This was intended
as a story for Christmas, as a take on the whole
Christmas Carol story.
I have again
shamelessly borrowed characters. So shoot
me: I have nothing but the greatest
respect for X and G. Oh, and this story
does contain a sex scene between them.

Not A Christmas
Carol
By Jaye
Morgan
The night air was stiff with cold. The
snow lay inches deep and the sky was a vast
black void. Snow had fallen, and more snow
was forecast. The palace stood gaunt and
forbidding in the light of the burning torches.
At the foot of the tower room, standing in the
freshly-fallen snow, was the Warrior Princess,
Destroyer of Nations.
The bloody fields were almost quiet. Xena
dismissed the bulk of her army, and ordered an
extra watch around the palace’s most vulnerable
areas. She paused to examine the treaty
offered up by her bleeding enemy, laughed at it,
threw it aside and then took the time to cut off
the supply of blood to the head of a lieutenant
who had made the mistake of grinning lecherously
at Xena as she passed by. When she
restored the oxygen to his system he had to be
carried away by two of the palace guard.
Xena watched his exit without much interest:
maybe she should have returned the blood-flow a
little sooner, but he was no great loss.
She looked across the valley at the little dots
of black on white that indicated where the
bodies of her enemies lay like broken toys.
They were hardly a loss, either. She’d
lost few of her own force. Her army had
better weapons, better training and better
motivation. And they had her to lead them.
That made them pretty much unstoppable.
Xena began the climb to her room. Since
invading the land and taking the palace by main
force, Xena had appropriated the tower-room for
herself. She liked looking down over the
land she was conquering. Also, the sense
of the smallness of battle was pleasurable.
Not as keen a sport as fighting and killing, but
pleasurable all the same.
Xena grinned as she reached the top of the steps
and gained the room. A fire was burning in
the hearth but she did not immediately move
toward it. Indeed, for some time she made
no move at all. Standing before the fire,
her back to the fire, stood a tall blonde woman
dressed in leather armour much like Xena’s own.
The strangers’ hair, long and fair,
half-concealed a face that was striking, and
angular. The blonde woman’s eyes were
dark, and as they settled on Xena’s face, they
seemed to burn with a manic fire.
“No, don’t do that.” Xena’s hand had gone
automatically to the chakram. Her visitor
shook her head. “You don’t need that with
me. Or rather, that will do you no good
with me. Cast it out into the ether if you
so wish, but you’ll only be wasting your time.”
Xena let the chakram fly. It sliced
through the air and returned to her outstretched
hand after passing through the only apparently
corporeal body of her companion. Xena
shrugged her shoulders and reattached the
chakram to her belt. “So you’re a spirit,”
she said, unimpressed. “Just what I need
to find in my room after a long day of killing
people. Well, I need some sleep, because I
intend to go on killing people tomorrow.
So let’s get this over and done with: what
do you want with me?”
“A
little of your time, Warrior Princess.”
“That’s the one thing I can’t spare you.
Spit out what you want and go. Did Ares
send you? If that’s the case, don’t let
the door catch you on the way out. I - ”
“I’m Callisto,” said the spirit. “And
although I realise I don’t seem it, I am flesh
and blood. But I exist in another
dimension that will one day collide with
yours.”
“And you want a little of my time. For
what?”
“To take you on a journey.”
“Look, Callisto, I’m tired. I could use a
bath. I could use a meal and a rest;
it’s messy, tiring work, killing people.
And as tomorrow I plan another long, bloody
battle, perhaps you could take your spirit self
the hell out of here. The only place I’m
going is back to the battlefield.”
“You might die in tomorrow’s battle not knowing
what I wanted you to see.”
“If I die in tomorrow’s battle it won’t matter
to me either way. Go.”
“I
can’t.” Callisto pulled up a chair.
Xena found the residual impression of the chair
in which Callisto sat showing through her body a
little off-putting. “And you can’t make me
go, either. You can ignore me, and you can
try to get some sleep, but I’m not leaving.
It’s just the ways things are. So if you
don’t mind, I may as well make myself
comfortable.”
