Amazon: Part 1 - ReGenesis
by Itinerant
edited by Amelia_R
Author's Note: A nagging plot-bunny chewed on my ankle until I finally
broke down and began this tale.
Bek D. Corbin's "Joy to the World" has a beautiful scene, which I
gratefully acknowledge as the springboard to one of my own below. It
also echoes a similar idea from C.S. Lewis in the Narnia series. It is
my hope my efforts do justice to the inspiration.
Biographer's Note: This is Nicole's story. It covers those events and
people she finds notable in her life and chooses to share. If you have
problems with it, take it up with her. I'm just a glorified
stenographer.
********
Wednesday, April 7, 2275
Prologue - Memories:
She awoke tense and on alert until she recalled where she was.
Home.
Finally.
Rolling slightly, Nicole pushed her long ponytailed hair out of her eyes
and peered at the bedside clock.
5:45.
~No meetings; no crisis; I STILL wake up before dawn!~ She flopped back
over and sighed, realizing it was pointless to try to get back to sleep.
After all the years of more to do than hours available, her body was
well trained to get up even when there was no need. She had to admit to
herself that this was late, for her, and Sarah was probably up and
waiting for some activity to pop in and begin the day.
Stretching her sleep-deadened muscles, she wriggled to the side of the
bed and sat up. Only the faintest gray light could be seen from the
eastern skyline through the large French doors that opened onto a
spacious balcony. ~Ah, well~, she thought, looking out. ~If I'm awake I
may as well take advantage of it.~ Guided only by long familiarity, she
stood and reached for her robe, hung on the chair near the bed in the
warm, dark room. As she wrapped the garment around herself to cover the
wisps of sleepwear, she spoke. "LIGHTING CONTROL: Night light" A dim,
deep-red glow rose from hidden fixtures providing just enough light to
see objects in the room without ruining night vision. The light revealed
the spacious bedroom was furnished in the clean style Nicole had favored
all her life. Shaker style furniture filled its function without being
ornate, and she was grateful for its solid functionality.
She walked to the bathroom, her tall form gracefully avoiding the
intervening furniture. After relieving the pressure on her bladder, she
splashed cool water on her face to help wake up until the coffee was
ready. In the mirror she saw, as every time for the last 275 years, a
face that looked perhaps 25 years old. The sun-bronzed face showed
neither lines nor even freckles. ~A Gift, they said. There are times it
is, but....~ She cut the thought off, knowing the need for her
agelessness. It was so tiring though, knowing there was no easy end to
this task she was set. As she stepped back out into the bedroom, she
caught a whiff of fresh-brewed coffee.
"Good morning, Your Majesty," came a familiar voice from a side table
near the outside wall. Nicole grinned and shook her head. Her dark moods
never seemed to survive her personal assistant and confidante's arrival.
"Sarah, you know you aren't supposed to say that in here! I get enough
of that out there." She waved in the general direction of the outside
world, knowing that her long-time friend would pay exactly no attention
to her complaint.
Sarah followed the old ritual between the two, responding, "You need
reminding of your place in the world, Your Majesty. You take your
importance too lightly. I recall my mother saying something of the same
sort." The woman, perhaps in her mid-fifties and a foot shorter, mock-
glared at her queen.
"The world has its own way of reminding me, Sarah. I refuse to take
anything that seriously."
Sarah knew a smirk was on her mistress' face and completed the ritual
morning verbal spar, "Then you must put up with the reminders from me,
Majesty. Your coffee." The last words spoken as a large mug of hot
coffee was handed to her friend.
"Thank you, Sarah", said Nicole as she gingerly sipped the hot, strongly
flavored liquid. "I don't recall there being anything on the schedule
today. Anything show up overnight?"
"No, Nicole. You can enjoy your balcony uninterrupted this morning. I
put the rest of the coffee in a thermal carafe for you. I believe dawn
is about 7 this fine April morning, so," she paused to check the clock
display, "you have about 45 minutes before the sun breaks over the
ridge. Will you want anything to eat now, or will you wait until later?"
"Nothing now, thank you. I'll want something after I put in my time in
the training room, as usual. I'll see you later."
Sarah bowed, knowing Nicole knew the teasing and respect it conveyed,
and left the room through a side door while Nicole opened the door to
the balcony.
~Quiet mornings like this are precious~, she thought as she stepped out
onto the dimly lit balcony. Only the faintest glow radiated from the
interior of the room, and the early pre-dawn light hid more than it
revealed of the outside. As she sat on her chair, she shivered as her
movements caused the cool air of the mountain dawn to leak inside the
warm robe.
Her view of the surrounding hills, thick with early spring growth, was
gently blurred by the haze so common in the soft, green Appalachians as
the outside light grew. This was the first morning in many months that
she'd been home to enjoy this overlook, and she took a chair to wait for
the rising dawn. This house, this room, had been sited and designed
specifically for this time of day, and Nicole was not letting the
opportunity pass. She loved the mountains, and in particular the life-
filled green slopes of the east. Granted there were more majestic
heights, but these heights were special. Her family had spent several
years near these eastern mountains, and she'd always favored them over
the harsh crags of western North America.
Down the mountainside, she sensed, rather than heard, the outdoor
activity of the trainers and recruits begin. It had taken years to
develop the program they followed. A hard regimen that had all the
lessons of the elite Special Forces from around the world, but tailored
to the ancient ways of the Amazon Nation. It worked; they'd fought off
the heirs of those who had destroyed the nation many thousands of years
ago, and would have done so again.
~We learned; we learned and survived,~ she mused. The old way of an
isolated female-only society had led to their attrition, decline, and
the shattering of the last of the clans. Like the more modern Shakers,
who denied the sexual side of humanity, they'd been cut off from the new
recruits that were their only real growth in numbers. Now they were
still a matriarchy, but a more balanced society with men added to the
nation, with their strengths complementing those of the women. The new
nation had survived and grown, even when the training cadre could barely
supply enough teams to combat their enemies.
And over the decades of war, for war it was and is, most of the world
saw only isolated events to draw their attention. These were quickly
dismissed as local strife, but most governments were well aware of
reality. All were grateful for the end of major conflict.
~This phase of the war may be over,~ she thought, ~but our real enemy
remains. We may rest briefly now, but the adversary will find his new
tools on Earth and return.~
Once again, Nicole looked out over the mountain valley before her as the
dawn tinted the clouds and mists. The purple and rose reflected from the
clouds, coloring the dew on the treetops.
~We can only see so far ahead, and I've been luckier than I deserved at
times. It's worked out for now, and we can all enjoy the respite. Or
perhaps I can finally retire, and Artemis can have the Queen she really
wants.~
She sat and watched as the sun broke over the far ridge, welcoming the
warmth as she pondered.
