventeen.
Green
eyes, red hair. Skin so fair it looked like fresh cream. She was small,
a little smaller than
you. And she was running away. It seems that her parents had promised
her to a wealthy
merchant in Athens, a man who had ties to royal blood. They called
him a prince, a great
exaggeration. I found out that he was the bastard child of a King's
heir. Twice removed
and barely recognized, but her parents believed his promises of wealth
and prosperity. He
was almost thirty years older, and had four other wives, all of whom
had met a painful
death when their replacement was found."
"That's horrible." Whispered the bard, caught up in the story. "Her
parents wanted to
send her into that?"
"People can do horrible things, Gabrielle, thinking that they have good
intentions at
heart." She touched her pale cheek with the tips of her fingers. "Asephony
wouldn't have
it. She was going to see the world..." Her words trailed off.
"What happened?"
"I watched her talk, watched her smile and reached out to squeeze her
arm. Before I
knew what I was doing, I had taken her in my arms and kissed her. She
fought me at first,
but only for a moment. Then I heard her sigh and she gave herself to
me willingly. We
made love under the moon, and by morning she had my heart." Xena looked
up quickly,
frowning at the sadness in Gabrielle's eyes. She hadn't paid attention
to what she was
saying. "It was a long time ago, Gabrielle."
The bard nodded, not trusting her voice to speak.
"I took her back to her village, told her to tell everyone that the
Warlord Xena was
coming to destroy their lives unless I was given a tribute. And that
the tribute I wanted,
was her. The next day, I rode in, my entire army at my back. I went
straight to her home
and saw her leaning against a tree." Something changed in her as she
spoke, as though
angry thunderclouds were rolling across the sky blue of her eyes. "Only
she wasn't
leaning. She was tied there. Her eyes were wide open, staring at nothing,
the blood on her
dress still fresh. They had given me my tribute." She swallowed, her
face closing down,
lost in memory. "All I remember after that...is darkness, and blood.
I razed the village,
burned down every house, every barn, killed every man that was moving,
and both of her
parents. The rest of them, I sold to the mines. When we left that valley,
the only sign that
a village had ever been there, was a long, black trail of soot. It
wasn't until that night,
when my senses came back to me, that I realized I had been wounded.
Someone had
gotten a knife between my ribs, and it felt as though a piece of it
was still in there. I went
into the woods, and found the spot where I had known her, leaned against
a tree and
waited there to die. That was were Athena found me."
"Athena?" Gabrielle's eyes were wide. "THE Athena??"
"Yes," Xena pulled out her sword. "She is the Goddess of War, Gabrielle.
She had
followed my army for quite a while, it seems. She came with the face
of Asephony, healing
me while I made love to her. When my confusion cleared, I realized
what she had done,
and refused to let her touch me. It was then that she cursed me."
"Cursed you? How?"
"None may go where a goddess was denied. On penalty of death."
"So that's why...Why didn't you tell me?"
"It seemed so unfair," She took Gabrielle's face in her hands. "But
when you died, I
knew how much I loved you, and I do, Gabrielle. I love you. And I couldn't
let you out of
my life without showing you how much." She leaned forward and kissed
her, a kiss of love
and barely restrained passion.
When the broke apart, it took Gabrielle a moment to clear her head.
"But, what happened
to you tonight?"
"I went in search of Athena."
The bard's jaw dropped. "YOU called a god?"
"Yes." She laughed at her look of surprise. "Just because I don't think
them wonderful,
doesn't mean I deny their existence. She cursed me. She can release
me."
"And?" She asked hopefully.
She laid her sword across Gabrielle's knees. "She gave me the answer.
But it doesn't
make sense. Can you read this, Gabrielle?"
The bard studied it for a moment, then nodded. "Part of it, anyway. 'You must take-'"
"I know that part," She interrupted.
"The rest is vaguely familiar, but there's something odd about it."
She sighed in
frustration. "I can't read it."
"It's all right, Gabrielle." She reached for the sword but the bard
curled her fingers
around it.
"It's my life, isn't it?"
Xena stopped cold. "Forget it Gabrielle." She warned.
"No, I won't forget it." She touched the first set of words. "'You must
take what you do
not want, from the one who would give you everything.' It's my life.
Isn't it?"
"Gabrielle," Xena pulled the sword from her grasp and set it aside.
"What does it
matter? I won't do it. I won't let you do it. If all we can have, is
what we have now...isn't it
better than the alternative?"
"But-"
"NO!" She felt panic rising in her throat and fought to keep control of it. "Come here."
Gabrielle moved into her arms, feeling warm breath against her neck
as Xena's lips found
the place where her pulse beat in time with her heart. She laughed
softly as teeth nipped
at her skin, and felt the marks rising that would claim her as Xena's.
Once, she would
have fought against any man who would try to own her in such a way.
But she possessed
Xena as well, she knew that every time she looked into her eyes.
She cried out softly as Xena trailed her lips down her chest, taking
a nipple into her mouth
through the thin fabric of her shirt. Pushing the warrior away, she
pulled her clothing off
and laid across the bed, her thighs parting slowly as blue eyes trailed
over her fair skin.
Never moving her eyes from Gabrielle's, Xena untied her leathers and
let them drop to
the floor. The need she saw on Gabrielle's face was enough to make
her knees go weak.
She knelt over the smaller woman's body, straddling her hips until
she could feel soft hair
against her labia. Closing her eyes, she began to rock, pushing against
the body beneath
her., as small sounds escaped her lips.
Gabrielle watched Xena in wonder, her own breath coming in gasps at
the feel of the
woman on top of her. She could feel exquisite softness and delightful
pressure each time
Xena moved against her, and her hands reached up instinctively, only
to be grabbed
tightly when they were an inch from the warrior's breasts. She whimpered
in frustration as
she felt them being pulled back and pinned behind her head in one strong
hand as Xena
brought her lips down against her body.
Xena could feel Gabrielle's passion building and increased the speed
of her hips. She
could feel the pounding of the girl's heart, could hear her name on
those sweet lips, and it
pushed her over the edge. Her release flooded through her, causing
spots to dance before
her eyes as she cried out Gabrielle's name. Beneath her, her lover's
body shook and
finally lay still as well. She collapsed into loving arms, and was
asleep in seconds,
mumbling 'I love you' before sliding into darkness.
Gabrielle held her, her eyes overflowing with the love she could not
contain. She felt as
though this woman was her heart, and without her, she would cease to
be.
How could she let her suffer?
She waited nearly an hour, until Xena's body had completely relaxed,
and then slipped out
from beneath her. She pulled on her skirt and top, then stood, looking
down at her lover
for a few moments.
"I love you, Xena." She whispered softly. Grabbing her lover's sword,
she headed out the
door.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Part 5
Gabrielle looked up and down the hallway. Finding it empty, she slipped
out of their room
and closed the door behind her. The cold boards against her feet reminded
her that she
had forgotten her boots and she thought briefly about going back for
them. With a shake
of her head, she continued down the hallway, listening at each door.
She heard Delphi's
voice in the very last room. Taking a deep breath, she knocked softly
and tried not to
laugh when she heard panicked footsteps from within.
After a few moments, the door opened a crack to reveal one of Delphi's
clear green eyes.
It widened slightly and then narrowed as the door opened completely.
