Chapter XXXIII
“This better be some sort of sick, fucking joke! DON’T!!” Chase shouted as Drea started to move within touching distance. “You stay right there.”
“Chase, if you will just give me a chance....”
“NO! You cannot possibly have anything to say that I want to hear! I don’t know what is going on here, and I really don’t care. I don’t need this right now. I’ve got way too much on my plate to worry about who you really are or why you’re here.”
Drea stopped moving and looked to Jasmine for guidance. She’d known Chase was going to be angry, but the proportion of her rage was much greater than either Jasmine or Drea had expected it to be. Drea wondered what exactly had brought Chase to them. Perhaps that would explain why her reaction, though well contained, bordered on furious.
“Annabelle,” Jasmine said softly, “let me explain....”
“No, Mama,” with cold, deliberate calm. “There is nothing for you to explain.”
“ANNABELLE!! Sit down please.”
“NO!! No, you lied to me!”
“Annabelle, I never once lied to you. Never! I have always been honest with you, Baby Girl.”
Chase turned her back to Jasmine and Drea and walked away from them. “No,” she said wearily, her back still facing them. “You didn’t tell me the truth, and that’s the same as lying.” Her shoulders slumped in defeat. “Drea, I’ll bring Diana to see you as I imagine that is the real reason you’re here. Then ya’ll can make whatever arrangements you need to return to your home.” She turned back briefly and gestured towards Jasmine. “Maybe you can take her home with you since you obviously belong to each other.” Then she walked away without another backward glance.
“Do you want me to follow her?” Drea asked, watching Chase get further and further away from them. Jasmine shook her head and sank to the ground with her hands covering her face. Drea followed her down, wrapping her arms around her sister and just holding her, wondering how they were going to fix this.
Chase drove back to the rebel encampment at a rapid pace, deliberately keeping her mind carefully blank. She stopped the jeep in front of the laboratory and hopped out, striding into the work area with deliberate steps. Hans and Diana looked up at the interruption, then at each other in disbelief as they saw who the interruption was. Chase had not been back to the lab since she had originally brought Diana in to talk to Hans.
“Diana, do you have a moment please?”
The request was so unexpected Diana nodded and moved away from Hans before consciously thinking about it. When she got close to Chase, Diana remembered her hurt and asked coolly in her low voice, “Is there something I can do for you?”
Chase was glad for the cold attitude; it made it easier to maintain her detachment. “Yes. Can you spare me a few minutes of your time?”
Diana looked back at Hans who was watching them with interest even though he couldn’t hear a word of the conversation between them. They were at a point in their work where she didn’t have to be there for them to continue to make progress, and she admitted to needing a break even if it required being in Chase’s presence for a little while to get it. Chase had never given her a reason not to trust her so she nodded. “Yes. What can I do for you?”
Chase didn’t reply but simply waved Diana towards the jeep. Then she looked back at Hans. “Staff meeting as soon as I return. Pass the word.” An order... not a request.
He nodded, only just refraining from saluting. She hadn’t been that harsh since her mother was killed, and he wondered what had set her off this time. He didn’t think it was Diana though; Chase’s reaction to Diana had been all over the place with Diana herself, but she had never been harsh with the rest of them because of it. Mostly she had simply withdrawn from them completely, stonewalling their every effort to talk about it. So something new must have happened to return the recklessness Chase had possessed after her mother’s death before she had settled down to lead them.
A hand signal from Chase as she left the lab garnered her a distant escort; someone who knew to follow but not too closely.
Chase didn’t speak when she got into the vehicle. She couldn’t think of anything to say that wasn’t weak or sappy to her ears and she really wasn’t in the mood for either. In a way though, this scenario would work out better for all concerned. Diana would return home where she belonged; Chase would get her focus back on the rebellion where it belonged; and the war would finally be over once and for all. After that? It wouldn’t really matter, would it? At least this way Diana would be safe.
“Where are we going?” Diana asked as they left the compound. Though she didn’t get the feeling Chase meant her actual physical harm, she had the distinct impression she was being set up for something she wasn’t going to like. Suddenly her trusting Chase seemed like a bad idea.
“Not far,” Chase answered briefly.
Diana tried to pay more than peripheral attention to their direction and destination, but her mind was torn in three different directions. She was trying to find a way to break the ice without coming across as begging or condescending, but everything she came up with sounded lame and trite to her mind. Why does that always happen when I am around her? she thought. Any other time or with any other human being, I can be a calm, rational adult. But I get close to her and my brain freezes up. Gods, it shouldn’t be this hard. We know each other... our souls belong to one another – they always have. So why can’t I just tell her that? Why won’t she let me mean something to her? Then Chase’s words interrupted her train of thought.
“I’m sorry, Diana. I really am. If things had been different, we could have at least been friends but....” Chase spoke as they turned into the lane. She covertly checked to be sure the other vehicle was still following, then took a deep breath to finish her apology. “For what it’s worth, I never meant to push you away. I wanted... I just... I thought.... Well it doesn’t really matter what I thought now. I think she is waiting for you.” She turned the jeep off and pointed to the figure on the porch. “I hope you find whatever it really is you came here looking for. Goodbye, Diana.” Then Chase jumped from the driver’s seat and into the jeep that pulled up right next to her. Then the driver hit the gas, and the vehicle roared back down the lane the way that it had come.
Diana got out and started running, but Amazon or no, she couldn’t keep up with a motor vehicle without Wonder Woman’s powers, and she was literally left in the dust as Chase disappeared from view. Great, she thought, what am I going to do now? She turned and headed back to the small farmhouse, wondering what had brought Drea into man’s world.
************
“What do you think you’re doing?” Ares leaned against the doorframe with his arms crossed over his chest. Orana didn’t deign to look at him but dropped her robe and walked into the closet to get dressed. “I asked you a question; I want an answer.”
“And I want to go out and destroy the rebellion once and for all. I don’t think I owe you any more of an explanation than that. I am the one in charge here, Ares... not you.”
“Uh huh,” he said, pushing away from the wall and moving further into the bedroom. “And then what? What exactly are you going to do if you destroy the rebellion? Hmm? Are you going to sit around on your ass waiting for something exciting to happen? Hoping I’ll come around once in a while to share your bed?” cupping her cheek and stroking his thumb over her lips.
She jerked her head out of his grasp. “Don’t flatter yourself, Ares. You’re not that good.” She tucked her shirt in and snatched up her boots before pushing past him to sit on the bed. He followed her and jerked her chin up til their eyes met.
“Don’t push me, Amazon. I am a god, and I own you, remember?” fingering the mark she wore on her neck. “You need me to remind you who is in charge?”
Deciding to change tactics, she stood and ran her hands up his chest. “Ares, I just want to go out and have a little fun. Is that so hard to understand? Come on... we haven’t had a really good fight in a long, long time. And I’ve heard rumors....”
“Oh yeah? What kind of rumors?”
“Well, I’m hearing things about some sort of offensive. My spies haven’t been able to pin down anything specific, but there are just too many rumors running around out there for there not to be something behind them. I want to go find a little action.”
“Well, Baby... you should have said something. You know if you want action, I’m you’re man... and I’m always ready to go.”
She pinched his ass and he jumped, not expecting it. “Wrong kind of action, Ares. I want a fight.”
“Well, I’ve been working on that too. I’ve got several fights star....”
“No, Ares. I want battles and wars and glory like it was in the beginning.”
Ares scrubbed a hand across his beard and looked intently at Orana. Truth be told, he missed that kind of action as well because it had been so long since they’d had a good fight. But something about the timing of this whole thing wasn’t sitting well... not with the goddesses renewed interest in the Amazons of Paradise Island. However.... “You think that’s what this is?”
“I don’t know yet, but I would like to find out. It’s making my fingers prickle.”
“All right,” he finally agreed. “Just be careful. We don’t want this to backfire. We’ve got a really good thing going here.”
She reached up and drew him to her, kissing him hard and passionately on the mouth. “Not a problem. I’m just looking for a little diversion. Now,” she said moving out of his reach and picking up her belt and lasso. “I’ve got work to do.”
“So do I,” he agreed. “”But I’ll be back.” Then he shimmered out of the room, and she walked out, leaving the room in darkness.
************
“All right – that’s it. Countdown starts now. We will commence the operation in forty-eight hours. Everyone’s got their assignments. Questions?”
“Yes. Where is Diana and what is her part in all of this?” This from Hans since he was the only one who knew that Diana and Chase had left together earlier and that Chase had returned alone. He hadn’t shared that knowledge with anyone, curious to know what had happened between them but anxious to give Chase the benefit of the doubt. She had been his best friend for a long time, and he’d never once know her to act without honor. But he’d never seen her out of sorts like she had been with Diana either.
