by 
  Alexiares 
  klotho@moonspeaker.ca
DISCLAIMER: 
  Hmm, let's see. Xena and Gabrielle don't belong to me. I am just among the many 
  who borrow them for my own purposes. Oh, Argo doesn't belong to me, either. 
  Or any other character from the television show. This isn't a violent piece, 
  or a very sexually explicit piece. But, those things do show up. What else... 
  oh, as far as I'm concerned, Xena and Gabrielle are a couple. If you don't like 
  it, don't read my story. Any other characters and other original material belongs 
  to me. Oh, and last but not least, chronologically speaking, this story is pre-Rift, 
  in fact, in my Xenaverse, there is no Rift. Truth is, I think the whole Dahok 
  storyline stinks, and I think the new Gabrielle thing isn't that hot either... 
  
  
  Oh, and if you have comments, send them to klotho@moonspeaker.ca. 
  Anything nasty will be cheerfully ignored. 
******
  
  Never get knocked out by a trout. It's worse than getting kicked in the head 
  by a centaur, because you'll definitely wake up afterwards. Chances are, a centaur 
  kicks you, and you won't get up again, until Charon prods you and demands his 
  fare.
  
  I came to after, most of the afternoon, I guess. My left eye was swollen shut, 
  and the teeth on the left side of my mouth felt like they were trying to leave 
  me. My guts felt horribly squirmy, and I found myself wishing very hard that 
  nausea did not accompany concussions. Then I noticed that I was tied with my 
  back to a tree, I had no weapons, and while I was sitting on the ground, my 
  ankles were tied too. Not a problem, just my ankles. That is still workable. 
  So, I tried to bend my knees, and made this awful squawking noise when I discovered 
  that the rope that bound my ankles had been somehow attached to the little fingers 
  of my hands. Bending my knees nearly pulled them off. Great.
  
  Off to my right, a faint rustling came to my ears, and voices.
  
  "Xena, I realize she attacked you... but did you have to hit her so hard? 
  Not only did you just about knock her head off, you killed the fish."
  
  "Ah come on. The fish had to die before you could clean it anyway... she 
  pulled a stupid stunt... think of what would have happened to the fish if I 
  had hit her harder... or if the fish had been older."
  
  This was supposed to help? I was struggling not to puke.
  
  "Well, well. So the Amazon wakes up. Not feeling so great, huh?" Ah, 
  it was the dark haired beauty. And she sounded quite cross. So much for chatting 
  her up.
  
  "Come on, Xena, cut it out. It's not her fault she happened to try jumping 
  you after being forced to spend a day and a half with Joxer." This came 
  from a smaller woman with fair hair and a green top. A top that had to be the 
  colour of my face at that moment. She was dressed pretty much like an Amazon 
  and carried her staff with authority but... I sighed. I had underestimated her 
  friend, whose name was Xena, and this had proved a serious mistake. Very serious.
  
  Xena scowled. "Fine. I'll mix up some herbs so she doesn't puke everywhere."
  
  "Gee, don't hurt yourself on my account." I managed to croak. "Shut 
  up or I'll hurt you... more." She sort of frowned and rolled her eyes after 
  that, then she went to get the herbs.
  
  "You might want to try more diplomacy and less brawn from now on," 
  the fair haired woman suggested mildly. "Right. Sure. That sounds so believable 
  when my face has been pulverized and I've been tied to a tree." The woman 
  raised her brows and walked around me, examining my bonds. She sighed. "Xena! 
  Did you have to do that finger thing? Hold still, I'll at least set your fingers 
  free." After a few breaths, I felt whatever attached my ankles to my fingers 
  disappear, along with the rope around my ankles. Then the woman sat down in 
  front of me, looking serious.
  
  "My name is Gabrielle. You tried to jump my best friend Xena, and to tell 
  the truth, if I has been closer you wouldn't have gotten hit with that fish." 
  I rolled my eyes. Well, eye. 
  
  "Maybe the staff instead, huh?" Gabrielle shook her head slightly. 
  "I can see you're an Amazon. But you aren't from around here." I shifted 
  a bit, trying to indicate subtly that lashing me to a tree was rather unnecessary.
  
  "No," I finally said grudgingly. "I'm from up North, Queen Prothoe's 
  tribe."
  
  "Ah," Gabrielle murmured. "One of the loyal ones too... and I 
  bet you have a name." I was warming up to her in spite of myself... not 
  like that! Sheesh you people, get your minds out of the gutter.
  
  "Thraso, daughter of Enna." Gabrielle grinned broadly. "You really 
  are a traditionalist." 
  
  That comment sort of pissed me off. Those of us up North get that a lot from 
  southern Amazons, because we still remember the old ways, and call ourselves 
  Emetchi, rather than Amazon... Amazon is what the Greeks like to call us, as 
  a slur. Either that, or Greeks have congenitally defective hearing. You know 
  what they call the Egyptian Goddess Au Set? Isis. Isis? How the furk do they 
  get that from Au Set? Anyway, the point is, and I had one long before I got 
  sidetracked, is that my people tend to be made fun of on a regular basis. That 
  little comment seemed to fit quite neatly into the 'being made fun of' category.
  
  "And what's that supposed to mean, wannabe?" 
  
  Her eyebrows raised much higher, and her face flushed. Getting right in my face 
  she said angrily, "There is no 'wannabe' about it. You haven't been keeping 
  up. I've been Queen of the Amazon nation nearly three years now... or had you 
  forgotten?"
  
  Forgotten? This was the Gabrielle? This was the one who had Ares' Chosen as 
  her champion and consort? No. No. Forget it. I saw what had happened. I was 
  sprawled on the stream bank, sound asleep, my fishing line gone on the current. 
  My stomach was complaining because I was starving. Perfectly reasonable explanation. 
  After all, you simply don't get knocked unconscious with a trout in real life.
  
  "Now look what you've done. You've scared her into unconsciousness again." 
  Xena said, trying not to laugh. "I have not... ah, hang on, I haven't, 
  right? Are you okay?" She sounded real worried. I felt bad. Oh well. I 
  kept my eyes shut and waited to wake up. "I said, are you all right, because 
  I don't think you're unconscious."
  
  "Don't mind me. I know I'll wake up shortly."
  
  "You are awake, now open your eyes or I won't give this to you and you 
  can stay nauseous and in pain. It doesn't matter to me. I feel just fine." 
  Xena again. Hera's tits. I opened the only eye I could and watched, bemused, 
  as Xena knelt down in front of me with a wooden cup. "Start with this and 
  I'll give you some water to chase it down. It doesn't taste too bad, but the 
  aftertaste is bitter." She surprised me. She was actually real gentle about 
  it, not choking me or anything. "Show her the top of your staff, Gabrielle. 
  It'll be easier for her to believe you if she sees the markings on it." 
  Xena's eyes had softened a lot and she seemed a bit regretful about the whole 
  situation. "Ah, you're just an overgrown kid. How old are you?"
  
  Getting called an overgrown kid got old a long time ago. And back then, I was 
  still a kid!
  
  "Twenty two winters... not a kid. I've been a weaponmaster four years already." 
  Gabrielle chuckled. 
  
  "That explains the attitude. She's more than a bit like Eponin." A 
  snort came from Xena, who had walked around their fire for a waterskin. "Just 
  goes to show, weaponmasters are picked that way on purpose. Stubborn, competitive, 
  and hot headed."
  
  A frown crinkled Gabrielle's forehead. "Well," she replied mildly. 
  "That is how I picked you." Xena's eyebrows disappeared under her 
  bangs. "I am not hot headed."
  
  "That man you belted into next week in the last village would beg to differ."
  
  "He tried to pinch your butt!" Xena blurted in an outraged tone. Gabrielle 
  rolled her eyes. Apparently this argument had been going on for awhile. "Look, 
  we might as well just untie her. I think there was just a misunderstanding." 
  Gabrielle stood up and dusted off her skirt as she spoke. Xena took half a step 
  forward, frowned, then handed Gabrielle the waterskin. "Then you hold this."
  
  She walked right up to me and yanked a dagger out of her bodice. My left eye 
  almost came open I was so surprised... alarmed. I'm not sure what stunned me 
  more, the place she took the dagger from or how unpleasant she looked when she 
  did it. A quick flash and I was free of the ropes. Can a flash be anything but 
  quick... lemme try that again, a flash and I was free of the ropes. Maybe... 
  heh, heh, come on now big guy, this is no time to start a brawl... yes, yes, 
  I'll get on with the story.
  
  To my embarrassment, at first my hands were numb, so I couldn't hold the waterskin. 
  That passed after a few moments though, so I stood up and shook myself. A bad 
  idea, because my head promptly started pounding and my vision filled with spots. 
  I clutched my head and nearly reeled into the fire before somebody caught me 
  by the arm and sat me down again. "Take it easy, willya!" Xena stalked 
  to the other side of the fire, and turned over the fish that had put me in this 
  condition in the first place. I figured it was time to try and cover my butt. 
  After all, I had had no idea I was picking a fight with Xena. All we hear up 
  North is names, they couldn't be bothered to visit there.
  
  Brushing off my trews, I cleared my throat and said, "So you're Xena and 
  Gabrielle, huh. Well, now I can go home and tell everybody what you really look 
  like." Gabrielle stared at me for a moment, then silently handed me her 
  staff to look at. It was the real thing. Damn. "What do you mean?"
  
  "Huh?"
  
  "What do you mean you get to 'go back home and tell what we really look 
  like'?" I squirmed. I seemed to be doing that a lot around these two. That 
  wouldn't do, I had the honour and reputation of my tribe to uphold, and so far 
  I had done a pretty lousy job. "Well, it isn't like you've bothered to 
  visit us up North, have you? Most Eme... Amazons, as you say, in the South, 
  think we're just... backwards people. My sister went South, and she asked me 
  not to use my weaponmaster's seal on my scrolls to her. She doesn't want anyone 
  to know how far North she's really from. She's ashamed. And the... Amazons she 
  lives with now mock us, do it's no wonder." This isn't a topic I enjoy. 
  I'm one of the youngest to ever earn the title of weaponmaster. I'm proud of 
  where I am from and that I have earned the right to use that seal.
  
  The fire cracked and popped. Xena pushed a log to one side and said quietly, 
  "But you're not."
  
  "Why should I be?" I liked Gabrielle just fine, but Xena was sending 
  such weird messages I was starting to dislike her just for confusing me.
  
  "You shouldn't be ashamed of where you're from." Gabrielle cut in. 
  "And I'm sorry that Northern Amazons are made fun of on such a regular 
  basis. I suppose we don't understand you as well as we should. What were you 
  going to say instead of Amazons? And how did you become a weaponmaster so young?"
  
