ForevaXena's FanFic . . .
Cycles
by Phantom Bard (a.k.a. J. Nakamura)
10 /14/2000, 1 /21/2001, 2 /4/2001
Revised © Ides of March, 2001
Disclaimer: This is a work of fan fiction, and
is offered for non-profit entertainment. It
may not be sold, may be downloaded for personal use only, and must contain this
statement. The characters from the
TV series Xena: Warrior Princess, including Xena, Gabrielle, Eve, Callisto,
Joxer, Tegason, Virgilius, Ming Tien, and the portrayals of Ares, Eli, Sisyphus,
and the archangel Michael are the creations and property of MCA/Universal and
Renaissance Pictures. No malice is
intended to these characters or concepts. I
would like to express my thanks to their creators for sharing them with us. The
other characters are my own creations, or have been plucked from history, (may
they rest in peace).
Feedback can be sent to me at the address above.
The material in this story was originally posted as
three stories; "Xena: Goddess of War" (10/14/2000), "The Twilight
of the Gods" (1/21/2001), and "Aurora the Midnight Star"
(2/4/2001). Additional material has
been added, and several continuity problems addressed.
"Xena: Goddess of War" is an homage of sorts to H.G. Wells'
1898 novel, "The War of the Worlds", while "Aurora the Midnight
Star" is my tribute to the late Isaac Asimov's Foundation series, in
particular his 1986 novel, "Foundation and Earth".
-Phantom Bard, Brooklyn,
N.Y., 3/15/2001
PART TWO
THE TWILIGHT OF THE
GODS

INTRODUCTION
Long
ago, in a time of ancient Gods, Warlords, and Kings, the schemes of Sisyphus and
Hades allowed me to secretly become the Goddess of War and Strategy.
Within a few years, Ares, the Great God of War, became a mortal man,
sacrificing his immortality to aid me in battle.
The war of the Olympians against my daughter, the Twilight of the Gods,
brought destruction to seven of the twelve major Gods and Goddesses. Afterwards,
I remained the Incarnation of the Spirit of Battle, and for over two thousand
years I worked to prepare mankind for an invasion that I sensed would come.
Finally, in the second half of the twentieth century, I reclaimed my
ancient mantle of warlord, raised a shadow army, and created the most powerful
defensive force the world had ever known. As
the twenty-first century began, the prowess of my warriors and our twelve
warships was unmatched. We could
have dominated the planet. Yet even
a Goddess cannot foresee all that is to come.
There was a Power above me, and as battle raged, Ares, my God of War,
returned from death, and an ancient weapon was revealed.
THE
FOLLOW UP TO THE INVASION
(Or Last War, On Xena)
In
2006, an alien invasion acted as a diversion for a troop of bounty hunters who
intended to capture Ares and I for some kind of intergalactic reward.
They had said we were the "last of the renegades", and claimed,
"your sires fled our world, and ruled the mortals here as Gods".
I doubt the bounty hunters would have been broken hearted if their
invasion had succeeded. After all,
settling down to rule the Earth, as Gods themselves, would have been a good
backup plan. I would have done the
same thing if I were still a bloodthirsty warlord.
You always need a fallback position in any campaign, it's just good
strategy.
In the
end, the invasion failed. I would
love to claim the forces of my shadow army had defeated them. That's just not
the truth. When I started writing
this history, I promised my long lost soul mate and favorite that I'd tell the
truth. The truth is that
terrestrial microbes had infected the alien soldiers, and wiped them out on the
first day of their invasion. True,
a newly resurrected Ares and I had invaded their mother ship, beaten the bounty
hunters in an old fashioned sword fight, and sent the mother ship into the sun.
Not bad for a day's work I guess. Well
anyway, the Earth was saved, Ares and I got together after a couple thousand
years, and a lot of alien technology almost fell into human hands.
There was also a major mess to clean up.
The invading force numbered thirty-one landing craft, each a mile in
diameter, about three hundred hovering killers, and about thirty thousand alien
soldiers. These are the ones who
made it to Earth. Nine landing
craft were destroyed on the far side of Jupiter by my warships. Of those who came to earth, my forces, and the New Air Force
of the United States, destroyed another twelve.
A war,
like an illness requires a time of recovery and healing. The destruction of even a day of modern war can take years to
be healed. I sent my forces to take
possession of as much of the alien technology as possible, and we acted quickly,
while the world's governments were still in shock.
We couldn't collect everything, but only a couple ships and a handful of
hover killers escaped our immediate acquisition.
Ares and I went time after time to the sites of the alien wreckage,
appearing in a ship or hover killer, and disappearing with it, transporting it
to my base in the mid-Pacific. Some
we took as Military Intel cadres approached.
Some we took before they arrived. The
last ones, we took from government labs within a couple days.
I know mortals, and I felt that the alien technology was too deadly for
their possession. After all, my own
ships were the results of human development based on the Roswell crashes from
the forties. When we had rounded up
everything the aliens brought to Earth, I let my scientists go through it all.
They were so excited, like the cliché kids on Christmas Day, tearing
into the alien hardware, and even the bodies of the aliens themselves.
We left it to the governments of the world to clean up the damage the
aliens had done.
The
U.S. President in particular was furious. He
broadcast demands and ultimatums in all directions, requiring me to share not
only the alien technology, but my own as well.
Ares and I ignored him. After
a few weeks he stopped sputtering, realizing he couldn't command me, and only
appeared impotent. I had paid him
an insulting visit during the war, and my initially helpful gesture earned me a
few dozen bullet wounds. Someone
once said, "no good deed goes unpunished". Ares and I let him stew…we would deal with him at our
convenience, not his. Such is the
prerogative of Gods.
There
were some unanswered questions in my mind.
Things which the war brought up. The
most troubling was the bounty hunters. Where were they from? Was
there a whole world full of them, and if so, where? Would they come after us again?
What about the aliens and their civilization? Ares and I spent many days talking about these issues, but in
the end there was no way to find out, unless they showed up again.
And a big "no thank you" to that offer.
"Ares,
I'm worried about the bounty hunters. There
are probably more of them out there, and they could show up anytime," I
said while we watched the scientists in one of my labs, "what's to stop
them from invading us and starting a new race of Gods?"
"Us,"
he replied.
"You
aren't worried at all are you?"
"What
me worry, baby," he said with his usual bravado, "we kicked their
asses, they'd be suicidal to show up here.
Besides, we aren't alone in this you know."
"Ares,
a secret weapon is only a secret until you use it. I'm not going to relax and depend on a bunch of germs to keep
the world safe again."
"Xe,
it's not just germs. There are
other Powers, other defenses. Just
relax, hon, the big guy isn't going to let a bunch of aliens take over…this is
His show."
"Yeah,
yeah, He's the one who needed me to do away with the other Olympians, and put a
new king in hell," I said, reminding him that God hadn't done everything,
"I think we should be ready, just in case. After all, He let Zeus take over way back when, and maybe
Zeus wasn't the best or brightest of the race of the renegades."
"Well,
keep a couple of your ships flying if it makes you feel better."
"I
just wish you'd be a little more concerned."
"I
just wish you had a little more faith," he replied, "but you're right,
He did let Zeus take over…LET being the important word here.
When He was ready for a change, Zeus was history."
"Wait
a second, are you saying what I think you're saying?"
"Yeah.
He used Zeus to clear out some leftovers…the Titans, and the Old Ones.
He wanted mankind to get used to the idea of their Gods looking like
people, like us. I mean, let's face it…who would have accepted His son if
Jesus had looked like a sea cucumber?"
I
chewed on that for awhile as I watched the scientists preparing to test a
particle beam weapon they'd removed from a hovering killer.
They had set up a target, and attached a power source.
Ares came up behind me and wrapped his arms around my shoulders.
I leaned back against his chest. Below
us in the lab the scientists had retreated behind a force-wall, and put on
shield helmets. A klaxon sounded. Suddenly there was a whump, and a blinding white beam sizzled
the air. In under a second it had
pierced a six-foot thick steel plate. The
beam stopped dead where it met a force-wall, and then it ceased.
We could smell ozone. The
scientists examined the plate, and congratulated each other.
One of them looked up, and seeing us made a "thumbs up" sign. We
would have the beam weapons installed on our ships within a week.
"Well
that was hot," Ares joked as he took my hand, "come on Xe, let me show
you something."
My
scientists, so nonchalant in their investigation of the alien weapon, jumped as
we vanished in a flash of lightning and flames.
WHAT
WAS AND WHAT SHALL EVER BE
Granite
cliffs fell sheer to the pounding surf two thousand feet below, and the reddish
sun cast lengthening shadows on the columns and arches in the hall.