“Fine.” Xena snarled out the word.
“You’re comfortable. That makes me feel so
much better.” She sat down opposite
Callisto and shrugged off her cloak.
When Xena’s servant arrived with food and wine
for the warrior princess it was immediately
clear that he could not see Callisto. When
Callisto reached over and took the flask of wine
from the servant’s hand, Xena was amused by the
expression of terror that appeared on his
face.
“Enough of the party tricks,” said Xena,
irritated, as the servant fled from the room.
“Can I eat and drink, or are we packing up a
picnic?”
“Eat, drink and be merry,” said Callisto,
cheerfully. “For tomorrow you may… Oh,
let’s get going. You can eat later.” She
leant forward and seized Xena’s hand.
“Let’s see what the past has to tell us.”
Her hand felt like ice around Xena’s own.
It seemed to Xena that a little of her own
strength faded as the walls around them seemed
to fall away, leaving the two of them in a kind
of nothingness through which they drifted until
they came to a city.
“See that?” Callisto indicated a series of
shadows on the ground beneath them. They
slowly floated to the ground. Xena felt
the harshness of stones beneath her feet.
“Remember anything?”
Xena looked around. “I think I know this
place…” She stared upwards at the ruins of
the city wall. “Of course I know it.
I took my army through here. We took the
entire town in a single day.”
“They had invited you in,” said
Callisto.
“It was still a victory!” Xena shot a
poisoned glance at Callisto. “They still
fought us.”
“Oh, yes. They fought. Once they’d
realised that they’d invited in and entertained
their enemy, they did try to fight you.
And what marvellous, mature soldiers they were,
too,” Callisto grinned at Xena. “This one
here… Such a fine example of soldiery at its
finest. I can see why you’d be proud of
such a conquest.”
Xena turned to regard the body of a young woman.
The body lay on its back, blind dead eyes
expressionless. Her body had been savaged by
the blade of a sword, and the bright colours of
the clothes she had been wearing were soiled
with blood. “Carnival clothes,” said
Callisto. “Holiday clothes. This was the
time of festival for these people: they
celebrated the shortest day with a bonfire, and
a feast. A time when their faith bid them
welcome strangers and treat them as friends.
How sweet. And how prepared they must have
been for battle…”
Xena stared coldly at Callisto. “What are
you trying to say? Do you want me to be sorry
for the girl? She was my enemy. So
she died. So someone mistook her for a
soldier.”
“Someone?” Callisto took Xena’s hand and
forced it down until Xena’s fingertips touched
the cold skin of the dead girl’s forehead.
As the touch burned through Xena’s body, she saw
herself, half mad with blood-lust, sword in
hand, cut down the child and kick away her body
without another thought. And she’d
probably smiled as she’d made the kill.
The slightest suggestion of a shadow flickered
across Xena’s face.
“Alright, so she was one of mine. Your
point?”
“Oh, no point. Just a little exercise in
history. After all, it wasn’t just her,
was it? Look over there.” Xena
followed the direction in which Callisto was
pointing. By the wall, near the girl lay
the body of a woman. In death the woman’s
hand lay on the dust, close to the girl’s body.
“In reaching out for her body, even though she
must have known that she was dead, she ripped
his wound beyond endurance. Love made her
bleed to death.”
“Were they family?” Xena didn’t want to
ask the question but there seemed to be no other
option.
Callisto looked at the blood that covered Xena’s
hand, and said, “Why ask? You don’t care.
Besides, I doubt that your mother would
try to reach for your hand if she was
dying beside you, even if she knew you were
dead. From what I’ve heard about her
feelings toward you, she’d probably not
bother.”
“So it was a mother and daughter.” Xena
felt a flicker of some emotion she could not
identify. Perhaps it was just the night
chill. She gritted her teeth.
“Or lovers, or sisters. Who cares?
You certainly don’t. Tomorrow you’ll be hard at
work, cutting down men, women and children by
the dozen.”
“Or the hundred.”
“You seem proud of the idea.”
“I’m a warrior,” said Xena, through her teeth.
“It is something I’m proud of.”
“And killing children?”