"Gabrielle!" She admonished. "You scared the wits out of me." She looked
behind the
bard, confusion apparent on her face. "What are you doing here?"
"I need to talk to you."
"Well, uh..." The barmaid looked behind her, into the darkness of the room.
"Please, Delphi." Gabrielle grabbed her arm. "It's important."
She studied Gabrielle for a few moments and then sighed. "All right,
all right. Give me a
minute."
"Hurry," The bard blushed. "I don't want-"
"Yeah, I know. You don't want Xena to wake up and find you lounging
outside my door.
One second." She closed the door and Gabrielle could hear heated words
from the inside
of the room. A moment later, the door flew open and a young woman stormed
out, the
surprise on her face matching Gabrielle's expression as she saw her
in the hallway.
Strawberry blonde, pale blue eyes, fairly athletic body. Gabrielle
tried not to smile as she
stormed away, throwing back a few hard words at the barmaid chasing
after her.
"It's not like that, Ari! She's just a friend!" Delphi's shoulders slumped
when she realized
her lover was out of earshot. "Thanks a lot, Gabrielle."
"Sorry." She couldn't keep herself from smiling. "But I need your help."
Delphi noticed the sword she was holding and did a double take. "What's
going on?" She
grabbed Gabrielle's arm and pulled her into the room, closing the door
softly behind her.
"Tell me."
"I need to ask you a question." Gabrielle reached out, her hand going
to the top of
Delphi's breasts. The barmaid sighed when her fingers only curled around
her necklace.
"This symbol...what is it?"
Delphi looked down, thinking that the bard had lovely hands. She shook
her head quickly
and retrieved her charm from Gabrielle's grasp. "It's an old prayer
stone." She turned it
so she could study it. "My grandfather belonged to The Ursa."
"The Ursa?"
Delphi nodded. "It was an ancient clan that worshipped Athena and Artemis.
At one time,
everyone in this valley was part of The Ursa."
"What happened?" Gabrielle leaned closer to study the amulet again.
"I've never heard
of them."
The barmaid smiled sadly. "The usual happened. There was an argument
between two of
the priests, one who favored Artemis, and one who favored Athena. As
can be expected,
the clan split in two, each side hating the other, even though they
were the same people
they had pledged to love and protect." She poured herself a glass of
port and sat down on
the bed. After a few sips, she continued, her voice soft. "They went
to war, each side
fighting for the honor of their God. A lot of people died, both men
and women. In the end,
the clan was so weakened that it couldn't survive. All that's left
is the Temple that
Artemis and Athena shared at one time. We still care for it, clean
it and keep the torches
lit. But no one goes to worship, no one goes to pray. To most of us,
it's as dead as the
clan."
"Who did your grandfather follow?"
"My grandfather was one of the few who did not choose sides. He tried
to unify the clan,
and was banned for his trouble. He spent the last ten years of his
life trying to make
people understand why the clan had failed.. He made me understand.
He gave me this
necklace. It is the symbol for peace in the Ursan prayer language."
Gabrielle laid Xena's sword in her lap. "Is this the same language?"
Delphi pulled the sword into the candlelight and ran her fingers across
the blade. She
turned questioning eyes up at Gabrielle. "Where did you get this?"
"The sword is Xena's. Athena placed the writing there. I was able to
decipher the first
part, it's just an odd version of ancient Greek." She pointed to the
first verse. "'You must
take what you do not want from the one who would give you everything.'
But the rest-"
"That's not what it says." Delphi corrected her. "This word is not 'take'.
It's actually
'accept'."
` "You must accept what you do not want from the one who would give
you everything?"
Gabrielle sighed in understanding. "She wanted Xena to think that she
had to do it."
"Do what?"
"Take my life."
Delphi stood quickly, the sword sliding to the floor with a clang. "What?!?"
Gabrielle tried to decide how much she should tell her. "Athena is angry
with Xena. She
cursed her. The only way to lift the enchantment is-."
"For her to take your life??" Delphi grabbed the sword from the floor.
"I'll kill her
myself."
"No!" Gabrielle twisted it out of her grasp. "Xena doesn't want to do
it. She won't even
think about doing it. And apparently, she doesn't have to. She just
has to accept it."
"Gabrielle, listen to yourself. We're talking about your life here."
She shrugged. "I was hoping the rest of the inscription...can you read it?"
Delphi nodded and held out her hand with a sigh. She studied the last
set of characters for
a long time before looking up at Gabrielle with something of a smile.
"Well, I don't know
how much help it is..."
"What?" The bard stepped closer.
"'No light is brighter than the moon, on love and life in shadows.'" She smiled.
"What?" Gabrielle repeated, frowning in confusion. "What does that mean?"
"It means the moon may be an answer." She set the sword down and drank
the rest of her
port. "Artemis and Athena are not fond of each other, but it seems
they are still playing
by the rules."
"What?" Her voice was getting higher and she was getting very tired of that word.
"In this valley, two gods are in power, still to this day, even though
the Ursa are long
gone. What Athena does, Artemis must endure, and vice versa. My grandfather
used to
tell me stories about the games they would play. One would set a course,
the other would
do her best to deter it. Sometimes it was in fun, sometimes in anger,
but they were always
trying to prove who was more powerful." She held up the sword. "It's
a taunt. Athena
placed these words here to proclaim her course as set. Which means
that Artemis-"
"Could deter it..." Gabrielle's mind worked furiously. "Artemis could
be made to stand in
her way."
"Perhaps." Delphi frowned. "But first you have to get her attention.
That is the tricky
part. It would require sacrifice."
Gabrielle swallowed. "Sacrifice? Delphi, I can't kill anything."
"Well, I don't know of any other way."
She looked thoughtful for a few moments. "Maybe I do." She picked up
the sword.
"Where is the temple?"
"It's a long walk, Gabrielle. And not through the safest territory."
"Let me worry about that. Where is the temple?"
"I know I am going to regret this." She frowned. With a sigh, she told
the bard what she
wanted to know.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Gabrielle glanced up at the glowing moon and tried to pull her cloak
tighter around her
body. It was no good, the breastplate just got in the way. She frowned
when she thought
about Delphi's reaction to her plan. First, she had laughed to see
the bard garbed in
Xena's armor, then she had all but broken down their door to try and
wake Xena to stop
her. But, being the bard that she was, she was finally able to persuade
her to let her go.
Now she wasn't so sure it had been a good idea.
It was very late at night, or very early morning, depending on how one
wanted to look at
it, and there wasn't another soul on the grown over path she was following,
but somehow,
she felt as though there were eyes on her, making her skin crawl against
the leather
covering it.
Well, if someone was out there, they weren't attacking her, so maybe
her idea was
working. She flashed a little more armor and let Xena's sword stick
out from beneath her
cloak. Maybe she had been right in thinking that any passersby would
see a warrior and
let her alone. Whatever, it didn't matter. She could see the temple
up ahead., Delphi's
directions had been very accurate, as had her descriptions.
The Temple of The Ursa looked as though it had been grown instead of
built. Trees lined
every inch of the walls with their branches and vines threading between
the stones and
mortar. There were no windows, only small slits cut through wood and
brick to allow the
moonlight in. She couldn't make out a roof, only densely grown leaves
and protective
overhangs that looked as though they could withstand the fury of Zeus
himself.