A ring of sixteen thrones circled the meeting space, open to the sky.
Six of the thrones sat empty. A
shadow cast into the circle struck the red stone inlaid at the center.
The figure on the South throne rose and addressed the other nine.
"We
have all felt the loss of our brothers and sisters. They no longer exist in time.
In success their hunt has failed. They
have been cast into the void."
The
figure on the East throne rose and spoke.
"For
the renegades they sought, and finding them, by the renegades they have been
destroyed."
The
figure on the North throne rose and spoke.
"Behold,
the renegades have become strong in their prowess, and as warriors they have
endured. Such is the legacy of our
way."
The
figure on the West throne rose and spoke.
"Still
the riddle remains: Two rings that hold the dark and light, And through eternity
remain, No hand of man shall hold the right, For joining them shall be our
bane."
In the
silence that followed the image of a figure formed in the red stone, a warrior
in leather and bronze, and from his anguished face his voice echoed in the
circle.
"My
son, my son, why have you betrayed us."
THE
CAUSE OF FAITH
I
didn't know where Ares was taking me, or what he wanted to show me, but I
trusted him, and let him take me where he would.
We reappeared outside time and the world, in a place I'd never seen
before. It was a high meadow among
clouds, where the sun shone brightly, and a gentle breeze blew.
There was a familiar feel to the place, but I knew I'd never been there.
In the meadow were many figures, some with wings of black and some with
wings of white.
"They
can't see or hear us, but they are angels and archangels," Ares whispered
to me, "you never came to this part of heaven. I don't know if we're really here, or if this is a vision.
All I know is we can't interact."
"Why
did you bring me here," I said.
My
heart was deeply troubled, for my only memories of heaven were twisted with
pain. I had been here with
Gabrielle when we had died together, crucified by the Romans. I had tried to defy the Holy Order to be with her, for I had
given up my purity and become a demon. Ares
wrapped his arms around me in comfort, and I could see the sadness in his eyes.
"Wait,
and watch," he said, "what you see will bring you joy and tears."
As I
watched the angels and archangels moving about on their business, one came
towards us. A figure with the black
wings of an archangel. I fell to my
knees, and my heart broke. I knew
that figure. In two thousand years
I could never forget her. Never,
never, never in a million years would I forget her.
Through the blur of my tears my voice croaked as I whispered her name.
"Gabrielle."
Of all
the company of heaven she alone seemed to be searching for something or someone,
and though she looked through us as she drew near, she stopped only an arm's
length away. I stood, and saw her
clearly, the sun-lightened hair I knew was silky to the touch. The piercing green eyes which had held my own so many times.
The lips that had called my name, and had given me so much hope and
brought so much laughter. As I watched, her eyes filled, and a single tear overflowed.
I reached out, but I could not touch her face.
Though she was looking right at me she gave no sign of recognition, yet I
heard her whisper.
"Xena
where are you."
Then
she turned away, and walked back across the meadow the way she had come.
But as she turned, I noticed something I hadn't marked before.
At her waist, on a brass belt hook, hung the chakram that I had lost so
long ago. Then I leaned against
Ares sobbing, and I wrapped my arms around his neck.
He held me a long time until my breathing quieted, and when I dared to
look up I saw on my finger a single tear of gold.
Before
he brought me back to the world, to my base in the mid-Pacific, he said one
thing to me that I have never forgotten.
"Xena,
my beloved, her spirit will never die. As
a Goddess you are immortal and cannot join her in heaven, but you must believe
that all things in the world change in time.
As I too have done, she has waited two thousand years, and kept her love
for you alive with hope. In love
and hope lies the cause of faith."
It was
the first time I truly realized how much he had changed. Then we vanished, and when we reappeared I looked down at my
scientists. A blinding white beam
sizzled the air. In under a second
it had pierced a six-foot thick steel plate.
The beam stopped dead where it met a force-wall, then it ceased.
We could smell ozone. The
scientists examined the plate, and congratulated each other.
One of them looked up, and seeing us made a "thumbs up" sign.
We would have the beam weapons installed on our ships within a week.
This time they didn't have a reason to jump.
"I
know you don't like to startle them with God Stuff," he said with a sad
smile, "I brought us back while they were busy."
The
scientists hadn't noticed our reappearance, and as the timeline had been
altered, our disappearance never happened.
God Stuff alright.
For a
while I was silent, lost in memory, seeing the pictures in my mind from a
simpler life. The cherished
memories of the years I had spent with Gabrielle so long ago.
I was shaken by the sight of her, and by knowing her soul had not been
reborn to a new life. I was moved
by the knowledge that she still loved and missed me.
I realized she knew I had not died.
I realized she was still waiting for me after two thousand years.
Ares had said love and hope were the cause of faith.
Unlike me, love and hope were such a natural part of Gabrielle.
The faith that so many strive for, and cling to, was second nature to
her. I didn't doubt she had the
strength to maintain her faith forever.
Our
souls were supposed to be linked, destined to find each other again and again,
in life after life. Somehow that
promise had never come to pass. I
hadn't realized how much I missed her…how much I still loved her.
"Oh
Ares," I sobbed, "what happened to all the things we believed
in?"
"You
became a Goddess," he said softly, "and she became an archangel again.
Both of you are outside the order of the world.
The cycle of rebirth was broken from both sides."
"I
belong with her," I whispered.
"Maybe,"
he said, "but I sense the One God's Will in this, Xena.
After being around Him for two thousand years, I can sense His presence,
just as you can sense mine."
God's
Will? I knew from long ago just how
subtle He could be. When I was
first reunited with Ares, he had claimed that I too worked for the One God,
whether I willed it or no. If I
accepted that, then I had to accept that the One God had a reason for separating
Gabrielle and I…for interrupting our destiny, of which it was implicit that He
approved. Could two thousand years
of loneliness be nothing more than part of the job?
Then I thought of Ares. He
had taken me to see Gabrielle, knowing I would find again my soul mate, and my
desire to be reunited with her…at the cost of my love for him? Oh gods how his heart must have been breaking.
To finally win my love, only to lose it again.
After waiting for two thousand years just to be reunited with me.
Did he know? Yes, of course
he did. He had never been stupid,
and yet he took me to see her anyway. What
kind of God would cause such heartbreak and sorrow?
What plan for the greater good could require so much sacrifice and pain?
Ares, Ares, I do love you, for this more than all the other things you
have done for me, save one. And
what could I say to him that would acknowledge his pain and sacrifice.
What poor words of comfort could I offer without speaking a lie we both
would know. Ares, my heart is
breaking too. Between what is, and
what shall surely be, there is no clean victory, no happy ending.
All choices are tainted with sorrow and guilt.
Sometimes even a Goddess and a God are helpless in the arms of fate.
I turned and looked at him as he stood before me, and as I had before
long ago, I spoke the most pitifully inadequate of words, though they came from
my heart.
"Thank
you."
WORLD
WITHOUT END
In the
circle of thrones eight figures rose in greeting as two rejoined the circle.
The ten figures seated themselves, and one of the newly arrived figures
rose to speak.
"We
have followed the trail of the hunters. It
leads to a small world that circles a yellow star on the fringe.
It circles in the third position, and holds captive a giant moon.
Much debris circles this world. It
is a strange world, with lands and seas much like ours.
It is overrun with life in many forms. There the trail of the hunters
ends. Beyond the fifth planet is
the debris of attack ships destroyed in battle.
The trail of the transport ship ends in the yellow star."
The
second newly arrived figure rose and spoke.
"Many
powers inhabit this planet, but they inhabit different planes.
Some we can see, and some we cannot see.
The spawn of the renegades is there, but the renegades are gone.
Though they are few, the spawn turned against the hunters, and threw them
into the void. There are many
mortals, and many machines which seem to live. They have many weapons, but we could not see the rings.
They are not there."
The
figure on the South throne rose and spoke.
"If
the rings are not there then we have nothing to fear, for we outnumber the
spawn."
The
figure on the East throne rose and spoke.
"To
avenge our brothers and sisters, to this world we shall lay siege."
The
figure on the North throne rose and spoke.
"Beware,
for the spawn destroyed the hunters yet they were outnumbered.
They are strong in their prowess. They
are warriors."
The
figure on the West throne rose and spoke.
"There
is danger and there is doom. There
are powers that we cannot see. There
are powers on many planes. The
renegades took the rings in their betrayal, yet the rings are not there.
There is treachery on this world. One
of the Great Powers is on this world, for there are so many forms of life.
This is a Cardinal world. Through
future colonies it shall endure. This
is a world without end."