“There are always accidents. It couldn’t
have been helped. Besides, she might have
grown up to fight against me.”
“Ah, yes. She might have become an Amazon.
She might have taken to warfare as happily as
you did. Oh, and Xena, have you noticed
anything about the woman? Oh, I’ll make it
easier for you: she has no weapons;
she’s blind. Her daughter was leading her
to the celebrations when you cut them both down.
Still, never mind.” Callisto grinned at
Xena. Xena looked away.
They continued through the city. The dead
lay all around them. A cold wind blew
through the plundered rooms, through the dust
that was splattered with blood, through the food
that lay on the tables. The air stank of
blood. Xena shivered.
“You’re cold?” Callisto pulled a face of
mock concern. “Perhaps you could go back
and pick up the blanket the girl was carrying to
her mother, to put around her shoulders.”
“I’m fine,” said Xena. “I don’t feel the
cold.”
“Nor do the dead. It’s something I imagine
they don’t miss.”
Xena made to grab Callisto, but her hands closed
on air. “Sorry,” said Callisto, grinning,
and not looking sorry in the least. “You
see, I can touch you, but you can’t touch me.
It’s just one of the rules.”
“What rules?”
“The
rules. Xena, I don’t know who makes
them. All I know is that today they sent
me to you. Tomorrow I could be anywhere.
It all depends. But they chose me because
one day I’ll meet you for real.”
“I
can’t wait.”
“Oh, so forceful, so dismissive. So
strong. Very attractive… Yes,” said
Callisto. “Oddly enough, I can’t wait,
either. I hope we’re on opposing sides.”
“Why?”
“No reason. Just hoping. Plus I’d
really
love the chance of killing you.”
They walked on through the city, past the broken
walls and burned-out spars. Callisto
said, “I’m here to show you what has
been. I should add that I’m not your only
guide. There will be three of us in all.
After I leave you, you will have an hour’s
peace. Then you may expect your second
visitor.”
“And who is that likely to be?”
“I’m afraid you’ll have to wait and see, Xena.”
And Callisto was gone before Xena could spit out
a response.
Back in her room and thankfully alone, Xena
found the fire still burning, the food still
waiting. It seemed that she had been
absent for no time at all. She poured
herself a cup of wine and drank it, but her
appetite had gone. For an hour she sat and
stared into the middle distance. If she
half-closed her eyes she could see demons in the
fire. She dozed for a few minutes, and
woke to see Ares in the chair opposite her own.
He had taken her cup of wine. As he
drained the cup he grinned at Xena and said “A
good day’s work, I’d say.”
“I
don’t remember asking for your opinion, Ares.”
“No, but, lucky you, I give it all the same.
Ah, Xena, I’m so proud of you. You stride
about the world leaving devastation in your
wake. Every stream of blood you set
flowing is like an adrenalin rush for me.”
“A
what?”
“Don’t worry about it. It’s not the time.
That’s the problem with being in this job… you
never know where you’re going to end up.
Having yourself used as a figure in someone’s
dreams isn’t onerous but it can be a nuisance.
One day it’s Greece and you; tomorrow I could
be watching someone patent a weapon that kills
people but leave buildings intact.” He
frowned. “Can’t see the point of that one,
personally… Anyway, I’m your second
visitor of the night. So, my warrior
princess, are you going to take my arm?”
“I’d happily take off your whole arm at the
shoulder, except that apparently I can’t.
Don’t tell me, you can take my arm, but I can’t
take yours. Right?”
“You learn so quickly.” Ares bowed to Xena
and then said, “Princess: your servant
awaits.”
“Save it,” Xena growled.
Ares grinned. “You say the sweetest
things…”
“Just get on with the show.”
Again the sense of buildings melting, time
spinning. And the aftermath of another
war. Silently Ares and Xena surveyed the
battlefield. The bodies of the dead went
on forever. There was no patch of grass or
dusty ground untouched by gore. Even the
sky seemed bloodstained. The sun was
beginning to sink. The battle was pretty
much over: several of Xena’s warriors went
about among the fallen, sword in hand. If
they found anyone beyond help they delivered a
quick, twisting and savage stab to the heart of
the dying. Xena watched as one face after
another blurred from anguish to absence.