The truth of another of Delphi's statements hit her instantly. This
place was empty,
deserted. Oh, there was not a spot of dirt on any wall, not a lone
leaf littering those
alabaster stairs, and light flickered from within, but she knew to
her bones that no earthly
creature was inside. She didn't know how she knew, she just knew.
Somehow, the thought of being so alone became more frightening than
the feel of eyes
from the wood, and she faltered in her steps. After a few deep breaths
and several
thoughts of Xena, she climbed the stairs and stood outside the door.
She tried to focus on what she had to do, but that only terrified her
more. She had never
spoken to a God, not even Ares when he came for Xena, and the idea
of it was very
unsettling. Then she thought of her Warrior Princess, sleeping alone
back at Delphi's inn.
Sleeping so soundly that she didn't even hear her lover leave. It wasn't
often that Xena
gave in to that kind of exhaustion. Whatever she had done that night,
she had done for
her. How could she turn back now?
With renewed will, she pushed against the door and found it opened easily,
swinging on
well oiled hinges to reveal the chamber within. The room was long,
long enough to hold a
hundred men, with rows of benches leading up to the altar. A fire burned
with disturbing
energy at the very back, behind the dais itself, and once again, she
found everything clean
and well cared for. The idea that people would care so fastidiously
for a place they didn't
even use was unsettling. With a shiver, she pushed the door shut and
slid the bolt that
locked it from within.
She moved towards the altar slowly, trying to form the words she would
say in her mind. It
was odd that words should desert her now. They never had in the past.
"Nothing was ever this important in the past." She whispered to herself.
Shrugging out of the cloak, she laid it over a nearby bench and resumed
her walk up to
the dais Her breastplate reflected the firelight and cast eerie shadows
across the floor as
she made her way.
The altar was beautiful, as altars went anyway. It was hewn from white
stone and inlaid
with symbols of pure gold. Flowers and fruit lined the floor, covering
every space except a
narrow path that led around it and down the center of the room. A ten
foot statue of a
woman looked down from it's pedestal above the hearth with two emerald
eyes, each set
in their own half of two different faces. There was no blood, no athame,
in fact no sign of
either anywhere.
Gabrielle stopped in front of it and looked down to see a red pillow
lining the step before
her. She sank slowly to her knees, knowing this would be the last test
of whatever faith
she had. Remembering Delphi's instructions, she tilted her head back
and stared straight
up, into the gemstone eyes of the stone goddess that presided over
this temple.
"Artemis," Her throat felt sore, her voice sounded dusty, almost as
though it was afraid
to speak. "Patron Goddess of The Moon and Maidens. I beg your counsel."
Nothing but silence.
With a sigh, she reached into her bodice and pulled out a small bundle
she had been able
to fit in between her breasts and the leather. She reminded herself
to be depressed later
about just how much she *could* fit in there.
Unwrapping the leather, she held up it's contents. "I offer these to
you, Artemis. One was
made by my own hands," She laid a tiny circle of braided thistle upon
the altar. "The
other...was made by love." She glanced one final time at the hoop of
silver in her fingers.
It had been a gift from her sister for the last birthday she had spent
at home. She closed
her eyes and squeezed it tightly in her palm before setting it within
the garland. "Hunter
Goddess, I beg your forgiveness for my lack of proper sacrifice, but
I am unable..." She
thought about that for a moment. "...unwilling...to kill." She corrected.
"I beg you, for
love's sake...give me counsel."
The silence that greeted her ears was deafening. Swallowing her bitter
disappointment,
she turned to leave, forcing herself not to reach back for her ring.
Delphi's warning had
been quite clear: Never take back a gift given to the Gods, even if
it seems they do not
want it.
Trying not to cry, she walked down the aisle to the bench where she
had left her cloak. As
she pulled it on, she heard a noise behind her. It was like the leaves
on a late autumn day,
followed by a low, throaty laugh. She spun towards the altar and saw
a handsome, if not
beautiful, dark-haired woman standing behind it. She watched as the
Goddess picked up
her ring. With a smile, she slid it onto her finger.
"Gabrielle." Artemis laughed softly, gesturing to the armor the
bard wore. "A sheep in
wolf's clothing."
Gabrielle looked down at herself and flushed as the ethereal voice echoed
in her ears. "It
was the only way to make sure I got here alive, Goddess."
Artemis snorted. "You're lucky I am a God, and as such, can hear
your thoughts.
Otherwise I might have killed you for this seeming impertinence."
"I did not mean it as such, Goddess."
"I know that, girl." She reached for a vine of grapes, slipping
each fruit into her mouth
slowly as she studied the young woman before her. "And stop calling
me Goddess. I have
a name. I give you permission to speak it."
"Artemis," Gabrielle walked forward a few paces. "I need your help, please."
The God came around the altar and leaned against it. "Why should
I grant you my help,
Gabrielle. You're not exactly a maiden anymore."
The bard's cursed in frustration. She had forgotten that. Her mind raced
furiously, trying
to think of something, anything, and settle on the Goddess' distaste
for men. Looking
directly into powerful, bright green eyes she said, "But I'm not exactly...'experienced'
either."
Artemis looked interested. "Explain that."
"Well," Gabrielle felt herself warm up to her task. "A maiden, by definition,
is a girl not
yet claimed by a man. I have never...been claimed by a man. If you
look into my heart,
you'll know I am telling you the truth." She smiled as endearingly
as she could. "Like
you, I prefer to keep company with women...well, one woman, actually."
Artemis gazed at her with an intensity that was unnerving. "You're
telling the truth." She
said finally. "Why are you here? The night is not a safe place for
maidens."
"No...no it's not. But I had to come here. Because of this." She came
up the aisle to stand
in front of the Goddess. Pulling out Xena's sword, she extended it,
hilt first, towards her.
She watched as Artemis read the words along the blade, her face growing
cold and
stone-like. When the Goddess returned her gaze, there was an anger
in her eyes that
would have frightened an army of warlords.
"So..." She laid the sword on the altar top. "Athena still
challenges me, in my own
valley." She stared into the fire, her expression unreadable
to the bard.
"Will you help?" Her voice was small.
Artemis didn't seem to hear her as she twisted Gabrielle's ring with
her fingers. Holding
her hand up, she looked at the simple, smooth band of silver, then
turned to face her.
"What does this mean to you?"
Gabrielle looked at her ring, resting on the hand of a goddess. "I carried
the love of my
family in that ring. It was a piece of my home."
The Goddess nodded. "What was the curse?"
"None may go where a Goddess was denied." Gabrielle mumbled, then explained
in
detail. When she was done, Artemis looked at her skeptically.
"You would do all this, for a simple act of pleasure?"
"No. I would do all this, to be able to love her. Without a god damning her for it."
Artemis considered her words carefully before speaking. "She is fortunate."
Gabrielle only shrugged, her cheeks reddening. "Not as fortunate as I am."
The Goddess took her face in her hands and whispered, "Watch then...listen...learn."
When she released her a few minutes later, Gabrielle stumbled slightly,
grabbing the
God's arm for support before she realized what she was doing. She pulled
her hands back
quickly. "I understand."
"Do you?" Artemis crossed her arms, her hands covering the places
that the bard's skin
had touched. "Do you understand, Gabrielle, that if she fails, you
will die. And Hades
will not let you go twice."