The
figure on the South throne spoke again.
"If
the renegades could thrive on this world, then so shall we, with the blessing of
the Great Power there."
The
figure on the East throne spoke again.
"To
rule as Gods on a Cardinal world would a great victory be."
The
figure on the North throne spoke again.
"Beware
the enemy within, lest the hubris in your heart destroy us."
The
figure on the West throne spoke again.
"On
a Cardinal world a Great Power rules to it's own desire, and even the Gods may
be scattered in the wind of it's passing. Yet
to this world we shall lay siege for vengeance, in our brothers' and sisters'
names."
The
figure in the red stone spoke in a voice that echoed in the circle.
"My
son, thy betrayal has doomed thyself, and thy family, for the riddle is a
prophecy. The rings survive from a Cardinal world long ago abandoned.
They were the creation of the Great Power that first separated dark and
light. If the rings have been
joined, then it's wounds will kill Gods of your generation, yet leave the spawn
untouched. In vengeance for the
dead you shall doom the living, and all shall be lost."
THE
KINGDOM
In the
weeks that followed I again felt the sense of impending danger which had
accompanied me for centuries before the invasion. I wasn't wholly sure that my emotional upset wasn't the
cause, but being a warrior I valued preparedness above all else.
Two weeks after the equinox I ordered three ships to patrol at all times,
and we again watched the sky.
Several
days after my warships resumed patrol, there was an incident involving the U.S.
New Air Force. Fate required that
the Ares be involved. Now under the
command of Adam McClellan, recently promoted to Captain, the Ares was over the
North Atlantic travelling from Europe on a routine flight path.
At 0400 GMT, the Ares was approached by a squadron of eight American
saucers. The following exchanges
come from the A/V recorder aboard the Ares.
"Captain,
we are being hailed," the communications officer reported.
"Audio
on, Mr. Davis," Capt. McClellan ordered.
"Aye,
Capt."
"Unknown
warship, this is the New Air Force Theta Squadron.
You are in a NATO airspace. Identify yourself at once," their
squadron leader transmitted.
"This
is the Ares. We are on routine
Atlantic patrol. Please do not
approach. Maintain a twenty-mile
radius. This is a safety warning.
We are at DefStat 2 condition. Hostile
actions will not be tolerated," Capt. McClellan replied.
This is a standard warning when my forces are at DefStat 2. At this condition level my forces will accept no
interference.
"Ares,
you are regarded as a suspect foreign power.
You are operating in defiance of NSC guidelines, and are within NATO
sovereign airspace. We require that
you accept our escort, and make landfall at Reykjavik, Iceland base.
Do you copy, Ares?"
"Theta
Squadron leader, this is the Ares. Conditions
are unacceptable. We will not
comply. Do not approach.
Maintain a twenty-mile radius. This
is a safety warning. Hostile
actions will not be tolerated. I
repeat. Do not approach," Capt. McClellan said.
At the same time, he ordered his communications officer to inform my
command center of the developing situation.
I ordered the Apollo and the Athena off patrol.
They were to converge with the Ares by the most expedient courses…about
six minutes.
"Ares,
refusal is not acceptable. Procedures
are dictated by the lawful charter of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization.
You must comply or you will be forced down.
I repeat, you are required to accept our escort, and make landfall at
Reykjavik base."
"This
is the Ares. We do not recognize
your authority. We accept orders
only from our own commander. We
will not comply. I repeat.
We will not comply. You are
within twenty-seven miles and closing. Do
not approach. I repeat. Do not
approach."
With
these ships, seven miles disappears in seconds.
The twenty-mile radius allows only one course correction and adjustment
for the New Air Force fighters. We
had made maneuvering advancements on our warships, and they were perhaps two
generations beyond anything the New Air Force had.
The
Theta Squadron continued closing on the Ares, and as they crossed the
twenty-mile radius, McClellan knew he had them.
"Weapons
officer, charge the x-ray laser and initiate a full force-wall shield," he
ordered.
"Aye,
Capt."
Captain
McClellan had ordered the giant capacitors within the Ares to build a charge of
1.5 x 10¹³ joules. A sphere of
visible distortion surrounded the ship. Within
two seconds the Ares was glowing blue-white, and shedding gamma radiation.
The g-rays built up within the force-wall shield to create a radiant
weapon. Upon collapse of the
force-wall, the gamma rays would kill anything within a twenty-mile radius,
literally roasting metal, plastic, and living tissue.
A body so exposed would explode in less than 1/100 of a second.
This was a passive-aggressive tactic.
Sensors
aboard the Ares monitored the inter-ship communications between the Theta
squadron fighters.
"Theta
leader to Theta squadron, they were radiating g-rays, then nothing.
What's going on?"
"Theta
6 to Theta leader, long-range visual of the Ares is distorted, but the ship is
glowing. I don't like this."
"Theta
4 to Theta squadron, remember that briefing we got about this ship from the
survivors of the Epsilon squadron? It
destroyed two alien ships at the same time, but before it fired it was radiating
g-rays. Two E-squad ships were
roasted."
"Theta
leader to Theta squadron, maintain intercept course. Those bastards are fuckin' with Old Glory, and we can't let
that pass."
"Roger
that Theta leader."
They
didn't have a chance. Capt.
McClellan ordered full stop, which maintains a ship's celestial position and
negates the Earth's rotation. Before
they could react, the New Air Force fighters had closed to within three miles of
the Ares. From the mesosphere the
Apollo and Athena power-dived to meet them.
Glowing blue-white, they came like flaming bolts out of the near black
where the unblinking stars are bright. They
stopped their fall to bracket both the Ares and the Theta squadron, orbiting
them at a seven-mile radius, like the twin electrons of a helium atom, creating
a spherical shell. The Ares at the
center glowed within its force-wall shield, nova bright, utterly blinding to the
New Air Force crews. The trap was
sprung, now for the test of wills.
Ares
and I appeared in the New Air Force command center, at National Security Council
headquarters. With lightning and
flames we materialized in their situation room, where a huge screen showed the
view from the Theta squadron's cameras. It
was blasted out…the screen completely white.
Ares made a gesture, and the screen darkened, filtering the image to make
it visible. I addressed the
commanders, as their guards belatedly surrounded us.
"General
Reusch, General Abbot, Mr. Hewitt, we have a situation," I said with a
smile, "your Theta squadron has managed to enter my trap in pursuit of one
of my warships. How dare you
interfere with my forces?"
"Who
the hell are you, and how did you get in here?" General Abbot countered.
"General,
please leave this to me…it is an intelligence matter, not a military
matter," Hewitt said with forced restraint, "we cannot gain anything
by force, for I guess we are in no position to make demands."
"You're
the brains of this outfit?" I asked, knowing Dean Hewitt had been head of
both the CIA, and the NSC, and had been in charge of U.S. intelligence, under
four administrations, for over twenty years.
"I
guess you could say that. I have
never met a Goddess, " he said with a slight smile, then nodded to Ares,
"or a God before."
"What
the hell are you talking about…are you crazy?" General Reusch
interrupted.
"I
told you I would handle this." Hewitt said more forcefully, " Neither
of you can recognize your most valuable allies, or keep from provoking them.
If they didn't have centuries of patience you would both be dead in a
heartbeat."
"Believe
him," Ares said, "and by the way, she's the one with the patience, not
me."
The
generals were seething, but Hewitt was in charge. He probably told the President off too. I knew enough about him to know the President should be
scared of him. In some ways, the
United States was his kingdom, and in his kingdom even some high ranking people
went missing. No one overruled him
on national security issues.
"Mr.
Hewitt, we have to reach an agreement very quickly. Your pilots are having difficulty with restraint.
I believe their orders are to try to shoot their way out of such
situations where possible?"
"Yes,"
he confirmed, "and yes, an agreement for future situations is a
necessity."
"Do
you know what you are looking at, now that the screen is showing an image?"
Ares asked him.
"High
energy radiation, type unknown, contained around your central ship in an
undetermined manner." He
looked at me and continued, "I would guess the results of a containment
failure are lethal, and that failure is under the control of your crew.
That's all I can be sure of based on our reports of your forces' actions
during the invasion last month."
"That's
accurate enough," I replied, "this is only a passive tactic.
If your crews fire on my ship, it will elect to breach its force-wall. Your ship's fire will not pass the force-wall.
They cannot harm my ships. Because
of my two other ships, they cannot withdraw.
They can surrender unconditionally, which we prefer, or they can be
destroyed."
"Flawless
battle tactics," Hewitt replied, "I would expect no less from the
Goddess of War. We surrender.