  A plate was handed to me as she said this, and I realized Xena had been divvying 
  up the fish. Her expression was unreadable as I accepted it from her, so I was 
  unsure whether I should say thanks or nod. I settled on nodding and looked back 
  to Gabrielle. "Emetchi. That is what we are really called. Amazon is a 
  slur most of the time, and a poor approximation the rest." I felt eyes 
  burning into my right side, and looked back to Xena. "You sound quite well 
  read, besides being a weaponmaster so young." Oh. I quickly turned my gaze 
  back to Gabrielle. No need to explain some of my weirder talents to these people.
  
  "I was always really tall. Really gangly. I spent half my time falling 
  over my own feet, and the other half picking myself up. It was awful. Then one 
  day my mother took me out back of our house and handed me a staff. 'You just 
  do what I do.' We spent every afternoon after that on staff lessons, and damn 
  if I didn't quit falling on my face all the time." The fish smelt too good 
  to ignore, and the herbs seemed to be working, so I worked through some of that 
  before I went on.
  
  "And after that, everything was easy. Picking it up was almost the same 
  as learning it. The javelin, the bow, anything. Eurybe, the weaponmaster when 
  I was finishing my training was old, over fifty summers. She usually just showed 
  technique. One day, she decided I was pretty good and declared I would be her 
  assistant. For that, understand training pell for the class. And when she was 
  showing how something was wrong, I had to do the wrong thing, and she dumped 
  me on my butt." I sighed here, and Gabrielle handed me the waterskin.
  
  "Uh, thanks. Anyway, one day I got really angry..." Xena snorted. 
  "...and I waited by her hut after class. 'Eurybe,' I said, 'I realize those 
  kids need to understand how and why something is wrong, but I'm sick and tired 
  of being a training pell. It would be better if you used the person who was 
  actually doing it wrong!' And she smiled at me and replied as if we were having 
  an entirely different conversation, "Excellent. Now you are ready to be 
  a weaponmaster.' And she set me up in front of the first class next day and 
  went back to her hut." I flushed. "No big fights, or anything. Nothing 
  real impressive."
  
  "Amazons." Xena muttered, rolling her eyes. Now, I've already said, 
  Xena confused me. Xena is an Amazon... okay a feather impaired Amazon, so what 
  was this all about? So I kind of stared at her, and rubbed at my nose, which 
  I do when I'm trying to work something out, except this was a bad idea because 
  my nose was pretty sore. "Whaddya mean?" I asked finally. The trout 
  had addled my brains. I kept having bad ideas, and now I couldn't figure this 
  out. The only thing left was to ask. Xena raised an eyebrow and sighed. "Trust 
  me, kid, a flashy fight is always best avoided." I rubbed at the right 
  side of my head. I would force that damn woman not to call me kid even if I 
  died in the attempt. And maybe I would, with my luck.
  
  Gabrielle asked suddenly, "What's that mark on your arm?"
  
  Okay, fine, show and tell... shut up buddy, or we WILL have a fight, and you'll 
  never hear the end of the story! See, on my left shoulder here? Well it's a 
  five pointed star, kind of stretched out like, and its all bluey silver, silver 
  bluey... blue silver... si... well come on, that sounds funny. Do you know another 
  way to say it? Umm... that isn't the sort of description I had in mind.
  
  It looks like that even at the height of summer, when the sun tans you the most. 
  I've had it since I was a little kid. Obviously, I told Gabrielle all of that.
  
  I couldn't resist you know, flexing a bit, being as she was looking just about 
  at my bicep. Xena made this really nasty growling noise, and I stuck my tongue 
  out at her. Like I was seriously gonna try to pick up her partner. Yep. Uh huh. 
  Me and what demented early death wish? Come on. So I flexed again, making my 
  tattoos show a bit more. "You should hear the priestesses back home going 
  on about it... how it indicates something to do with the gods and all that stuff." 
  Shaking her head slightly Gabrielle ran a finger across the star, and jumped 
  back half a body length.
  
  This was actually funny. A little lady like that jumping that far. That green 
  top moved so fast you would have mistaken it for a grasshopper. She shook her 
  hand a bit like I had slapped it, which I hadn't, then looked at it like it 
  was burnt, which it wasn't, and then looked at Xena. Then back at me. Then she 
  got a real funny look on her face. Being as the first funny look was a fake 
  one. Sorry, I like puns.
  
  "Xena, why don't you look at this. It's a birthmark, obviously, but birthmarks 
  don't usually feel different from the rest of a person's skin, do they?"
  
  "Not necessarily." Xena got up with this long suffering look on her 
  face. Fact number two about the Emetchi queen. She is nosy! Heh, heh, heh, now 
  sit down Iphito, I don't mean it in a mean way. Sheesh.
  
  "What do you mean? Yours doesn't." I burst out laughing as Gabrielle 
  tried to swallow the statement after she had said it, and Xena just about blushed. 
  Laughing was a bad idea. She just about pulled my arm off. As it was, I was 
  sure I'd be able to catch behind my back without turning my wrist.
  
  She glared at the star on my arm, and I swear, it nearly grew legs and ran away. 
  Then she sort of turned me around a bit to get better light. Remember, I am 
  well over six feet tall. I am not accustomed to being turned around like a moldy 
  sack of turnips. I was getting ready to say as much when Xena asked, "You 
  sure this isn't a burn?"
  
  "No, it's not a burn!" I snapped and jerked my arm out of her grip. 
  And fell over my feet because between my having forgotten how to work my knees 
  and my inability to tell which way was up, there was no way I could have avoided 
  them. One thing about not knowing which way is up... guaranteed you'll eventually 
  fall down.
  
  I woke up again, with both women peering at me with alarmed looks on their faces. 
  "The fish," I muttered dazedly. "That damn fish. I should have 
  reached in and grabbed the furking thing. Yeah..." My eyes rolled up.
  
  "Oh no you don't." Xena grabbed me by my tunic front and shook me. 
  "Why don't you just take it easy?" I couldn't believe my ears. "You're 
  asking me? I'm the one getting shaken like a ragdoll, and you're asking me?" 
  I glared at her. Okay, I tried to glare at her. A one eyed glare is terribly 
  ineffective at the best of times, and this was the glare queen I was looking 
  at. Finally I hauled myself upright. Xena looked over at Gabrielle with a pained 
  look in her eyes. "Maybe I should whack the other side and even her brains 
  out again." But there was a worried look in her eyes that belied the words, 
  and I realized something must have happened while I was unconscious.
  
  "Listen, Thraso, for a few moments after you collapsed, you were in some 
  sort of convulsion. You've been unconscious for four candlemarks." Gabrielle's 
  tone was pretty worried. She didn't know me, so that was understandable.
  
  "Oh, that's okay. It wasn't anything serious... that happened after the 
  last concussion I had too. I felt a lot better afterwards." To prove my 
  point I stood and hopped up and down. Then I shook myself. No more dizziness. 
  I still didn't feel so good, but hey, dizziness is the worst part. If you can 
  get rid of that, life is getting better. Xena and Gabrielle just stared at me.
  
  "Of course, this birthmark as you call it tends to get me in all kinds 
  of trouble. Last week it was a guy yammering about half god types... this week 
  an Ares' army recruitment team... and now, now I'm having trouble even before 
  anyone notices it!" I stopped my tale of woe to take a breath. "The 
  half Goddess stuff was the weirdest." The look that passed between Xena 
  and Gabrielle were priceless. And I would still have paid dinars for it. Get 
  it? Oh. Forget it. Teach me to throw in subtle humour in a crowd like this.
  
  That pretty much shut down conversation for the day. Xena insisted I stay put 
  and got my stuff. I half expected my fishing gear to be kind of tossed into 
  a bundle, but you know, she put it away in the special satchel I made for it 
  and wound up the line so it wouldn't tangle or anything.
  
  "See, she's not so bad." Gabrielle told me, as she handed me another 
  mug of crappy stuff to help my headache and my sore stomach. Don't get me wrong. 
  It worked. It was still crappy. Then I curled up in my bedroll. Must have been 
  sleeping herbs in that cup, because I fell asleep so fast. And the last thing 
  in my waking memory of that night was Xena and Gabrielle curled up together 
  in their bedroll, making moony eyes at each other. Moony eyes! 
  
  
******
  
  The next morning started about as nicely as the previous afternoon had finished.
  
  "Aiyeaaaah!" someone nearly stomped on my head.
  
  Bong! Smack! "No, Xena, not the frying pan!"
  
  "Eat rocks." Crack. Thud.
  
  "Hey! Pick on someone who can fight back!" A blow whistled by my head, 
  and was followed by several whacks and a thump... sounds, that is.
  
  Clearly I was missing the fun. Scrambling out of my bedroll, I grabbed my sword. 
  Five guys had ganged up on Gabrielle, so I ran over to help out. She was holding 
  up quite well, all things considered. There were raiders all over the damn place, 
  partly because there were lots of them, but mostly because Xena was hurling 
  them around like ragdolls, bouncing them off trees, each other, the ground, 
  whatever. Since Gabrielle had seen fit to nix the idea of using the frying pan 
  for a weapon, I noticed it sitting serenely on some rocks by the fire. Those 
  rocks were probably hot, I figured.
  
  I had downed three guys, but now I had Fool from Smelliopolis to deal with. 
  Damn, that guy's body odour alone nearly knocked me out. He was fairly big, 
  and unlike me, unconcussed and untired. However, warriors are taught to fight 
  through being tired, knowing when to conserve energy and when to use it. Altogether 
  I was having a good time if I forgot about the smell, because I had never fought 
  sword against glaive before. It is really quite interesting, the key is guiding 
  the other person's momentum... if you guide it instead of trying to stop it 
  cold... er, sorry. Can't help it, I'm a weaponmaster, it's what I do.
  
  Anyway, I saw a really neat relay of thugs go ricocheting off a series of three 
  trees into Gabrielle's fighting space, where she'd knock 'em into further insensibility. 
  Think of a tornado. Think of being in the tornado. That's how wild it was. Fool 
  of Smelly was starting to get tired, so I began to move around the fire, forcing 
  him to run a bit to catch me. It was working great, he was getting tired and 
  really angry, so his swings were wilder, and I was getting close to a real opening. 
  My left foot landed solidly on a flat surface, and I used it as a pivot. Finally, 
  Fool of Smelliopolis fell to the earth like a rotten tree in a hard wind. Which 
  he was, in a manner of speaking.
  
  Then I turned my attention to some other people, and found myself rather close 
  to Gabrielle and her staff. Four guys to fight, three down, and then I smelt 
  smoke.
  
  My boot was aflame... as in on fire. Have you ever tried you put out a fire 
  and fight with someone at the same time? It's no picnic, let me tell you. Hades, 
  it isn't even a roast.
  