"I understand," She said quietly. "that if I don't do this, I will have failed her."
Artemis nodded and handed her the sword, new words etched along the
blade. "Go then.
Even now, it begins."
Gabrielle nodded. "Thank you." She grabbed her cloak and fled from the temple.
Outside, the night air felt charged with something she couldn't identify.
It felt dangerous,
deadly, as though Athena herself would try and block her way back.
She glanced back
once and saw no light from the temple. She whispered 'Thank you." again
and ran towards
the Inn.
She hadn't gone more than 30 yards when a figure leapt from behind a
tree and threw her
to the ground. She scrambled backwards, and he stepped into the moonlight,
grinning
down at her like a cat with a nice little mouse.
"'Tires?" She questioned. "What are you doing?"
"Your story was a fool's tale." He started to unfasten his belt. "Now,
I will teach you the
way the world really is."
She kicked up with her leg, catching him hard in the groin with the
tip of her booted foot.
He doubled over in pain and Gabrielle shot to her feet, moving to run
past him. Before
she could, his arm shot out, tangling in her hair and yanking her painfully
back to face
him. He leaned in close and she could smell his sour breath and the
nauseating stench of
his unwashed body. With one hand still clutching her hair, he reach
around with the other
and pressed her up against him. "You'll pay for that. Oh yes, you'll
pay." He freed her
hair and grabbed the top of her bodice to hold her still. Pulling back
his arm, he slapped
her, hard, across the face, knocking her to the ground. "Think you're
smart doncha?" He
swaggered around her, taunting her.
Gabrielle knew her only hope was to kill him, something she didn't know
if she could do.
She felt Xena's breast dagger against her skin and worked her hand
slowly from her face
to the top of her tunic.
"You think," 'Tires continued. "that uppity bitch of yours is the Warrior
Princess? Well,
maybe she is and maybe she isn't. It doesn't matter. By this time tomorrow,
you'll be tied
to my horse like any other slave girl, watching as I beat her to death."
He stared down at
her, a smug grin on his lips. "My army's comin', little bard. And there
ain't nothing that
can save her."
"Your army?" Gabrielle's nature got the best of her. "What are you talking about?"
"Seems your well muscled friend ruffed up a few soldiers over you. Took
a crest from one
of 'em." His face grew dark. "Well, he wants it back, he wants her
dead...and he wants
you. He's gotta hundred men, ready to march on Atwir in the morning.
When he's done
with you, you'll think I was a gentleman." He started to take off his
shirt. When he had
stripped down to what passed for his underclothes, he loomed over her
and spat,
"Where's your Warrior now, harlot?"
"Right here."
He turned to see a fist speeding towards his face. When he was able
to stand, he looked
at her and laughed. "Well, that's some get up."
Xena rolled her eyes and looked at Gabrielle pointedly. All she had
on was her shift and
her boots.
He lunged at her, pulling a dagger while her attention was on Gabrielle.
She flipped over
his head and landed behind him.
"Yiyiyiyiyiyiyiyiyiyiyi!" Her cry echoed in his ears as she launched
herself into his chest,
her boots burying themselves in his ample gut. He fell backwards as
the air left his lungs
and Xena stomped on his hand until he dropped the knife. She kicked
it away, into the
trees, and then knelt, one knee on his neck. "Well," She smiled. "Looks
like you
lost...again."
He struggled and she pushed harder, hearing his neck creak under her
weight. "Just tell
me what I want to know, and I'll get up. Then we can finish this like
men." She said
sarcastically. "Or, I can just kill you now, like a snake crushed under
my boot heel." He
shook his head in panic. "What time are they attacking?"
"First light." He croaked, taking huge gulps of air the moment she was off his throat.
"All right." Xena looked at him coldly. "There are two ways we can do
this. You can run
now and hope I never see your ugly face again, or you can attack me
and I can kill you,
saving some other warrior the trouble." She sighed when he charged
her. "That's what I
thought." She stepped out of his way, kicking him in the ass as he
sailed past her.
When he came at her again, he held a thin spike, something he had pulled
from his boot.
He gripped it's handle and lunged, only to have her knee connect solidly
with his groin,
and then her fist with the back of his head. He crumpled to the ground,
his own hand
shoving the spike up into his heart. She flipped him over with her
foot and shook her head.
"Who do they have to be so stupid?" She asked, to nobody in particular,
and then turned
her attention to Gabrielle. "Are you all right?"
Gabrielle saw the worry in her eyes and immediately felt like a child. "I'm okay."
Xena helped her up and then inspected every inch of her.
"I said I was okay!" Gabrielle protested, anger creeping into her voice.
"Oh, I'm not worried about you," Xena remarked. "This is my favorite
armor." She
laughed quietly.
"Very funny."
"What are you doing out here, anyway? In my armor?"
"I thought maybe I could find a way to help you," She saw the steel
in Xena's eyes and
rushed to continue. "But I was wrong. You were right." She hated lying
to her, but it was
the only way.
The warrior studied her for a few moments and then nodded, whistling
for Argo as she
pulled her sword from Gabrielle's back. She hooked it onto the saddle
horn with her
chakram and then vaulted into the saddle, pulling the bard up behind
her. "We have to
hurry, so hang on. We have to warn the villagers while there is still
time for them to do
something." She spurred Argo into a full gallop back towards Atwir.
When they reached the town, everything was quiet. The quiet of peace
loving farmers and
merchants with no idea they were about to be attacked. Xena recognized
it, she had
destroyed it often enough.
"Not this time." She whispered. "Gabrielle, go get Delphi. Tell her
to wake everyone and
have them meet us in the tavern. Hurry."
Thirty minutes later she was staring into incredulous faces. "You can't
be serious!" One
man shouted. Why would raiders come here?"
"Raiders go where they will," She snapped, losing her patience. "They
don't care who
they destroy."
"If they are coming here, then they are coming for you!" A woman cried
out. "You've
brought them down upon us!"
Xena was speechless in the face of their accusations. She had come to
help them and was
receiving their anger instead of their support. She was close to leaving
when Dophycles
forced his way to the front of the crowd.
"You are all being fools!" He shouted over the noise. "This woman is
offering her aid in
saving your village. She is a noble warrior. If you turn her away,
you deserve what you
get."
The villagers stared at him, all of them surprised into silence. Dophycles
turned and
clasped Xena's arm. "If you stay, I will help you."
"As will I!" Delphi agreed from the back of the room.
Within a matter of minutes, she had twenty volunteers, all the men she
could use. She
sent the rest home and gave instructions to her 'army' before releasing
them to tend to
their families. "Remember, be in position well before dawn. Warlords
can be
unpredictable." They nodded and filed out, leaving Gabrielle and Xena
alone by the bar.
Xena looked down at her lover and smirked. "Could I get dressed? Please?"
Gabrielle smiled. "Lead the way, Warrior." She followed Xena up to their
room, her feet
moving automatically as she went over her own plans in her head. With
a sigh, she
realized that she was betting her life on the woman in front of her.
She hoped to the God's
she was right.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Part 6
Xena didn't know what to think. Silence was something unusual for Gabrielle...very
unusual. And yet, silence is what she got as she led the bard up to
their room. She
desperately wanted to believe her, that she had given up on trying
to 'save' her. She
wanted to believe that. But something in the way the bard looked right
then, kept her from
doing it. "What's wrong?"