Kites circled above the field: soon they’d
be less cautious, and begin the process of
rendering down the dead. There were jagged
edges and open wounds enough to satisfy the most
demanding.
“It’s odd,” said Ares. “There’s meat
enough for them all, but they still squabble
over the remains.”
Xena raised an eyebrow. “Is there meant to
be some deep, dark symbolic meaning to that
remark that’s meant to make an impression on
me?”
Ares grinned. “Xena, all I know for
certain is that it’s my delightful duty to
escort you about a battlefield, once the
fighting is over. Callisto took you back a
year, and I take you forward… a day, or a week,
or possibly even a year. Who knows?
Your third visitor - oh, but that would be
telling… However, as Callisto may or may
not have said, they send us out to various
people without telling us why. Frankly, I
don’t much like being an errand boy, but the job
has perks – being with you again, for one.
And there’s always pleasure in seeing a
battlefield, especially one over which you’ve
been so victorious.”
“So I won?”
“Looks like it.” Together they walked across the
valley floor. The air was warm but the
hint of evening made itself felt in the growing
shadows. Ares looked about him. “You
really did a job on them,” he said, casually
kicking the arm of a dead man. Xena
frowned.
“Don’t do that.”
“Don’t do what? Oh, this?” Ares
rolled another corpse out of the way with his
foot. “Surely that doesn’t bother you,
Xena?”
“It’s… unnecessary, Ares. The man is
dead.”
“And consequently feels nothing.
Xena! Who cares? There are probably
a thousand bodies lying across our route.
Am I supposed to step round them all?”
“You can be such a bastard, Ares.”
“And you, my sweet, can be the most exquisite
hypocrite. You didn’t care about any of
these people, living. What makes you begin
to care for them once they’re dead?”
“It isn’t necessary to defile the dead.”
“No. But it can make such an impact.
It wasn’t
necessary for Achilles to drag Hector’s
body round and round the walls of Troy, but he
still did it.”
“I
imagine you gave him the idea.” Xena’s
tone was scornful, but Ares wasn’t offended.
He only grinned.
“You flatter me… But yes, it was my idea.
And it worked marvellously, better than anything
I could have anticipated. With a single
action, Achilles undermined the entire fabric of
the Trojan society. He went against their
every rule for honouring the dead. It
granted him immortality of a sort. No-one
will ever remember the story of Achilles without
seeing the ruined corpse of Hector. That
and the whole ankle thing,” he added, vaguely.
“And you worry about me kicking a corpse…
Xena, I never imagined you could be so
squeamish.” He gave the last word a
disgusted twist.
“I’m not,” said Xena, furious. “I don’t
destroy things just for the sake of it. I
fight wars. I’m not interested in if the
world remembers me.”
“No?” Ares smiled. “Well, in that
case, I shan’t worry about how you’ll feel when
you see your next treat.” He nodded toward an
area just beyond the edge of the battlefield.
“In fact, you’ll probably enjoy this.”
By
the same magic that had already taken her so
far, Xena blinked and suddenly she and Ares
stood within the main room of a small house.
At a table by the window a young woman was
writing onto a scroll. Other scrolls lay
on the table and on the floor. Ares bent,
picked one up and unrolled it. He grinned.
“This one’s convinced she can write.
Someone’s been telling her the stories of the
great Xena. She’s never seen you, but she
thinks she knows all about you. Who knows,
maybe one day you’ll get the chance to kill her,
too. She’s got a long way to go but I
think she shows promise. Listen, Xena, I
think you’ll like this one.” He read
aloud,
“‘After the battle, when the blood had poured
over the valley like a sea of death, the
Destroyer of Nations walked about, smiling to
see the contorted faces of the dead. No
sign of compassion touched her face, but no-one
sighed to see such callousness: the Destroyer of
Nations had long been said to have only a stone
where every other being had a heart. It
was said by the children of the village that the
Destroyer feasted that night on the fallen
bodies of her enemies, and that when the moon
rose high over the wreckage of the city, her
face was held up to the whitened moon, and the
blood ran down her lips – ‘”
Xena put up a hand to silence him, but Ares
didn’t stop. “This is great stuff, Xena.