  So, I was hopping around like an idiot, and my foot wasn't getting any more 
  comfortable when... note that I magnanimously ignored the heckling comments 
  you all so kindly contributed... despite the yellow flames that were to starting 
  to grow alarmingly tall at the expense of my boot, and probably my toenails, 
  I knocked my last opponent flat. Ah, life was getting really good again. I managed 
  to dampen the flames to a smolder and took a step back. At which point, something 
  nailed me on the right side of my head. You know, sometimes you really do see 
  stars when you get hit in the head. 
  
  
******
  
  "Come on, wake up. You can do it." Right. Clearly this person didn't 
  have Hephaestus using their skull as an anvil.
  
  "Please?" Hades' balls. Fine. I peeled one eye open. My left eye ignored 
  all commands. A fair haired woman with green eyes gazed at me with an expression 
  of deep concern. "I'm so sorry... I swear it was an accident." Really? 
  It was? What was, I wondered. A dark haired woman with blue eyes walked into 
  my line of sight, such as it was, and laid a cold compress on my head. "Better 
  do the checklist." She drawled. This drew a grave nod.
  
  "What year is it?" Hmmm. Tough question. I was pretty sure it wasn't 
  a millennium, after all, those things are a one in a thousand deal. That didn't 
  help much though, and I finally had to admit I didn't know. "What day is 
  it?" Oooh. Another tough question. When all else fails, try the sixth day 
  of the waning Moon. It may be dead wrong, but it's something. Apparently it 
  was more than just dead, because the blond covered her eyes. The dark haired 
  woman laughed out loud. 
  
  "Met your match, bard?" The blond glared at her. She held up one hand. 
  
  
  "How many fingers am I holding up?" I looked at her hand. I squinted 
  at her hand. 
  
  "Well quit wavin' already!" I exploded finally. The blond looked up 
  plaintively. The dark haired woman shook her head in disgust. 
  
  "Do you know me?" Uh oh. Double uh oh. That was always a bad question. 
  Real bad. 
  
  "No, have we met? If it'sh 'bout Camilla, I never touched 'er, I shwear." 
  The dark haired woman's lips twitched. 
  
  "Ah, no, no, this isn't about Camilla." She knelt down beside me. 
  "Say good night."
  
  "Good night?" Everything went dark after that. I guess that was the 
  point. No, I am not going to explain about Camilla. 
  
  
******
  
  My mother was explaining to me, very gravely. "Life is just damn silly. 
  Every time you've got a plan, life changes. Every time you have a clue, it grows 
  legs and runs. Name one time you were in control of a situation, and I'll tell 
  you a time you were asleep. And remember, beware panthers bearing fish." 
  And then she vanished in a flash of light, which became a puff of smoke. That 
  was confusing, and I noticed in a vague sort of way that I seemed to be confused 
  a lot lately.
  
  But that was all right, because then I started flying, just coasting along, 
  watching the world down below. Seeing trees, and mountains, and fields. It was 
  so pretty, and I was having a great time, and better yet, I wasn't hurting a 
  soul. And then I flew up to this mountain, and coasted around. It had the usual 
  mountainey (is that a word? Don't answer that) stuff, but half way up, it stopped 
  having just the usual. It started to have marble buildings, and I could see 
  people. There was this woman in a pink, floaty thing scolding this guy with 
  a bow in his hand and wings on his back. Then there was this really over tanned 
  guy on some sort of board. He was flying too, but he wasn't having near as much 
  fun as I was. He was trying to do tricks, I think.
  
  And then I got bored with them, so I flew higher, and found a building set off 
  from the others with no one in it. But it had a big arrow on the roof, so I 
  followed it. It was a big, silly, bright red arrow too, so I realized I was 
  having a dream, albeit a remarkably detailed one. In a moment I had arrived 
  at a totally different place. It was on a mountain too, and it didn't look quite 
  as imposed on the landscape. Sitting on a balcony, which was part of a turret, 
  which was part of a tower, which was part of a set of buildings that didn't 
  look at all Greek, was a woman in dark clothes. For some reason, I found it 
  quite important that I go and speak to her. So I flew on up there. She had grey 
  green eyes and dark hair. I just dropped onto the balcony in front of her without 
  so much as a by your leave. She looked up, and never had I seen a person so 
  surprised.
  
  "Thraso!" she blurted. What did I blurt? I don't even know how I knew 
  this. 
  
  "Mom!" she stared at me. I took a step and fell over my own feet into 
  a heap by hers. 
  
  "How the tartarus did you get here, and how do you recognize me? I never 
  wore this form on the mortal plane!" Damn. More hard questions. I struggled 
  to untangle my legs, which had gotten into the human body's equivalent to knots. 
  
  
  "I don't know. You were telling me weird stuff... then I started flying... 
  then I realized I was dreaming... then..." Hang on. The mortal plane? "What 
  do you mean? Where is this?" Mom walked around me, very carefully. 
  
  "Thraso, look here." she pointed at the stones beneath our feet. Her 
  shadow stretched languorously in what seemed to be the afternoon sun. "What 
  is missing?" Everybody was asking me questions lately. I was starting to 
  feel real cranky about it. 
  
  "I don't know." A nice, sullen answer. Mom laughed. 
  
  "Yes, this does try a person's patience. But trust me on this one."
  
  Look at the stones. Stones, Mom's shadow... oh. A problem. There is a problem. 
  A big problem. "Heh, he, I seem to have misplaced my shadow. This has got 
  to be the weirdest damn dream I have ever had." A soft chuckle. I was hearing 
  a lot of those lately too. I was really starting to yearn to be on the chuckling 
  side.
  
  "You are most certainly dreaming, and you have managed to wander astrally 
  over here to visit me. I'm pleased to see you, very surprised, but pleased. 
  You inherited many powers and abilities from me, but my psychic powers did not 
  seem to be among them. Perhaps you are a late bloomer." She hauled me into 
  a standing position, then plunked me into a chair she made appear beside her 
  own. "I loved your birth mother very much. I used my powers to make you 
  of the two of us, as a gift to her." A heavy sigh. "I never expected 
  sickness to take her away so soon. But I had intended to stay, and live as mortals 
  do, and see to it that you had two loving parents. So stay I did." Silence 
  fell over us.
  
  I used to think that was just an expression. But that is exactly what silence 
  does, like a great big tree. And then you have to find a way to squirm out from 
  underneath the thing again.
  
  The implications of what I had just been told were not lost on me. I looked 
  over at her. "You're a, umm..."
  
  "A Goddess, yes. Athena, to be precise." It felt like I was in an 
  earthquake. My breath came short, and my limbs began to feel heavy and jerky. 
  "No! Don't leave me yet!" Mom's voice was urgent. "Let me give 
  you a token, or else you will dismiss this as a concussion caused illusion. 
  You have arrived where you are for a reason. An explanation for that will come." 
  Kissing me on the forehead, she placed a carved wooden pen with a metal nib 
  in my hand. "I expect you to use it."
  
  The angle of the sun changed, and the air began to smell suspiciously like burnt 
  leather. For the first time in a day, both my eyes opened. Peering right into 
  my face were two beady little eyes in the midst of a furry face. Jerking upright, 
  I dislodged the squirrel, who hared off into a tree (bet you never heard of 
  a squirrel haring before), and gave myself a bad case of dizziness while I was 
  at it. Letting whatever it is in your head that needs to settle down so the 
  world stops looking like it's spinning around, I listened to the squirrel scold 
  me. I pulled my arms out of the bedroll. A neat row of stitches closed a gash 
  down my left arm. I reached to touch them, and found the wooden pen in my right 
  hand. I flopped back and let my breath out in a whoosh. Yep, my life had veered 
  off into strangeland and I was getting further and further from home.
  
  The smell of stew drew my attention to the left, where Gabrielle was busy over 
  the fire, while Xena was sharpening her sword.
  
  "Well, welcome back to the mortal world." Xena commented dryly. 
  
  "You don't know the half of it." I sighed. The curious stares were 
  palpable. I looked at my arm, with its star and its neat row of stitches. Then 
  the pen. Wow. A look at my feet revealed that my left foot had some nasty burns 
  and no big toenail, but with a bandage and a stick I could walk. "Really 
  interesting dream, I had." Sitting up carefully since my gut was pretty 
  sore, I discovered my leather tunic had been replaced with one of my linen ones 
  while I was unconscious.
  
  "You bled all over the other one." A quick look revealed another row 
  of stitches along my ribs on the right side. Dropping my head into my hands, 
  I sighed, "I wanna go home."
  
  "Good idea," Gabrielle agreed crisply. "We'll come with you." 
  My head popped up. "I need to know about Northern Amazons... Emetchi, and 
  we..." she flashed a look at Xena. "are going to ensure you make it 
  home safely, since you received most of your injuries from us." Somehow 
  having people beat you up with fish and began their day with a scrap with a 
  band of raiders escort me home didn't seem any safer than me hobbling home alone.
  
  "You are very kind, my queen, but that really isn't necessary..." 
  Fair eyebrows drifted upward. "...although appreciated." She nodded, 
  clearly pleased I had decided not to argue. Picking up the waterskins and her 
  staff she said, 
  
  "Be right back." I watched her. Oh, but she had a cute walk. Without 
  really considering who I was talking to, I turned to say as much to Xena. The 
  warrior was watching me with a very unfriendly look on her face. I smiled weakly. 
  
  
  "Stare at her butt again and I'll make you tell me about Camilla... twice." 
  
  
  
******
  
  I would have had no problem stumbling along with a crutch. After a few minutes 
  I'd have a rhythm going and that would be that. And hey, I had happy thoughts. 
  Now I had a cool scar to show off to my buddies across my ribs, and I could 
  tell them how I met the queen of the Emetchi and Ares' Chosen. Well, leaving 
  out being smashed by a fish and lightly sauteed, that is. My left eye was practically 
  open... I heal really fast. There was only one problem. Xena was determined 
  that I should ride Argo. I was determined that I should not.
  
  Argo is a nice, smart, beautiful horse. Argo is also very big, and a fully trained 
  battle horse. Her size alone made me nervous, let alone climbing up onto a high 
  saddle which wouldn't be moving as predictably as a tree branch. Let's face 
  it, a tree branch can move up or down mostly. Any other direction is what you 
  determine yourself. Perhaps this is also true of a horse. If you know how to 
  ride. I don't. When I was six, a mean old horse that used to belong to one of 
  the village elders bit me on the arm. I'm still not sure why. I mean, I didn't 
  fall into him on purpose... in fact, falling was the furthest thing from my 
  mind, since I was busy trying to escape a swarm of angry bees.
  
  Point is, I was determined not to ride a large, unpredictable, smelly animal 
  when I could move myself just fine. None of this made any difference. Tired 
  of protests, arguments, and a bit of sidestepping and tap dancing that probably 
  endangered my stitches, she picked me up like the aforementioned sack of moldy 
  turnips and plunked me in the saddle. I was very unimpressed. The time was rapidly 
  approaching when Ares' Chosen or not I was going top have to carefully explain 
  how a little mutual respect would be required between us long before we so much 
  as approached my village.
  