Gabrielle glanced up, forcing a smile. "Nothing. I was just thinking
about tomorrow.
About how we can stop them from hurting these people."
"We?" Xena shook her head. "No, Gabrielle. There is no 'we' in this.
You're staying
here."
"Staying here?" Anger showed clearly in her pale blue eyes. "Xena, I
can help you. I
know what I'm doing with a staff. I'm not a child anymore."
"I never thought you were." She filled a bowl with water and splashed it on her face.
"Then why?"
"Because Athena is angry with me." She dried herself with a towel before
taking the
bard's shoulders in her hands. "and you're no match for a God."
Gabrielle nodded slowly. Everything depended on her being on that battlefield
tomorrow,
arguing would only make it that much harder. "You're right."
Xena blinked. "What's going on , Gabrielle?" she whispered, her eyes narrowing.
"Nothing."
"Mmmhmm." She grabbed the bard gently by the chin, tilting her head
up to meet her
eyes. "Don't even think about it."
Gabrielle smiled and leaned into her, feeling the warmth of her body
through the thin
fabric of her shift. Her hands moved in small circles across the warrior's
back until she
heard Xena swallow.
"We don't really have time for this." Xena whispered, her voice hesitant.
"Shh." Gabrielle bowed her head, running her lips above a swollen nipple.
"Gabrielle, I don't know what the rules are. I don't know how much you can do..."
Gabrielle reached up and unsnapped her breastplate, letting it fall
to the floor between
them. "I know how much you can do."
Xena's arms were around her instantly, pulling at the laces that held
the leather closed.
When it finally slid from her hips, Gabrielle moved to the side of
the bed. Moonlight
streamed through the window and reflected off of her pale skin, bathing
her in a glow that
made her look unreal. "Come here." She whispered, holding out her hand.
Xena didn't hesitate. All thoughts of time forgotten, she pushed Gabrielle
back onto the
bed and parted her thighs with a hand, eyes closing at the wetness
that met her fingers, a
small moan escaping from her lips. The urgency of Gabrielle's need
astounded her. There
was no shyness, no pause, just a demanding hunger that burned deep
in her lovers eyes.
She lowered her head and bit softly on one nipple, running her tongue
around it in circles,
keeping time with her hand as her fingers grazed Gabrielle's center.
"Please..." The bard's voice was no more than a ragged whisper.
"What do you want me to do?" The words were light, almost teasing, and
Xena smiled as
she said them, but her heart nearly hammered it's way out of her chest
when she felt
Gabrielle's palm against the top of her head. The bard pushed her down
gently, moving
her hips up to meet soft lips as Xena buried them in pale, fragrant
hair. She lifted
Gabrielle's thighs onto her shoulders, sliding two fingers deep inside
as her tongue parted
her and flickered lightly against her clit. She went as slow as she
could, exploring every
fold, every soft, satin ridge with her tongue as her fingers curled
inside, reaching deep to
find the spot that always stripped away Gabrielle's senses.
When she had it beneath the tip of her finger, she increased her speed,
pushing harder
with her tongue as her hand moved in and out of Gabrielle's sweetness.
She felt the bard's
ecstasy in her own body as Gabrielle began to buck beneath her, her
hips shuddering
wildly against the roughness of her palm.
"Xena!" Gabrielle's cry ripped through her like a blade and she felt
her own thighs begin
to tremble against the sheets beneath them.
"By the God's, Gabrielle..." Her voice was weak, her hands trembling.
When she felt the
bard's back arch, she let go of her self control, allowing herself
to slide into release,
pulled by the force of Gabrielle's climax. When they fell back to earth,
they lay
shuddering together, gasping for air.
"I love you." Gabrielle pressed her face into Xena's neck and the warrior
could feel the
warmth of tears.
"It's all right, Gabrielle." She stroked her hair and let her cry, holding
her for as long as
she could. She was surprised when the tears stopped almost immediately.
"I guess you need to go." The bard sniffed. "Go on, before I hold you
down and never let
you out of my sight."
Xena kissed her softly and rose from the bed. She washed in the same
basin she had used
for her face, wiping away the traces of their love with a cloth before
pulling on her
leathers. Gabrielle got up and helped her buckle on her armor, kissing
her soundly before
sliding her sword into the scabbard on her back.
"You'll be okay." She whispered. "I know it."
Xena hugged her tightly. "I'll see you soon."
"Yes. Yes, you will."
She locked the door behind her, and went quickly to the window. Looking
down, her eyes
followed her lover until she was out of sight.
Gabrielle sighed deeply, wishing she had more time, but a quick glance
to the east told
her all she needed to know. She pulled her clothes on quickly and grabbed
her staff from
the saddlebags, assembling it as she watched the sky lighten above
the mountains.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Xena moved like a shadow, slipping from one attack point to the next
with the agility of a
cat. She had ordered them to stagger themselves in groups of four,
creating five small
defense parties spread across a field outside of town. She inspected
each group, finding
them satisfactory, until she reached the last one.
There, she found Delphi, armor strapped around her chest and a sword
in her hand. Her
skirts were gone, replaced by the rough breeches that the townsmen
wore and her hair
was braided tightly against her head.
"What do you think you're doing?" Her voice was harsh, there wasn't time for reason.
"I'm defending my people," Delphi shot back. "And save your breath,
I'm not going
anywhere."
Xena cursed under her breath. "Do you even know how to use that thing?"
The barmaid smiled. "I run a tavern."
With a curt nod, Xena moved on, only stopping when Dophycles grabbed
her by the arm.
"How do you know they'll come through this field?"
She looked from him to the horizon and then back again. "Because I would."
She pulled
her arm free. "Now get ready."
She left him to move into position and strode to her own spot on the
battlefield, right in the
front, with no cover. Everyone else was backup...just in case. If they
wanted Gabrielle,
they'd have to get through her first. She turned her head and listened,
smiling darkly
when she heard the whispers of the enemy, carried softly to her on
the wind. A few
moments later, she saw them.
Not a hundred men, but fairly close. She estimated about seventy five.
Every one of them stopped when they saw her, her armor flashing in the
newly rising sun.
"This is your only chance," She yelled. "Throw down your weapons and
go home to your
wives...before I make them widows!"
A few men shuffled nervously, the one's that believe the legends about
her. Most of them
just laughed. They parted ranks to let a lone man through and Xena
spat when she
recognized him..
"Kyldus."
"Xena," He tucked his hands into his belt and smiled. "How nice to see
you again. I've
come for what is mine."
She pulled out his patch of leather and released it to the wind.
"Nice try," He sneered. "But this town is mine, the girl is mine...and
you are mine." He
pulled his sword and charged, his men fast on his heels.
Xena grabbed her chakram and threw it to her right, watching as it arced
back to cut it's
way through the nine separate swords. The men stared down at their
weapons in surprise
before throwing them to the ground.
Xena caught the chakram neatly and held it up for them to see. "Next
time it will be your
heads." She called, smiling when they scattered into the nearby woods.
"Nine down,
sixty-six to go." She drew her sword and met the attack, the blood
singing in her veins as
she bulled her way through the men around her.
Somewhere deep inside, she knew this was the real reason she didn't
want Gabrielle here.
She didn't want her to have to watch...to see what she might have to
become, to save them
and this village.