You should try reading it yourself some time.
Now, where were we? Oh, yes,… ‘And the
blood ran down her lips and marked her body so
that she resembled nothing so much as a fiend.
Even the bacchae would have fled from the path
of the Destroyer. Achilles in his most
bloody triumph was as nothing compared to the
horror wrought by the Destroyer; it was
said that even snake-headed Medusa would have
turned away her mortal smile from the face of
Xena.’”
Ares grinned again. “A little heavy on the
alliteration and a tad fantastical, but the
style ain’t bad. I’d say she shows
promise. And it’s nice to know that you
made such an impression, eh? When you’re
dead and gone, they’ll still remember you.
Oh, but that’s not in my remit.” Ares
lifted Xena’s hand to him and kissed it.
Then he winked at her. “Even Medusa, huh?
Some accolade, Princess.”
Xena watched the girl as the young bard wrote.
After a few moments she said, “Worse than
Medusa?”
“You have to have standards. I think
that’s pretty good. Mind you, I’ve never
been keen on bards. Too wordy.”
“Read something else.”
Ares shrugged his shoulders. “More
stories? Alright. Just one more and
then it’s straight to be.” He grinned.
“It’s your funeral, Xena. Ah…” He fished
about among the scrolls and selected another at
random. “Oh, this one’s great. I
think you’ll like it.
“‘Surely the girl had had as much right to live
out her life as even the poorest inhabitant of
Greece, but it was her great misfortune to have
been handed as mere chattel to the Destroyer,
Xena. It is said that once the Destroyer
had exhausted the girl’s sexual favours Xena
happily slew the girl in order to enter the land
of the dead and return again to the land of the
living. The Witch and the Destroyer
returned from the land of the dead, and the
young girl’s body was cast into a shallow pit
where the kites might feed upon her.
Surely it was from such nightmares that the
rumour that the Destroyer was indeed the first
vampire to walk upon the earth took hold.’
Nice going, Xena. I just love your work.
No wonder you make my heart beat a little
faster, every time we meet.”
“Who are the other scrolls about?”
“The other scrolls? Xena, they’re all
about you. This girl really has you on her
mind. And on her scrolls. Xena the
Destroyer, Xena the Vampire. I rather like
that idea: very darkly erotic. Very
sexy… I can see why you’d turn down my
offers of immortality when you’ve someone like
this around… Xena the Eater of Children.
My! It looks like you’ve already attained
as much fame as anyone could handle.
You’re well on your way to becoming the figure
mothers use to frighten their children with:
hurry home or Xena will get you… I can just see
your image drawn showing a child’s bone between
your teeth. A good thing you’ve never had
any children yourself.”
“I
– I…” Xena’s voice faltered. For a
single moment she thought of the child she had
given up, and something twisted inside her.
Sternly she fought the unsteadiness she felt.
“What should I care what I’m remembered for,
Ares?”
“Quite. I mean… As good to be remembered
as a monster than as anything else. Medusa
will never be forgotten: in years from now
when we gods are nothing but print on a page,
she’ll be there, too. And so, my love,
will you.” He frowned. “And just
what is a vampire, anyway?”
Xena tried to shrug off the feelings that were
beginning to eat at her. She had been a
warrior for so long that she had forgotten all
other ways of life. Seeing that young
woman sitting so quietly at the table had
unnerved her. There was no time for
writing when there were wars to be won, battles
to be fought. The world was out to get
you, it was just a matter of who moved first.
Xena watched the words appearing in black ink on
the parchment. I had to become a warrior,
she thought. I had to fight to save my
home. Someone had to do it. If you
don’t fight, you lose. And if you’re weak,
you die. Suddenly on fire with frustration
she kicked her way out of the dream house and
into the open air. Nothing fitted:
once outside the sunlight-filled house she was
back on the battlefield with Ares still beside
her. “You’re implying I had a choice,
aren’t you?”