“There was an emergency in her family, and they came looking for her. She went with them so I’m guessing she’s got some things to take care of that don’t involve us or this mission. That’s all right – she wasn’t really ever a part of this mission to begin with so we didn’t have to make any alterations. Anything else?”
The silence around the room made it seem like there was more that each of them wanted to say... questions they wanted to ask... but they let it go. Chase was focused on the rebellion again, and that was what they needed. As much as they liked Diana, they needed Chase. No one stopped to consider that Diana was what Chase needed.
“All right,” Chase nodded, picking up her notes. “Everyone make sure to see Hans before we head out to get their shots and pick up their new armor. No one goes on this operation without both. Move out – we’ve got a hell of a lot to get done and not much time left to do it in.”
She was out the door before any of them could even get up from their seats.
***********
“That is why you’re here, Drea? It has nothing to do with me then?”
“No,” Drea said, “though of course your mother did ask me to check on you and make sure you were doing all right. She really is concerned.” Diana nodded but made no other attempt to acknowledge acceptance of Drea’s words. “Is that how Chase got you here – under the guise of me needing you?”
“Actually she just asked for a few minutes of my time, then she apologized and left me here.”
“But she left you a vehicle....”
“... that I cannot drive.” Diana bit her lip. “All right; I guess that means I start walking. Would you like to come with me or would you prefer to stay here?”
“Given my choice, I will come with you of course. Let us have something to eat first.”
“Yes, and Aunt Jasmine can explain why she never told Chase about her heritage,” glaring at the spirit of the woman who sat in the window seat looking across at the tree beneath which her body lay buried.
Jasmine looked at Diana with eyes that were full of despair, and Diana was inclined towards sympathy for her. But the truth was she had unwittingly managed to complicate Diana’s life immensely and thrown any chance of Chase accepting Diana or her heritage into a tailspin. It made things more complicated, Diana sighed, but not impossible. One more hurdle on the path to being whole again.
“First things first. Jasmine will tell her story for you while we eat, then you and I will head back to the rebel encampment. Do you think you can find it again?”
Diana nodded. Then she took a seat and waited expectantly for Jasmine to begin speaking.
It took Jasmine through their meal and a little longer to finish her telling and Diana listened and ate without interrupting. Drea watched Diana as she listened, noting with interest how she absorbed the details about Chase’s life. The sun had almost set by the time that Jasmine finished.
“I didn’t keep it from her maliciously, Diana. It just never seemed like a good time to tell her... especially not as a teenaged child... and then it was too late. I ran out of time. I am hoping after she settles down and thinks about it calmly that she will realize that.”
“Do you know why she came out here?” Diana asked.
“No. We never got that far.” A pause. “I wonder if she suspected the truth or if she came looking for answers about something else.” Drea met Diana’s eyes. “How are things progressing between the two of you?”
Diana shook her head. “They aren’t. She’s been avoiding me, but I don’t know if it just me or if there is more to it.”
“Well, what do you say we go and find out?”
“Drea,” Jasmine interrupted before Diana could answer. “Take care of my baby girl, and remind her that I love her – that I never meant to hurt her with any of this.”
Drea took Jasmine’s hands in her own. “Do not worry, Sister. It may take a while to convince your stubborn child of the truth, but we will make Chase understand it eventually. Have a little faith. Diana and I will bring her back here as quickly as we can.”
Jasmine leaned forward and brushed a cool kiss across Drea’s cheek. “Go with my blessing then.”
Then Drea turned to Diana and held out her hand and the two walked out of the house and down the lane, headed back to the rebel encampment.
************
“My queen??”
“Find a way, Nubia. Given what Paula has been able to record in the last few days in man’s world, it has become imperative that we get involved. We have to do something. We have stood by unknowing in our ignorance while man’s world has suffered and bled and died under the hand of one of our own. Diana and Chase have both suffered so much to get to this point. I think we owe them whatever help we can provide, but it needs to be now.”
“As you say, my queen. But without divine intervention, I am not sure we can arrive in man’s world in time to make a difference for them. We’re still piecing it together, but from all the data we have managed to cull together something big is coming and it’s going to happen soon. Within days, if we are understanding the transmissions correctly.”
“My queen, we know for certain Orana is out and about again. Now that we know she is involved in this, we have stepped up our surveillance, but it is still all piecemeal. We do not know if she is out looking for something specific or simply trying to relieve her boredom.”
“What of the rebellion?”
“Again, just bits. Short of asking the goddesses, it is all guesswork on our part. But there has been a lot more activity over the past month or so. That in and of itself indicates things are happening. Can we ask the goddesses?”
“I already have,” Mala finally spoke. “The queen is right. The time has come for the Amazons to take their place again as the warriors they once were. Be ready tomorrow before dawn.”
A cheer went up from the council. Then they scrambled to get the warriors of the Nation ready to go into man’s world. The time had finally come, and the women of the Amazon Nation were spoiling for a fight. Knowing they were going to support their princess and redeem themselves from Orana put a fire in their bellies the Nazis were going to have a very hard time putting out.
Chapter XXXIV
"Chase, you got a minute?" Ty asked, sticking her head in the door of Chase's hut. Chase leaned back in the chair and gave Ty her full attention.
"Sure Ty," she said, pushing her papers away from her. "What's up? Problems with your preparations or...?" extending her hands in inquiry. Ty shook her head.
"No, no. Nothing like that. I want to know what really happened to Diana, Chase. I know how she feels about things," not wanting to reveal a confidence. "I want to know why you made her leave."
Instead of becoming angry as Ty half feared she would, Chase sighed sadly and crossed over to the small window that looked out over the compound. Everywhere she looked there was activity; to the untrained eye it appeared much like controlled chaos. But to Chase's knowing gaze, it was the steady, forward progress of war preparation. She didn't sense fear but instead saw excitement simmering just below the surface of the purposeful commotion.
Ty didn't interrupt Chase's musing, sensing the conflict within her cousin even though Chase kept her eyes on the hustle and bustle taking place just outside her hut. Ty figured her patience would be rewarded sooner or later if she remained quiet; Chase had been like this before – when her father had died and again when her mother had been killed. Eventually Chase was going to need to share with someone if only to vent before she drove herself crazy. So Ty waited.
"I didn't make her leave, Ty. Someone who is from Diana's home found me and I took her to them." Truth mostly, as far as it went, but Ty wasn't buying it. She knew there was more. She waited but Chase didn't speak further, and Ty slapped her legs in frustration.
"Damn it, Chase! What the hell is going on with you?? I know there is more to this story than you are telling me. Now you wanna start from the beginning and just tell me the truth, or you want me to pick and pry it out of you until I'm satisfied??"
Chase almost had to laugh. Ty would do it too; she had before. One thing Chase knew she could count on her cousin for was absolute honesty and a swift kick in the ass if she needed it. Unconsciously, she rubbed her butt and Ty chuckled, forcing Chase to turn and glare at her before smiling sheepishly.
"Start at the beginning, Chase, and tell me everything. Maybe I can help; at least you might feel better for sharing the burden with someone. C'mon. I know something has been bothering you since you came back from wherever it was you disappeared a few months ago."
Then Ty waited. She knew if Chase didn't share now she never would, or at least not for a very long time. By then, with a little luck, the war would be over and Chase wouldn't need the focus she needed now. But it would still eat at her until she had nothing left, and Ty didn't want to lose Chase to madness. And this, Ty feared, would be the final push Chase needed to cross the line.
"Do you remember the stories my mother used to tell, Ty? Stories from the old country, she called them - about ancient cultures and heroes and myths."
"Oh yes," Ty answered enthusiastically. "My favorites were always about the Amazons. I loved...." She broke off when she realized what she was about to say and to whom she was saying it. "I'm sorry, Chase. I didn't...."
Chase smiled at her sadly before turning her attention back out the window. "Don't be sorry, Ty. I loved the ones about the two who traveled together the best, but the Amazon stories were some my favorites too. At least until...."
"Yeah."
"Anyway, do you remember how real she made those stories seem... like they were real people who lived in real time and had real lives and adventures? Do you remember how much we wanted them to be real so we could meet them?"
"Do I? My daddy tanned my backside more than once for going on and on about them when I should have been concentrating on other things. Said the Amazons were nothing more than myths and I needed to focus on the here and now. He said Aunt Jas just made up stories to give us some strong female figures to aspire to."
"For a long time, I figured he was right. Don't get me wrong... I loved Mama's stories, but they couldn't be real, right? Things like that were just make-believe in our world. Then I met Orana, and she made me hate the thought of there being Amazons if they were like her."
"You think differently now." A statement, not a question.
Chase shook her head. "No, Ty. I know differently now. Those dreams... you know the ones I had when I first got back from that mission?" looking over her shoulder at Ty and seeing her nod her agreement. "Those weren't dreams, Ty. It really happened. The Amazons, the island... everything."