*****
Sarah returned to the kitchenette to ensure the makings for breakfast
were ready. Normally, she'd have begun preparations by now, as her
mistress would already be in the training room -- a schedule kept
rigorously over the years to ensure mind and body were in top condition
and also in harmony. She recalled many quiet mornings at home, "The
Settlement" as it had come to be called, as she tended the household
while the queen was in the field or at meetings; her mother and
grandmother had also served the household for generations as they cared
for, and sometimes defended, this home.
She thought back, counting the years. Her mother had entered the Queen's
service when she was 20 and retired at 60. That was the standard, forty
years of service then retirement. She was the seventh generation of her
family to serve the royal household, yet no story mentioned any queen's
name but Nicole. Almost 275 years of family service to the royal
household. When she was 12, she had asked her mother why all the
pictures of the queen looked the same and only one name was ever
mentioned. Her mother had smiled at her and answered that that was a
question she could ask the Queen herself, if she followed her mother's
footsteps. Only the household, those closest to the Queen, knew the
answer.
As the daughter of the Queen's attendant, she'd been around more than
most. Several times she'd seen the youthful looking woman take on a
palpable feeling of command. She'd looked young; she'd felt much older
at those times.
As she grew, Sarah and her friends had talked about the apparently
ageless Queen. They'd speculated about her being a clone, or a robot, or
even an alien. The adults had never answered, and eventually the
question had been replaced by more important things, like boys, high
school, and careers.
She'd never forgotten the question, but the battles had never allowed
for the asking. She'd had to focus on the important things first.
Now, though, the battles were over. The Queen was in residence with no
plans to leave for some weeks. Perhaps now was the time to ask that long
unanswered question.
Sarah turned back to the bedroom and saw Nicole sitting on the balcony,
watching as the sun rose. She walked to the doorway.
*****
"Excuse me, Ma'am."
Turning, Nicole saw Sarah had returned. She looked uncertain as she
stood in the balcony doorway.
"Is something wrong?" Nicole asked. The look on Sarah's face became, if
anything, more uncertain.
"No
Stuttering? Sarah? Nicole swiftly rose, responding now to a friend who
looked more like the shy child who had entered her service 35 years
before. "What's wrong, dear?" She took Sarah's hand in one hand and
lifted her chin with the other to look her in the eyes, as a mother with
a troubled child, and examined her friend's face. The rising sun turned
her long, red hair to a flaming aura around her head. The aura of
command was nearly as visible.
"I don't mean to worry you, Majesty," Sarah began, feeling the
reassurance of her mistress wash over her. "I just was remembering a
question I asked my mother once, about you. She said I'd have to ask
you, if I took service with you. I thought that since it was finally a
quiet day you might have time now to answer."
A faint smile crossed Nicole's lips. She thought she knew the question
to come and was actually surprised it hadn't been asked before. "And
what question is that, dear one?"
Sarah paused, reassured by the tone and endearment, then squared herself
and proceeded. "I asked my mother how it was that you never seemed to
get any older, and how it could be that my mother's grandmother could
have served you and not your grandmother."
Nicole's smile grew a bit, growing faintly sad at some of the memories
invoked. "Get yourself something to drink", she said, "and then come and
sit with me while I tell you that story as I told it to your mother and
her mother, as far back as your family has served my household."
Quickly pouring a small cup of coffee for herself and refilling her
friend's mug, Sarah took a chair in the sun and curled up.
Nicole sat back down and took another sip of coffee, recalling the
strange road she had traveled to this place. How her life had changed so
radically from what it had been to that of a warrior, leader, and Queen;
the one to rebuild, in the modern world, the Amazon Nation.
Her eyes refocused on past scenes as she began. "I am older than the
Amazon Nation. I was born more than 320 years ago in North America, and
I was not always as I am now...."
********
Saturday, November 18, 2000
Minneapolis-St. Paul Airport, Concourse F 2:20PM CST
Selection Criteria:
The flight from LA to Minneapolis had arrived almost exactly on time. He
scanned the area and located the nearest flight status monitors as he
moved, wanting to stay ahead of the rush of passengers exiting the gate
area.
~Let me see, I'm at F12, and the flight home is... D4. And on time so
far.~ Tom checked the time and saw that there was almost an hour before
boarding began, so he walked briskly down the concourse toward the food
court he recalled was on the way to D concourse. ~It may only be McD's,
but it beats nothing.~
People crowded both sides of the concourse. Tom hadn't expected this
kind of crowd on an early Saturday afternoon in November, but he felt
too good to complain. He'd completed a major project, a successful
demonstration to the primary customer, and finally the packing of the
last of the equipment for return to the company's development center.
Several new contacts he'd made with other companies would be useful,
too.
He negotiated another traffic eddy as travelers gathered to board
another flight to warmer climes. Minneapolis might be a traffic hub, but
it was also a place to leave before the real cold of winter hit. Growing
up, his family had spent a year living here, but now, as a fifty-
something, he had lost the enthusiasm (or insanity) of youth. Yet he
still lived well north of the snow line, doing what was needed to find
work. Still, as much as he disliked the cold, he'd found a company that
paid well for him to do something he liked and was good at.
He bore left as he exited the gate area, then turned hard to continue
along the main corridor between the concourses. Grateful for wheels, Tom
pulled his computer case along as he dodged past people reading signs on
the walls or just waiting for someone. Passengers crowded the
newsstands, shoe shops, and stores as he made his way to the food court
and a surprisingly short line at Mickey D's. Within 10 minutes he had
wheeled himself, his computer case, and a late lunch to a free table and
was munching on the warm sandwich and fries.
*****
The crowds were thin as he approached the gate area. He was close enough
this trip to avoid the tramway. With all the traveling he'd done this
year, he had developed a fondness for the Minneapolis Airport, since it
was almost always the last stop before home.
He had spent half of the last six months away, and though she didn't
complain, he knew the strain it had put on Beth. Even a guy can
eventually learn after more than thirty years of marriage. He smiled to
himself briefly, then frowned as he considered the need for a special
treat for his best friend, girlfriend, and wife. ~She's put up with more
hassle than she deserved this year~, he thought. ~I think we need some
'us' time again to reconnect and relax.~
As he moved to enter Concourse D, he felt something under his foot. It
rolled, and he found himself losing his balance and falling forward. He
released the handle of the computer case and put his hands out to catch
himself.
The crack of the falling handle echoed in the hallway as Tom's hands and
knees impacted the smooth tile of the floor.
~Great. Just great,~ he thought as he picked himself off the floor and
brushed the dust from his jeans and hands. He spotted his computer case,
apparently none the worse for the drop, which was more than he could say
for his dignity. One or two passers-by asked if he was OK; most people
gave him a quick look and decided he'd live. He reached over and grabbed
the handle, pulling it back to its normal, vertical position.