I don't want to sacrifice our crews needlessly, but more important, I don’t
want us to be enemies. We got off
on the wrong foot when you came to see the President.
I'm sorry about the Secret Service overreaction.
They were stressed."
"That's
acceptable, as far as it goes," I said, "but I want it clear to all
the armed forces everywhere that they are never to interfere with my forces.
We are concerned with the defense of the Earth, not with the acquisition
of territory on it."
"Make
them understand they can't beat us, and we don't want to have to beat
them," Ares said, "we've got more deadly enemies in our sights."
"Another
alien incursion?" Hewitt asked, making the connection in a flash.
He was smart, and he didn't miss a thing.
Our conditions were expected sooner or later, and didn't seem to concern
him much. I realized that they were
a military matter to him.
"Perhaps,"
I replied, "I suspect another assault soon, and I have placed my forces on
alert."
It
seemed we had reached an agreement. There
was nothing further to discuss. Ares
and I vanished. Moments later I
ordered my three ships to stand down, and I saw the New Air Force squadron fly
off in the other direction….whipped.
AND
THE POWER
A week
later the assault I had expected began with the materialization of two mother
ships in low orbit over the Earth. This
time there was no stealth, no warning, no chance of waylaying the invaders
before they reached us. They had
learned their lesson well…once burned, twice wary applies everywhere in the
galaxy. Within twelve minutes all
of my warships had moved to engage the enemy.
Joined by the New Air Force, we barricaded their flight paths, hoping to
keep them from landing any of their attack ships. At first it appeared to be a stalemate. They made no move to release the numerous smaller ships.
Perhaps they knew enough about their earlier failure to be wary of
landing, but if there was to be no landing, then there could be no goal to the
invasion, except Ares and me. Perhaps this was only a great posse coming to apprehend the
renegades. Perhaps the Earth would
be spared. That would almost be
acceptable.
We
waited. Ares and I had materialized
in Washington, D.C. to meet with Dean Hewitt.
He had become a valuable contact for us, reigning in the impulsive
President, and using him to manage the Congress. Where the U.S. led, the rest of the nations would follow.
In a way, the whole world had become Hewitt's kingdom.
Not bad for a South Carolina army brat.
Then
all hell broke loose. From the
mother ships over fifty landing ships emerged.
The battle plan Ares and I had agreed on with Dean Hewitt left the New
Air Force to rain fire on the emerging ships, while my twelve warships would
deal with the ones who got past them. A
lot of the aliens got past them, and many more would have if not for the heroics
of Delta squadron. All eight
fighters of the Delta squadron, realizing they were outclassed by the alien
ships, chose a suicidal maneuver which will be long remembered in the military
history of Earth. Ares will make
sure those courageous warriors are never forgotten.
Taking
advantage of their smaller size, the Delta squadron moved into the dispersing
formation of alien landing ships, and flew head-on towards the mother ship's
exit portal. Because of their
position in the column of enemy ships, they couldn't be fired on.
The aliens would have been shooting at each other.
They fired continuously at the landing ships, destroying many as they
passed by. That was not their objective.
Though reduced to five fighters, they breached the mother ship's
defenses, and flew into the alien's hanger deck. Once inside, they made kamikaze runs at the command structure
that acted as a flight control tower for the departing ships.
They overloaded their own reactors, turning their ships into fusion
torpedoes. Three of the New Air
Force fighters managed to crash into the command structure, causing so much
damage that almost twenty alien ships were trapped inside.
This meant that close to two hundred hover killers and twenty thousand
enemy troops never joined the battle. Their
attack was recorded, from their onboard cameras, at the New Air Force command
center. Those images are now almost
a cliché for patriotism and self-sacrifice.
The Delta squadron's attack is studied by every military cadet in every
branch of the service, and there is not a single American school child that
hasn't seen the footage.
There
were many other outstanding acts of bravery in the skies over Earth that day, as
mankind fought for its continued freedom. My
warships attacked the aliens relentlessly, and all the while their tactics and
capabilities were being analyzed by military experts on Earth.
To say they were astonished would be an understatement.
Over
the South American rainforests of the Amazon basin, my warships Apollo and Hera
engaged a squadron of six enemy ships. The
enemy ships were attacking from a formation, and so my ships applied a fast
moving and unpredictable attack pattern. They combined to engage the aliens from two sides, making
high-speed feints and firing runs. In
this attack pattern, they minimized the disadvantage of being outnumbered by
always keeping the enemies in each others' lines of fire.
They made their attack runs keeping two or more of the alien ships
perfectly lined up behind each other. They
fired both x-ray laser beams, and electromagnetic pulses.
As they flew, they corkscrewed or wove erratically so as to present an
inconsistent and difficult target. The
aliens couldn't fire on them with any accuracy.
The
Apollo lined up a target, with another enemy ship behind it. The approach was made with the sun at the Apollo's back,
making visual and infrared tracking impossible.
At only a half-mile from the targets, the Apollo struck the nearest alien
ship with an electromagnetic pulse series. In the three-quarters of a second it took the Apollo to close
with and pass the nearer target, over a hundred pulses lashed out, shifting from
the first to the second target as he passed. Behind the Apollo, first one, then the other enemy ship
incandesced from the absorbed energy, and exploded. By the time the debris sphere began to expand, the Apollo was
far beyond the blast zone.
In the
confusion of their destruction, the Hera swept up from below, glowing blue-white
with deadly gamma radiation. Two
beams lanced out from the Hera as she passed through the center of the ruined
enemy formation, and two more of their ships exploded. In a second and a half she was two miles above the targets,
back flipping to reverse her course and resume the attack. But ill fate was with her that day, and as she lined up the
remaining two aliens for a diving attack, another three enemy ships dropped from
the cloudbank to the south to intercept her. From the west, the Apollo hurtled in to cover for her, and
from a distance of almost fifteen miles a projectile from his electromagnetic
launcher punctured one of the alien ships, causing it to flip end over end into
the jungle below. At 27% of the
speed of light, the projectile had struck the target before the weapons officer
had lifted his finger from the firing button.
Still, two enemy ships were closing on the Hera from the south.
There were also two ships remaining from the original squadron she was
engaging. She targeted the original
two with electromagnetic pulses, but the Apollo was closing too fast.
She aborted the firing, closed her force-wall shield, and rammed one of
the enemy ships instead. At the
speed the Hera was moving, it was like a bullet hitting an alabaster egg.
The two
incoming aliens waited for her to drop her shielding. As the Hera began to glow
with gamma radiation prior to an x-ray laser attack, they fired their particle
beam weapons. The beams from the
two ships were directed through rotating prisms to form a flickering net two
miles square. The Hera struck the
net at full speed. She absorbed so
much energy that for a second she appeared to be a multiple image in blue-white,
being stretched like a rubber band. There
was no explosion. One moment she
was there, the next moment she was gone. Like
her namesake two millennia before, the Queen of the Olympians was the first to
be lost.
Half a
world away, over the sub-continent of India, Zeus and Poseidon were fighting for
their lives. Outnumbered six to one
at the start of the battle, they were facing two full squadrons of alien ships,
the squadron they had engaged, and a second which had reinforced them.
My warships were designed to fight at a numerical disadvantage.
They had to be. We never
intended to build many of them. So
we armed them to the teeth, and each ship carried a triple crew.
When the second squadron arrived to oppose them, the Zeus and the
Poseidon changed tactics. Double
teaming their battle stations, and linking their navigation controls, they
maintained a distance of a half a mile between them. Then they flew in tandem, revolving around each other like
the suns of a double star, covering each other's backs, and multiplying their
firepower. As their enemies
converged on their position, their flight path described a tumbling spiral,
electromagnetic pulses dispersing in a widening sphere around them.
The tactic was devastating. Around
them seven enemy vessels incandesced, doomed, but the five that remained formed
a sphere around them, tracking their procession across the sky with weapons
fire. As the population of Srinagar
watched the Gods battle above, the five surviving alien ships laced the sky with
their particle beams, driving the battle to the West.
Whether they drew straws, or acted on orders, no one shall ever know, but
two of the alien ships, despairing of victory by normal means, flew into my
warships' formation, ramming them, and sacrificing themselves as well. It was a tactic of desperation, but valid on the battlefield
against a smaller force. The
resulting fireball could be seen for almost two hundred miles, and the shock
wave leveled buildings in Islamabad, now only fifty miles away. In a moment I had lost two more of my ships, and two hundred
of Earth's finest warriors met their end.
The
hand of fate struck down the Hephaestus over the Bering Strait.