  It was nearly midday, and the sun was glaring a little. The forest was getting 
  closer, and occasional pale grey rocks were poking out of the meadow we had 
  to walk across to enter it. The grass was really short, and that emerald green 
  colour really young grass with good soil to grow on gets. A stone about three 
  body lengths away was cracked neatly in half, and now I could see why the grass 
  was so trimmed looking. The rock was partially blackened, and fragments were 
  spread about it in the grass. A fire had cleared off the previous cover, and 
  shattered the rock with its sudden, searing heat. I felt empathy for that rock. 
  My burnt foot throbbed just to remind me why I felt empathy for the rock. Then 
  I felt a little jealous of the rock. After all, rocks can't feel anything.
  
  These pointless, silly meanderings were interrupted by a determined queen.
  
  "So, how long does the route we're using take to travel?" Gabrielle 
  asked briskly. I rubbed at my nose, successfully this time, since it was no 
  longer sore. 
  
  "Going this direction isn't much fun, really. When I left home, I just 
  travelled to the Nestos River and convinced a trading barge captain that his 
  half empty ship would add more money to his pockets if he let me sail with him 
  for a few days. That took three days going non stop." Poking half forgotten 
  geography lessons into fretful life, I calculated a bit. "We're fairly 
  close to Drama... three days to the mountains... a day to the village."
  
  
******
  
  Believe it or not, the next three days went quite peacefully. We had to hole 
  up one day due to a filthy storm... slush fell out of the sky for the majority 
  of the day. I got to clean and repair my battered tunic, which was a good thing. 
  Usually I got to clean my stuff more often, but I had gotten out of my routine 
  and had become rather rank. One of my rules of coexistence with others is: unless 
  it's right after class or patrol, smelling bad is not a good thing. However, 
  should you notice insects and small animals dropping dead downwind, see your 
  healer immediately.
  
  I was distracted from these considerations by the star on my arm, and a funny 
  shiver ran up my spine. I had my boots on, but my foot was still tender so I 
  was still stuck riding Argo. Turning around as best I could, I tried to see 
  what was bothering me. Nothing but the rather scrubby road and the trees and 
  soggy meadows on either side. Maybe. You ever get that? Just that weird feeling 
  something is totally wrong that leaves you looking behind you every second breath? 
  See, I figure, that feeling ought to have a name... how about... the Platos? 
  Ah come on... he's a pretty strange guy, and that feeling is pretty strange... 
  no go, huh?
  
  Argo had stopped moving, so I jumped down. Maybe I had an excess of energy from 
  not walking enough. Having too much energy can do goofy things to you. A great 
  explanation until I saw Xena standing with her sword drawn and Gabrielle in 
  a fighting stance. Uh oh. I really had the Platos now. Looking straight back 
  to where we had come from, I found myself counting, "One rainbow trout, 
  two rainbow trout..." Now, be nice. I hadn't been fishing in nearly a week. 
  I was itching to pull out my gear at the first creek.
  
  Finally, a group of screaming, yelling, and occasionally tripping and falling 
  filthy guys jumped, fell, and collapsed out of the trees. "Where do these 
  people come from?" Gabrielle exploded in exasperation. "Do they just 
  wait in the middle of nowhere hoping to ambush us or what? Where have they been 
  for four days? Figuring out excuses not to wash?" 
  
  Weaving little patterns in the air with her sword, Xena laughed softly. "Personally, 
  I think it's that trouble magnet you carry around in your bodice."
  
  "Yeah, and look here, it caught you first!" Gabrielle snapped.
  
  Okay. Whatever. This exchange had 'keep your mouth shut' written all over it 
  for me so I snatched my chobos off my belt and started denting skulls and bruising 
  appendages and ribs in earnest. I had seen my first battle two winters ago, 
  so all the yelling and screaming didn't do much for me one way or the other. 
  Lots of people though, so I started circling, forcing them to come after me. 
  Being from this part of the world, I knew some things about the terrain they 
  didn't.
  
  Typical of semi-capable raiders the world over, when I apparently started trying 
  to run away, I had a merry crowd of them on my heels. They were laughing like 
  a bunch of kids... but not the ones you like to play with at breaks from lessons... 
  no, this was like the little group of bullies who run around together stealing 
  lunches. Despite my current size, I was small for my age until I hit my teens, 
  and I often had to deal with those bullies... all great strategists began as 
  small for their age kids who were bullied during breaks, I'm sure of it.
  
  Hopping off into the soggy meadow like a demented rabbit, I leapt from solid 
  patch to solid patch, and heard the footsteps of my pursuers dropping rapidly 
  from solid strikes to loud squishes to quite impressive splats. Non-Emetchi 
  of the world: why do you walk like elephants? For those who haven't seen an 
  elephant, it's about ten times bigger than a plow ox with legs like tree trunks. 
  Those things can't help but walk heavy.
  
  Looking behind me now, I saw one fellow drop down into the muck up to his groin, 
  drawing a disgusted howl as he found himself covered in cold, sticky muck. Most 
  of his buddies joined him in the ranks of smelly-soggy-stuck guys, and one fellow 
  plunged face first into the muck. Having knocked the two guys out who made it 
  the furthest, I dashed back to the road, where Xena and Gabrielle were creating 
  neat piles of unconscious people. They didn't really need me, so I sat on a 
  rock by the side of the road and watched. You know that move Xena uses, when 
  she knocks some goof out with her thighs? There's an insidious message in that 
  move, I just haven't figured out what it is yet. 
  
  
******
  
  Xena and Gabrielle were walking along together, holding hands. I was thumping 
  along ahead on Argo, feeling kind of out of place, and just relieved to be entering 
  the mountains. Of course, that holding hands thing is king of goofy... no, I 
  didn't tell Xena that... now who's interrupting the story for no good reason, 
  buddy?
  
  Sheesh. Some people's kids.
  
  The day was dimming into twilight when we stopped. A neat little clearing was 
  settled not too far from one of the small creeks that cross cut the range, and 
  barring the fact that I fell off of Argo, setting up camp went ahead without 
  incident.
  
  Digging in my pack, I came up with that wooden pen again. It was pretty cool. 
  It was carved with snakes, birds, and eyes. I ran my fingers over it. It'd be 
  nice to try out. Lacking ink and parchment, however, this was not an option. 
  Digging around some more for my whetstone and cloth, my hand bumped an unfamiliar 
  bundle. Hauling it out, the bundle proved to be rather lumpy, wrapped in a piece 
  of thick cloth, and tied with a chunk of sturdy cord. The knot was intricate, 
  and so interesting in itself that rather than just cut the cord, I began to 
  try puzzling out how to unravel it.
  
  It was pretty easy, once I had taken a good look at it. Unfolding the cloth, 
  I found a sturdy book and a bottle of ink. Obnoxious things. What were they 
  doing in my bag? Opening the book, a short note on the first page gave the answer. 
  
  
  Hello Thraso,
  Surely you didn't think I'd forget to give you something to write on?
  Love, Mom 
  
  A typical mother's message, isn't it. you get the main point, but feel like 
  you've missed something anyway. If you think you completely understand your 
  mother, than you are deluded. I'm sorry, but you have to be. Mothers and their 
  kids aren't supposed to completely understand each other. It's some kind of 
  law some divine being came up with just to give everyone something in common 
  by keeping everyone befuddled about at least one thing.
  
  I had gotten occupied with figuring out how to get the ink to run evenly and 
  noting that a bit of charcoal would be better to draw with when a bowl of stew 
  appeared by my right knee. If that had been all there was to it, it would have 
  been a truly amazing bowl of stew. Shaking her head slightly, Xena drawled, 
  "I figured that would get your attention. You're too big not to notice 
  food." Never mind that the bard ate more than me or Xena.
  
  "Thanks." I said. I rubbed at my arm. Maybe I had a sunburn. That 
  could explain why the skin felt so warm.
  
  Dinner went by in silence, and then Gabrielle started this weird game with Xena. 
  She'd sort of wave her arms around and stuff, and apparently Xena was supposed 
  to guess what the arm waving meant. I politely refused to play, and wondered 
  if Xena worried about Gabrielle tossing herself into the fire accidentally during 
  her more vigourous arm waving moments. After a bit I returned to my pen, and 
  soon had a nice little picture of the clearing framing up Mom's note. With a 
  bemused Xena and a suitably contorted Gabrielle, of course.
  
  "How can you not get that? You figured out The Fool from this..." 
  Gabrielle held up one hand in a sort of halt pose. "But you couldn't figure 
  out The Metamorphosis from this?!" Now she crossed her arms across her 
  chest and opened them wide in an expansive gesture that made me think of an 
  overenthusiastic flower girl at a joining in a Greek village I had seen. Looking 
  a little alarmed, Xena replied, "That is supposed to be a metamorphosis?" 
  Gabrielle glared at her. "Yes, you know, like a butterfly coming from a 
  cocoon. I know, ask an unbiased observer. Thraso, what do you think?" and 
  she repeated the overenthusiastic flower girl just for me.
  
  Ah, Hades. This is not my thing. I do not get into the middle of lover's disagreements, 
  no matter how minor. I got in the middle of one once... having failed to realize 
  there was a lover in the picture, and got my nose broken. Some lessons you remember, 
  especially when it rains.
  
  "I... ah... you must remember, Gabrielle, I am not Greek, so the metaphors 
  we use aren't quite the same... so really, I can't judge." Complete and 
  utter horse crap, but, all importantly, unlikely to get me bapped in the head 
  with a staff horse crap.
  
  Gabrielle looked at me like I had grown another eye in the middle of my forehead. 
  Xena looked at me with an expression of utter disbelief. "I thought you 
  said you were a weaponmaster." she said dryly. Uh oh. The conversation 
  had just spiraled off into the land of confusion again. 
  
  "Yeeah... that's right." Pulling a chunk of wood from the fuel pile, 
  Xena poked the fire a bit. "You just did one amazing impression of a bard." 
  Her eyes were twinkling, and it now became clear to me that Xena thought this 
  was real funny. And that I was up to my eyeballs in trouble, because Gabrielle 
  had gone from thinking I had grown another eye to thinking I was fair game.
  
  "You're telling me that as an Amazon... Emetchi of non Greek occupied Thrace..." 
  Ouch. She was pulling out the catapults on me. "That the metaphors you 
  use are different... and you can't understand Greek metaphors, despite the fact 
  that you have learned Greek." 
  
  Not to be outdone, I replied, "Metaphors in speech reveal themselves by 
  context. Physical metaphors are something else entirely." Try to nail me 
  with facts will you? Try to force me to take this seriously, will you? Try to 
  force me into this argument will you? Hah!
  