When she realized that Chase wasn't going to continue, Ty prodded. "How?" Suspecting it had everything to do with Diana.
Chase took a deep breath. "Diana was there. She's an Amazon princess." Her pronouncement was met with silence, and Chase turned to meet Ty's eyes. They were widened and her jaw was slack. Chase smirked just a little and went over to wave her hand in front of Ty's face. It took several passes before Ty blinked and met her gaze. Then she cleared her throat and spoke.
"An Amazon princess?? Oooooookay. Did she tell you this?"
"Ty, trust me when I tell you I know it is true; you know I can sense if a person is lying or not. She told me things she could only have known if they were true and she was there."
"That doesn't make her a princess."
"No, but I have reason to believe that part is true."
"Is that why you made her leave? Because she's an Amazon princess?" Chase shook her head but made no more effort to elaborate. "C'mon, Chase," Ty finally huffed. "You gotta give me something more here. You know I have never been good as guessing games."
Chase walked back over to the window, careful to keep her back to Ty. "No, Ty. I told you the truth about that. An Amazon, the woman who healed me on that island, was at the homestead today when I went to talk to Mama." Ty didn't comment; she knew Chase usually went to back to her old home to talk to Jasmine's grave whenever she needed to talk. It was only very rarely that she would open up to one of them so as not to appear weak. "Since Diana had made it fairly clear to me that she was here because she had nowhere else to go, I thought it was best to give her the chance to go home when the opportunity arose."
"Uh huh," Ty said dryly. "Did it ever occur to you to ask her what she wanted?"
"Ty," Chase finally said with more than a hint of exasperation and asperity in her voice. "She was a distraction for me. I needed her to be gone from here as much as she wanted to be away from me."
"But...."
"Ty, she left here of her own volition, all right? She walked out of this hut and away from me without a word of explanation. No amount of window dressing is gonna change that little fact. But by taking her back to her family, I did what was best for everyone; the timing just happened to fall into place like it did by sheer coincidence."
Ty stood up and stomped her way over to the window. She grabbed Chase by the shoulder and swung her around so their eyes could meet. "I don't believe you," she swore, throwing her hands up into the air. "You are... argh!" words failing her completely. Ty held up a finger and glared when Chase opened her mouth to speak, pacing back and forth across the small room, her anger apparent in her attitude as well as her actions. "Did it ever ONCE occur to you to talk to Diana? To ask her why she moved out in such a hurry? To find out why she really stayed here? It didn't, did it? You let your feelings get hurt over something you won't even acknowledge, much less try to understand. You pushed her away - making sure you couldn't even be friends because you were afraid."
Ty turned to look at Chase who hadn't stirred at all, her gaze appearing to be completely riveted on the world going on around her just outside her hut. "Chase, are you even listening to me??" anger coloring her tone.
"Ty, are you done?" never removing her eyes from the window.
"Yes, damn it! I'm done." She blew out a deep breath and spoke more calmly. "I'm finished, yes."
"I hope you will respect that what I shared with you was done so in confidence. I would appreciate if you wouldn't share it with the others."
"Chase, even if you had shared something private like that with me – which you didn't, by the way - I wouldn’t go out and share it with the rest. I never have. I treasure your trust in me; I'd hoped you understood that by now and felt the same in return." Her voice was saddened by remorse and her shoulders slumped in an air of utter defeat.
"I do, Ty. You know that. I just... this is awkward for me, and I'm not sure why or...." Her brow furrowed in consternation. "Wait, I did share with you. I told you the dreams were real and not dreams and that Diana is an Amazon princess."
Ty nodded. "Yes, you did, and of course I would never share that with anyone. But you still haven't shared why you sent Diana away. Or why you won't talk to her. Or how you feel about the whole thing. Or...." Ty had to stop speaking when Chase's hand covered her mouth. She met her cousin's green eyes, expecting to find anger or frustration... anything but the amusement she found there.
"All right, Ty. All right – I get the point." Her eyes turned serious. "I appreciate the concern, and if I had anything to share, you know you'd be the first to hear about it. In all honesty, maybe I'll have time to think about it and worry about all that later. But for right now, I have to focus on the here and now – the rebellion and winning this goddamn war once and for all. Once it's all over and everything is taken care of, maybe I can worry about the rest... maybe I can worry about me for a change. But I can't let this distract me now. This is about more than just me, Ty; this is about all of us and is critical to our survival."
Ty clasped Chase's hands in hers. "All right, Chase. I can accept that for now. But you promise me... when this is all over and everything is taken care of... you promise me that you will take care of Chase. I want you to be happy. You deserve it so much. You especially," she said, not letting Chase interrupt her, "because you have done so much for everyone else."
"Okay, Ty. I promise. When we're done, I'll try to take some time for me and figure out what I need to do to be happy. Then I'll go out and do it."
"You promise me that you'll talk to Diana – give her a chance?"
"Ty, I doubt Diana will be anywhere around, but if she is, I promise that I will talk to her and give her a chance," knowing in her heart that Diana was going to be a very long way from anywhere Chase expected to be, assuming she survived the coming battle. Because she knew someone was going to have to be the one to take down Orana, and she had already granted herself that special task. She felt she deserved as much, and she certainly wasn't going to put anyone else in harm's way.
Ty nodded, not liking the vibe she was suddenly getting from Chase but unable to do more than accept her word. "All right. C'mon," she said, pulling her towards the door. "It's time for dinner, and I know you're hungry. You missed lunch, and I can hear your stomach growling. Don't bother," when Chase tried to pull free. "I'm not taking no for an answer."
Chase chuckled wryly and shook her head, then followed Ty out the door and across the compound to the mess hall where they were greeted with hails and cheers.
************
"So what are you going to do when we get there?" Drea asked Diana as they walked down the road in the twilight that was swiftly fading to darkness. "Do you have a plan?"
Diana shook her head. "Not yet. Only that I'm not going to throttle Chase when I see her. Because she did leave me a vehicle to use even if I don't know how to use it. I think she brought me to you because she wanted to keep me safe and out of the way."
"Is that a good thing?"
Diana considered the question, then nodded slowly. "I think so. From what I know of Chase, it is almost the ultimate compliment. She knows I’m not incompetent or stupid and she expects everyone to pull their weight. So either she is protecting me because she cares about me to some degree or getting rid of me because I am a distraction.
“Maybe a little of both?”
Diana sighed and shrugged. "Maybe. I would prefer if she would talk to me, though. I really want...." She stopped speaking with a blush when it occurred to her just who she was talking to. Drea smiled.
“It’s nothing to be ashamed of, Diana. I think it is wonderful that you really want, and even better that you’ve found the one you really want to with.” Drea took Diana’s arm as they continued walking down the road. “I’ve missed this with you. I’ve missed you.” Diana patted the hand that rested on her arm, but she didn’t speak. “Your mother misses you too, you know. She has for a long time. She just couldn’t seem to find a way to reach you and eventually she stopped trying.”
“Drea, I know you mean well, and I know that sooner or later Hippolyta and I will need to come to some sort of an understanding. But not right now. Right now, I have enough to worry about without having to consider any of that. So can we leave it alone... please?”
“I am sorry, Little One. You are entirely correct, of course. You do know that Paula has continued to monitor things here and in the Nazi capital as well as she can. If she has been able to see any of what you say has been going on, Hippolyta will be preparing the warriors to come join the fight.” She held up her hand when Diana would have spoken. “It is their fight as well, Diana. We all bear the responsibility for Orana, and no one wants to be left out of providing a solution for dealing with her.”
“No, Drea. This is my fight – mine and Chase’s. We lost the most to Orana’s machinations. I hate to be the one to point this out, Drea, but I doubt very sincerely Chase is going to let anyone but her deal with Orana... especially not an Amazon.”
“Does she know about what happened with your mother?”
Diana nodded. “She knows about everything except why I followed her here. I couldn’t find the words to tell her when we were talking, and then she stopped talking to me. I wonder if I had told her the truth... even part of it... if....”
“If perhaps she might have reacted differently? If something might have already happened between you?” Diana nodded, the motion barely visible in the light of the waning moon. Drea pulled them to a halt and cupped Diana’s face in her hands. “Little One, what is the one thing I have tried to teach you, hmm? The one thing you know to be true despite everything.”
“Everything happens in its own good time.”
“Exactly. Even if we do not understand the reasons; even though we cannot see the big picture; even when we do not agree with what has happened and why,” the last bit muttered under her breath, “eventually things do come together of their own time and their own volition.” Drea removed her hands from Diana’s face and took her arm again, resuming their walk down the road.