She clamped down firmly on those thoughts, and shoved them to the back
of her mind,
letting her body react on it's own. She couldn't tell how long she'd
been fighting, but the
men were down to coming one at a time and she dispatched each of them
quickly, satisfied
they would live to show the scars that she had given them.
When she reached Kyldus, Xena smiled and began to circle around him,
her sword cutting
the air as it danced at her fingertips.
The soldier took one look at her and swallowed hard. In her eyes, he
saw death, dark and
very gleeful.
She raised her arm to cut him down and heard a scream from behind her.
"NO!"
Xena turned her head and saw Gabrielle slam her staff into a soldiers
legs. He had been
five feet behind her, stealing up quietly, a dagger in his hand. She
opened her mouth to
speak and felt a foot against her back. Stumbling slightly, she regained
her balance only
to lose it when a gloved fist slammed into the side of her head.
"Oh, Xena." Kyldus laughed. "I guess you're not as good as everyone
says you are.
You're not paying attention." He kicked the sword out of her hand,
sending it spinning in
the dust to be grabbed up by the soldier Gabrielle had just knocked
into the dirt. He stood
and began to circle the bard, pushing her to the edge of the field,
backing her into the
trees.
Xena waited until Kyldus stood over her and then flipped herself up
and back, catching
him under the chin with both of her feet. He staggered backwards, giving
her time to grab
a sword that had been abandoned on the field. "That's the problem with
your kind,
Kyldus." She grinned and twirled the sword between her fingers. "You
always have to
gloat."
Kyldus snarled in rage and rushed at her, pulling out a dagger as he
went. When he was
two feet away, she jumped to the right, bringing her arm around in
a sweeping motion, the
blade flat against the back of his head. With a low, painfilled moan,
he crumpled and lay
still.
Turning to check on Gabrielle, she felt her heart slip into her throat.
The soldier had
managed to knock Gabrielle's staff away and now held her by the front
of her shirt,
readying the sword at his side.
Xena whipped her arm back, dagger ready at her fingertips, and had it
grabbed from
behind. It only took her a moment to crush her attacker's windpipe,
but a moment was too
long. The dagger left her hand a full two seconds after the soldier
began his thrust,
impaling Gabrielle through the chest before it could rip through his
shoulder and pin him
to a tree.
She watched as Gabrielle's hands closed around the blade. The bard's
lips moved, but no
sound came out. And then she fell, toppling backwards onto the ground.
Xena stared, trying to will that gentle chest to rise and fall, but
it didn't. It lay as still as
the bard herself.
Her vision went black along the edges as she took one step and felt
her legs give out,
driving her to her knees in the dirt. A sound came from her lips that
would haunt all those
present until the day they drew their final breath. It began as a low
wail, rose to a roar,
and ended with the feral note of an injured animal, enraged and unstoppable
in it's fury.
"NO!"
In that one moment, the soldiers glimpsed what she had been....and ran
in fear of their
souls.
Xena did not hear them go, and wouldn't have cared if they hadn't. Her
cry ended as she
pitched forward into the dust, the sword sliding out of her hand as
her fingers dug
convulsively into the earth.
That's when she felt it coming.
The black rage and unstoppable hatred that had driven her as a warlord,
began to escape
from the places where she had locked it away. The darkness traveled
from her mind,
down along her spine, stiffening it as it went. She could feel it as
it threaded it's way
through her soul, never ceasing in it's struggle to reach her heart
The madness began to take over and she reached out for a sword, any
sword. As her
fingers brushed over a hilt, her body racked in a pain so intense that
she bit down on her
lip, bringing the taste of blood and soil to her mouth. She focused
on that as words
struggled up out of her memory, struggled up out of her soul. She listened,
her heart
aching, as Gabrielle spoke from within her:
NO! No, look, you promise me...if something happens to me, you will
not become a
monster. There's only one way to end this cycle of hatred, and it's
through love...and
forgiveness.
Xena felt some small part of herself fight it's way through the hatred.
She felt it grow as
she heard her heartbeat through each of Gabrielle's words.
No...No, you promise me!
Somewhere in those words, she heard her own voice. Not the voice of
the warlord, or the
voice of the hero, but the voice of the young woman Corteze had left
behind. It spoke only
two words, but those words repeated through her heart and mind, driving
out the darkness
wherever they touched.
I Promise...
Two words whispered to a friend...what seemed like ages go. But as the
last strands of
them echoed in her mind, she felt her trembling cease. Her vision did
not clear, but
lightened instead, relieving the pressure in her temples. Reaching
out, she grabbed the
sword and pulled it to her, using it as a cane to help her rise to
her feet. Her gaze was
fixed on the figure before her, barely more than a boy, struggling
to free himself from
between the dagger and the tree. She raised her sword above her head
and ran straight
for him.
"Yiyiyiyiyiyiyiyiyiyiy!" Xena saw his eyes widen as she brought her
sword down in a
devastating arc. Mid-swing, she changed her grip and slammed the pommel
into his head.
He slumped, unconscious, his body still pinned by her dagger. She grabbed
it and tugged it
free, letting him fall to the ground unaided.
Dropping both sword and knife, she went on her knees beside Gabrielle.
As if disconnected from herself, she watched her hand touch that pale
cheek, watched it
brush re-golden hair away from a smooth forehead.
There was no blood on that hand.
With that one realization, all the hatred left her soul. All the blackness
she had hidden
away drained out of her, leaving her weak and shaken as she stared
down at that beautiful
face, wanting more than anything to have one more moment, one more
chance to tell her...
"I love you, Gabrielle." She whispered, tears stinging her eyes. "And
I kept my
promise...I kept my promise." She chanted the words over and over,
as though they were
a mantra that would wake her from this nightmare. Cradling the bard's
head in her lap,
she rocked back and forth as the anguish tore through her heart. When
it became too
much for her to bear, she threw her head back and screamed her rage
up to an uncaring
sky.
After what seemed like hours, the pain finally receded to a dull, throbbing
ache and she
gently laid Gabrielle's head back against the earth. Willing her hand
to be steady, Xena
reached out for the sword still trapped within her chest.
'My sword.' She choked, trying to swallow the bitter tast in her mouth.
Steeling herself, she grabbed the hilt and felt her fingers close around...nothing.
Her hands began to shake as she watched the sword disappear, followed
by the wound,
which went much more slowly. A few minutes later, all that was left
was an angry red line
against Gabrielle's once flawless skin and the blood that had soaked
into her clothes. A
moment more and the bard's hand moved, going instinctively to the sore
spot above her
right breast.
Turning towards Xena, Gabrielle frowned, "You didn't tell me it was going to hurt."
The warrior had opened her mouth to reply before she realized that Gabrielle
was not
speaking to her, but rather, over her shoulder. She looked behind her
and saw the young
soldier climbing slowly to his feet. Her shock increased when his mouth
opened to emit
the fair tones of a woman. "Well, I told you, you had to REALLY
die. What? Did you
think it would be pleasant?" The man-child slowly melted away
to reveal the fair,
dark-haired woman beneath.
Xena didn't even blink. "Artemis."
The Goddess smiled down at her, reaching out to stroke her cheek gently.
"I understand
now why Athena was so angry," She looked over at Gabrielle.
"And why you were
willing to die." She knelt beside Xena and leaned in close,
her word's for the warrior
alone. "She would have died for you. A part of you died for her.