Having destroyed a lone alien ship with a beam from his x-ray laser, the
Hephaestus was suddenly besieged by the remaining five ships of the enemy
squadron. They were fighting in the
whiteout of a squall, targeting each other by sensors, their weapons lacing the
clouds with the lightning of war. The
Hephaestus flew within the enemy formation, tricking them into shooting down two
of their own ships, while killing another with an electromagnetic pulse.
But the pulse was his undoing. Though
not a weapon of war, yet still destructive are the forces of nature.
The electromagnetic pulse series caused a huge static buildup on the
ship's hull, and when an alien ship approached, the discharge of lightning
jumped between them. For a second
the Hephaestus was blinded, and at the speed the ship was travelling, that
second brought doom. The Hephaestus
struck the Bering Sea at over 3,500 miles per hour, skipped twice on the
surface, and slammed into Gambell, on the tip of St. Lawrence Island.
AND
THE GLORY
Ares
and I had concluded our meeting with Dean Hewitt.
We had agreed to release some of the alien technology, and to have our
advisors direct its integration into the U.S. arsenal.
By the terms of our agreement, my advisors would answer only to me, and
they would not be obstructed by the military command structure.
I think Hewitt enjoyed the idea that the generals would have no real
control over my men. He also knew I
would never agree to having my warriors take orders from them, and he wanted the
technology. He had succeeded
in achieving through negotiation, what the President had failed to get with his
earlier demands. We were all in the
oval office, getting his signature on the documents, when we saw the flames, and
the flashes of lightning that could only signal the appearance of Gods.
Out on
the lawn of the White House, with the Washington Monument in the background,
they materialized. There were ten
of them, dressed in leather, fur, and coarse fabrics.
They wore helms and armor of steel and bronze; bracers, grieves,
breastplates, and gauntlets. They
bore the weapons of ancient warriors, spear, bow, and sword.
They were equally divided, male and female.
They stared directly at Ares and me as if the walls of the White House
were glass. They stood in a line
facing us, and in the center a God stepped forward.
"We
have found the spawn of the renegades, and our triumph is at hand."
From the end of the row of figures a Goddess stepped
forward.
"Two
only are they, yet in battle our hunters did they overcome."
At the far end of the row another Goddess stepped
forward.
"Fear
not, for the rings are not with them, and they are unarmed."
The God standing next to her in the row stepped
forward.
"Still,
there are powers unseen about us, and the fate of worlds is not ordained."
Ares
and I looked at each other as Dean Hewitt and the President looked on.
Their aides had fled in terror, but a detail of secret service agents had
entered the oval office.
"Take
them to the bunker," I told them, "and keep your heads down."
"Guess
it's' time to go to work, baby," Ares said. "looks like we could use
our weapons though…now where did I put that sword?"
"Ares,
I think they really don't take us seriously," I said with a grin, "and
I always did like a fight against overwhelming odds."
"Makes
them careless, huh," Ares quipped, "I'll take the ladies, and you can
have the boys hon, I know you'll knock 'em dead."
"You're
both crazy," Hewitt remarked as the agents dragged him out into the hall,
"hope you beat them though, they don't look like they're very reasonable
folks."
"We've
got a deal," I called after him, "and I always keep my word."
Ares
was concentrating on something, but then he smiled and said, "Oh yeah, how
could I forget."
There
was a flash, and we were in the battle dress we had worn two thousand years ago.
I didn't remember that breast-plate being as heavy, but it felt good to
have a sword at my back. I drew it, absently spinning it twice on my palm.
"The
balance is good," I told him as I watched him draw his own sword.
"It
should be, Xe, it's yours…took me awhile to remember where it was though.
I don't think the British Museum will miss it a bit.
It hasn't been on display since the forties."
"I
see you've still got your old blade," I said, looking at the sword that had
once made me a Goddess, then glancing at the battered sword in my hand.
I swore I'd never lose it again.
"Yeah,
the One God gave it back to me when he let me return to the world," he
said, "I think he liked it himself though."
"Come
forth to your doom," one of Gods yelled from the row of figures on the
lawn.
. "Sounds like a challenge to me," I said.
"Nothing
like ganging up on us, ya know…kinda rubs me the wrong way," Ares said.
"Me
too. Guess we should start by
evening the odds," I said with a grin.
"Don't
scorch the carpet," Ares joked as we disappeared in flames from the oval
office.
We
appeared on the White House lawn right behind the row of Gods and Goddesses, and
before they knew what hit them we had hewed down three. Then we disappeared again, and materialized twenty feet in
front of them. They were still
reacting to our surprise attack.
"Hey,"
I said to Ares with a smile, "no fair…you slashed two of them, and I only
got one."
"Kindness
to your enemies is cruelty to yourself," Ares replied with a grin.
"Have
you noticed the four standing ahead of the others?" I asked him, "I
think they're the ones we're going to have trouble with."
"They
don't look so tough," Ares said, appraising them like warlords in the old
days, "I'll bet it's been forever since they've really had to fight."
"The
time has come for you to meet your fate," one of the three secondary Gods
said, "and we will beat you without cowardly tricks."
"If
you think ten against two is a fair fight, you've got nothing to say," Ares
yelled back at him, "this is WAR, boy!"
"Yeah,
give it your best shot," I yelled, "and by the way, when you're in our
back yard, you play by our rules."
We
closed with them. The three who had
stayed in the line took the lead at first, the four speakers hanging back.
I noticed they were watching us, trying to get a feel for our tactics.
I would have done the same with an unknown but deadly enemy. Perhaps they underestimated me, but it was a young looking
God who approached me, while a God and a Goddess attacked Ares.
The young God I fought was a very good swordsman…not a prodigy, but
more than competent. He just didn't know enough tricks of the trade to survive
very long. He began by circling me,
then opened with a high slashing attack. I
tested him by blocking his strokes and shoving his blade away to break his
rhythm. He didn't fight my force,
but continued with it, pivoting on one foot, and spinning to attack me from the
other direction. Again I shoved
away his blade, and again he pivoted, to attack from the other direction.
I knew his weakness. After
trading blows with him face to face, I shoved away his blade for a third time,
and as he started to pivot, I leaped over his turned back, landing behind him as
he slashed at where I had been. I
brought my blade down on his neck from behind, and he fell on his face.
A moment later his body disappeared.
Now I
joined Ares as he fought the God and Goddess.
The Goddess was wielding a spear, and had managed to keep Ares from
killing the God, who was armed with a sword.
They fought well together, covering for each other, and working their
weapons at the long and middle distances. I
knew from experience that to best them I would have to neutralize the Goddess
with the spear to allow us to get close enough to kill them.
I waited for an opening, and leapt in front of her as Ares traded blows
with the swordsman. She used the spear like the Romans had, holding it from the
end, and attempting to stab with the point.
The Chinese field lance, with its flexible shaft, used both ends to
attack, by both stabbing and slashing, and I had always found it a more
troublesome weapon to defeat. She
made rapid controlled movements, parrying my most rapid attacks, and driving me
back with the point, using longer thrusts that came from the movement of her
body. I was again testing my
opponent, probing her techniques to find anything unexpected.
She was very quick, very strong, and very predictable.
A good technician, but not an artist.
I had no doubt that I would kill her.
By now
Ares had appraised his opponent, finding the weakness in his repertoire.
Being used to fighting with the spear wielding Goddess, he was lazy, and
didn't recover well. I watched them
out of the corner of my eye as I fought. Ares
pressed his enemy, changing speeds to confuse him, then, without warning he
unleashed his full speed. His
opponent couldn't believe how fast he could move that massive sword using only
one hand. Ares slammed both sides
of his blade, slapping it to the side, and sliding the tip of his own blade up
his arm, slicing him to the bone from the wrist to the shoulder.
Shock and pain distorted his face, and he looked at the wound.
He was out of position, and couldn't parry when Ares thrust his sword
into his chest.
And
I saw the reaction I was looking for on the face of the Goddess with the spear.
She was either the lover or the sister of the swordsman Ares had killed.
When she thrust at me again, there was the slightest decrease in her
speed. I spun, rolling up the shaft
of her spear, now too close for the way she used it.
If she had abandoned the weapon, leapt back, and drawn her own sword,
perhaps she could have recovered, but she was hurt by the loss of her loved one.
My sword entered her body just above the sternum, and pierced her
windpipe before striking her spine. She
gave me an astonished look, and then her body vanished.
I looked over, and gave Ares a big smile.
"Yeah,"
he crowed, "we bad, we bad."
"So
what about you?" I asked the four who had been watching us, "Seen
enough? Going home?"