“Besides,” she continued, “she needs to discover the truth that is the two of you for herself. If Chase had been told the truth about the two of you and then found out she was an Amazon, there is always a chance she would feel manipulated, and that is never a good foundation for a relationship of any kind – even friendship. At least this way, she knows the truth about her heritage, and the rest will come with time.”
“Do you really believe that Drea? Do you think she’ll figure it out and accept it for everything it is?”
“Yes, Little One. I really do. Aside from knowing her mother pretty well, and realizing that both her mother and her aunt are brilliant and have impeccable taste, it sounds like she already has feelings for you, Daughter. She is not going to pass that up. Her soul won’t let her. The down side, and of course you knew there had to be one - knowing her mother and aunt as well as I do, I can safely say she is a fighter, and she’s going to fight every step of the way to realization.”
Diana chuckled wryly. “Given her original soul, I can believe that. Do you think I am losing my mind over this... maybe being a little impatient with the whole process? I mean Chase and I have really only just met in this lifetime – we’ve only known one another for a very few weeks when you really think about it... a couple months at most.”
“But this is something you have been searching for for a very long time, Diana. And your soul recognized her and your heart knew the truth even before your mind figured it out. Hers is the same way except that she doesn’t even realize she has been looking for you through her lifetimes. She just knows there is something about you and for whatever reason, it terrifies her. But she will figure it out. I would be willing to guess that part of her problem is her leadership of the rebellion. Jasmine told me Chase has always been very singularly focused, and it only got worse after the death of each parent and then her incarceration by Orana. She is going to need to learn a new focus.”
It was quiet for a long while as they walked along the road while Diana considered Drea’s words. She had missed their talks as well as the sage advice Drea always seemed to have well in hand. And with Drea’s belief, she felt her own belief reassert itself. She knew Chase felt something. Now it was simply a matter of getting her to see and acknowledge what that something between them really was. But first they had to win this war.
It was just after midnight when they crossed the outer boundary of the rebel encampment. At Diana’s request, Ty was called to meet and vouch for them instead of Chase. Ty did a double take when she saw Drea and was introduced to her casually by Diana as ‘my other mother.’ Instead of asking the questions that dripped off her tongue, Ty reassured the guard with alacrity so the trio was soon crossing the grounds to Diana’s small quarters. Diana looked around, easily able to see the preparations that had already been made and were in fact still in progress. She turned questioning blue eyes to Ty and waited for an explanation.
“I’ll explain everything in the morning,” Ty promised. “But for now, let’s just say it’s time to wrap up this war and go to bed, all right? Please, Diana. It’s been a very long day.”
“She’s right, Diana,” Drea said, placing a hand on Diana’s arm. “There will be time for discussion and explanations in the morning.”
Diana looked at Drea, noting for the first time an exhaustion she could plainly see written on her face. She nodded her head. “All right,” looking back at Ty. “In the morning, then.”
************
But the morning was going to bring even further complication to their lives.
Chapter XXXV
Hippolyta looked around at the homestead in the bare light of the approaching dawn. Though there were obvious signs of neglect, still the place had the look of recent occupation. Despite the repairs that needed to be done, the walk had been swept and the flowerbeds had been weeded. Hippolyta knocked on the door and waited, then turned to look at her warriors – her warriors – she thought with pride. They stood waiting patiently for her orders and she turned to her advisory council.
“Well there doesn’t appear to be anyone home, though I don’t think she’s been gone too long.” The goddesses had transported them to Chase’s homestead figuring to meet up with Drea and going to the rebel encampment together and to find she was no longer here.... “We will have to figure out where they are and make our way to them. Best guess as to which direction we should go?”
It was only an answer on the wind, but they all heard it as clearly as though Artemis was standing among them when she spoke. East. So the warriors formed ranks and began a comfortable run east, hopefully towards the rebel compound.
************
Chase was up before the sun and looking over every aspect of the camp as it continued to make preparations for the final assault. At each place she stopped, listening to concerns and answering questions, helping make things run smoother for everyone. Most of the rebels here, directly under her command, were long veterans of the war against the Nazis. Most of them at one time or another had served on the front line, and all of those that had, had served more than once in the face of death. Those that hadn’t were young and scared, and Chase did her best to reassure them as much as possible. And so she slowly made her way across and through the camp until she was satisfied that everything that could be done was being done.
Ty, meanwhile, had gotten up as the sun peeked over the horizon of the eastern sky. Given her late night, she felt like she could have slept til noon but knew that was completely out of the question. She went to the mess tent to pick up some breakfast and then made her way directly to Diana’s hut. She had questions she wanted answers to as well.
Ty knocked, but she didn’t wait for an invitation before she entered. She didn’t want Chase to see her loitering outside Diana’s hut especially with food in her hands. Chase would start asking questions of her own before Ty herself got some answers. Immediately she was met by two blades on opposite sides of her neck until the two Amazons got a good look at their intruder. Drea turned to Diana for advice and Diana simply nodded and removed her own blade from Ty’s throat. Drea was only a beat behind her. Ty placed the tray down on the small table.
“We do not rate the courtesy of inviting you in first?” Drea asked in a curt tone. Diana just looked at Ty and waited for her response. She had her own suspicions why Ty had done what she did and was curious to know what sort of explanation she would offer. Ty handed each of them a cup of coffee and a roll before picking up her own and giving Drea a well-thought out answer.
“Under normal circumstances, you would rate that and much more besides, but we are not under normal circumstances, are we? And I want some answers before Chase discovers you’re here. You,” looking directly at Diana, “are supposed to be on your way back home to that island. And you,” turning back to Drea, “are obviously related to my Aunt Jasmine. So how are you related to Diana and what are you doing here? What are you both doing here?”
“We’ll answer you questions, Ty, if you will answer ours.”
“Of course, Diana. I told you I would, but please....”
By accident or design, Ty had become her confidante when she couldn’t talk to Chase and needed an outlet. Though Diana had only shared small snippets, Ty had proven trustworthy and loyal and able to keep a secret. So Diana told her the whole story in all its excruciating detail. Everything that was relevant to this situation anyway – who Drea was and why she had really come and why they had returned to the rebel compound together instead of going home. Ty just covered her eyes as she listened and scrubbed her hands through her hair when the recitation was over.
“Damn sonofabitch!” she cursed, making Drea’s eyes widen in surprise. “Is there anything else I need to be aware of?”
“Not to my knowledge,” Diana answered honestly. “I have told you everything I know that happened once I left here. I only found out most of this myself yesterday. I knew about Drea and Jasmine being twins, of course, but I didn’t know about the rest.”
Ty squeezed her eyes shut and pinched the bridge of her nose. “Chase is gonna kill me,” she muttered, “just on general principle, much less for knowing things I shouldn’t.” She sighed. “Well as long as I am going to have to die because of all this, let me bring you up to date on my side of things.” Drea and Diana exchanged glances wondering what they had missed in Diana’s narration.
“First and foremost, you have to know that though she didn’t always, Chase hates Amazons now because of something that happened to her when she was captured by the Nazis in Berlin some time ago. She never shared with me what happened; only that it was an Amazon who had caused the damage I could see, and obviously the psychological damage I couldn’t. Anyway that’s not the important part, though I think ya’ll needed to understand – especially you, Diana. It helps explain why she is having problems... um, relating to you.”
Diana nodded, understanding far more than Ty was aware of, though her expression gave none of that away.
“You also need to understand that she didn’t share with me the fact that she is an Amazon, which means she hasn’t come to terms with it. It would probably be in all our best interests if number one, she doesn’t know you told me this and number two, you,” motioning to Drea, “stay out of sight. Seeing you probably hurts Chase more than she would ever admit to. Aunt Jasmine was her best friend, and her death was agonizing for Chase, especially since Chase still feels a guilty responsibility for it.”
“Okay not to seem cold but what does that have to do with what is going around here now?” This from Drea. “Obviously something big is happening.” Diana remained quiet.
“Something big is happening. We are preparing for our final offensive against the Reich. This is an all or nothing gamble, and thanks to Diana’s and Hans’ work, most of us now have a huge hope of not only succeeding but actually coming through this alive.”
“You didn’t expect to succeed before?”
Ty shook her head. “Oh yes, we always expected to succeed; the actual plan hasn’t changed. We just didn’t have much chance for survival. Diana’s efforts helped change all that. It’s one reason we are moving now, and it’s one reason Chase took you to Drea, Diana. She cares for you too much to endanger you though she won’t admit that to herself. She claims you are a distraction, which is true enough, though again, she’s not analyzing the why behind the distraction.”
Diana tilted her head in question. “Do you know something?”
“I know Chase. That’s enough,” but she didn’t say anything else.
“Would you like to share?”