  A sage nod. "I see. And what... physical metaphor would you use for metamorphosis?" 
  How did I get into this again? Wasn't Xena supposed to get asked this? I was 
  beginning to feel desperate. Surrender was not an option. Time to go to my death 
  with dignity like an honourable warrior.
  
  I sat up straight, and set aside my book and everything else, and then I shrugged 
  off my cloak which I had previously thrown across my shoulders, and stood up. 
  "I'm not sure what you want, Gabrielle..." I sighed. Looking at her 
  face, I began to wonder if I had grown another eye.
  
  "I never thought of that." Worriedly, I checked my forehead. "A 
  snake sloughing off its old skin. That's amazing. That's really good. I see 
  what you mean about different physical metaphors." And she sat down and 
  hauled out parchment and ink, to make a note, I guess. Meanwhile, I was just 
  kind of standing there with my mouth open. Enough of that, I decided, and sat 
  down with my mouth open. A soft snickering caught my attention, and I looked 
  over at Xena, who was enjoying herself far too much.
  
  "Hey," she tossed me a wineskin. "Anyone who can out B.S. my 
  bard deserves a drink." Not quite the way I meant to gain the warrior's 
  respect. But I'll take it, after all, no one got hurt, and no one got embarrassed. 
  This was especially good, since if anyone had gotten hurt or embarrassed, chances 
  are it would have been me. 
  
  
******
  
  "Here, Cerby... here Cerby... here Cerby, Cerby, Cerby... come on now, 
  no hiding from me, you know how worried Persephone gets when we get back home 
  late..."
  
  My first thought on hearing this was, "Dammit to tartarus, I'm tired and 
  I want to sleep!" My next thought was, "If I'm awake, how can I be 
  hearing this?"
  
  "Here Cerby, here thingy... aw, come on!"
  
  I sat up. I was getting the Platos again. I looked over at Xena and Gabrielle. 
  Sound asleep with silly grins on their faces. Hmmmm... good thing I sleep like 
  the dead, I think. Probably. Ahem. The fire was neatly banked, lots of warmth 
  and little light. The campsite was neat. All was well. And, I heard no more 
  calling. Well, obviously I had had a weird dream and surprised myself awake. 
  Okay. Just a touch of the Platos. Maybe I'd scout a little, just to settle out 
  of the Platos and banish weird dreams. Oh, and promise never to eat that funny 
  red pepper Gabrielle used on the fish steaks we had again. Yeah, there was a 
  plan. I slipped my boots on and tightened my belt and tunic fastenings. Then 
  I grabbed my chobos, just to be on the safe side. A slow, careful look around, 
  and I slipped into the trees.
  
  I really wish I could explain to those of you who aren't Emetchi how it feels 
  to us to move through a forest. A lot of you look on a forest as a huge bunch 
  of trees. Either a source of wood or a source of game, or a nuisance if you're 
  a farmer. When you pass through the forest, I get the impression that you feel 
  the way my Mom used to visiting my other Mom's mother. Err, yeah, that's right. 
  She felt like an unwanted but occasionally necessary guest. That's really too 
  bad, because the Emetchi never feel that way. We feel like we belong there, 
  just as we do in our villages or the fields we work.
  
  Yeah, I know, I'm wandering around again. But it'd be a really cool part of 
  the story, if I could explain that. Of course, in the meantime, I damn near 
  need a map to get back to the point.
  
  Nothing. Just an owl, and a few other animals that prefer to hunt at night. 
  I could hear frogs singing to each other, and the breeze meandering around the 
  trees the way I've been meandering around this story. Stopping by a tree, I 
  rested one hand on its rough bark and took in the smells and sounds. Hmmf. Just 
  had a weird dream that gave me a touch of the Platos. time to go back to bed.
  
  "Here Cerby... that's right... come on... come on... yeah, you like that, 
  huh?"
  
  Uh oh. Platos. Platos. Big time Platos. And then, right behind me, "Woof!" 
  in, triplicate.
  
  I whirled around and backed against the tree, hard. Standing far, far, too close 
  was a large, three headed dog. Cerby... Cerby... Cerberus?! Climb the tree, 
  dogs can't climb trees, even three headed supernatural soul eating underworld 
  guarding dogs... climb the tree, climb the tree... "Woof!" The thing 
  bounced up and down and wagged its tail. Then all three heads started barking, 
  sounding like a dog pack, and the beast began to bounce up and down in a semi 
  circle.
  
  Climbing a tree is very difficult when your back is pressed against it so hard 
  that it is entirely possible to sink into it. Cerberus jumped forward a bit, 
  and barked some more. Finding my voice, I croaked, "What is a beastie like 
  you doing here? Okay, ah, no chewing on the nice mortal, okay? No chewing on 
  the nice mortal who never attempted to cross paths with you." Slipping 
  to the side, I saw a sturdy branch right within reach. Ah, a means to, hopefully 
  keep Cerberus at a distance while I scrambled up the tree.
  
  Picking up the branch, I took a deep breath. Cerberus was tail wagging, and 
  two of three heads were drooling. It was sort of reminding me of a mongrel one 
  of my students has. Ugly little beastie, but the thing does adore that kid. 
  One day it apparently decided I was being too rough on her and took a chunk 
  out of the seat of my trews. I'm not sure what part was more embarrassing, the 
  fact that a dog had taken a chunk out of the seat of my trews, or the fact that 
  my underwear had been a cutesy gift from Mom... polka dots, okay, my underwear 
  had blue polka dots on it.
  
  I waved the stick a bit. This incurred another round of barking and tail wagging. 
  Altogether, I was beginning to think that maybe I was going to go deaf and its 
  tail was going to come off.
  
  I waved the stick again, and Cerberus jumped up and down eagerly. Oh my gods. 
  It wanted me to play fetch. I f I was dreaming, this was the most spectacularly 
  strange dream of all time. Never one to ignore a blatant cue, I tossed the stick 
  and ran like the wind. Right behind me, I could hear Cerberus barking and baying. 
  I looked. Right behind me was the three headed beastie, two heads yanking at 
  the stick, one keeping an eye on me. I should have been looking ahead. I ran 
  straight into a tree and bounced off, knocking the wind out of myself. A moment 
  later, Cerberus arrived, dumped the stick, and proceeded to lick my face.
  
  "It likes you." Sitting on a branch above me was a woman I had never 
  seen before. She was wearing Emetchi type leathers, except they were black, 
  and black gloves. Her hair and eyes were dark too, and she had a really nasty 
  pallor.
  
  "Really?" I squeaked, as Cerberus flopped on its belly and dropped 
  a head on my shoulder. Scratching it bemusedly behind the ears, I asked, "Who 
  are you?"
  
  "Believe it or not, my name is Pluto. One bard goofed up my gender and 
  nobody has gotten it right since." Okay. So, I was talking to a Goddess 
  of the Underworld. Appropriate, since I was playing with her pet... Persephone's 
  pet... or, whatever.
  
  "I try to take Cerberus out for a good run every night before it goes back 
  to watching the gates. Cerby enjoys it. I don't usually run into mortals, but 
  sometimes Cerby takes off after unsuspecting rabbits, and that can lead to surprises."
  
  Surprises. No, I think they're Platos. Sitting up gingerly, I carefully brushed 
  off my torso, which was full of bark bits. This gave Cerberus ideas, because 
  it rolled over with all four paws in the air.
  "Go on, scratch its stomach... it won't bite your hand off." Thanks, 
  that made me feel better.
  Pluto looked up. "Hey, here comes Xena. Just think of how impressed she'll 
  be that you can scratch ol' Cerby's belly." True to Pluto's word, Xena 
  ghosted out of the trees a moment later, sword in hand.
  
  "Well, it looks like you've got everything under control, Thraso." 
  The damn woman didn't turn so much as an eyelash. 
  
  Not to be outdone, I really can't ever allow that, I drawled, "Well, yeah, 
  you don't get to be a weaponmaster at eighteen without the ability to get a 
  handle on tough situations." Xena's lips twitched, but she didn't tell 
  me I was full of crap, so all was well with the world, as far as it went.
  
  "Aren't you supposed to be in the Underworld, helping Persephone judge 
  souls?" Clearly Xena considered it entirely appropriate to question a Goddess 
  about her activities. I suppose if she wasn't always hauling Goddesses and Gods 
  out of trouble she wouldn't see it that way.
  
  Pluto chuckled. "Perhaps. As I told Thraso here, however, this is Cerberus' 
  free time." Dropping off the tree branch, she continued, "Really, 
  you shouldn't be surprised to run into me, Xena. After all, bring more than 
  one half Goddess together at a time, the Fates see to it you fall over a God 
  or Goddess at some point. In for a dinar, I guess." An expression which 
  would have convinced most people to turn and run appeared on Xena's face. "What's 
  the excuse when Thraso or Hercules or whoever isn't travelling with me?"
  
  "What makes you so sure there needs to be one?" Pluto's smile broadened, 
  and now I could see that she had fangs. "Thraso knows who her divine parent 
  is. Do you know yours?" Another soft chuckle. "Come on, Cerby. Time 
  to go home." Cerby sighed in a doggish sort of way, wagged its tail at 
  me, and then Goddess and beastie disappeared. "Come on," Xena sighed. 
  "Time to go back to camp." She gave me a hand up and I finished dusting 
  myself off as we walked back.
  
  "Ah, Xena..." She turned to stare at me. "What she said..." 
  
  
  Gazing off into the forest, Xena said quietly, "I heard all the implications 
  you did." Her pale eyes drifted to me again. "It isn't your business." 
  Oh, hey, woops, miscommunication, miscommunication. 
  
  "That's not what I meant at all... I was just trying to say, I can be trusted 
  to keep it to myself." A dark eyebrow twitched upward. "Thanks." 
  
  
  
******
  
  Ah, a village. Different food, possibly an inn. Oh, the possibilities were endless. 
  Xena went in one direction to get Argo reshoed, since the trip through the mountains 
  had been rough on her, and Gabrielle went in another to shop. What is it with 
  the shopping thing? It's boring. I only shop when I need something and I can't 
  make it.
  
  Anyway, the village was bustling due to a trade caravan that was busy emptying 
  money pouches, so there was plenty to see. The occasional Emetchi showed up 
  too, but no one I recognized. That was pretty weird, since I had lived in the 
  area all my life. Finding the inn, and finding myself much enamoured of the 
  idea of a tall tankard of ale, I stepped inside.
  
  Following the mandatory smacks, whacks, and punches men seem to need in lieu 
  of listening to a clearly stated, "No, I'm not interested." I made 
  my way to the bar. A rather tired looking man with greying hair was handing 
  plates of food to a server, and he asked without looking, "What'll you 
  have?"
  
  "What does it cost to have dinner, ale, and a room for the night?"
  