As if
to make a final test, one of the Goddesses notched four arrows in the long bow
she carried, and fired them at us. As
two arrows came towards me, I leapt high into the air, back flipping, and landed
after the arrows had passed. Ares
just held out his sword and angled the blade towards the arrows targeting him,
using it as a defelade. The arrows
struck the blade, deflecting off it and away.
"Is
that the best you can do?" he asked.
I took
a quick look around us, and noticed, on the other side of the fence surrounding
the White House lawn, a news team had set up and were broadcasting our battle
with a camera. I couldn't resist
waving, and seeing this, Ares looked over at them too…and bowed.
Our
four opponents drew their swords and approached us.
Ares and I went to meet them. We
squared off, each of us facing a God and a Goddess. They were very good fighters.
Actually, they were outstanding. They
were pathetic tacticians. I would
have set three against one, leaving the fourth to hold off the other of us,
until the three had made their kill. Then
it would have been four against one…one who was already tired.
The second kill would have been quick.
But they must have been ruled by their own code of honor, and whatever it
was, it worked to our advantage that day. They
drove us apart, and kept pressing us relentlessly.
Those I
fought favored attacking me from two sides, knowing I had only one weapon to
fend them off. I expended a lot of
energy turning back and forth, defending against their attacks from both sides,
and hoping for a mistake or an opening. They
made no mistakes, and I realized if there was to be an opening I would have to
create it. To make things more
difficult, the Goddess was using a main gauche, or parrying dagger, as well as a
narrow bladed sword. I had often
wielded my chakram with my left hand for this purpose.
Now I had to move at high speed constantly, just to keep them away.
At one point we had locked swords overhead, and as I blocked their two
blades, she stabbed me with her dagger. I
felt it pierce my left shoulder. The
wound would slow me down until it healed, even though I wouldn't bleed. Ares called my name, and I knew he had seen it. I could only
hope it wouldn't break his concentration. She
smiled at me then, trying to goad me into an error.
It wouldn't work, but it gave me an idea.
The next time they closed in, I locked up their blades with my sword, and
as she went to stab my chest with the dagger, I turned my wrist, letting their
blades slide away down mine, and moved closer to her.
There, her dagger slipped between the leather and the bronze of my
breastplate. I turned, and the dagger was trapped in the scrollwork.
Then I twisted my body, and wrenched it from her grasp.
I would have a bruise along my side below my right breast, but I had a
second blade! I pulled it out with
my left hand, turned the blade towards her, and smiled.
Now I could create an opening.
I
fought them with renewed vigor, weapon against weapon, and I think they were
surprised. As the Goddess closed in
again, I kicked her hard in the stomach, throwing her off balance, and I cut her
right thigh deeply with my sword. She
staggered, but the God covered for her, forcing me back.
Ares
had been holding off the two he fought, and his greater strength made his combat
more equal than mine. At one point
he had managed to slide his sword down the blade of the Goddess he fought,
catching her blade guard, and by twisting his wrist, flipped her sword from her
grasp. She back flipped out of his
range, as his blade whistled past her throat.
It was close. The God came
at him, but he parried his attack, and kicked his forearm, driving his sword to
the side, and creating an opening. He
drove his left fist into the God's face, and followed it with a crescent kick
that knocked him to the ground. Then
Ares reversed his grip, stabbing his blade down to make the kill, only to have
it blocked at the last moment by the Goddess who had retrieved her weapon.
He turned towards her, and had to settle for kicking the downed God hard
in the ribs. From where I fought I
heard the snap of bone. He pressed her, driving her away, but before he could
overpower her, the God rejoined the fight.
Having
wounded the Goddess, I found myself concentrating on the God who was covering
for her. He lunged at me, but I
flipped over his blade, turning in the air, and kicked the Goddess' sword arm as
I came down. There was a satisfying
crack of bone as the elbow joint gave way.
I had managed to damage both her right arm and leg.
She transferred her sword to her left hand, and kept her injured side
away from me after that. Then I
heard a yell of pain, and a curse. Ares
had caught his foot on a sprinkler head embedded in the lawn, twisting his
ankle, and losing his balance. In
that moment, the Goddess he fought had managed to knock away his sword, and the
God had pierced his left side. I
could tell from the position it was a lung wound, a wound that would lethally
degrade his fighting ability. The
Goddess was reversing her grip preparing to impale him. I did the only thing I
could. I rolled over my shoulder,
away from my enemies, flipped the parrying dagger so I held the blade, and threw
the dagger as hard as I could. It
struck her, burying itself to the hilt in her back, driving her off balance, and
making her drop her sword. She fell
right on top of Ares. I barely
turned back to my attackers in time to roll away under the blade of the God's
sword. I was rolling towards the
injured Goddess, and she was ready for me.
It was a bad situation. Luckily
I was on her injured right side, and she had to turn to attack me.
Instead of regaining my feet, I stayed down, and lashed out with my legs,
sweeping her feet out so she landed on her back, the broken arm twisted beneath
her. I could have killed her if I'd
still had the dagger. I settled for
a jabbing strike, crushing the nerves in one side of her neck.
Then I was on my feet, racing towards Ares, with the God at my back and
the Goddess close behind. All I could think of was keeping them away, so he could die
in peace with me beside him. I
doubt more than a dozen feet separated them from me, when there was a blur
overhead, and the ground right behind me erupted, throwing me head over heels.
UNTO
THE AGES
As Ares
and I fought on the lawn of the White House, battles raged in the skies.
The Hades was high above the Earth, firing on the damaged mother ship.
Making pass after pass, the Hades had fired seven rounds from its
electromagnetic launcher…each a twenty pound steel egg, moving at 27% of the
speed of light. Each had pierced
the mother ship, passing completely through it, and imparting part of its energy
to damage the structural integrity of the target.
The shots were not directed at random.
The Hades' crew had scanned the mother ship, and located its structural
axis. Each round had chipped away a
part of the mother ship's frame. After
seven impacts, it was like a giant cracked egg. At my base in the mid-Pacific, this message was received from
the Hades.
"In
the name of the free people of the Earth, we choose the way of the warrior.
The crew of the Hades sends this message to any beings that would oppress
mankind. IT IS A GOOD DAY TO
DIE."
The
Hades circled in an arc of one thousand miles, and turning back towards the
mother ship, accelerated to full attack speed.
The crew charged the x-ray laser capacitors to 120%, and within its
force-wall shield, it glowed the blue-white of a dwarf star.
The Lord of the Dead had become the Avenging Angel.
The Hades slammed into the mother ship at almost 34,000 miles per hour,
on the damaged axis it had created. They
collapsed their force-wall shield, freeing the gamma radiation. And vaporizing themselves.
The mother ship was reduced to a dead hulk, lit from within by secondary
explosions, broken into two halves, which slowly drifted apart.
Two
other ladies lost their lives that day. Artemis,
and Athena. They were destroyed in
separate battles, Artemis while engaging four alien ships over the Gibraltar
Strait, and Athena during a dogfight over the Australian outback.
Their crews won honor in combat, taking many invaders to Tartarus before
their own destruction. I lost seven
warships that day, but seven hundred warriors lost their lives.
As the
Hades was preparing to make its suicide run, I was lying on my back on the White
House lawn, stunned, staring at the sky. A
few feet away there was a gaping hole in the ground.
On the other side of the hole were a God and a Goddess who wanted to kill
me. About eight feet away from me
lay the fallen Ares, wounded through the chest, while a wounded Goddess, and a
God intent on killing him were starting to regain their senses.
In the sky above the blur resolved itself as it sped away to the east.
It was the warship Ares…the distinctive red color of the hull unique
among all my forces. It took what
seemed like hours for my head to clear enough for me to understand what had
happened. When I did, I knew I owed
a crew of mortal warriors my life. Capt.
McClellan had somehow managed to line up the Ares, in a vertical dive, and fire
a round from the electromagnetic launcher straight down into the White House
lawn. He had used the ship itself
as a gun sight, and the shock wave, as the projectile slammed into the earth,
had knocked us all off our feet and stunned us.
He had pulled the ship out of the dive only eighty feet above the ground.
Heat from the ship scorched the famous rose garden, while the suction
behind it tore the antennas off the roof. I
hadn't recovered enough to stand or walk, but I could crawl.
I grabbed my sword, and dragged myself over to where Ares lay dying.
"Who
turned out the lights," he mumbled to me as his eyes focused on mine.
"It
was McClellan…he shot the lawn. Saved
our butts, for a few minutes at least," I told him.
"Damn
hot rodder," Ares said, forcing a grin, "we're screwed I think…at
least I am."
"Bull,"
I said, "you're a God. You can heal."
"Yeah,
yeah," he said, blinking, "not if they have anything to say about
it."