No stories or legends
from any bard could ever equal that."
Xena nodded, trying to force her heart to start beating. "Thank you."
"Don't thank me, Warrior Princess." Artemis pressed something
into her hand. "Just
make sure you never let her go. Because if you do, I'll be there.
And I guarantee...you will
never get her back." She stood and began to go.
Xena's eyes narrowed as she realized what the goddess meant. Rising
slowly to her feet,
she kept her face carefully neutral. "Then why?"
Artemis looked over at Gabrielle, who was inspecting the damage to her
favorite shirt.
With a gentle smile, she whispered, "Even a God can have a heart."
Xena watched her fade away with a mixture of gratitude and mistrust.
Shaking her head,
she accepted that there was no point in worrying about it. She could
compete against any
mortal, but a God? She had to trust that Artemis would keep her word.
Opening her hand, Xena looked to see what the Goddess had given her.
It was a ring of
hammered silver, one she had seen before. Her heart aching, she remembered
that it was
Gabrielle's. A gift she had received from her sister before leaving
Poteidea. So special to
her that she didn't even wear it, just kept it tied about her neck
with a leather thong.
Xena looked closer and saw something etched along the inside of the
band. She tried to
read it, but a wind came up, blowing her hair across her eyes. On that
wind, she heard a
bitter whisper:
Go then. You are free....
The symbols forgotten, she tucked the ring into her pouch and gathered
Gabrielle in her
arms. Xena held her tightly, lifting her from the ground. "You didn't
have to do that." She
whispered.
"Yes I did." Gabrielle broke free and stared into her eyes. "I love you."
"You could have died, Gabrielle."
"I had faith in you." She tried to walk and stumbled, still weak from
her loss of blood.
Xena placed an arm firmly around her waist and helped her, guiding
her back towards the
village.
"I almost didn't deserve your faith. I can't tell you how appealing
it was, to let go, to bury
myself in the hate again. I thought it was all I had left."
Gabrielle stopped and pulled her close. "You'll always have me. No matter
what. There
isn't a god that could keep me from you."
Xena smiled and ruffled her hair affectionately. "Getting kind of cocky
aren't you? You
cheat death twice and you think you're invincible or something."
They kissed gently, Xena well aware of the pain Gabrielle was in. She
was just about to
suggest carrying her, when Delphi ran up and grabbed Gabrielle's other
arm. Pulling it
over her shoulder, she took the rest of the bard's weight.
Xena stared at her.
"I just want to help," Delphi smiled. "That's all."
The warrior finally nodded and they resumed their pace back to the inn.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Two days later, Xena was sitting at the bar, talking with Delphi while
Gabrielle
convalesced upstairs. The anger between them gone, both barmaid and
warrior found they
liked each other quite a lot. Dophycles had taken charge of the fallen
army, those he
could catch anyway. He had left that morning, with several of the village
men, a long line
of prisoners behind them, headed for the mines.
As Delphi waited on another customer, Xena reached into her pouch for
a coin, coming up
with Gabrielle's ring instead. She turned it sideways for another try
at reading the
inscription, but her vision blurred, running the symbols against one
another.
When Delphi returned, she held it out to her. "Can you read what's written
on the inside?
Whatever language this is, it makes my head hurt."
The barmaid shrugged and plucked the ring from her fingers, holding
it up to the torch
behind her. "It's Ursan." She smiled. "No wonder your head hurts. See
this part?" She
indicated a series of eight different symbols. "This is a prophecy.
It says, 'Two Hearts,
One Destiny'." She flipped the ring over and pointed to the other side.
"This....this is a
warning."
"What does it say?" Xena could barely see the long, ornate symbol scratched
into the
silver.
"It says 'Remember...'" Delphi laughed quietly, shaking her head in
amusement.
"Artemis?"
Xena nodded. "She apparently took quite a liking to Gabrielle."
The barmaid handed the ring back with a long sigh. "The Gods never learn.
They still
think they decide the destiny of man."
Xena looked at her oddly.
But Delphi only shook her head and slid another port in front of the
warrior, raising a
hand against her protests. "On the house."
"Delphi," Xena growled. "If you keep giving me drinks on the house,
you're going to go
out of business."
"Oh, I think I can handle it."
"Yeah, but what would your father say?"
The barmaid leaned in close, beckoning with one finger for her to lean
in too. "Want to
know a secret?"
Xena nodded.
"My father never says much of anything. He's too far away for that."
She whispered. "In
fact, I haven't heard from him in over forty years."
"Forty years?" Xena laughed. "Come on! You can't be much older than Gabrielle."
Delphi brought her chin up and leveled her gaze at the warrior. "Looks can be deceiving."
Somewhere in her bright green eyes, Xena saw something she couldn't
quite put her
finger on. She opened her mouth to speak, but Delphi interrupted her.
"Speaking of swords..." She leaned down to look under the bar.
"We weren't." Xena frowned.
"One of the field hands brought this in this morning," The barmaid continued
as though
Xena hadn't spoken. "It's yours, I believe."
She laid Xena's sword down on the counter. It was clean, not a drop
of blood on it, and the
blade held nothing but scratches and nicks.
"The symbols are gone..." She drew the sword to her and ran her hand
down the length of
it.
"I don't think they were ever there."
"I saw them, Delphi."
"You saw a sword with symbols along the blade. This one had been lying
in the dew for
days, in the old abandoned orchard out by the riverbed. The smithy
had to really work to
get all the rust off of it."
"So it wasn't my sword..." She smiled and slid the weapon home, adjusting
it in the
scabbard on her back.
"Thank you, Delphi. For everything."
"Hey, 'Chesis!" An old soldier called from the doorway. "Bet you never
thought you'd
see me again, huh?"
" 'Chesis?" Xena questioned.
"Just a nickname." She smiled. "Something my father used to call me.
Excuse me." She
went and threw her arms around the old man. "Actually, Griga," She
shouted. " You're
too damn mean to die! I knew you'd be back!"
Xena laughed and sipped her port, a smile coming to her lips when she
heard soft
footsteps behind her. She put on her sternest look and turned to face
Gabrielle. "What
are you doing out of bed?"
"Looking for you!" Gabrielle snapped. "I told you, I'm fine. It's boring up there."
"I don't care, you're not well. Go get back in bed."
The bard crossed her arms and stood her ground. "Not unless you're coming with me."
Xena felt every eye in the bar come to rest on her. She could hear them
all snickering,
waiting to see who would win this battle. With a sigh, she held out
her hand and allowed
herself to be led upstairs.
The laughter and applause followed them as they went
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.
"Are you happy now?" Xena whispered, feigning anger. "Now word will
get around that
I'm soft on bards. Guess you'll just have to get used to being one
of the many."
"I don't think so." Gabrielle's voice was low, almost husky and it took
Xena by surprise.
She looked at the bard and swallowed.
"What are you doing?"
Gabrielle began to circle her, a dangerous look in her eyes, as Xena backed up to the bed.
"Yiyiyiyiyiyiyiyi!"
Her eyes widened as the bard flew at her. She stumbled backwards onto
the bed and
laughed when Gabrielle came down straddling her hips. "Gabrielle!"
She tried to slap at
hands that were quickly unfastening her armor. "Stop that. You're not
well."