As he pulled the handle up, he spotted the reason for his impromptu
gymnastics. A cylindrical, white rod was just in front of the case's
wheels, no doubt stuck there after rolling out from under his foot. He
reached for the offending object to get it out of the way. As his finger
touched the rod, a small spark jabbed at him. He jerked back. ~OK, not
only do you make me look like one of the Three Stooges, but now you even
start biting. Behave!~ Again Tom reached for the object, managing to
pick it up without another assault on his person or dignity.
With the rod in one hand and the case handle in the other, he finally
reached the gate for his flight and sat in one of the end seats. Parking
the carry-on beside him, he used the time to more closely examine his
inanimate tormentor.
Tom guessed the thickness at about an inch and the length at about 18
inches or so. Just about the length from his elbow to his fingertips.
~Hmmmm. A classic 'one-cubit' stick with an attitude. Someone lost their
clue-stick.~ He saw no obvious markings. ~Odd. I'd expect at least some
dirt ground in from my shoe.~ He ran his hand down the rod using his
fingertips to examine the surface and felt what might be engravings. A
look down the length of the object revealed no useful details other than
confirmation of some kind of engraving along the length. ~If no one
shows to claim it, I'll use the old paper and pencil routine to try to
get a picture of the etching at home. That might give a clue about the
owner.~
As he sat examining his prize of war, another figure was slowly
navigating the terminal corridors. Slightly above average height, about
5'10, she glided along with the grace of a dancer or athlete. The low-
heeled shoes made little sound as she moved along. Her long, black hair
was clasped in back and trailed well past her shoulders, covering part
of the leather jacket she wore. Her skin was a dusky, olive tone; her
dark eyes and facial features reflected a Mediterranean heritage. A
loose, leaf-green blouse and snug, but not tight, jeans permitted easy
movement without concealing the slender, long legged figure beneath. She
had no baggage, just a large purse or bag, held firmly under her left
arm.
*****
She'd felt it. It had appeared somewhere in this building, seeking out
and finding its new owner. Over the centuries she had waited, ever
pleading for a new start and being told that she must wait for the right
person. She had spent countless days, covering thousands of miles,
examining place after place and person after person. And each day,
painful as it was, she'd ended resigned to the rightness of that higher
power's counsel. No one, anywhere, in any culture she'd visited, was
equipped to accomplish the task she longed to begin again.
Her daughters had been crushed and dispersed; now only fragments of a
memory remained of the nation of Amazons. It was embarrassing to see how
distorted that memory became, now reduced to the absurdity of that
"Xena" show on television. She stopped for a moment, thinking,
~Although, it is far better than that miserable Wonder Woman show.~
Shuddering at that horrible memory, Artemis resumed the search for the
woman finally appointed to wield the scepter of the Amazons.
*****
"We are now pre-boarding our first class and Elite Club passengers at
Gate D-4."
Tom grabbed the handle of his case with the same hand holding the white
rod, and pulled out his ticket as he walked to the gate. ~Finally, this
lovely day will be over, and I can spend time at home!~ The thought
cheered him as he handed his ticket to the attendant. He tucked it into
his coat, put the rod on his shoulder, and walked jauntily into the
jetway.
Artemis felt the scepter's pull change subtly, finally close enough to
have a better feel for direction. Turning the last corner, she glimpsed
the object of her search disappear into the jetway, perched on the
shoulder of an impossibility.
~No! It cannot be! No male should even be able to SEE it until it has
bonded with the new Queen! How can a man have the scepter at all? After
all these years, it is sent out, and a MAN has it! One of those who
destroyed the nation!~
She thought there might just be time to catch the impudent male if she
ran to the gate; she felt a strong hand hold her in place just as she
started to move. She spun, prepared to deal with the fool who dared to
interfere, and saw Michael grinning at her. He had been designated as
her contact, her new "immediate supervisor." He was taller than she,
brown haired, with bright blue eyes. Broad shoulders tapered to a
runner's hips and legs. They'd established a good working relationship
over the time between her "assignment" and now, but she was in no mind
to be balked. Not at this critical moment.
"What is this?", she hissed. "Who is that person and how could he have
the scepter?"
"I know you don't understand, yet," Michael replied calmly. "I agree
this is unprecedented, but the decision was made at the very top, and I
don't feel like crossing swords with Him even if I disagreed -- which I
don't. I understand part of why this person was selected. If he chooses
to accept, he has the best chance to re-establish your Amazons for
millennia." He gestured toward the gateway.
"If you think you're upset, just consider the situation he's just been
handed. He has no idea what he has, nor why. We'll be asking him to give
up everything near and dear to him: his home, his family, the person he
considers his very heart; even himself, the person he considers himself
to be. We will ask him to forfeit his Eternal Reward for hundreds of
years for the privilege of a nearly unbroken period of work and battle.
And he is the one person in the world who can do it properly, with the
right combination of mind and spirit."
Artemis felt frustrated; it was a shock to see that person carrying the
scepter. "Michael, it was men who destroyed the Amazons. They dominate
and crush women under their heels even now! Saddle them with suffocating
clothing for their stupid rules. How can a man lead the Amazons?"
"You don't know everything planned yet. Be patient for a little while.
Your work has yet to really begin."
*****
4:30PM CST
Milwaukee, WI
Tom exited the jetway, smiling to himself as he rejoiced at ending the
last trip for the year. He was travel-tired, not weary from work so much
as just sitting all day. He pulled the wheeled case along, carrying the
attack rod carefully in his other hand. Passing through the security
area exit, he scanned the crowd for Beth near their usual meeting spot.
She grinned back as their eyes finally met and the computer case was on
its own while the two hugged in greeting.
"Welcome home, Mr. Edwards!", Beth said with a happy lilt to her voice.
"It's good to be home, Mrs. Edwards!"
The hug this time was accompanied by a not-too-chaste kiss. Too quickly
for either, they parted. A few passers-by took in the sight and smiled
at the couple.
As Tom and Beth walked toward the Baggage Claim, she glanced down and
asked, "What's the stick all about?"
Tom grimaced and replied, "It attacked me first. I was walking to the
gate in Minneapolis when this thing", he held up the rod, "jumped out
and tripped me! It was a fierce fight, and it got in one good bite at a
finger, but I won and it's now the spoils of war."
His wife chuckled and answered, "Doesn't that make it eligible for POW
status under the Geneva Conventions?"
"I don't think sticks are covered; they're illegal combatants. Really, I
stepped on the thing without seeing it; it rolled under my shoe, and I
hit the ground. No one came to find it, so I thought I'd bring it home
and see if there was some identifying mark of the owner."
They collected the checked suitcase, and then began the hour drive home.
Both enjoyed the banter at the terminal and even more the chance to
catch up on the events of the last two weeks on the way home.
********
Saturday, November 25, 2000
Waukesha, WI
Decision Point:
The post-trip week was typical: Laundry, resettling into home routines,
expense reports, project final reports, and meetings to discuss how to
proceed with the potential new products. Tom and Beth had their usual
readjustments and minor tiffs as they reacquainted themselves with
living together. It was all old territory, and they each knew the ground
well, having covered it many times over their thirty years of marriage.