“Nope. I am in enough trouble as it is. Besides, I have enough to worry about with ops prep. I’m not about to get involved in someone else’s love life – or lack there of.” Ty would have laughed at the way Diana’s eyes bugged out of her head if she hadn’t been so engrossed in her thoughts. “My big concern right now is how to tell Chase that you are back here. She’s not going to be happy.”
“Does she need to know?” Drea asked. “If I need to stay out of sight, why can’t Diana? I mean if it would make it easier....”
“Drea, even if I wanted to let Chase protect me... which I don’t...” with a glare at both of them, “I have a score to settle with Orana as well. For my sake as well as Chase’s. I worked hard to make myself a productive part of this rebellion and I am not going to be left out of it because Chase considers me to be a distraction to her for whatever reason.” She turned her gaze strictly on Ty and it was all Ty could do not to flinch at the intensity she felt flowing from Diana in waves when she became the sole focus of it suddenly and without warning.
Ty blinked. “Um, Diana?”
“You let me take care of Chase, Ty. I should have before.”
“Why didn’t you?”
“The million dollar question. Any number of reasons; this isn’t the time to get into it. I’ll talk to Chase and we will work out some sort of compromise.” She started to stand when Ty’s name was hollered out and the door was jerked open. “Ty, what are you doi... Diana?” Shep stopped short and dropped his head to his chest before blowing out a frustrated breath. “What are you...? Nevermind. This just gets better and better. C’mon, Ty. You don’t want to miss this.” Drea stood and Shep finally noticed her presence in the room. His eyes bugged right out of his head. “Holy shit! Jasmine??”
Drea shook her head and extended her hand. “Jasmine was my twin sister. My name is Drea. And you are?”
“Shep. Um, I don’t want to seem rude, but Ty, if we don’t get out there....”
“Shep, what’s wrong?” Ty asked as she took the two steps to the door. “Please excuse us,” she said to Drea and Diana. Shep shook his head.
“They should probably come along... at least Diana should.” They stepped from the hut as a group and followed Shep swiftly towards the front gate. “There is a woman at the gate who mentioned her by name.”
Drea exchanged looks with Diana. “You don’t suppose...?”
“One way to find out,” Diana said and hastened towards the gate.
************
Hippolyta couldn’t say what made her bring her troops to a silent halt, but without warning she stopped and held up a hand. Immediately the Amazons stopped running and though they didn’t draw their weapons, they were hyper alert to everything around them as they slowly spread out to search the area and find whatever it was that had caused Hippolyta to stop their forward progress.
Erilani saw them first, but only because she literally walked into the outermost guard. He was so well disguised Hippolyta couldn’t blame the royal guard for her strangled yelp. Had she been two steps to the left she would have been the one to bump into him.
“State your name and your business,” the man commanded as he and several others stepped forward with their weapons drawn and highly evident to block any further advancement. Hippolyta had to remind herself that this was man’s world and they had no idea who she or her warriors were. And remembering that these were rebels against the Nazis in a fight for their life, it was no surprise that simple courtesy did not exist for unexpected guests into their encampment.
“My name is Hippolyta. I was looking for a woman named Chase or my daughter, Diana Prince.”
“What business do you have with them?” the man asked without batting an eyelash in surprise, though Mala picked up on the slight widening of his eyes at the mention of Diana’s name. She wondered what the princess had done to make such an impression so quickly here, though she had always been able to captivate people easily before she had become so angry. She hoped to see that charismatic princess again, but first they had to find her.
“I have come as the Queen of the Amazon Nation to offer my warriors to aid the rebellion in the destruction of Nazi tyranny.”
This time the man did blink at Hippolyta for several long seconds before he turned his attention to the woman who stood beside him. “Go find Ty or Shep – someone in authority,” not wanting to confirm Chase’s presence in the camp. “Now!” The woman nodded and ran off, disappearing into the brush with an ease that the Amazons appreciated for the art form it was. The man turned his attention back to Hippolyta. “You might want to find a place to wait. It might be a little while before anyone gets back here,” not mentioning that the gate was just out of sight behind the trees and brush.
Hippolyta smiled. The man was young, but he had strength in his gaze as well as in his bearing, and Hippolyta respected that. She motioned to her warriors, and the Amazons settled down to wait.
The wait wasn’t very long all things considered. Hippolyta rose as soon as she heard the sound of people approaching and the warriors rose behind her as one. The council formed a semi-circle at her back and they waited in silence for the rustling to morph into something more tangible. Shep was in the lead and was the first of the little group to the gate outpost. Directly behind him was Ty, followed by Drea and finally Diana.
A couple discrete hand signals from Drea kept Hippolyta and thus everyone else, in place as the quartet stepped closer to the Amazons. Shep stepped forward with his arm outstretched and Hippolyta accepted it with a warrior handshake. He adjusted quickly and introduced himself, then moved aside so Ty could do the same. They had agreed that Ty would take the lead once they had introduced themselves to the Amazons.
“Hello, Queen Hippolyta,” she said graciously, bowing her head briefly in respect. “My name is Ty. I believe you know Drea and Diana,” motioning to the two women who stood just behind her.
Hippolyta couldn’t stop the huge grin that crossed her face. It was good to see both Drea and Diana again. She had missed them greatly for obviously different reasons, but she knew there was business to take care of first. Besides, she had a feeling she was going to like Ty; there was something about her that was refreshing. “I believe you are right, Ty.”
“So I understand ya’ll want to help us out. Can I ask why you want to help and how you found us?”
“The why is simple – Orana was... is an Amazon though we’ve only just recently been made aware of her activities here in man’s world. That makes her our responsibility. We’d like to offer whatever assistance we can to help rid the world of her. As for how we found you, well, let’s just say we had divine assistance and leave it at that for now. Perhaps when this is all over we can get into the details.”
“All right,” Ty said. “But Queen Hippolyta, before you commit yourself and your warriors to this fight, there are a few things you need to be aware of. No bullshit now – just honest truth.” Hippolyta’s eyes widened at Ty’s choice of words, but she nodded for her to continue. “First of all, we do not stand on ceremony here. If you join us, you will not be a queen here; you will just be Hippolyta, like I am Ty and your daughter is Diana. Next, we have one leader and what she says, goes. We are allowed to voice opinions and ask questions of course, but at the end of the day when the choice is made, we follow her. If you can’t give up both your title of queen and your warriors won’t accept orders from another authority, you can’t do any good here. You may as well go back to wherever it is that is home for you because we can’t use you here.”
Ty waited and finally Hippolyta felt compelled to speak. “Is there anything else?” wondering if Ty knew about Chase’s hatred of the Amazons. “I would like to hear all the negatives before I make any comments or decisions.”
Ty nodded. She really did like this woman’s spunk. If Jasmine had been telling stories about real Amazons – these Amazons – then the woman standing in front of her was nearly three thousand years old. Regardless of the fact that she looked to be a woman of less than middle age, that was a very, very long time to have been alive, and Ty had a sneaking suspicion immortality was not always what it was cracked up to be.
“The last critical thing you should know is that our leader may have issues with the fact that you are Amazons. She was captured and tortured by the Fuehrer... the one you call Orana... and she made it a point to rub her Amazonian heritage in her face. I would like to believe she would be fair and give you the opportunity to prove yourselves, but the fact is there is a lot of hate and a lot of hurt she will have to overcome first to do so.”
She noticed Ty was very careful not to mention Chase’s name and she applauded her caution, as frustrating as it was not to have her suspicions confirmed, though surely Drea and Diana would not be here if Chase wasn’t. Hippolyta turned to her council and gave them a brief word Ty couldn’t hear, but whatever it was caused them and the warriors behind them to drop to one knee and bow their heads while waiting for their queen to speak.
“As for the first, I will be happy to be called by you as my consort Drea calls me... Pol. It is much less formal and much easier to say than Hippolyta every time you would like to get my attention. I don’t know if the rest of the Nation can remember to call me by anything other than ‘my queen’ as they have done so for such a very long time, but I give you my word they will try. For the second, I had hoped to turn the leadership of the Amazon warriors over to my daughter to lead as she knows each of them and how the skills they possess could best be utilized for the good of the rebellion. But if she has sworn fealty to your leader then we will of course do the same. For the last, I have hope that if your leader is the woman I remember her to be, she will remember that we gave her aid in her hour of need and will give us a chance if only for that reason. I believe in her heart she knows the truth. We merely have to guide her to it. So if Chase is willing to let us fight beside you, we will prove ourselves worthy allies indeed.”
“Very well then, Hip... Pol. Let’s get you all into the compound and let Chase know we have reinforcements and unexpected allies.” The Amazons rose as one before Hippolyta put a restraining hand on Ty’s arm.
“Ty, would you mind very much... I would still like to turn over leadership of the warriors to Diana. I believe she will be better suited to, if not lead them into combat, at least give Chase good advice on their placement within your ranks.”