"Excuse me, Princess." Gabrielle said sarcastically. "But if you can't
see what's really
ailing me, then you're the one that isn't well." Her voice became husky
again. "Just do
what I tell you and no one will get hurt."
Xena laughed into a pillow and let Gabrielle undress her, fully intending
to take control of
the situation as soon as she was done.
Gabrielle, however, had different plans. She finished pulling the leathers
off and felt
Xena's hands go to her waist. She knew what the warrior intended to
do, and slapped her
hands away. Grabbing the bottom of her own shirt, she pulled it up
over her head,
exposing perfect breasts to the woman laying below her.
Xena hesitated, telling herself that she should make her rest. With
a small grin, she
shrugged and crawled her fingers up over Gabrielle's ribs, only bringing
them to a stop
when her palms covered hardened nipples. She squeezed gently and heard
a small moan
from Gabrielle. Xena was surprised when small hands covered her own,
pulling them
away.
"Patience." Gabrielle smiled. "You've already had your turn." She laid
her palm against
Xena's neck and brought her lips down, kissing the warrior with a passion
that startled
her. When her lips trailed down to touch the hollow of her throat,
Xena jumped slightly.
"Gabrielle..."
"Shhhh." Gabrielle managed, her lips moving lower over soft, tan skin.
She kissed her
way up the swell of one breast, stopping when her lips were a hairs
breadth away from
Xena's nipple. She blew on it softly before capturing it with her teeth,
her tongue and lips
sucking lightly. A soft sound came from the back of her throat as all
her inhibitions slid
away. These were the breasts she had always thought perfect, always
admired. And she
knew with utter certainty, that her hands had ached to hold them, her
lips had gone dry
with the thought of kissing them, long before she had admitted it to
herself. Laying here
now, with her face pressed against them, she breathed in Xena's scent
and thought she
would never get her fill.
Xena's eyes had closed instantly, her back arching beneath her. She
ran her hand up
Gabrielle's spine to cup her head gently, holding her lips right where
they were. It had
been so long.... "Yes..." She whispered, her fingers curling softly
in Gabrielle's hair. A
moment later she felt a warm wetness against her stomach as the bard's
hips pushed into
her. Sliding her fingers down a smooth hip, she ran them across her
abdomen and then
brought them to her mouth.
Gabrielle trembled as she watched Xena lick her fingers, her lips closing
firmly over each
one. With a small cry, she began to kiss the warrior's stomach. Sliding
down her thighs,
she shrugged away the hands that tried to stop her.
"You don't have to do that, Gabrielle." Xena stroked her face gently.
"Try and stop me." Her throat was hoarse, emotion stretching her ability
to speak. She
laid her face against dark, curly down, breathing in a scent so sweet
that it made her head
spin. With tentative lips, she kissed each thigh before nuzzling her
face into Xena's hair.
For a moment, she only breathed, wanting the scent in her lungs, in
her blood. Then, she
slowly flicked out her tongue, parting the warrior's labia, barely
grazing the clit beneath.
Xena went completely rigid at the feel of that shy tongue against her
flesh. She felt her
breath ripping through her lungs in short, aching gasps and tried to
slow the beating of her
heart. There was nothing...no one, that had ever affected her this
way. The way Gabrielle
was affecting her with the small, short strokes of her fluidly soft
tongue.
The slowness died away as Gabrielle found that she loved the taste of
her. At that
moment, she knew the power of what they were doing, and why Athena
would try and hurt
them both by taking it away. Never had she felt this close to anyone,
never had she
shared anything that felt this intimate. The knowledge of the power
she had swept through
her, causing her tongue to move more rapidly, pressing harder against
Xena's swollen
flesh. At the same time, she needed more. Needed to possess this woman
more
completely, the way she herself was owned. She pressed two fingers
against her and felt
her body spasm around them when she slid them in. The warmth that surrounded
her hand
felt like pure silk, the convulsive tightening like the beat of her
heart. Her mouth never
hesitated as she found the rhythm of Xena's hips, sliding her fingers
as she slid her
tongue.
Through all of it, she kept her eyes open, locked on the woman above
her. She knew
every move of that well muscled body, knew every whisper that left
her lips. Her eyes
traveled over every inch of glistening skin, noticing when the muscles
in her stomach
clenched, noticing when her back arched slightly higher. Xena called
out once, whispered
her name, and then came to rest, her hands pulling the bard away from
her sensitive flesh,
drawing her up and into her arms.
Xena brushed damp hair out of Gabrielle's eyes before bringing her lips
down to taste the
bard's mouth.
With a gentle laugh, Gabrielle pushed her away and ran her tongue across
her own lips.
"Mine." She whispered fiercely, her fingers touching the warrior softly
on the cheek.
Her mind screamed a warning, telling her to run, as far and as fast
as she could. But Xena
only smiled. Her heart had already won this battle. She took Gabrielle's
hand and placed
it on her chest. "Yours."
She watched as pale blue eyes widened, then closed, only to open again
with tears running
from them. She tried to kiss the tears away, but Gabrielle pushed her
back once more,
taking Xena's hand and laying it above her softly pounding heart. "Yours...always."
Gabrielle whispered. "From the first day that I met you."
Xena felt tears begin in her own eyes. She kissed the bard quickly and
turned her around
to slip an arm across her stomach, snugging up behind her as close
as she could get. "Go
to sleep." She coughed to hide a sniffle. "We're leaving in the morning."
Xena closed her eyes and pretended not to hear Gabrielle's soft laugh.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
By midday they had only reached the mouth of the valley. Xena helping
Gabrielle over
every rocky area, demanding they go slow until the bard was completely
well. When they
crested the last small hill before the mountains, they both turned
to look back at the
sleepy homes and small town that had come to mean so much.
"I think I'll remember this place for a long, long time." Gabrielle
leaned into Xena,
turning her face up to receive a soft kiss. She watched as the warrior
reached into her
pouch. She withdrew something and laid it in the bard's palm, closing
her fingers around it.
Standing back, she smiled as Gabrielle examined her gift, loving the
way her face lit up,
taking on the qualities of a child.
"My ring." She threw herself into Xena's waiting arms. "Thank you."
She whispered.
"Goddess....I love you."
Xena held her tightly. "There's something written on the inside. Delphi
translated it for
me, but I didn't put it there." She turned the ring so Gabrielle could
see the inscription.
"What does it say?"
Xena tightened her grip, resting her chin on the top of the bard's head.
"Two hearts, one
destiny."
Gabrielle smiled. "Thank you, Artemis." She whispered. Looking back
at Delphi's inn,
she nodded in satisfaction. "It's kind of fitting, actually."
"What is?" Xena took her arm and began to help her down the hill.
"Inn of The Three Daughters." Gabrielle laughed. "Fate, destiny...great
idea for a story,
huh?"
Xena felt a chill run up her spine and she spun around quickly, her gaze resting on the Inn.
An old woman stood outside, waving to them as she watched.
Xena looked down and then back again, but the woman was gone. All she
saw was
Delphi's backside as it disappeared into the Inn. Something played
at the edges of her
mind and she tried to grab at it, feeling it shift and flutter just
out of her reach...
"What's wrong?" Gabrielle asked.
With that, it was gone.
Xena shook her head and smiled, "I still think it's a dumb name for an Inn."
The End...Finally, eh?
:)
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