I
followed his gaze, and I saw the enemies staggering towards us, weapons in their
hands, confident that it was all over.
"Why
don't you bug out," he said, "live to fight another day and all that
crap."
"I'm
not leaving you," I told him, then I said it, " I love you.
We're in this together."
"I
have always loved you, Xena," he said, "I'd be happier knowing you
were still alive. I'll tell 'em you
went to powder your nose or something."
"Ares,
shut up." I said, "I'm going to take at least one of them with
us."
"That's
my girl," he said with a grin, figuring he'd get away with it this time.
I
kissed him, and I staggered to my feet, my sword gripped in both hands.
I glared at them as they approached us.
I thought the wounded Goddess would be joining us in hell real soon.
She was closest. I didn't
notice the spotlight that came down behind me, but Ares must have.
"Well,
I never thought I'd be happy to see the you again," he said, "hey Xe,
cavalry's here."
"Oh
great, now your getting delusional on me," I muttered.
Then I
heard a sound I hadn't heard in hundreds of years. It's whine sang of metal and speed. It came from behind me, and by reflex I dropped to the
ground. Something flew past me a
few feet above the lawn. It struck
the nearest God so hard he flew backwards, ricocheted with sparks, and nailed
the wounded Goddess in the side of the head, flipping her off her feet,
ricocheting again…back towards me. I
raised my hand, and it slammed into my palm.
I closed my fingers, and let my arm absorb the impact, pulling it close
to my body. When I looked, I saw I
held a ring of steel, with an S-curve in the center.
I just stared at it, unbelieving. Two
bodies sizzled on the ground where they'd been struck down, flesh smoldering,
impression of their skeletons, burning and crumbling to dust.
Then they were gone. I'd
seen a God die that way once before. Only
once before. I stared at the
chakram I held like a dim witted mortal, still unable to comprehend.
"Shut
up Ares," a voice said behind me.
I
didn't believe my ears, but I wanted to believe so bad that I hurt inside.
There was a shadow moving up behind me, and now it covered me.
A shadow with wings. I
turned around, forgetting the two enemy Gods still before me.
She was right there in front of me, not two feet away.
The Archangel Gabrielle, and she was smiling up at me.
I choked back a sob and grabbed her in a hug that would have squeezed the
guts out of a mortal. She wrapped her strong arms around me and shrouded us with
her wings. Neither of us
spoke, for words could not express the tidal wave of emotions at this reunion.
I rested my chin on her head, and would have been happy to stay that way
forever, never letting go again. I
might have too, but from behind me came a grunt, and a cry of triumph.
I
released Gabrielle and spun around. The
remaining God had driven his sword into Ares chest, pinning him to the ground.
He wasn't moving. I took a
step away from Gabrielle, and I threw the chakram so hard my feet left the
ground. It closed the distance between us in a heartbeat, just a
silver blur in the afternoon sun. Then
it struck him down, the impact severing his head from his body, the force
carrying it right through him to slam into the Goddess who accompanied him.
It knocked her flying across the lawn, and ricocheted away, its whine a
cry of outrage and vengeance. It's
flight carried it to the White House portico, where it finally struck the chain
of a great lamp over the doorway, dropping it to the pavement, and rebounding
back to me. I caught it as I ran to
Ares.
He was
dead. No question about it.
No breath, no twitch of dying…he was gone, killed while my back had
been turned. Was every joy to be
shadowed by despair? Was this the will of the One God? Though our enemies were vanquished, the cost was bitter to my
heart, yet such were the fortunes of war. Many
had lost their lives that day in battle, but none so dear to my wretched heart.
I fell to my knees and cradled his head, and my tears splashed his face. Emotionally, I was a disaster…beyond conflicted, I felt the
rise of the blinding fury that had once been my emotional retreat.
The red of bloodlust grew in my heart, and demanded sacrifices, bodies to
hew, enemies to snuff out…yet there were none.
All our enemies were dead…the last two falling to dust a few feet away,
smoldering. I raised my eyes to the
sky, and with a cry that tore my throat, I wailed out the pain in my soul and
the anger in my heart.
"OH
GOD NO!!! WHY HAVE YOU BETRAYED HIM!!!"
And
then my senses shut down. I may
have passed out, or I may have turned within.
I don't know how much time passed, minutes I would guess, because when I
regained my senses, nothing on the lawn had changed.
There was a warm hand resting on my shoulder, gently squeezing.
I let the chakram and the sword fall from my hands, and I wrapped my arms
around Gabrielle's waist, and buried my face in her chest.
Her hands cradled my head as I sobbed.
And there I stayed, as her warmth thawed the monster I knew lurked a
hairsbreadth below my skin.
After a
time, she gently tilted my face to look up into her eyes.
I saw there the love that had changed me two millennia before, and a
greater wisdom than I had ever seen.
"Xena,
I know this tragedy has brought you immeasurable pain," she said, "but
beyond the pain is a chance which is hidden within.
You will know what to do. It
is the time of change, and the time of restitution.
There is a debt to be paid."
A debt?
A time of change? I tried to
understand, because in some deep place, her words rang true.
I played back all the time I had spent with Ares since he had come back
to me. His words came back to me
then…"you must believe that all things in the world change in time…in
hope and love lies the cause of faith."
He had brought me to heaven so I would know that Gabrielle still waited
for our reunion, still had faith in the promise of future lives together.
He had done it, knowing he would one day lose me again.
He had done it though it had broken his heart.
All I could say was "thank you", such a paltry expression for
what he had done…for what he had done at Olympus an age ago, when I had
supposedly been a mortal, and he a God. And
I knew what I had to do.
Gabrielle
stepped away to give me space. I
laid my hands on his head, cradling his face, and I concentrated as I had never
concentrated before. "Immortal
beloved, my life force for you…accept my immortality, for I would bring you
back. I will that you take my gift,
it was ever yours from the very beginning.
Come back from the hall of souls. Come
back to the world. You were meant
to be a God. Come back to me."
A blue light had surrounded him, flowing from my hands, and I felt the
power draining out of me. I felt my
wounds, and the fatigue of battle. I
felt him move beneath my hands!
Behind
me I heard Gabrielle softly beseeching her God as well, "Almighty Father
who art in heaven, hallowed be thy name. Thy
kingdom come, thy Will be done, on earth as in heaven…"
He
lifted his head, and looked into my eyes, and he knew what I had done, for a God
always knows a mortal from an immortal.
"Xena,
why?" he asked.
"It
was the only way," I stammered, "I couldn't let you go like this.
I couldn't leave you. The
world needs a God of War...the world needs you...and, and I need you.
You gave up your immortality
to heal Eve and Gabrielle…now things are back the way they should have
been."
And I
realized another thing. The circle
had come back to its start, and I was mortal again. I could die, and finally, I could one day be reborn.
On some day in the future, in some place we could not foresee, a child
would be born to fulfill the promise made so long ago.
God had granted me a way back…a way out of the detour of two thousand
years we had taken. All
things in the world change in time, yet all things flow in a circle.
I had done God's Will, and He owed me.
I knew there was one other debt to be paid, but now I had faith.
I turned to look at Gabrielle. She
stood on the lawn next to us, just her. The
wings were gone. She looked into my
eyes, and I could see the truth. Her
prayer too had been answered. We
were both mortal, and we could both die one day, and we could proceed with the
cycle of rebirth that had been promised so long ago.
We were home.
In the
silence that followed I felt the sun on my back, and the beating of my mortal
heart. I began to hear the sounds
of the world around me. I stood,
and I helped Ares to his feet. He
was shaken, but otherwise unchanged. He
looked into my eyes, and I knew it was an emotional moment for him, but he
swallowed, took a breath, and spoke to me.
"Thank
you."
Better
than any other I now knew those words were not pathetic, not inadequate, for
they came from the deepest part of his heart, just as they had twice come from
mine. A weight of guilt lifted from
me. The circle had truly closed at
last.
SO
MOTE IT BE
(2256
A. D.)
I've
been around a long time, and I thought I should write this all down.
It really is history, and I've started to feel obligated to preserve it.
There isn't anyone now who knows the whole story except me. Maybe someday someone will need to know.
So much has been lost in the passage of time, and often, I hear things
that make me want to scream, "No, you morons! It didn't happen that
way". While I still have the
chance, I'd like to get it right. It's
more than taking names and kicking ass.
This is
a big step for me. It's really out
of character. I guess writing was
never my thing, but things change...I've changed...the world has changed.
I've known a couple people who could have done this right, so I just keep
asking myself, "What would they have done?
How would they have told this story?