Ty looked at Diana whose eyes widened in reaction to her mother’s words. It was the only change in her expression. She shrugged her shoulders at Ty who in turn nodded at Hippolyta. There was no ceremony – no pretty words and flowery speeches. Instead Hippolyta simply took off her signet ring and slid it onto Diana’s finger, then brushed her cheek with the very lightest of kisses before Diana could move out of range. Hippolyta motioned to Ty.
“Can we go into the compound now? I am somewhat anxious to see the changes time has wrought in man’s world. And I would like a proper introduction to Chase.”
Drea took Hippolyta’s hand in her own and the council closed ranks around the three women and Shep as they walked the short distance to the front gate. Diana took her place at the head of the Amazon army, and though they didn’t make a sound, she could feel the pulsating energy of them cheering behind her. It made her smile.
************
Harry knocked on the door of her quarters where Chase was finishing up her own last minute preparations. “Come in,” she called, checking the status of her armor. Hans had added some extra pieces knowing Chase would be going into the lion’s den. She looked up when Harry crossed the threshold and her expression became one of immediate concern.
“Harry? Is there a problem?? Have you gotten news from our outposts overseas??”
“No, ma’am! No, nothing like that. But I think you’d better come outside and see this for yourself.”
Chase followed him out of the hut and then stopped dead at the sight that met her gaze. The courtyard was filled with women – Amazon women – and chief among them stood Diana and her mother’s twin. She considered her alternatives and decided a strategic retreat was in order before she said or did something stupid she might regret later. Suddenly nothing was easy anymore, and this situation was becoming more and more complicated by the minute.
Chapter XXXVI
Orana walked into the conference room, and every man snapped to attention until she put them at ease. They waited until she sat down and gestured at the table before they assumed their seats, and they did so with alacrity. Something about their Fuehrer was different; she exuded an edgy energy that they had only heard about from the oldest elders or had on the rarest occasions, seen in action – though even then, it had been a residual effect of a particularly nasty torture session. And there had only been one noteworthy session in their lifetime.
This energy was subtly different. When Orana had Annabelle Chaser in her custody, she had been first thrilled with her conquest and then furious at being outwitted by someone she considered inferior to her both physically as well as intellectually. Their only saving grace had been that she had been in too much agony immediately after Chase’s attack and subsequent escape to do more than give cursory orders; otherwise the lot of them would have been strung up... or worse.
Then she had been angry, but by the time she had healed, she had moved her focus on to other things and had withdrawn into her own world. It had made them relax slightly. But it was obvious from her attitude today, something had happened to bring back the feared Fuehrer who had originally deposed Hitler and built the Nazi regime into the most powerful war machine the world had ever known.
This Fuehrer had purpose and determination and marked the return of the legendary Black Widow into their midst. Every single man and woman in the room with her sat a little straighter in their chair. They hadn’t felt this kind of excitement before and they enjoyed the tingle that ran across their skin from the energy that skittered throughout the room.
Orana let them absorb the new sensation, letting it build into something of a controlled frenzy. She wanted to infuse the feeling into their being so their desire for it ran hot and strong. In that way she would be able to utilize it to destroy the rebellion. Because once they had the burning, they would do anything to keep it and tightening her grip on the world would be easy.
She had gotten lax since she had brought the world under her iron grip of domination, and except for the episode with the rebel spy, had been little more than a name used to keep both her army and her subjects in line. Now it was time to take action to assure that she didn’t lose her hold on her regime. This was hers and she wasn’t about to let any threat real or imagined take it away from her. When she cleared her throat to speak, all heads turned her direction and flinched at the intensity of purpose that burned in her eyes.
“Rumors have reached my ears that the rebellion,” said with a sneer in her voice, “is making a big offensive push against the Reich. But I cannot seem to get confirmation on this one way or another. The signs are there, but I need more details. So what do you have for me?” looking around the room for some sort of response, not pleased with the lack thereof. “This is not rocket science, people. I have scientists for that if I want to indulge in that sort of speculation. This is military security. Do you mean to tell me not one of you has any idea of any problems going on in your region? No rebels, no discontentment – everything is perfect.”
Her voice and demeanor was calm but none of them were stupid enough to miss the clenching of her jaw or the flexing of her fingers. Finally one small woman, braver than the rest and a personal favorite of Orana’s, rose to speak. Orana nodded towards her graciously and motioned for her to speak. The woman bowed her head in acknowledgement and drew breath to speak.
“Mein Fuehrer, we haven’t had any clear cut reports of rebel activity in my region, but we did notice some awkward movement by those we suspect might be rebel sympathizers or resistance members a couple months ago. Nothing we could have arrested them for without causing a panic, nothing we would have even noticed as being odd if we hadn’t been looking for it. As it stands, it was only unusual... a little out of the ordinary. And it didn’t last very long... a few nights, then everything stopped again and settled back down.”
Orana leaned back thoughtfully. “What happened? What was the change in routine?
“It was more of a rumbling, sort of like the atmosphere change. The people seemed to have a new kind of energy. But it only lasted for a few days and then it was gone like it had never been. We looked around; checked papers more carefully; searched houses and cars and the like thinking perhaps someone was being smuggled through, but we never found any evidence of it.”
“Was anything else done about it? Any arrests made?
“No, mein Fuehrer. We have nothing but suspicions. The people we have been watching aren’t even confirmed rebels. We’ve continued to watch, but short of purging entire villages, I....” The woman shrugged.
Orana sat silently, gesturing absently to the woman to resume her seat. Orana waited, wondering if anyone else would be able to gather the courage to speak. When no one else was forthcoming, she leaned forward. “Ladies and gentlemen, let me make a couple of things perfectly clear for you. We are going to meet back here in twenty-four hours, and in that twenty-four hours you are going to dig up every bit of information on rebellion and resistance activities in your area of responsibility. Because when we meet back here, I want names and numbers and locations and any other pertinent data you can find. Am I clear?”
They answered as one body, their volume loud enough to rattle the windows. Orana smiled. She doubted they had been as terrified as recruits as they were at this very moment.
“I don’t care how you get it done, just do it. Failure is not an option, ladies and gentlemen. Because I assure you, each and every one of you can be replaced, and there are plenty of good little Nazis clambering for your position, eager to take your place.” She rose, and they rushed to stand as well, snapping to attention and hardly daring to breathe while Orana walked around the table, then made her way to the door. “Oh, by the way,” she paused and looked back over her shoulder at them, meeting each and every set of eyes in the room. “Adelia, I like your idea.”
“Mein Fuehrer?”
“Each of you choose a village or town in your region... preferably one that has known or heavily suspected rebel activities and purge it. Completely.”
Eyes widened and jaws dropped. “Co... co... completely, mein Fuehrer? Buh... but we have loyalists in those towns as well. What about them?”
Orana shrugged. “What about them? They are obviously not loyal enough or there wouldn’t be any rebels there now, would there?” She exchanged glances with each of them again. “Take care of it. I want reports on my desk in the morning detailing your actions in this regard. Am I understood?”
“YES SIR!!!” The words resonated throughout the room and down the hall as Orana exited and made her way down to her office. For the first time in a very long time, she felt alive. She wondered what other chaos and mayhem she could cause, and she turned her attention to her Reich, feeling enthusiasm rush through her in waves.
************
Chase looked idly around her hut, wishing she had taken up smoking or drinking or tap dancing or any other number of vices that could be considered a nervous habit – anything to expel some of the panicky energy she suddenly found herself full of. She paced back and forth across the length of her hut before taking herself in hand and breathing deeply.
“All right, Chase. You can do this. You are the leader of the rebellion and you have faced down the Fuehrer and lived to tell the tale. It doesn’t matter that the courtyard is full of Amazons. It doesn’t matter that your mother’s twin is out there with them, and it certainly doesn’t matter that....” She blew out a shaky breath. “It does matter that Diana is here. Goddamnit! I don’t need this right now!” She clenched her hands into fists and dropped onto the bed.
“All right, Chase, all right,” she repeated to herself again, closing her eyes and focusing on taking deep even breaths. “You can do this. You can put all of this out of your mind.” She sat for long minutes and just breathed – in, out, in out. She took every concern that could interfere with the upcoming offensive and put it away in a box in her mind... something she could deal with later. First her mama and the issues she had only just discovered; then Drea and the Amazons that now occupied the entire compound courtyard; and finally Diana.
That one was harder. There were so many variables involved where Diana was concerned. Things Chase hadn’t come to terms with completely herself yet much less discussed with anyone or admitted to Diana. Memories and feelings and desires and needs – anger and friendship, love and lust. Only when she heard the door to her hut open did she allow her eyes to slowly open and her thoughts to return to the present. She looked up to find Shep glaring at her impatiently.