Ares looked outraged. “A choice?
Xena, you were meant to become what you are now.
As I see it, you were destined to live out your
life thigh-deep in the blood of your enemies.
And with me by your side forever, can’t you
imagine how glorious it will be?”
Xena considered the image. For the first
time, it struck her that perhaps it wasn’t
exactly the fulfilment of a dream. She
looked back toward the little house and the
writing woman, but both were gone. Ares
hadn’t finished. “The weak perish, Xena!
They always do. And the strong succeed!
And there’s nothing you can do about it.
Your destiny is to be my companion. I have
never known a woman I wanted to possess as much
as I do you, and believe me,…” Ares’ voice
was both honeyed and complacent, “There have
been plenty of women before you.”
Xena looked him squarely in the face. “How
attractive: a well-tested god. And
it’s my destiny, huh? Nothing I can do
will change it? Tomorrow I go out and
fight and then it’s you and me from there on
in?”
Ares beamed. “You took the words right out
of my mouth. Every step you take over the
bodies of the dead brings you that much closer
to me. When you’ve beaten down those last
few hesitations, you’re home, and mine.
And once mine, you’ll never want to be anywhere
else.”
Xena took a few steps back, rested her hands on
her hips, and scowled. “Why is it that I’m
not finding this dream as enticing as you do?”
“Probably because you’re weak,” said Ares, with
an eye for Xena’s psychology. “Those last
few humanitarian impulses. But they’ll
fade with time. Oh, and talking about
fading…” his image became blurred, “Looks
like I’ve had my time for tonight. Sweet
dreams, Princess. I’ll be seeing you in
mine.” The battlefield faded as it was
supplanted by the very real walls of Xena’s
room.
The Destroyer of Nations watched as Ares’ image
twisted into little pockets of light and then
vanished altogether. “Don’t count on it,
Ares” she growled.
She waited for her third visitor. This
time her hour of peace dragged on. She had no
desire to sleep, and no appetite for food or
wine. If she closed her eyes all she could
see were the bodies of the dead. All the
dead. All the men and women she’d
despatched since beginning her existence as the
Destroyer of Nations. She hadn’t meant to
become a monster… Somewhere along the line
it had happened. The great space that
separated the woman who had become a warrior to
serve and save her village from the
single-minded warlord who viewed killing as
something akin to sport had gone: there
was nothing left of her old self. Ares
wanted her as his partner, and Callisto wanted
to meet Xena in combat so that she could kill
her. Some blonde kid who fancied herself
as a bard was writing Xena’s history so that she
sounded like some kind of madwoman, sick with
bloodlust. Her stomach twisted and
something inside her shrank away from what she
had become.
And the time went by. Outside snow fell,
covering the bodies of the dead with a
sympathetic, if useless, blanket. Xena
looked out at the changed world. At some
point, she thought, there’s going to be another
one turning up. What this time? More
comment on my past? No… I’ve had the past,
I’ve had the present, or thereabouts. I
don’t think I want to see the future.
She shifted in the bed. It was good to
have for once a roof above her. Good for
once to know that Argo was safely stabled and
sheltered from the bite of a Grecian winter.
Xena sighed and pulled the bedcovers up higher,
to cover her shoulders. “Xena, could you
spare just a little bit of blanket? I know
I’m not the most significant person round here,
but if Argo can have two horse-blankets, don’t I
at least deserve one person blanket?
A Gabrielle blanket?” The surprise was so
great that Xena ricocheted into a upright
position. Beside her, a blonde head
rested on the shared pillow. “Or is this
your revenge for my saying I wanted to put off
frostbite for just one more season?”
Xena just stared. Gabrielle said, “Ah,
don’t pull the how much did I have to drink last
night and who in the name of Tartarus is this.
We’ve been together too long for that. But
I’m glad you’re awake: it’s about time you
and I had some quality time together.
Sometimes in the midst of your trying to put the
world to rights, I think you forget that that
your partner can get to feel a little
neglected.”
The room was slightly lighted by the candle that
burned beside the bed and the candle that
flickered by the tightly-barred window.