What words would they have chosen to make it come alive?"
And yes, I miss them both, even the annoying little blond.
What makes it difficult is that I've always liked hearing stories about
myself, but I've promised to tell the truth this time.
This is not a myth or a legend. Well,
maybe someday it will become a legend, for the events deserve to be seen for
their heroism and passion, and they are bigger than life.
First,
let me relate what happened after I was resurrected from the dead.
The last of the race of the Gods was destroyed, and their threat ended
forever. In all the time since,
there has been no evidence of any more survivors.
I am the last of the renegades. The
invasion ended with their defeat at Xena's hands.
The aliens who survived the battle withdrew to their remaining mother
ship, and disappeared. We
considered hunting them down, but I reasoned it was better to let them relate
the terror they had met with on this world, then to invade their home world and
prosecute the war. The defense
forces Xena created have expanded, having absorbed the military forces of the
nations of the Earth. Fifty years
after the invasion, the people celebrated the Dissolution of Nations, and have
ruled themselves as a global community for the last two hundred years.
Their security from invaders is guaranteed by my Planetary Defense
Forces; two hundred and fifty warships, and a half-million warriors.
You cannot imagine the advances we have made.
I keep
the chakram. It is not a thing to
be held by mortal hands, and having within me the Balance of Dark and Light, I
am the only being with the right to hold it.
I treasure it, for the memories it holds, and because it was a deathbed
gift from the one who held my heart. I
also keep a battered sword, and a bronze breastplate, both priceless for their
ancientry, and their sentimental value. I
keep them with my own sword.
In
the last hundred years, we have attained to the mastery of space, and the
promise implied by the invading Gods. This
is a Cardinal world they had said. A
world without end. So Mote It Be. We have spread beyond the confines of what God first gave,
and now have six colonial planets. We
have established The Kingdom. On
those worlds, the riot of Earthly life was transplanted, and gratefully took
hold. Someday, far in the future,
when this Earth is gray with age, we will live on those worlds, and many more to
come. We will abandon this world,
and become a race of the galaxy…by then, perhaps a race of Gods. And then what shall be?
Maybe one day a band of renegades will take with them into exile the
chakram and their history, and the cycle will begin again.
Mankind
was created to struggle, both with the world, and with itself.
The battle is joined each day, through the struggle to survive…to
master the world, and to master ourselves.
A two-fronted war, within and without.
Mankind will always need a God of War, and in His wisdom, the Great Power
that is here has always known war is not an evil to be stamped out, but a force
to be applied in righteousness. What
would you have? That when an evil
threatened there would be no one to stand forth to set it right?
The Spirit of Battle is what kindles hearts to the greater good.
It exists in the hearts of every soldier who, on some battlefield
baptized with the blood of his brothers, masters his fear and fights for the
right of others to live in peace. It
is what drives every good cop to enter into mortal danger for the sake of those
who would be victimized. It is the
instinct that drives a parent to protect a child, even one that is not their
own. You could say it is love that drives them on, and yes, in
part you would be right. But love
without strength is a force out of balance, for it allows evil to prosper by its
weakness. Love must have a Spirit
of Battle to win it room to grow, just as a Spirit of Battle must be tempered
with love, lest it degenerate into tyranny.
But I
get ahead of myself with all my philosophy.
The people of the world had seen what had happened on the White House
lawn that day so long ago. Because
of the special effects tradition of cinema, they didn't believe a bit of it.
The shadow forces could be explained as a secret government project.
That was believable. They
went back into the background for awhile. Xena
gave command to Capt. McClellan, who she promoted to Air Marshal, and she
dropped out of the force. She'd had enough, and she wanted to spend her mortal
years with Gabrielle and me. McClellan
did a great job as commander, continuing the development of the warships, and
expanding the goals to include space sciences in general.
He'd been a trekker as a kid, and the thirst for the unknown had never
left him. He was achieving my
desire with the fire of his own heart. He
became the Favorite of the God of War…the first favorite since ancient times.
Nothing could stand in his way after that.
By now
you are wondering, why doesn't he say more about Xena and Gabrielle?
I guess after all these years, it's still hard for me to talk about them.
Especially Xena. But it's
part of the story, and I've promised to tell the truth.
Xena
was perhaps the richest mortal on the face of the Earth. She bought properties everywhere, and she and Gabrielle lived
in privacy for the rest of their lives. By
the time she died, she had made anonymous donations to disperse her fortune…something
like 1.2 trillion dollars. It took
her forty-five years. We spent a
lot of time together, the three of us, or just Xena and I.
She still loved me, and there was no question of my love for her.
She and Gabrielle took the long view…placing their faith in a shared
eternity of successive lives. She
didn't begrudge me her time in this life. She
was an invaluable counsel to me, she was my best friend, and she remained my
lover for many years.
On
March 14, 2051, I stood in the rain with her as the earthly remains of Gabrielle
of Poteidia were interred in a private mausoleum just a few miles from The
Archeological Museum of Amphipolis, near the ancient city, now a ruin in Serres
Prefecture. We knew the time had
grown short, for Xena too had advanced in years, and to follow Gabrielle had
always been her purpose. She
reckoned her age to have been about thirty-four when she lifted my sword and
became a Goddess. She was still
thirty-four when her mortality resumed in 2006.
She was now seventy-nine.
On the
13th of April, 2051 her spirit left her body for the last time in her
villa on the island of Amphios. There
was thunder that shook the rock beneath my feet, and lightning split the sky,
tracing webs through the clouds. An
honor guard of twelve warships circled the island just below the squall, holding
salute formation, glowing blue-white. Then
the rain came down in torrents, as though heaven itself cried at her passing.
I held her hand as the warmth left it, and it was many hours before I
moved from her side. It was
forty-five years to the day since she had defeated the last of the invaders, and
given up her immortality. In her
final hour, she had sent away the members of the household, and whispered a last
request to me. Then she had told me
to open the safe in the wall behind her bed.
There were her ancient weapons, and some other heirlooms she had managed
to keep through the centuries. These
she told me to take as tokens of our time together, memories of our love.
Then I waited with her for the end.
In the
final hours of the night I carried her body to the roof…it felt so light, for
her spirit, the best and strongest part of her, was gone.
The storm had ended, and the sky was clear.
Nowhere on Earth are there more stars to be seen.
In the dark I waited, holding her, until the first pink of dawn opened in
the east. Then I laid her on the
rain soaked pyre she had prepared, and with God's Fire I made it burn. All day it burned, hour after hour as the sun progressed
across the sky, for I fed it with my heart long after the wood was spent.
Then, as the sun went down, blazing red into the sea, so too I let the
flames die. In the dark of the
Aegean night I gathered the ashes of my beloved.

Half
the ashes I interred with Gabrielle in the mausoleum near ancient Amphipolis.
The other half I keep with the chakram and the sword.
She was split between us in life, and asked to be divided thus in death.
And then I mourned.
SUCCESSION
Literary
Guild of America Awards Ceremony
March 15, 2086
Best Historical Fiction
Awarded
to Chelle Martin
For
"The Way of the Warrior"
I
really hate these awards ceremonies, but I have a reason for being here.
I've read the book, and it's not bad, but it's fiction, and after the
things I've seen, fiction isn't really very interesting.
Not compared to the truth. I've
watched this author for almost a decade, and though I will never approach her, I
am very sure we'd become close friends. I'm
even more certain I would become close to her lover Diana Miller.
I see her in the front row. She's taller than the people on either side
of her, and that dark hair makes her pretty unmistakable.
She's watching her partner take the stage to accept her third award for
the writing that comes from somewhere deep inside her soul.
Michelle Martin is a short blond, with a bubbly personality that doesn't
get mistaken for ditzy. She also
holds a brown-belt in Tae Kwon Do. Diana
Miller is a real piece of work. Lt.
Diana Miller, that is. She is one
of the youngest executive officers of a warship, and the only woman so far to
hold that commission. It figures
doesn't it, another cycle happening before my eyes.
I'll
stay long enough to hear the acceptance speech, but I'm not sitting through the
dinner afterwards. I can't take a
chance on one of them noticing a tall handsome guy that no one knows anything
about, but somehow seems familiar. They
are both very curious, and they are both very smart. I know things are better off with them living their lives
without a God in the picture. I
want them to have space, to live their lives, and to grow old and die.
I know they'll be back. And
I know they were meant to be together. Together
through a succession of lifetimes, forever.
And maybe one day, just maybe, oh say ten thousand years and a hundred
lifetimes down the line, someone like Diana will manage to steal the chakram,
and flee to the stars. And I know
she'll have someone a lot like Chelle with her.
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