By the next weekend, the familiar routines mostly re-established, the
two enjoyed a slow morning of sitting, sipping coffee, and discussing
plans for the coming Christmas holidays as they enjoyed the sunshine of
the cool morning. They'd dressed in work clothes -- jeans for both, a
flannel shirt for Tom, and a warm blouse for Beth -- to take care of the
end-of-season yard cleanup postponed until Tom's return.
"Ding-Dong!"
The doorbell sounded through the house, interrupting a discussion of
Orlando versus San Diego as a vacation destination. Tom walked to the
door, seeing two figures through the frosted glass. It struck him as odd
that someone was out going door-to-door before 10AM.
*****
"I still don't understand how a male is going to restart the nation.
Males wrecked it in the first place." Artemis fumed as she approached
the door of the ranch with Michael.
Michael sighed. She was still ranting about the scepter. "Artemis,
you've waited for 3500 years. You claim to want your Amazon Nation
restored. Even I don't see all that will be happening, but God started
this process now, with this person, to rebuild and establish the Amazons
for millennia to come. It may be hard to do, but you must trust Him.
Now, you have your ID and the briefcase?"
"Of course I have them. I know I'm whining and ranting, and I'm sorry.
It's just hard to accept a man as the keystone -- especially this one.
He's so... so... average!"
"I understand, but we're here now. And just remember, we are interested
in what's inside, not what the outside looks like."
They walked up to the large ranch style home. A low brick wall
surrounded a courtyard area with gardens. Outside the wall, the house
was surrounded by trees, and the lawn was covered with leaves as were
the remnants of flower gardens flanking the porch. They walked up to the
door and pushed the doorbell, hearing the sound of the bell from inside.
A man of average height opened the door, graying hair, gray eyes, and a
slight paunch indicating his age. He was dressed casually, as if for
yard work. He had an open, friendly face and greeted them pleasantly.
*****
Tom opened the door and saw a young couple on the porch. Tall and lean,
they had the look of athletes. She was, he estimated, a couple of inches
taller than his 5'8"; the man was half a head taller yet. Their clothes
seemed light for the weather, but Tom figured they were young enough to
have more tolerance for the temperature than he had. They each had a
briefcase.
"What can I do for you?" Tom directed the question to the man, as he was
closer to the door.
Michael replied, "You are Mr. Tom Edwards?"
Tom nodded.
"Sir, we are here to speak to you about an artifact you reportedly found
recently."
"I did find something. If it belongs to you and you can describe it,
I'll be happy to return it to you."
Michael knew his response was crucial. He needed time to give Tom the
information required to make his decision. He could not mislead, lest
trust be destroyed. He could not tell all; Tom would not yet believe.
"My name is Michael Wing. My companion's name is Artemis Dianapopolis.
We are attached to the Smithsonian Institution Special Collections, and
we've been sent because the object you reportedly found is an important
historical and religious artifact. If we may, we'd like to see it to
confirm its identity and give you some of the history, if it is truly
what we expect."
"Do you have some identification?"
Michael and Artemis pulled out their IDs and allowed the man to examine
them.
Tom considered the situation; his caution and curiosity warred. He could
put off the yard work for a while, he decided, to find out what that rod
was all about. He decided first to get Beth informed of what was
happening. "Please wait here a moment."
Closing the door, he went back to his wife. "Beth, there are two people
outside who claim to know what that stick is all about. They seem to be
from the Smithsonian and want to examine it to verify its identity. I
don't think they are a threat, and I'm curious to find out what it is,
but I want you there to listen in and see if you have any odd feelings
about them."
Beth seemed sensitive, somehow, to the spiritual side of reality. He was
the logician with an intuitive side. She, on the other hand, seemed to
sense major family events. When her mother had her heart attack, Beth
had awakened the same morning with a dream of that same event. Tom
didn't understand it, but he trusted her and her perceptions. He
abruptly noticed tear tracks on her cheeks and moved to sit by her.
Beth looked shaken. When her husband had gotten up she'd been fine, but
when the door opened and the visitor spoke she'd felt torn. These people
were important, but their presence brought a sense of pain and loss.
"I had a dream, just sitting here. I saw an angel taking you away." Her
voice broke in sobs, grief tangible in the shaking hands and shoulders.
The pain of loss was overwhelming, yet a sense of peace was also there.
He held her for a moment, trying to give comfort. He also tried to
process her dream, vision, whatever. He rubbed his wife's back for a
short time, until the tears gave way to sniffles. Handing her a tissue,
he told her, "I know you aren't really up for this, but I need your
insight. Can you come into the living room and listen in while I talk
with these people?"
She hesitated, still shaken, but nodded. Holding her hand, he helped her
up, grabbed some extra tissues, and walked toward the door.
"Hold on a minute!" Tom scurried out of the hall to his office and
grabbed the rod. Returning to his bride, he asked again, "Are you OK?"
Receiving her nod, he opened the door and again greeted the couple.
"Would you care to come in? We can talk in the living room." He held the
door wide and gestured for the two to enter.
Michael opened the screen door and held it as Artemis entered, then
followed her in. Beth took little notice of the tall woman, but when she
saw Michael she gasped and clutched her husband's arm.
As their guests walked into the living room and took seats on the sofa,
Tom looked at Beth and quirked an eyebrow in question at her reaction.
Long experience allowed her to understand and nod in affirmation; the
man was the angel from her dream.
Tom walked in, leading his wife to a love seat. His mind was spinning,
trying to process the information about their guest from his wife. ~An
angel named Michael, if that is truly his name,~ Tom thought. ~I suspect
there is much more to the lady as well.~
Tom looked sharply at the angel; he found he could use that term in his
head. "So, you say you are here from the Smithsonian regarding this rod
I found, true? I presume you need to examine it to verify its
authenticity?" He handed the rod to Michael. "You also implied there was
significant history tied to this thing. What can you tell me about it?"
Their two visitors looked at each other; Michael nodded to his companion
to proceed.
Artemis began, "Four thousand years ago, the Amazon tribes were thriving
in much of the area now called the Middle East and Eastern Europe. Some
few stories survive, but the tribes were all matriarchal with only small
numbers of men permitted. Within 500 years, as what are now called the
Bronze Age empires spread, the tribes were sought out and destroyed.
They were considered a threat to the male-dominated empires, providing
an escape for their best and brightest women; the ones that would not be
limited by their small-minded overlords! They were too few, and too
scattered. The Hittites and others sealed off their borders and kept
anyone from coming or going."
Her face showed her grief and frustration, which grew as she continued,
"They couldn't get away and finally couldn't fight anymore." The pain
she felt reflected only in her voice and clenched fists. Her face was
schooled to conceal, not reveal, but the pain was too intense not to
react at all.