  "Two dinars." I rubbed my nose. Not bad, and pretty honest considering 
  all the folks hanging around due to the trade caravan. "All right. I appreciate 
  an honest price." I always butter up innkeepers a little when they don't 
  give me a reason to haggle. The innkeeper smiled a little. 
  
  "Thank you... and I might just spoil you a little, Sly One. Don't think 
  I haven't noticed you in here many times before, trying to chat up Eumache." 
  I flushed a little and cleared my throat. 
  
  "Thanks but, I don't think she's interested. I only know her name because 
  you just told me." The innkeeper chuckled. 
  
  "That one is from Crete... and her Greek was miserable when she first got 
  here... anyway, go sit down already. You're holding me up."
  
  I slid two dinars across the bar, and found a seat against the wall. A truly 
  terrible bard was giving a rendition of the war of Troy. Poor guy. Absolutely 
  terrible, and completely unaware of it. I think the patrons were listening out 
  of sympathy. Just goes to show, folks are good at heart.
  
  A sweating tankard of ale and a platter of food arrived, and I looked up to 
  thank the server. And oh, it was my favourite person in the whole place. What 
  a very beautiful woman. From her fine build, olive colouring, and ringleted 
  hair she was obviously a Cretan. I didn't need an innkeeper to tell me that. 
  I had been dying of unrequited interest from the first time I saw her deftly 
  smack a drunk fellow's attempt to grab her ass. Truth be told, I sort of had 
  a crush on her. This day of all days, I finally caught her eye despite the large 
  number of people vying for her attention, and decided it was now or never. I 
  simply had to convince her to sit with me. Of course, in the meantime, my heart 
  was attacking me, and my speech had left me for someone else.
  
  She smiled at me, and said, in a fabulously innocent tone. "You know, my 
  shift is over, and the inn is pretty full. Do you mind if I take up this free 
  seat beside you?" I hadn't said a word yet... not a word... damn, was I 
  ever good at convincing people! Yeah, yeah, who am I kidding. Bear with me here.
  
  "Sure... I mean... no... I mean... yes... wait..." by the gods, what 
  was wrong with me? "What I'm trying to say is, no, I don't mind, please, 
  have a seat." Hey, now that came out rather well. 
  
  She smiled again. "Great. I'll just get myself some dinner."
  
  I watched her go behind the bar, then quaffed half of my tankard. Now, see here, 
  I am like any other young woman. When I find someone interesting, I like to 
  chat them up, have some fun, whatever. I like being on the receiving end too, 
  but it hardly ever happens, unless it's a guy... and, sorry guys, you're not 
  my drink of water. Having experienced and lived through the embarassing moments 
  of my adolescence, I never expected to be reduced to incoherence again. I'm 
  not sure what surprised me more, that I reacted like a Moonstruck teenager when 
  Eumache finally decided to sit with me, or that somehow, I didn't mind.
  
  Of course, these ideas didn't come to me then. Instead, I was babbling inwardly, 
  "She's perfect. Perfect. She's wonderful! She is finally going to have 
  dinner with me... something must be wrong with my pick up lines 'cause they 
  never worked with her until I stopped trying to use them... is it hot in here?" 
  And so on. End result, after the official introductions, I found myself grinning 
  at her like a complete fool. 
  
  Eumache cheerfully plied me with shamefully easy and inane questions until I 
  snapped out of it a bit, and we were soon having a really interesting conversation. 
  It turned out she was quite good with various weapons herself. And she loved 
  fishing. Oh, I was in Elysia. If I was dreaming, nobody wake me up.
  The common room was three quarters empty before Eumache commented mildly, "Hadn't 
  you better see what those two people behind me want?" I blinked like the 
  total goof I was and realized with a start that I had talked the evening away 
  with this woman. That meant the two people behind her could only be...
  
  "Hi, Xena, Gabrielle... need... something?" Smooth, Thraso, smooth. 
  Did you forget seven years of your age out in the mountains somewhere or what? 
  They grinned at me. 
  
  "Just wondering when we'll arrive at your village tomorrow." Xena's 
  expression was unreadable, but Gabrielle had this funny little smile on.
  
  Village? What village? Weren't we already in a village? "Oh, well," 
  I struggled to work up some enthusiasm for going home. Trouble was, all I got 
  was a bit of heartburn. "Only two candlemarks walk."
  
  Pulling on her lip, Gabrielle said, "We should probably leave early, then." 
  Early? Early? Leave?
  
  "I have to work all this week, Thraso. But, come by and see me at the end 
  of the week. We'll go... fishing." I had no idea that word could sound 
  so lascivious. Blood rushed to all sorts of places, none of which I'm going 
  to name for you. Eumache grinned broadly. "We could go for a swim." 
  Swooning is not something the Emetchi do. I just about did anyway. My brain 
  was struggling for its fair share of my blood supply.
  
  Having said the appropriate good nights, and finally conceding that talking 
  all night and getting up early in the morning were not compatible, we all made 
  our way upstairs. Xena and Gabrielle already had their room, but since I would 
  have been oblivious to the sky falling, Eumache had to show me where mine was.
  
  "Well, see you in the morning before you leave."
  
  "Sure, Eumache... it's been really..." Oh, stumbling wildly here. 
  "...wonderful." Goes for the save! The crowd roars. Eumache smiles. 
  Ooh, that was better than the crowd roaring. And now, I am suave, I am strong, 
  I am gorgeous, and now shall stride with aplomb into my room, despite my bulky 
  pack and bedroll.
  
  In fact, while all the rest may be true, I walked into the door, walked into 
  the door jamb, hit my head on the lintel, and finally fell with a terrible thud 
  into my room. Eumache never laughed at me. 
  
  Disentangling me from straps and what not, she asked me in a concerned tone, 
  "Are you all right?" Never mind I would have been great even if I 
  had just broken every bone in my body. 
  
  "Yeah, fine."
  
  A half candlemark later, I was laying on my bed, staring at the ceiling, and 
  wondered what the tartarus was up. Crushes were silly, although in this case 
  rather fun barring the speech problems and inability to walk properly. Hmmm. 
  Ah, the cause of my extreme ridiculousness was clear. Xena and Gabrielle gave 
  off all kinds of vibes. A few times I nearly jumped in the nearest body of water 
  after getting caught in the crossfire. So, between them, and a moon or so without 
  any female companionship, my hormones were having a wild party and making a 
  big mess. In fact, they were probably bustin' for action.
  Having told myself all of this, I grinned like a goof at the ceiling and fell 
  asleep thinking how beautiful Eumache was, and how cool it was that she found 
  me interesting after all. 
  
  
******
  
  "Ah, Xe, be nice. I think it's cute."
  
  "I think she hasn't got a clue what hit her."
  
  "That's half the fun."
  
  "Uh huh."
  
  "Oh, come on, you can't lay there and tell me you knew what was happening 
  that day in Potidaea."
  
  "Of course I knew. I was busy saving villagers from slavers. Then I saw 
  you. Then I got hit from behind. And then..."
  
  "That's not what I meant. How about a different example... when we were 
  getting to know each other better."
  
  "Oh, you mean while you were sticking to me like a burr..."
  
  "No!"
  
  "Or maybe the saga of the ever shrinking halter top..."
  
  "Ooooh... you're going to pay for that." 
  
  I had no idea what they were talking about, but the fact that I could hear them 
  and the grey light of dawn meant it was time to get up. Time to put on my working 
  leathers, and go back to being a weaponmaster again. And since Gabrielle wanted 
  to know about my tribe, then I was going to have to go all out. Of course, impressing 
  Eumache had nothing to do with it.
  
  A candlemark later, I had not only polished my armour, brushed my leathers, 
  fixed my boots, and readjusted my gauntlets twice, I had been able to find someone 
  to trim my hair. I don't keep it long anyway, so it just needed tidying up. 
  Gathering up my kit, I paused by the rather dirty mirror, which was placed, 
  curiously enough, right beside the rather creaky little bed. It was unusually 
  wide for a mirror too, stretching almost the entire length of the bed. Hmmf.
  
  Black leathers, red trim, and crimson armour. I was still a bit thin from a 
  stomach illness I had suffered through two moons ago, but all told, things were 
  fitting well. I smoothed my hair and fiddled with my scabbard. "Oh, get 
  over yourself already!" I told my reflection irritably. Have you ever noticed 
  that whenever you give yourself good advice you always ignore it?
  
  By the time I got downstairs, my two fellow travellers were already seated, 
  and Eumache had joined them for breakfast. I caught Eumache looking me up and 
  down appreciatively. Oh, this was a good idea. I missed two steps and almost 
  careened down the stairs. Sigh. For a half Goddess I sure felt like a clown.
  
  Arriving at the breakfast table without further incident, barring almost missing 
  my seat, which Gabrielle saved by knocking it underneath me with her foot just 
  in time, I tried to remember what composure meant so I could regain mine.
  
  "Those are pretty impressive leathers. What are all the designs for?" 
  Gabrielle asked. 
  
  As it happens, I'm wearing similar leathers today. As you can see, the trim 
  is in the form of various animals and symbols. "I don't know how it is 
  for your tribe, but the leathers we wear speak of our position in the tribe, 
  and our personal beliefs." I paused. "I get to wear the snakes and 
  falcons as symbols of my rite of cast. They are on my seal, too. The meanders 
  and v's they speak of, my dedication to Artemis, to Athena, to the respect and 
  memory of my foremothers." And here I thought I had been too hungover that 
  day before I was invested as a weaponmaster to remember the lorekeeper's lesson. 
  "That I wear red and black... that represents growth."
  
  "And the gorgoneum on your breastplate?" Xena had no sense of drama. 
  None at all. How could she just butt in like that? That and her eyes needed 
  checking, because I didn't have a gorgoneum on my breastplate. Looking down, 
  I saw that yes I did have a gorgoneum on my breastplate and I needed my eyes 
  checked. Luckily breakfast arrived just then, giving me a chance to make up 
  something. I shouldn't have worried. A small scroll sat beside my plate. 
  
  Mom here,
  You made it through the Cerberus thing with flying colours. That and the dream 
  test... that makes two that you passed. The gorgoneum is a mark of that. Both 
  Artemis and I wear it, and what it symbolizes for you is that you are a Chosen 
  warrior of the Nation.
  You know I'm proud of you, right? Right.
  Later, Mom. 
  
  Okay, I'll admit it, I got sort of choked up. 
  
  
******
  
  The walk to the village was uneventful, and I got peppered with questions from 
  Gabrielle about everything. Food, clothes, scrolls, staves, feathers... I mean 
  it, everything, everything but the... the... the cauldron in the food hut. Yeah. 
  Don't get me wrong, I'm not complaining. It was far more enjoyable than the 
  wave of questions you get from a class after giving them a task they realize 
  they have to do partly on their own.
  