Outside was winter. Sleet striped the
shutters and made goose-bumps rise on Xena’s
arms. “All day long I’ve been
watching you from a distance, hoping you’d see
me. Sometimes I think that you know it’s
me even from miles away. I know that’s
stupid, and I suppose that you’ll laugh…”
Gabrielle twisted in the bed until she was lying
next to Xena. She ran her fingertips
gently down from Xena’s shoulder to the nice
curve of her hip. “It’s so seldom I see
you without your armour that sometimes I forget
just how nice you look beneath it.”
Xena lifted back the blankets to check that
things were as she imagined, that she was stark
naked. Gabrielle lifted herself up.
Her body looked golden in the candlelight, and
the shadows that fell across her showed both
curves and finely-muscled limbs. She sat
up over Xena, and when she rested herself on
Xena’s thighs, Xena nearly groaned with pleasure
and desire. Gabrielle leaned toward Xena
and her kisses landed first on Xena’s throat,
and then on her mouth. Her weight was
insubstantial but Xena would have welcomed
more.
When she ran her tongue lightly over Xena’s lips
and then down to Xena’s throat Gabrielle left a
trail of sensation that burned in a line to
Xena’s cunt. Xena felt herself grow damp
between the legs, felt a jolt of sensuality that
made all her nerve-endings buzz. She
didn’t know who this woman was, but she wanted
to be kissed by her again.
Gabrielle smiled at her. “I love you,
Xena,” she said. “And just for once I’m
not going to let you do all the work.” She
grinned. “For tonight you can be my
prisoner.” Xena stared at her. She
felt that soft warm mouth as it ran from her
throat to her breasts, her stomach, her hips,
and then she felt her heart shift a gear as that
mouth reached her cunt. Her legs fell open
without any command from their owner.
Gabrielle lifted the blanket up like a tent that
sheltered them both. She put up her face
and grinned at Xena. Then she slid down in
the bed and pressed herself in between Xena’s
legs. Her touch was too firm to tickle,
and it awoke every nerve-ending in Xena’s body.
When she pressed her tongue just inside Xena’s
cunt, it was all the warrior princess could do
not to grab her by that soft blonde hair and
hold her in place indefinitely, but when Xena
felt fingers inside her and that tongue just
sliding across her, over and over, she gave up
the unequal struggle and fell back against the
pillows. What the hell… She said
out-loud, “Just please never stop doing that,…
Gabrielle.” Xena felt the woman slide
another finger inside her, and she felt how it
made her muscles dance.
Xena’s control cracked. The last of her
self-possession slid from her as she reached
down and bodily hauled Gabrielle up and across
the mattress. She covered Gabrielle’s body
with her own, feeling the softness of
Gabrielle’s breasts against her skin, the heat
of the woman’s cunt against her own. Xena was
so overcome with desire that the sound that
fought its way out of her throat sounded like a
growl. She opened her legs around
Gabrielle’s body and used them to hold her down.
She kissed Gabrielle, tasting the sweetness of
her mouth. Gabrielle’s mouth tasted like
fruit, like sun-warmed grapes. Gabrielle’s
lips were soft and her tongue danced against
Xena’s own.
Gabrielle’s hands were on Xena’s pulling her
closer. Gabrielle’s breasts were so
soft, and her touch was so comfortable that Xena
began to lose track of where she stopped and
where Gabrielle started. She let her hair
flow over Gabrielle’s stomach as she kissed the
tops of Gabrielle’s thighs, and the smell of
aroused woman washed over Xena like diving.
She closed her eyes, saw nothing but flickering
darkness. She gently pulled Gabrielle’s
legs apart and opened her mouth over the
musky-smelling cunt, her tongue flickering in
and across until Gabrielle shouted out, and
buried her hands in Xena’s hair. Xena felt
Gabrielle’s hands fighting to hold her where she
wanted to be, and she smiled to herself. A
wash of sexual hunger hit Xena and lit her up
from inside. Starting slowly she began to
push all her fingers inside Gabrielle, wanting
to be a part of her, wanting almost to hurt her,
wanting to claim her, and she heard Gabrielle
moan and shudder and open up to Xena like a city
throwing back its gates.