"There were a few survivors when the last villages were overrun, but
they scattered and were lost in the vast sea of kingdoms and empires.
Only legends remain that cannot begin to describe the reality." She
stopped, face bleak and a bit pale at the memories. "Michael,
please...."
The angel picked up the narration. "Amazon royalty, the Queen, was
marked by a unique scepter. It was reported to be approximately 18
inches long, a cubit at that time, and an inch or thumb in diameter. It
was engraved with the name of the patron goddess of the Amazons,
Artemis. The stories say it was made by the gods. When a Queen passed
away, the scepter would seek out the next woman chosen by the gods to be
Queen.
"Now if I may have a moment to examine it. I have some material you
might find interesting while I do so." He extracted a thick folder of
material from his briefcase and handed it to Tom. A magnifying glass
also came out and was employed to aid close examination. A second folder
from Artemis' briefcase contained drawings and pictures related to the
scepter.
As their two guests checked the potential scepter, Tom and Beth scanned
the material in the folder. It outlined archaeological data establishing
the Amazon tribes, locations, some history, and provided an interesting
overview.
Finally Michael and Artemis completed their examination. "Based on my
preliminary examination, I believe the artifact is genuine."
Tom considered the information he had. Beth's revelation, plus the names
of his guests, indicated a major league setup.
"Wonderful! I'm sure you'll have much to learn from it when you get it
back to your labs in Washington. The darn thing seemed to trip me and
then gave me a static shock, so I won't be sorry to see it go. It needs
to be somewhere it can be properly studied." Tom carefully kept the
smile on his face moderated as he waited for a reaction to the offer to
give it up freely.
Too obvious, Michael thought. Tom knows something is up and isn't going
to play. Simultaneously, a smile crossed Artemis' face. She would be all
too happy for the scepter to pass to a more worthy candidate.
"Mr. Edwards, I fear it isn't quite that simple," Michael began. "I fear
we haven't been as candid as perhaps we should."
"Then it might be well for you to start by being more honest about who
you two really are and why you are really here." Tom's face lost the
friendly look it had held since the visitor's arrival. "I am fully aware
there is more going on here, and I don't appreciate games. I especially
don't appreciate them when my wife is upset by them."
"First, I must apologize for being somewhat misleading. The information
we gave you at the door is entirely correct, but incomplete. My name is
Michael, and I am attached to the Smithsonian for the moment, as is my
companion. Her name is truly Artemis. As you said, there is much more
here than we let on. I am the Archangel Michael, commander of the Armies
of Heaven. My companion is Artemis, patron goddess of the Amazons.
"After the fall of the last of the Amazon clans, and for the next 1500
years, Artemis tried to restart the tribes; Zeus refused permission. He,
too, had orders from higher authorities. When the Christ walked the
earth 2000 years ago, a long planned reorganization occurred. The old
Roman, Greek, and other gods were either taken into the heavenly orders
or banished. Artemis was a huntress and patroness of warriors, which put
her in my area. A promise was made to her that the Amazons would be
rebuilt in time, but she must wait until the scepter was sent to the
chosen leader." He paused.
Tom sat back, knowing there were ramifications as yet unclear. The room
was quiet as time for consideration was allowed. Michael waited for
questions from his hosts, then continued, "God waited for the right
person, and the right time in their life, to select the one to rebuild
the Amazon Nation. The scepter was sent to that person at the
Minneapolis Airport last week." Again he stopped for a time.
Tom's mind raced; they were still not telling him everything. He had
this "scepter;" he had been chosen for this task. "OK. Permit me to
review the situation. The rod I found is the scepter of the Queen of the
Amazons and was sent to me as the one selected to rebuild them. Right?"
The two nodded. Artemis had an unhappy look.
"Artemis looks as happy as I feel right now. I'm not a manager; I
deliberately avoided that field, as I prefer hands-on involvement in my
work. I was also not physically qualified for the draft when I was 18;
it's even worse now. I've made a hobby of history, and military history
as well, but I cannot begin to qualify for this kind of position. There
MUST be a better qualified candidate somewhere on those two points
alone!
"The story Artemis related also pointedly mentioned the deliberate
avoidance of men in the tribes. That alone would be a problem. I cannot
believe an unbalanced society of that sort can survive long term, no
matter who is in charge." Tom pointedly examined himself. "Not to
mention there is at least one fundamental qualification lacking to be an
Amazon. I'm beginning to appreciate the reaction Gideon had."
Artemis' emotions were in turmoil. This person DARED to challenge her
rules for the Amazons, yet he was the Chosen and there would be no
nation without him. He seemed uninterested as well.
Michael smiled at the reference. He had spoken to Gideon and recalled
the difficulty he'd had convincing the man he was the warrior God
wanted. Tom was right; they both rated their abilities far too low, and
both were equally reluctant to take up their tasks. "Let me ask you some
questions, Tom. Do you believe I am who I say I am?"
Tom paused, considering the vision his wife had, then nodded and
replied, "Yes."
"Do you believe this scepter was sent specifically to you? That you are
the one chosen to bear it?"
Again a nod.
"Do you believe that God can ensure you ARE qualified for a position He
calls you to?" Michael extended the scepter to Tom.
At this, Tom understood, with agonizing clarity, the implication of the
question. Fully qualified, no doubt, in all respects.
"You aren't kidding, are you?" Reluctantly, he reached out and took hold
of the responsibility contained in the scepter he now took back.
Beth spoke hesitantly, "Tom? What does he mean?"
Grimly, he looked at his wife. "You know the Amazons were a matriarchy,
right?" She nodded. "So, what does that imply about the person they
choose to restart things?"
She looked at him, puzzled. "But you're not...."
Horrified, she looked at their guests. "Oh, please, God, no!" Her voice
rose hysterically; tears formed and trailed down her cheeks as the full
import of the situation crushed her emotional control.
Tom's jaw clenched as he desperately strove to hold himself together.
Facial muscles quaked under the emotional strain as he tried to comfort
his sobbing wife. He held her, arms around her shaking body, allowing
her to vent the rising pain as tears soaked into his shoulder. Tears
stung his own eyes and trickled down to his own chin.
The two visitors looked on, sympathetic, but unable to provide comfort.
Finally Beth's sobbing eased, less from calm than from fatigue. Tom
continued to hold her as he turned back to the visitors.
"Do I have any choice in this?" he asked.
Michael responded, all too aware of his host's state of mind. "There is
always a choice. You will not be forced into any of this." His calm gaze
held no comfort, not relieving Tom of the need to make the decision
himself.
Tom's mind flashed back to a promise made long ago. Before he'd even met
Beth, he'd made a promise to God to follow Him. He and Beth both held
that same promise sacred, and now faced a fundamental choice to hold to
it or be oath breakers.
"A choice that is no choice at all," Tom murmured. "Called on the only
promise that overshadows all the others I've ever made."