  The walk IN the village was another story. First, we met the scouts, made the 
  sign of peace, all that. The first words out of Linden's mouth after I told 
  her who the strangers were was, "Are you nuts!?" Thanks for the vote 
  of confidence, my sister. Another scout, Tharjon, grabbed me by the elbow and 
  hauled me ahead of the others. "Are you sure this is a good idea, Thraso? 
  I mean, consider how irritated the Queen was with you before... you bring Xena 
  here... and the Queen of the entire Nation... she'll lose her eyeballs! We'll 
  have to pick 'em up off the ground and wash 'em off and put 'em back... and 
  then what'll we do when the Queen starts spitting up her kidneys? Hey, when 
  did you get the gorgoneum?" Tharjon can make up wild crap almost as fast 
  as I can.
  
  Made it through that part. Whew! Next, we finally get into the village proper. 
  Then I got to watch the unflappable captain of the guards get so busy watching 
  Xena and trying not to drool that she walked into a tree. Then the village smith 
  fell in a horsetrough. Then one of the carpenter's assistants stepped off of 
  a roof, luckily landing on some bushes... excepting they were a little thorny, 
  so she yelled a bit. Then my Queen showed up, looked at the various gaping, 
  sprawled and silly women, and bellowed:
  
  "Get to what you're supposed to be about! Now!" I can't understand 
  that phrasing either, but the point gets through somehow.
  
  Queen Prothoë turned to look at me. "Weaponmaster Thraso, how kind 
  of you to return from the rest of the world. Come with me a moment, please." 
  Ah, tartarus. She already sounded angry, and I hadn't done anything yet.
  
  We walked into her hut, and she seated me in front of her desk. Then she sat 
  down across from me. She looked at me. I looked at her. No one said anything. 
  I began to wish I was still young enough to carry around my stuffed bear. Queen 
  Prothoë leaned back. "You're glowing, Thraso." Huh? Queen Prothoë's 
  eyes narrowed. "You haven't come back here pregnant, have you?" I 
  couldn't help it. I laughed until tears rolled down my cheeks. "I'll take 
  that as a no." Queen Prothoë said dryly. "What's the matter with 
  you then?" I blinked. There was something wrong with me? 
  
  "Er, well, actually..." A glare which very nearly matched Xena caused 
  me to say hurriedly, "There's this server at the inn in the other village, 
  she's gorgeous and smart, and funny, and..."
  
  "Stop, stop, stop. I get the hint. The Great Mother alone knows how you 
  have managed to keep from having more than a broken nose with your woman chasing." 
  Queen Prothoë had a funny little smile on her face even though her tone 
  was sour. I was seeing that funny little smile a lot, the last day or so. "Who 
  are the people you brought here with you? I highly doubt either of them is the 
  server." Oh, body blow to the ego. 
  
  "Well, you see, nearly a half moon ago, I... ran into Xena, fishing." 
  Settling her chin in her hands Queen Prothoë asked, "You were fishing 
  and running at the same time?"
  
  "No, no, of course not. I was fishing, she was fishing, we wound up in 
  the same place." Apparently that answer was better, Queen Prothoë 
  waved one hand in a 'go on' sort of way. It looked kind of like a 'get out' 
  gesture too, but I was pretty sure that wasn't what she had in mind. "She 
  and Gabrielle are bondmates, so I got to meet her. We got to talking about how 
  the Southern Emetchi tend to think about the Northern ones, and Gabrielle decided 
  she needed to learn about us. So, here we are." Oh, what a lame finish. 
  Oh well. Win some, lose some.
  
  "Ares' Chosen, Artemis' Chosen, and a breastplate that has the entire village 
  abuzz already... couldn't you have just brought home a dog?" Standing up 
  and pacing around the room Queen Prothoë added, "What am I supposed 
  to do with them? How long are they going to stay? And what do you mean Queen 
  Gabrielle wants to learn about us?" I don't know about you folks in the 
  audience, but I sort of expected some enthusiasm.
  
  "They are Emetchi, your majesty. They'll earn their keep. At the very least 
  they should have plenty of news. Who knows, maybe this visit will help ease 
  the belief among southern Emetchi that we are a bunch of bumpkins." Sorry, 
  I have to be fairly serious when I talk to the queen.
  
  "An exchange program for queens won't achieve that, Thraso."
  
  "No, but maybe her example will help move things along. Trying to get respect 
  can be like expecting someone to throw the discus properly by reading about 
  it." I was getting the uncomfortable feeling that there were facts that 
  I was unaware of flying around. Flying unknown facts are all very well until 
  someone loses an eye.
  
  Queen Prothoë dragged her fingers through her greying red hair. "Thraso, 
  you have no idea what time of year it is, do you?"
  
  "It's... autumn." I did so know what time of year it was!
  
  "Ah, and clearly you have forgotten the Beggar's Festival." Oh no. 
  Oh no. No, no, no. Okay, now the obvious question is, what is the Beggar's Festival?
  
  Well, I'll repeat the story as the loremaster told it to me... you can tell 
  I didn't make it up, because I can't stick to the point like she can. Anyway: 
  a high priestess of Artemis with nothing better to do needed to set herself 
  apart somehow from her fellow high priestesses. The others were known for being 
  great oracles, or hunters, or warriors, or bow makers, whatever. Her skill, 
  she declared, was that unlike all others in the mortal world, she knew what 
  Artemis really looked like and could identify her anywhere. Typically, such 
  silly claims derive from lack of sleep, but she took herself very seriously. 
  Nobody could prove her wrong, so this rather dubious distinction was taken rather 
  seriously. Apparently taking silly things too seriously is contagious.
  
  The very eldest of the high priestesses of Artemis got wind of this, and she 
  laughed herself breathless, much to the alarm of her students. After regaining 
  her breath, she called a conclave, a great big meeting of as many Emetchi as 
  can get to a place and declared, "In three days, Artemis herself will come 
  among us. We shall then see what we shall see." At the time, the Nation 
  didn't extend as far south as Arboria, so what is Northern Amazonia now was 
  all Amazonia then. And Amazonia went nuts. There was decorating and partying 
  and feasts, and the weavers and tailors for miles around were exhausted since 
  everyone wanted a new set of clothes. It wouldn't do not to be as impressive 
  as possible.
  
  As a last step in the beautification of the Nation, any poorer women who passed 
  through the Nation on their travels without staying was briskly removed. According 
  to a queen of the time, they were mere beggars, not true followers of Artemis 
  at all.
  
  Two days went by, and that infamous high priestess hadn't seen Artemis yet. 
  So she went outside the temple, where she had been waiting, to watch the children 
  playing in the sun. This particular day, an old woman was with them, telling 
  them stories and giving them carved toys that she pulled from the folds of her 
  robe. The kids were delighted, but the high priestess was not. She stalked up 
  to the guard on duty and said, "Why has that beggar not been removed?"
  
  Can't you just about see her trying to glare at the poor guard down her nose?
  
  "I... well, ma'am... it's just old Admetus... the kids love her, and..."
  
  "You let that woman remain here because of the children?!"
  
  "Er, yeah." Come on, what else could she have said?
  
  Entirely disgusted, the priestess stormed up to the old woman. "You must 
  leave at once. The Great Artemis is expected and you will not be pleasing in 
  her sight." Old Admetus was not at all bothered. 
  
  "Aren't I? Aren't I? Mind your manners, sprite, or I'll put you over my 
  knee." I'll bet you already know how the priestess felt about being told 
  that. She was a priestess though, and a high priestess, no less. It would be 
  easy to show this old woman her place. "Come with me." she ordered. 
  
  
  Admetus rolled her eyes, but clambered to her feet anyway. Leaning on a twisted 
  stick, she tugged on her tattered robe a bit and replied, "These young 
  sprites here know manners... how come you don't?" The children tittered 
  and tagged along, some of them clasping bits of her robes, and others occasionally 
  fouling up her progress by hugging one of her legs in midstride.
  
  In the apse of every temple of Artemis is a little alcove which is usually poorly 
  lit. Also usually, there is nothing in it. Not so usually, hung on the back 
  wall of the alcove is a tapestry called The Three Wise Fools. Greeks laugh at 
  it because there are only two people in it, standing about a shoulder width 
  apart. They wear nondescript robes... these people could be anyone in the college 
  of priestesses. The high priestess took Admetus to it and declared, "A 
  beggar such as yourself created this ridiculous tapestry. As you can see, she 
  couldn't even count. The tapestry was dedicated to Artemis over the protests 
  of the high priestess of this temple at the time, so she insisted it be placed 
  in this dim alcove. Such a position relative to the Emetchi is proper for beggars."
  
  Admetus tipped her head to one side. Then she shifted a torch so that the apse 
  was lit. "You want to see Artemis, and you think you won't if I am here. 
  Hmmf." Shuffling forward, she drawled, "Step back a step or two... 
  a little more, yes that's right. Now, to the right, oh, too far, left." 
  Shuffling back a bit, Admetus called one of the older children to herself. "Can 
  you count to three?" A grave nod. "Excellent, you and I, we'll count 
  to three. Count the Fools now..." And counting the suitably positioned 
  priestess, there were indeed Three Wise Fools.
  
  "Well, well. It seems you have seen me. But don't forget, an indulgent 
  guard and a gaggle of children saw me first." With that, the twisted stick 
  became a silver bow, and the tatters fine leathers. No longer wearing the appearance 
  of an old woman, Artemis said, "Now forget this nonsense and go play with 
  the other kids your age."
  
  And that's how we wound up with one of the biggest, rowdiest, best festivals 
  in all the world. Adults play like children and spoil their children rotten. 
  In the spirit of it all, we have created a bunch of silly games. The one of 
  concern here is called Slap Your Neighbour. In it, all of the physically able 
  warriors have to draw lots from three different bags. One is for an opponent. 
  Another is for a weapon. The third is for a location to fight on. These things 
  are all as silly, messy, and embarassing as possible. Can you imagine Xena in 
  a food fight with the woman who trained me... on top of the temple of Artemis? 
  With this game it could happen. I think the game is called Slap Your Neighbour 
  because when they laugh at what you pull from the bags you feel like slapping 
  them. It's just a theory.
  
  Queen Prothoë straightened her pale brown leathers and settled her lanky 
  form into her seat. "So, oh brilliant and foresighted weaponmaster, how 
  do you intend to avoid a massacre when Xena finds out about the game of Slap 
  Your Naighbour, hmm?" Foresighted? Foresighted? Excuse me, I have never 
  claimed to be foresighted, especially being as I only have two eyes. Yeah, I 
  know, Queen Prothoë didn't think that was funny either.
  
  Outside, practically the entire tribe was assembled. The three wardens who kept 
  the bags of lots before the draws were standing off to one side, looking thoroughly 
  cowed. Looking around, I saw a furious Gabrielle, looking ready to smack someone 
  with her staff. Xena looked as cool and enigmatic as ever. The entire crowd 
  was abuzz. Such a set of circumstances hadn't happened in years. 
  