Oh. Xena lay back on the bed, still
fully-dressed, her muscles taut, her blood
burning, her heart pounding so hard it hurt.
She was dizzy with the intensity of what had
just been, and she was entirely alone.
Her third visitor of the night hadn’t come with
much of a warning. Xena’s body ached from
the inside out. Unsatisfied desire still
burned inside her: her body was damp with
perspiration and her head spun. Slowly she
sat up, swung gently round and stood up.
For a moment she stumbled, and put out a hand to
steady herself. She stood up straight and
looked back at the bed.
The blankets were a little disordered, but that
was all. Xena went to the fire and built
it up. She shivered, her skin quickly
cooling, her heart returning to its usual
rhythm. She said out-loud, “Gabrielle.”
She splashed her face with water from the
pitcher in the corner. The water was close
to ice, but it did its work. It chilled
Xena, sobered her. Now she knew where
she’d seen Gabrielle before… sitting at that
table writing horror stories about the Destroyer
of Nations.
The fire crackled. Xena dropped to the
floor before it, and put out her hands to the
growing warmth. She fought the sense of
dizziness she felt. “Some night, huh?”
Xena looked up and into Callisto’s eyes.
“I didn’t know that I’d be seeing you again.”
Her voice lacked fire.
Callisto shrugged her shoulders, sat down on the
floor across the rug from Xena. She
grinned at the sexual flush that was still
colouring Xena’s face and throat. “Looks
like your last visitor made a more positive
impression than Ares or I.”
“Do you guys get together and draw straws for
who gets to do what?” Callisto’s eyebrows
rose. “Oh, I don’t mean the whole sex
thing… But why all this? You and Ares and…
Gabrielle get to play with my head for a night
and what’s the pay-off?”
“You don’t get it, do you?” Callisto gave
Xena a very patronising smile. “Well, for
the hard-of-understanding, Warrior Princess,
all that I showed you has happened. The
battles were real, and the dead are dead.
But the events Ares showed you, and the…”
Callisto grinned. “The last little sexual
odyssey… these are the things that could be.
Gabrielle dreamed you; she doesn’t know you.
Not yet. But play your cards right and
you’ll leave a legend written in other people’s
blood on half-a-hundred scrolls.”
Xena sighed deeply. “And if I took another
path...?”
“Well, I suppose in that case you get to play
with blondie under the blankets.”
“You have such a way with words.” Xena’s
spirit was reviving. “But it’s all
relative, isn’t it?”
“If that’s how you choose to see it.”
“And if I wanted to make any changes, what would
I have to do?”
“Well, it’s not going to be a story of overnight
success, Xena.” Callisto examined her
nails. “If you really wanted to take that
route… You know, the long, boring and winding
road… I suppose you’d have to look at this
again.” She drew out the treaty proposal
from somewhere inside her armour. “But I
don’t think that’s you, Xena. I can’t
honestly see all that force and fever going
domesticated. Really, can you?”
Xena shook her head. “I don’t know,” she
said. She stood up. “I suppose it’s
the choice between a monster and being… I don’t
know… something else.”
“It’d never work. Not in a million
years.”
“No,” said Xena, softly. “Maybe not.
But I suppose people can change.”
Callisto shrugged her shoulders. “You
think? Rather you than me.” She
stood up. “Parting is such… oh, forget it.
One bard in anyone’s life is more than enough.
I’m off. Things to do. People to
haunt. Oh, and just for the record:
whatever decision you make, whatever path you
choose, sooner or later, we’ll meet.
You’ve already made me what I am. No
second chances there, unless one day we get to
meet in hell, and I really can’t see that
happening.” She grinned. “Xena, I’m
so looking forward to the chance of killing
you. Really. I can’t wait.”
She blew Xena an ironic kiss.
Xena watched as Callisto’s form began to
dissipate. In the space of a breath Xena
was alone again. Only a faint shimmering
in the air marked where Callisto had been, and
in another moment, even that had gone.
Xena picked up the treaty. Sighed deeply.
Began to examine the terms.