Beth heard, understood, and despaired.
The couple was visibly shattered. Tom handed a tissue to his wife and
wiped his own eyes with another. He could choose otherwise, but would
not be able to live with himself if he did. His duty, the highest Duty,
called.
Red eyes fixed on the visitors, the holder of the scepter asked, "If I
choose to accept, what will happen with me and Beth?"
Artemis answered, "Your wife will be given all the support, financial
and otherwise, she needs or wants for the rest of her life. We've
arranged for people to be available for any assistance, counseling, or
anything else she needs." She still looked unhappy, but resigned.
"And me?"
"You will be prepared for your new duties ahead," Michael answered.
"How do you intend to cover my disappearance?"
"You won't disappear. It will appear that you had an untimely demise
from an aneurysm. This will allow closure for other family members."
Tom put his head in his hands, then knelt in front of Beth. He took her
face in his hands and gently caressed it, wiping the trails of the tears
away for the moment.
"Beth, are you certain Michael is who he says he is?"
She hesitated, not wanting to answer, but finally nodded.
"You understand then, who is commanding this."
Again a nod, with misery in her eyes.
"And you know what I must do." Tears began again, slowly, from gray eyes
and hazel. And again Beth nodded, her head ending bowed.
Tom felt crushed by the heartache, but he had to make the choice that he
knew was right. He stood, gently kissing the forehead of his beloved,
then turned to the visitors.
His voice cracking he said, "I can't do anything other than follow His
commands. What now?" He didn't really care. His world was ending.
Michael stood, as did Artemis. She moved to Tom, put a hand on his
shoulder, and whispered, "Wait for a moment, then we'll leave."
Michael walked to Beth, still seated on the love seat. A golden glow
rose around him as he gently touched her head. "Know peace in your pain,
dear one. In your heart you will know all is well with your husband,
even though he is no longer with you. And know you will see him again,
in time."
Her eyes closed, and the grief she exuded seemed to ease; she recalled
the events since the arrival of the visitors without the overwhelming
pain. She had the cover story in mind and moved to the phone to dial
911. She, too, would play her part.
Artemis said, "It is time." And the world faded for Tom. Michael
followed, disappearing from sight. They left behind a body, lying on the
floor, identical to Tom's.
********
Saturday, November 25, 2000
Time for a change
The world faded back into existence, warm and green. Tom noticed a faint
scent of flowers, honeysuckle perhaps, in the still air. He was outside,
in a hillside clearing, looking downhill at a large pine forest. He
turned around slowly, trying to orient himself. The forest swept up the
hill and continued to either side of the clearing, closing behind a
sizable cabin or house behind and uphill of his position. There was a
cloud deck that prevented him from identifying the sun's location. He
heard and saw no one, just a few birds singing in the forest or flitting
across the clearing.
Alone. More alone than ever in his life. The emotional weight crashed
into him again; he had lost everything now, including his whole world --
that one person who made life bearable at its worst. Gone. His knees
buckled as he broke down and wept.
Finally, the emotional shock was spent. The tears slowed, then stopped.
He drew a last quivering breath, then wiped his eyes and stood.
He looked again at the house, in a frame of mind to examine it more
closely. It seemed large, being two stories across its width and
appearing, if the door was 3 feet wide, to be nearly sixty feet wide
with a covered porch across the full width. A chimney was to the right
as he faced the door. Several large windows were placed symmetrically
along the front of each floor.
He walked up to the porch of the cabin. A short flight of stairs rose
from the ground, and took only a moment to climb. Wherever he was, he
would likely need food, water, and shelter for the night, and he was
bone-weary. Even a chair and some cold water would be welcome. A faint
odor of cedar hung about the porch.
The door was open, seeming to invite visitors. He paused and knocked on
the doorjamb, calling out, "Is anyone here?"
A voice he recognized replied, "Come in and be welcome, Tom."
He entered, finding an open floor plan, a kitchen area to his right
looking out over the porch, a fireplace and large sitting area to the
rear of the house. A doorway was to his left, as was a stair to the
second floor, presumably bedrooms were there. Artemis was curled on a
sofa that faced the fireplace. Tom walked over and sat in a chair near
the sofa.
"I know you need some time to adjust to the situation," his hostess
began. "We brought you here to give you that chance."
"I don't know why you'd say that. I mean, it's not like my life was just
run through a blender or anything." The bitterness in his voice almost
dripped. "I know I chose this, but I don't feel overly gracious about
it." He glared into the dark, cold fireplace.
"I cannot say anything that will make the pain go away. Not even time
will do that. It will be with you, to some degree, until you die. It
will become easier to bear. I know that from personal experience." She
continued, "I know it doesn't seem like much right now, but if you need
someone to listen, I will be here to help. I thank you, as well, for
giving me hope that at last that my Amazons will be restored. I truly am
grateful."
"I appreciate that, both the assistance and the thanks. Where is
Michael?"
"He wants to give us time to resolve any lingering issues before we
proceed."
"Issues?" He gave a faux-shocked look. "I can't imagine what he could
mean!" He paused a moment and continued, "More seriously, we do need to
talk. I need your help to have any chance of succeeding in this job. I
don't know the history of the Amazons and I want to learn. At the same
time, it appears I'm the only way you have to even try to restart the
nation." He shrugged. "I'll listen respectfully and with great interest
to whatever you have to say, but I don't plan on turning my brain off. I
also can't be someone other than myself."
Artemis looked at Tom as she pondered the situation, his comments, and
what her response should be. "I can't forget what happened. I still
cannot understand how a man, even with external changes, can lead the
Amazons."
"I don't expect you to forget, and I don't understand either. I don't
plan to make a change in the leadership of the Amazons. It can't be
anything other than a matriarchy and still be the Amazon Nation; I get
that. I know there is much to learn, and I'm relying on you to teach me
if you're willing.
"Please remember, I am utterly unlike the men who crushed the Amazons. I
grew up to consider women as equals and wives as partners, not property.
I'm a 20th century American, not a 14th century BC Hittite. I don't
think I COULD act the same. Just give me the opportunity to demonstrate
who I am before you judge."
"You may be different, and I'm willing to accept that. I just don't want
any more men in the nation than absolutely necessary."
"Are you familiar with the history of the Shakers?"
"Not really. I haven't spent any time studying American History."
"They were a religious sect that started in England in the mid-1700s
and, led by a woman, they expanded to the Colonies just before the
American Revolution. They had equal rights and responsibilities for men
and women and were important in caring for orphans. All their growth
came from people joining the church as adults or orphans who grew up and
stayed, as they had a unique dogma. Sex was forbidden, and church
members were expected to remain celibate as long as they were church
members.
"By the 1900s, the membership was dropping steadily. By 1990, for all
their innovation, there were perhaps a half-dozen members left in the
world." He paused. "They died out just as surely as the Amazons. I
believe that is because, in each case, there was a lack of balance. The
Shakers denied the sexual side of humans; the Amazons denied the balance
between men and women.