  A rather pudgy, arrogant woman stepped up. Her name was Eriphyle, and she believed 
  herself to be my obvious successor. I'm twenty two winters old and I already 
  have a successor? She vastly overestimated her talent. And when I say vastly, 
  I mean vastly. She couldn't hit a mountain if she were standing on it.
  
  "I must say, weaponmaster, if anyone had said that you were going to arrange 
  something like this, I would have laughed in their faces. Who knew you had such 
  imagination?" Hitching up her skirt and straightening her bracers she drawled, 
  "These people are your guests, Thraso, shall they adhere to our traditions 
  today?"
  
  "No," It nearly became necessary to retrieve eyeballs from the dirt.
  
  "No?!" Eriphyle squawked incredulously. Oh, but she sounded so like 
  a chicken.
  
  "I mean, no they don't have to participate in things they aren't comfortable 
  with. We're supposed to be having fun." Eriphyle puffed up her chest. Apparently 
  she was confused, and believed herself to be a rooster.
  
  "Surely we cannot allow them to spurn Tradition." I don't know about 
  you, but 'Tradition' in this sense makes me think of some nasty ritual your 
  parents make you do once a year for no reason that you understand, and everybody 
  hates it. Things like always eating split pea soup the day after Solstice.
  
  "Get over it, Eriphyle. They are guests, not prisoners." Prisoners 
  often are people who expect to kidnap and enslave Emetchi at their leisure. 
  We like to tie them to posts and pelt them with sloppy biscuit dough. You'd 
  be amazed how effective it is at preventing new attempts... and how quickly 
  an otherwise completely bloodthirsty warrior will cheerful trade hacking the 
  offender to pieces for a few good sized handfuls of dough. I think maybe it's 
  the shocked looks on the guys' faces after the first faceful of muck. After 
  using up the dough, we go on to more serious considerations. But who needs serious 
  considerations?
  
  Eriphyle stepped up to me, and glared, trying to look intimidating. I nearly 
  laughed, and I could hear tittering in the crowd. She is about tall enough to 
  look at my gorgoneum... barely. Glaring in a threatening manner at my gorgoneum, 
  which was sticking its tongue out at her, she hissed, "Don't be a fool! 
  this is our chance to put the so called Warrior Princess in her place... and 
  that upstart Gabrielle too."
  
  "Seems to me that they are both already in their places... and if you don't 
  get out of my... body space... right now, I am going to do a series of unpleasant 
  and embarassing things to you."
  
  "Oh yeah!"
  
  I smiled my, I am a weaponmaster, I am huge, and I am about to eat you for breakfast 
  along with my daily portion of rocks smile. "I will knock you down, tie 
  you up, strip you naked, paint you orange, and suspend you from a tree." 
  I licked my lips and showed my teeth. "After that I'll coat you with honey 
  and leave you for the bears." Chances were a naked, pudgy, orange Emetchi 
  semi-competent warrior would be considered inedible and she would live to be 
  ridiculous another day. Paling a little, Eriphyle stepped back, so that she 
  could actually look in my face without hurting her neck. She shook her head 
  and tried to disappear into the crowd.
  
  "Xena of Amphipolis," called Queen Prothoë. "Yes," 
  Xena drawled in a bored tone. "Do you wish to participate in the game of..." 
  she sighed. "Slap Your Neighbour?"
  
  "Certainly." I could not believe my ears. No one else could believe 
  theirs either. Gabrielle turned around and looked at Xena like she had lost 
  her mind. 
  
  "Xe, maybe we should take a little holiday, huh?" 
  
  Still looking cool and enigmatic, Xena replied, "Don't be ridiculous. You 
  said we should come here and learn the customs of the Northern Amazons... Emetchi." 
  she amended with a nod to me. "I can handle that, and so can you." 
  Oh, I saw the logic. I saw the plan. I saw Gabrielle's eyes narrow as she too, 
  saw the logic, and the plan. 
  
  Stepping very close she hissed, "Don't you even dream of trying to get 
  up close and comfortable tonight you rat!"
  
  All that said and done, it was time to draw the lots. All sorts of other warriors 
  were involved, but everyone was interested in Xena, and Gabrielle, since her 
  partner had so deftly boxed her into participating. I was having nightmare visions 
  of what had happened to me last Beggar's Festival. In that one, the smith and 
  I had to fight by doing hand stands in four inch deep mud puddles, throwing 
  eels at each other with our feet. It was pretty funny. I just wish someone else 
  had been forearms deep in mud praying no eels slithered down their leg. Eww, 
  I get the Platos just thinking about it.
  
  Gabrielle drew Eriphyle as an opponent. According to the goofy near impossible 
  edicts of the lots, which I begin to think Artemis herself makes up... they 
  were to pelt each other with potato peels while perched on rickety piles of 
  hay bales. The hay bales were specially prepared and stacked to give the poorest 
  footing possible, while scattering hay to the four winds and preventing injurious 
  falls. I however, was far less fortunate. I think you already know what I drew. 
  Xena as my opponent. Fish as the weapons. And we were supposed to beat each 
  other up with them while standing on a log bridge over a rather mucky, fishy 
  smelling, partly dry creek. It was Muddyopolis under that bridge. Smelly Muddyopolis.
  So, Xena and I strolled down to the river to get the required fish, which no 
  one had thought to catch beforehand, even if only for dinner.
  
  "You first." Xena drawled. I had no rod, no string, no hook, and I 
  couldn't get my armour wet. I would have a chance to change into more appropriate 
  gear before the fight, but still. What was I supposed to do, just reach in and 
  grab a fish? Xena jerked her chin at the river and said, "Well, hurry up 
  and grab one." I was supposed to just reach in and grab one. Hera's tits. 
  Laying flat on my stomach parallel to the river, I watched the water flow, one 
  arm held about o hand's length from the surface. All I could hear was the water. 
  And then, I don't know, I just up and grabbed something that I could just see 
  out of the corner of my eye. Something was a trout as long as my arm, wriggling 
  vigourously. I nearly dropped it back in. I nearly dropped my bulging eyeballs 
  in, too. Chuckling a bit, Xena soon had a fish of her own, and we returned to 
  the fighting field.
  
  The referees judged our fish acceptable, although Xena couldn't resist jiggling 
  hers a bit and drawling, "Mine's bigger than yours."
  
  A quarter candlemark later, I was in considerably more appropriate clothes, 
  and we were perched on the log bridge. Now, understand, I have never fought 
  with fish before. Never. I have been hit with a fish, but I had never fought 
  with a fish. Clearly I was going to have to make this up as I wandered dazedly 
  along. So I punched the fish senseless so it quit wiggling, and bounced up and 
  down on my toes a bit. I nodded at Xena once, and swung.
  
  Never in all the days of the world can this deliberately silliest of games have 
  produced a sillier sight. An entire village agape, the sun rising slowly higher. 
  The log bridge made steadily smoother and more slippery by the dancing, quick 
  moving feet of two leather clad demigoddesses, beating the crap out of each 
  other with trout.
  
  At last, I saw a gap in Xena's defense. I was dead tired, and had slipped and 
  cracked my shins on the log far too many times. Xena must have had sucker pads 
  on her feet because she hardly slipped at all. If I knocked her silly and into 
  the mud, that would be nice, considering how we had first met. If she knocked 
  me sillier than I already was, chances were nobody would notice the difference. 
  Ultimately, I never knew what hit me. This time it was okay, because Xena didn't 
  either. We knocked each other out.
  Coming to sprawled in the smelliest mud I had ever encountered, I noted regretfully 
  that my left eye had once again suffered indignity, since half of my face was 
  buried in the mud. I never saw the duel between Eriphyle and Gabrielle, however, 
  I understand that Gabrielle, struck by sudden inspiration, simply tossed her 
  entire arsenal of potato peels at her opponent. Overwhelmed and blinded by the 
  barrage, Eriphyle misstepped and found herself buried in hay. It took nearly 
  half a candlemark to haul her out, and Gabrielle was carried around on shoulders 
  as the best winner of the day. In the mean time, Xena and I got to lay in the 
  healer's hut. I felt really sulky about the whole thing. Surely challenging 
  Xena to a fight and living to tell the tale deserves some recognition? 
  
  
******
  
  Things settled down after that. Gabrielle had become well loved just by being 
  smart and quick, and Xena had by being willing to take part in something that 
  really was only meant to be fun. They stuck around for about three moons, visiting 
  villages, taking notes and stuff. I got to spar with Xena quite a lot, which 
  was fun... bruising, but fun. Eumache eventually stuck around to help me teach 
  classes and stuff. An excellent arrangement, since not only did I have a knowledgable 
  partner, but I could show off to her practically all day.
  
  Still, as everyone knows, Xena and Gabrielle don't seem to stay anywhere too 
  long, and this was no exception.
  
  "Well, Thraso, we got off to a rough start, but it's been great." 
  Gabrielle grinned at me. 
  
  "You could say that." I replied, chuckling.
  
  "Hmmf." snorted Xena. She was already perched atop Argo, and ready 
  to leave. Rolling her eyes, Gabrielle nearly surprised the feathers off me by 
  giving me a hug. 
  
  "Send a scroll along to Amphipolis once in awhile, we'll get it... and 
  I expect you to invite us to the ceremony." With that, she scrambled up 
  behind Xena. Ceremony? What ceremony? 
  
  "Seeya, Thraso." Xena rumbled gruffly. 
  
  "Sure." I growled. We shook forearms, then Xena tossed me on my butt. 
  
  
  "Never underestimate your opponent." Struggling to my feet and trying 
  to regain some dignity, I slipped an arm around Eumache's waist and ordered 
  the blush creeping up my neck to go someplace else.
  
  We watched them ride away. I was still confused. "Ceremony?" I asked 
  Eumache a bit plaintively. 
  
  "Don't worry about it. We do need to talk, though." We were walking 
  back through the forest that surrounded the village, and I walked into a tree. 
  I bounced off the tree. I tripped on a root. I fell on my face. Eumache sat 
  down beside me and said. "Well, now that you're already no longer standing, 
  you do realize I'm staying?" 
  
  Okay... loose ends, right? Ummm... oh, yes, my mother's last note implied another 
  test coming my way. I know, audience participation... three guesses. Come on, 
  I'll even buy an ale for the one who gets it right. No, no, not the fish fight 
  with Xena. No, not refraining from carrying out my threats to Eriphyle. Is that 
  the best you've got? Wow. Anyway, what am I doing here, telling this story? 
  Well, I have to take care of some trouble over the silver hooved hind sacred 
  to Artemis that some doofus stole about half a moon ago. Just on the way here 
  I had to deal with a giant wolf Ares sent to wreak havoc on a village. The inhabitants 
  supposedly pissed him off. Oh, and Eumache and I figured out why the walls of 
  the new palace being built in Athens kept falling down...