“Chase, what the hell are you doing? I know Harry came to get you. What the hell are you still doing in here? C’mon. We have guests and they might be able to give us an unexpected edge.”
“I’ll be there in a minute, Shep.”
“But....”
“SHEP!!”
He backed out hastily and met Ty’s eyes. She arched an eyebrow and he shook his head, holding his hands up in the universal ‘Beats me’ sign then he started back over to where Ty was waiting. He hadn’t made it but three steps before being shoved out of the way from behind by Chase. Not hard, but enough to make him stumble, and he ran to catch up.
Meanwhile Chase had on her game face and she strode confidently over to where Ty waited flanked by Hippolyta and Drea. Diana remained at the head of the Amazon army waiting for the proper time to be acknowledged by her mother as the leader of said force. With luck, it meant that she would in turn be acknowledged by Chase. Anything to break the stalemate and tension that lingered between them.
Ty blew out a breath of relief. She knew Chase was going to be furious by the unexpected arrival of Amazons, but from all indications – mainly the fact that she hadn’t yet gone completely ballistic – she was at least going to be cordial if not accepting of their presence here.
“Chase, I’m glad you could make it. I was afraid you were going to be too busy,” Ty’s only reproach for the amount of time it took her to arrive after she was summoned. She continued speaking before Chase could reply. “I believe you know Drea,” not mentioning the obvious relationship between Chase and Drea. “And have you met Hippolyta?”
Chase extended her hand to Drea, not even a twitch to betray her thoughts. Certainly no one could have guessed the anger and foul words she had thrown at the older woman only the day before. “It’s nice to see you again, Drea. And Hippolyta, was it?” she asked withdrawing her hand from the healer’s as politely as possible and clasping Hippolyta’s briefly. “I don’t think I have had the pleasure.” She clapped her hands together. “So what can I do for you ladies? Your arrival here was completely unexpected so I really can’t offer you much – maybe some refreshment?”
Hippolyta exchanged glances with both Ty and Drea. Though they had tried to explain a little of the situation to her on the very brief walk, she had expected... had hoped for a little warmer reception. Though given what Chase’s reaction could have been, all things considered, she figured she was ahead of the game with the offer.
Hippolyta nodded and took Chase’s arm, ignoring the flinch she could feel shudder under the skin at her touch. She wondered at the cause – if it was her being an Amazon or the fact that she was Diana’s mother or if there was something more even beyond that.
“Please, Chase. Some refreshment would be most welcome by not only myself but also by my warriors. It has been quite a trip here. Besides, it will give us some time to talk about why we have come.” Hippolyta halted their progress briefly and turned, signaling to Diana. “I believe you know my daughter and the head of the Amazon army, Diana.”
“Yes ma’am, I do,” Chase acknowledged with a nod of her head then turned back to Hippolyta. “C’mon. Let’s see if we can throw Cookie into a tizzy. I highly doubt he is expecting this large a post-breakfast, pre-lunch crowd for snacks.”
Chase and Hippolyta led the way, fully expecting the rest to follow. Ty and Shep did as did the Amazon council, but Diana and the warriors went to the practice field. No one said a word, but they could see in the tension that sang across Diana’s shoulders that they were in for quite the workout indeed. They didn’t realize that work in the encampment had come to a screeching halt and everyone followed after them, anxious to see what was coming.
It was obvious fairly quickly that Diana and the army had failed to follow them into the mess hall and before they could even begin dialogue, Hans rushed in and slid to a stop in front of Chase. “Chase... you’ve got to... oh excuse me,” he said to the small group of people sitting around the table with her. “But Chase, you need to come to the practice field – quickly.”
Chase and Ty exchanged a glance that was the exact replica of the one Hippolyta exchanged with Drea. Then they looked at one another and exclaimed simultaneously, “Diana!”
Chase was out the door before the rest could even get out of their seats, but they were quick to follow. Hans and Shep were the fastest, followed by the council. Ty, Hippolyta and Drea brought up the rear, not conversing, but simply swapping knowing smiles.
When Chase arrived at the field, she couldn’t see anything for all the bodies that blocked her view. However, a simple, deep breath allowed her to project her voice from the depths of her diaphragm and her roar caused everyone and everything to suspend its motion – even the fighters on the field. “What the HELL is going on here?!? Did someone call an unscheduled break and forget to send me the memo??? Get back to work... NOW!!!!”
The rebels scrambled to get back to their tasks, creating a wide berth around Chase in their haste to return to work. Their exodus slowed the arrival of the others so they missed the altercation between Chase and Diana.
The army had frozen as soon as Chase started to bellow. It had honestly startled them, having never actually heard that kind of roar from someone so relatively small. Diana had nudged them aside so by the time Chase finished yelling at the rebels Diana was out of the circle and waiting for Chase’s attention. Chase wanted to... well, there were any number of things she wanted to do, and the confusion she felt showed in a ripple effect across her communicative face. But she schooled her expression before Diana could express any concern.
“Diana,” Chase said, meeting those deep blue eyes but careful not to get too close. “It was unexpected to see you here again. I had hoped you would be on your way home by now.” She looked like she wanted to say more before realizing they had an audience that was listening intently. Diana recognized the reason behind her hesitation and motioned to the army to get back to drilling then gestured to Chase, directing her away from the melee.
“Please, let’s find somewhere to talk a moment that we won’t be interrupted.”
Chase considered, then nodded. She knew she had been unfair to Diana because of her own feelings and confusion, and it wasn’t fair to continue with that treatment, especially since Diana had obviously returned to help and even brought in reinforcements though Chase was still a little unclear on exactly how and why the Amazons were here. Besides, Chase had a handle on her feelings for Diana now, right? She had put them away for the duration, and this would be over and Diana would be gone before she actually had to deal with them.
Chase led the way out of the camp and up towards her thinking hill. Everyone knew when she went there, Chase was going for the peace and solitude it afforded her, and only the direst of circumstances would cause them to disrupt whatever bit of peace she was able to find there.
Hippolyta and the rest arrived just as Diana and Chase stepped into the tree line, and Hippolyta made a move to follow when a hand placed on either arm stopped her progress in its tracks. She looked questioningly at Drea and then Ty.
“They are going there for privacy, Pol. We don’t intrude on Chase when she goes to the hill. It’s the only time she gets a modicum of privacy or peace.”
“Besides, Pol,” Drea continued. “They are going to have to work everything out for themselves sooner or later. Have a little faith.”
Hans and Shep had returned to their duties as soon as Chase had shouted loud enough to be heard in Berlin. The council hadn’t been far behind and had watched with great respect at the speed with which everyone moved when Chase commanded it, then with greater amazement at the sparks they could see flying between Chase and Diana as hard as Chase was trying to avoid it.
“Come,” Mala said, taking Ty’s arm and turning the group back to the compound. “I believe we were going to partake in a bit of refreshment before the late excitement. Do you think Cookie might have had time to prepare a snack by now? I am ravenous.” Not really, but it did accomplish what she had set out to, and soon the little troupe was moving back to the mess hall, marveling at the frantic preparations so apparent now that people were working again.
Diana followed Chase only because the path was narrow and could not accommodate them side-by-side. Several times Chase extended a hand to Diana to help her over a rough spot but immediately released it as soon as she could. Diana held on the last time just before they crested the hill. Chase tried to pull away again until Diana’s low voice stopped her.
“Please, Chase. I’m not going to hurt you. Can’t we at least be friends? I thought we were headed in that direction before.”
Chase’s shoulders slumped in defeat. “We were,” she admitted quietly and walked over to the chest to retrieve a blanket before leading Diana to the edge of the hill. Diana accepted two corners and together they placed the blanket on the soft grass overlooking the water as they had that morning weeks before. Only this time the awkward history between them was out in the open and sitting like a white elephant, making things even more difficult. Finally Chase tried to pick up the thread of their earlier conversation.
“Why are you here, Diana? I had expected... I had hoped you would have returned home. It’s why I left you the jeep – so you could get to an airfield. You don’t have any business here, Diana. This isn’t your fight.”
Diana’s smile was feral, and it sent a chill skittering up Chase’s spine. “Oh this is very much my fight, Chase, for more reasons than you could possibly imagine right now. And though I appreciated the thought of the jeep,” here her smile became playfully mischievous, “you probably should have taught me how to drive it first.”
Chase colored slightly for that oversight. “Oh... sorry. I was mostly focused on getting you out of here,” not mentioning Drea or Jasmine, and Diana let it go in the interest of pursuing other avenues of questioning.
“Why?” blunt and to the point.
Chase shrugged her shoulders and shook her head negatively. “It doesn’t matter.” And she kept her attention on the interesting sparkles the sunlight was creating on the water below.