"I intend the Amazons to be a matriarchy, but with enough men to grow
even without immigration, as well as lending their talents to the
nation. I am a better person because of Beth in my life. I like to think
I was a benefit to her also." He stopped. "God, I miss her already!"
"I don't want men in the hierarchy!"
"I'm NOT going to arbitrarily throw away resources. I WILL NOT fail
because I didn't use talents at hand. This nation will not fail because
of that! NOT ON *MY* WATCH!" His fury radiated. "I've not given
everything up just to fail. I won't hamstring myself."
"No! No men in the government! They killed, *murdered*, my daughters!"
"I agree that they won't have direct power. But I won't give up a role
for them, as advisors at least. We must be able to stand and grow even
if no one immigrates."
"I don't like even that much, but I can understand and won't argue for
now. Don't think we're done on this subject, though!"
Tom nodded. "I think we can agree on that for now. There is so much
still to talk about. It's just hard right now, and I'm so tired...."
The energy visibly drained from him as the adrenalin rush faded. His
head fell forward into his hands, scepter across his knees, too worn and
burdened with grief to weep anymore.
She rose from the sofa and gently led the man up the stairs, guiding him
into a bedroom. Sitting him on the bed, she removed his shoes and coaxed
him into lying down.
"Rest now. Tomorrow is soon enough for what must be done."
She covered him with warm blankets, placed the scepter on the
nightstand, darkened the room with heavy draperies, then slipped out and
closed the door as he dropped into the sleep of the emotionally
exhausted.
********
Sunday, November 26, 2000
Who am I?
Tom awoke, finding he had a pillow in his arms, as well as under his
head. For a moment he wondered where the motel was, then he recalled the
events of the previous day. He delayed for a time, relishing the warm
comfort of the bed. At last, he roused himself and sat on the bed edge
to examine the room.
Still dark from the covered window, he made out a nightstand holding the
scepter, a dresser, and three closed doors on the other walls. He stood
up and turned right to check the closest door. It opened to a full
bathroom, having a larger than average tub. He made use of the toilet,
razor, and toothbrush, feeling much more human at the end. Returning to
the bedroom left two doors to examine. Tom checked the door to his
right, which revealed an empty closet. He closed the closet, exited the
bedroom, and went down the stairway. His nose led him to a pot of coffee
with an empty mug next to it. A note beside it said:
"Make yourself comfortable. Food is in the refrigerator when you are
hungry. Michael and I will return shortly. 'A'"
He sipped the coffee and examined the contents of the kitchen area,
finding a variety of foods including his preferred breakfast, bagels. He
buttered one and took it and the coffee out on the porch. Nothing seemed
to have changed; the air was still warm and held the same sweet floral
scent. He sat on a step, chewing over the situation as he chewed the
bagel.
He knew only the rough outline of what was ahead. He was tasked with
rebuilding the Amazons, which implied he was to wind up female. It was
still unreal, a concept only. The Amazons were a tribe of warriors, and
he had no experience there either. Added to his lack of interest in
management, he couldn't understand how, or why, or... anything. This had
all the hallmarks of a big bomb ready to blow up in his face. He
wrestled with it as he finished his light breakfast. ~None of this is
controllable now. Hard as it will be, I've got to trust that it will
work out.~
He re-entered the cabin, refilled his coffee cup, and washed up his
other dishes. A survey of the room revealed Spartan furnishings and
little else. He took his stroll to the outside again, deciding to kill
time exploring the upper reaches of the hillside. A trail led up,
disappearing into the trees. He found some honeysuckle, explaining the
aroma, as he walked. Finally, the coffee mug was empty, and he reached
the top of the hill. The clearing below was the only visible break in
the forest that stretched to the horizon on all sides. The air had only
a slight haze, as on a humid summer day. It was lovely. He spent some
time just soaking in the view before making his way back down the trail.
He returned to the cabin to find his hostess had returned and had been
joined by Michael. They sat in chairs on the porch and greeted him as he
rounded the corner of the cabin. They exchanged pleasantries about
having a good sleep, sufficient food, and having a nice walk as he
crossed to the stairs and reached the porch.
"Now that you're back, we should begin preparing you for you new
duties," Michael began. "What we need to do here will not take long, but
there are many other things to do elsewhere. You will need time to gain
new skills before we leave."
Tom winced, thinking of all the 'female maintenance' skills he lacked.
Oh, goody. He felt like that diver in the first "Jaws" movie, Matt
Hooper, played by ummm, Richard Dreyfuss, as he got ready to go down
into the cage with his bang-stick. Scared spitless. Deep breath. Exhale.
"OK. I don't really feel ready, but let's do it. Inside?" They nodded.
He walked into the cabin, followed by the two celestials. "Now what?" he
asked.
Michael explained, "This will not be painful, but you should lie down on
the sofa."
Tom, tension clear in his face, walked over and lay down as suggested.
He was frightened, more than ever in his life. He closed his eyes and
spoke. "I guess I'm ready, but I think I have a few hundred more gray
hairs from this."
A soft chuckle came from Michael as he said, "I don't think you need to
worry about that anymore."
In the beginning, it sounded like a song. First a male voice, he
couldn't exactly follow the tune and somehow didn't want to try. His
mind couldn't grasp it. Then a female voice joined with the male. As the
duet continued, he felt a lethargy fill him. His muscles didn't want to
move. Then he began to lose feeling in his extremities, fingers and toes
first, then more of his limbs. The numbness spread as the song
continued, and he could no longer feel his groin, belly, and chest. A
silence came to his attention; he could no longer feel the beating of
his heart. Was this what dying was like, he wondered? Chest, shoulders,
neck, finally he lost the perception of light in his closed eyes and, at
last, could no longer hear the song.
Tom knew he was, but didn't know where. He sensed, rather than heard or
saw, familiar presences. Suspended in bright nothing, he felt the care
and love of family, and reassurance as well. They were all there,
parents, grandparents, friends that had died. A feeling of comfort, that
all would be well, was almost broadcast to him. Memories flashed through
his mind that were not his. He knew they would be recalled at the proper
time. A long timeless moment passed.
Then, from the distance, came the faint echo of the song again. It grew
in volume, and he felt the tide of awareness flow back. The stream of
sensation resumed, stretching out again, ears, eyes, heart, lungs. Like
a limb that was asleep and now has sensation returning, there was a
tingle, which slowly spread to all parts of his body. Each part of his
body was reasserting its existence and a new connection to reality.
The voices ended their song, and it was done.
*****
The lethargy left his body at last, as if from a long sleep. Tom left
his eyes closed for a moment as he sorted out how he felt now. No aches;
that pain in his shoulder wasn't there either. ~OK, that's good.~ He had
a general feeling of energy, the sense that for once his body would do
as it's told. Odd sensation on his chest. ~Don't want to think about
that yet.~ He slowly sat up, feeling an odd weight of hair on his head
and brushing his shoulders. ~OK. Long hair, and that odd sensation on
the chest is definitely two somethings hanging a bit.~ He finally opened
his eyes.
Red hair. Wavy red hair. Lots of it. He pushed the unruly mass behind
his ears and looked at his hosts. Everything was blurry. He checked and
found he still wore his bifocals. Taking off his glasses, he suddenly
found his vision was crisp and clear. He put the glasses on the sofa and
examined his hands and arms. The hands didn't seem dainty, but were more
slender now and lacked those age spots he'd picked up recently, and the
skin was smooth and flexible again. Interestingly, not the pale skin
typical of a redhead, he seemed to have retained the slightly tanned
skin of his previous life. The hair on his arms was fine and nearly
invisible. He noticed his arms, upper arms in particular, had also lost
bulk. He had lost his gut, and all those extra pounds picked up over the
last 10 years.
"Welcome back", said a female voice. "How are you feeling?"
He responded "I-", and stopped. Voice change, too. High enough for a
soprano, but probably second soprano. He wondered if he could still
sing. "Physically I feel odd, but good. No aches, pains, or assorted
mementos of the last 50-odd years. The rest of this," he gestured to
himself, "will take getting used to."
Examining his clothing, it seemed to fit his new body well. "Thanks for
adjusting the clothes along the way." He felt the movement of the
clothing across his skin more acutely, it seemed, as he changed
position.
Michael looked at the new person on the couch, where the middle-aged man
had lain before there was now a tall, young, slender woman. A disorderly
mass of red hair tumbled from her head as her gray eyes belied her
apparent youth. "You seem to be handling this better than I thought you
would," the angel remarked. "I expected more of a reaction to the change
you just experienced."
Tom looked up. "What's the point? I trusted the one calling me to do
this, plus I had some family visit, I guess, while you two were doing
your thing. The situation is what it is, and I'm even more sure this is
as it should be. All I can do now is deal, even if I'm still scared
spitless. I assume I am a fully functional female now?"
Michael responded, "Completely. With all the rights, privileges, and
periods appertaining thereto."
Tom continued, "Erm, right. So. Who am I?"
His hosts looked blank. "What do you mean?" asked Artemis.
"I'm not Tom Edwards anymore. So, who am I?"
"Your name is for you to decide, then a history will come into being for
you with that name and adjusted to allow for your knowledge. It wouldn't
do for a waitress to be an experienced project leader and computer
scientist."
Tom paused. He hadn't really considered this aspect over the years. He
and Beth had never had children, and the need for name searches had
never come up. This was a final gateway, a last sign to show he accepted
his new life as a woman. After a few moments, a thought crossed his
mind. It felt RIGHT. His mother, as she'd aged, had spent hours tracking
down family history. There were a couple of people she'd found that he
wanted to honor.
"Nicole Joy Harrison. Family names my mother came across in researching
our family trees that I always liked. The names come from the two women
who were first to cross the Atlantic and founded the family line in the
New World. It seems appropriate."
"Very well," said Artemis, "names to honor and carrying a burden of
history." She nodded approvingly. "Next we need to start your education
on how to be a woman. Starting, I think, with a wardrobe." She looked
with distaste at Nicole's current flannel, jeans, and sneakers look.
"Hey! It's comfortable! Besides, for my work it was sufficient." Nicole
grumbled at the needling. As Tom, fashion never was much of a
consideration. Well, any consideration, unless Beth intervened. And what
was wrong with shades of blue anyway?
Artemis' grin was wide as she contemplated a bit of revenge on a male
with no escape. "There is no reason to look shabby just to be
comfortable; you can do both. We need to refit you with everything from
the skin out anyway, underwear, hose, shoes, cosmetics, jewelry,
clothing. You need to learn everything about how to live and look like a
Queen. We will start with a basic wardrobe, but eventually we'll need to
add the specialized clothing for the social circles you will need to
operate in."
She was shifting into extreme makeover mode, and Nicole knew she was
doomed to suffer a multi-day effort to equip her with everything, along
with an education on how to use it. She groaned. "How do we do this? Are
you planning on playing 'Mom taking her daughter for an after-college
makeover'?"
"Excellent idea for a cover story! I know just the place to go, too.
Lots of top notch stores, so we can get all our shopping done in one
place!" The goddess looked a bit like a little girl on Christmas day
who'd just gotten her first Barbie.
Artemis walked over to Nicole. "Come here, daughter. We may disagree on
some things, but you are the hope of the Amazon Nation. You are showing
the kind of courage that would make your predecessors proud."
Nicole stood. Her balance was uncertain at first, then it steadied. She
found herself taller now than the goddess. A half smile was on her face,
knowing the compliment being given.
Artemis continued, "I know you have lost much, but I will help as I
can." She gave the taller woman a hug of reassurance. "Are you up to
some shopping now?" She looked closely at Nicole's face, evaluating her
physical and emotional state.
"I guess so. There's an awful lot I need to learn, but let's get it
done. I need to get adjusted to shop-a-thons at some point." Nicole gave
a small smile, returning the hug. "Where are we going to put everything
when we get it? I don't think the two of us can carry a complete
wardrobe ourselves."
Artemis raised an eyebrow, looking pointedly at Nicole.
"Right. Goddess. Not a problem." Nicole grinned. "Give me time to catch
up with the new reality here, will ya? We could always drag 'Daddy'
along to help with the carrying." Now the grin turned into a smirk as
she looked at Michael, who put on an obviously faked panicked look.
"Oh, no! You two are on your own!" He held his hands up and waved them
in a 'not me' gesture.
"You know, it's kinda fun being on this side of the battle." Nicole
giggled and linked arms with her 'mother.' "Come on, Mom. Let's leave
the fuddy-duddy here and have some fun."
********
Monday, November 27, 2000
Shopping Spree
Nicole and Artemis arrived in the mall via 'Goddess Express,' fading
back into reality in an obscure corner of a hallway.
Artemis outlined their tasks for the day. "Since you need everything,
we'll start with undergarments and work out from there. You'll need a
variety of clothes: business, casual, formal, sports, loungewear. You
will need something to wear under each type of clothing, shoes for each
outfit, jewelry as well. We'll also get your ears pierced while we're
here."
Looking around, Artemis considered exactly where to start. Lingerie was
available at most of the stores she planned to visit. She decided Nicole
needed to come to grips with the full reality of her new life. She
needed to understand, down to her bones, that she was now a lovely young
woman and start adjusting her thinking. Sometimes the best way to deal
with learning to swim is to just dive in. An evil grin rose on her face.
"And I know just the pool."
Nicole gulped as she saw the grin on the goddess' face. The scope of
this effort was daunting.