“It does to me,” Diana said softly. When Chase still didn’t answer, Diana muttered to herself, “Hard to believe you’re the bard here,” but it was spoken too low for Chase to understand. Diana took a deep breath and steeled herself for what was coming next. Then she focused her attention on the water as well and spoke. “Do you want to know why I came here?”
Chase‘s forehead creased in a frown, and she turned to look at Diana. “I had you brought here for your safety as well as that of the rebellion.”
Diana smiled wistfully. “Yes, but do you want to know why I left Paradise Island and came to man’s world? Would you like to know why the fight against Orana is very much my fight? Why I stayed despite everything even when you made it clear I should leave?”
Chase considered, and Diana let her take her time. Chase knew that with this – this crossing the last barrier of knowledge that lay between them – things would change irrevocably. There would be no way for her to pretend she did not know or understand that there was something between them even if it was something she didn’t want. But having reached the bridge, there was no way to turn back. Things would change between them no matter what decision she made. So she turned her face back to the vista that lay before them and nodded.
Chapter XXXVII
“Do you remember the stories your mother told you growing up... about the Amazons and their origins?” Chase blinked; this had not been at all the tack she had expected Diana to take, though she couldn’t have honestly told what she had expected. Diana waited, giving Chase’s mind a minute to catch up, knowing she had caught her completely off guard. Chase swallowed and nodded again, more slowly this time.
“Did she ever tell you the Soulmates’ stories?” At Chase’s blank look she elaborated. “Did Aunt Jasmine,” wincing at the not-quite-hidden flinch that title got her. “Sorry, did Jasmine ever tell you the stories about the warrior and the bard who traveled together across most of the ancient world sharing adventures and doing things for the greater good?”
Now Chase smiled unexpectedly and Diana found herself enchanted by the change in expression. She couldn’t help but respond to the enthusiasm she could feel pouring from Chase.
“Oh yes,” she replied joyfully. “Those were my very favorites. They saw and did so many interesting things together and they seemed... they were so much a part of each other,” she said wistfully. “Even before they became lovers... when they were still just two people getting to know one another... there was something between them.”
“Yes, there was,” Diana agreed quietly.
Chase smiled again, this time a bit wistfully. “Despite the trials and tribulations they faced together, I always wanted them to be real. What they had together was so rare I wanted them to be real just to be able to see that kind of – I dunno... it was more than love and commitment to each other. It was a bonding, almost.”
“It was a bond. They were soulmates.”
“You mentioned that before, but I’ve never heard the term. What are soulmates?” wondering how they had gotten so far afield from Diana’s reasons for coming to man’s world but enjoying the conversation nevertheless. Ty was the only other person Chase had ever talked to about the stories her mother had told, and she found she liked having someone else she could share these things with especially since Diana obviously had her own handle on those same stories.
Diana blinked at Chase’s question. “Your mother never explained soulmates to you?”
Chase shook her head. “No, why would she? It’s not like they were real; they were just stories she told to keep me, and sometimes Ty, entertained and out of trouble for five minutes. She never gave me any reason to think they were more than just stories,” the last added bitterly and Diana knew she was treading dangerously close to thin ice. She almost missed Chase’s whispered comment. “Those stories made me want to be a storyteller when I was a kid before the war took those dreams.”
“Maybe someday, Chase. The war won’t last forever, you know. We’re going to win... soon. We just... we need to settle things between us first so I’m not a distraction and neither of us loses our focus at a critical moment.” A beat. “Would you like to know what soulmates are?”
Chase nodded, watching Diana’s expression in fascination. She had a twinkle in her blue eyes that was lit by an inner fire and just the tiniest hint of a smile graced her lips. Diana indulged herself in a long look at Chase, seeing depths and shadows in the green eyes that gazed back at her. She took Chase’s hands in her own and squeezed them lightly before settling in to tell Chase the story of soulmates that had been a part of Amazon lore since time began. She was gratified when Chase returned the clasp and held on.
“Soulmates are a caprice of the gods and a rarity in any world. They are two whole parts to a single whole entity.” Diana took a deep breath, seeing the confusion in Chase’s face.
“Legend says that at one time, human beings had two heads, four arms, four legs, and a single soul between them. When the gods saw how happy they were, it made them angry. So the gods split humans into two beings and separated the halves they had created, leaving human beings whole but at the same time, incomplete. Most people spend their entire lifetime unconsciously searching for something they don’t even understand they are looking for, And only very rarely and only in some lifetimes do they find that other half. And when those two halves of the same soul find one another again, the two are known as soulmates.”
Diana sighed. That had been exhausting and she wasn’t even to the hard part yet.
Chase thought about Diana’s words. “Wait... are you saying the two women my mother told stories about were more than just stories? That those women really existed... really loved one another?”
“Yes, they did,” with absolute conviction.
“You sound so certain.”
“I am.”
Chase looked at Diana, searching her eyes intently. “Why? How can you be so sure they were real people – real soulmates - and not just the made up figments of some ancient bard’s fertile imagination to make people believe in impossibilities?”
Diana returned the look, and she saw the shift in Chase’s expression when it happened; felt the gasp as an indrawn breath. But instead of pulling away, Chase tightened her hold and tilted her head in a way that rang a bell of sweet memory in Diana’s soul. She smiled gently.
“I know, Chase. I know because I was one of those soulmates.”
Chase stopped breathing. She stopped breathing so long Diana became concerned and then alarmed, and she finally blew air in Chase’s face, forcing an instinctive inhale out of her. Then Chase sat there simply breathing while her mind wrapped around the ramifications of what Diana had said. At last she shook her head and released Diana’s hands so she could stand up and pace.
Diana simply watched. She didn’t feel like Chase was trying to pull away from her as much as she was trying to come to terms with what she had been told. Eventually she came back to where Diana still sat, her attention turned back out at the view. Chase squatted to one side in front of her and waited for Diana’s eyes to track to her.
“You... you’re... how do... um.... Shit!” Chase scratched her head in frustration. Diana took Chase’s hands in her own again and chafed them gently. Then she gave Chase a crooked smile that was at once comforting and familiar.
“Chase... take your time, all right? We’re not in a rush here.”
“Okay... okay.” She dropped to her knees from her crouch and let her gaze drop to their conjoined hands. “How do you know you are one of the soulmates written about in the Amazon chronicles?”
“I have some residual memories from that time – not real memories, but a familiarity... a feeling. It’s kind of hard to explain, but it’s real, Chase. I know it is even without the goddesses’ confirmation.”
Chase just blinked. “The goddesses confirmed...?” She cleared her throat. “Nevermind. If you want to believe that you are the soul of a three thousand year dead warrior, then who am I to say you’re not? But what does that have to do with me and the here and now?”
Now came the really hard part. It was obvious that Chase didn’t quite believe what Diana was saying about herself being part of those ancient soulmates though she did think Diana believed it. It was equally obvious from her reaction yesterday as well as her reaction to her mother’s name earlier that she was still not all that enamored of being an Amazon. Diana wasn’t very confident of the response she was going to get from Chase once she related the rest of her story.
“Chase, I never told you I was the warrior half of the pair; how did you know?” Chase blinked rapidly and swallowed. “But you’re absolutely positive of that knowledge, aren’t you?”
“I... I....”
Diana released one hand and let her free hand comb through Chase’s hair that was being blown into her face by the gentle breeze. “Chase, I know you’ve had a rough time since I arrived... especially the last day or two. But I want you to consider why that is, and why you know in your heart and in your mind and down to the depths of your soul that I am that warrior.”
Silence.
“Chase, I came to man’s world for you.”
“NO!”
“Chase....”
Chase ripped her hands free from Diana’s grasp and stood, rapidly moving to the edge of the hill. She stood staring sightlessly at the water that continued to shimmer and sparkle as it moved on its way, all unknowing of the turmoil that was occurring in Chase’s mind or the hollow ache in her chest only a few feet above its chuckling trickle.
Diana came up behind her more slowly and put her hands lightly on Chase’s shoulders. She felt the tension sing through Chase’s body as though it was a tautly pulled bowstring. Diana removed her hands when Chase shuddered at the sensation of her touch and Chase stiffened to the point that the rigidity in her body was painful to look at.
“Chase,” Diana said softly as her hands fell to her sides. “I did come to man’s world for you. I wanted to give us a chance to maybe at least become friends. After all, we can’t get to know one another if we aren’t in the same world, right? But I also came to settle an old score. I owe Orana, Chase... for what she did to me; for what she did to you; and for what she did to the world. Even if you weren’t my soul....” stopping when Chase flinched again at the implication and feeling the pain of rejection lance through her. “Even if you aren’t....” She cleared her throat and dropped that line of thought. “Let’s just say I owe Orana and leave it at that, all right?”
“No,” flat and unemotional. “No, it’s not all right, Diana. You don’t get to just to show up here and start making those kinds of claims... not on me and not on the rebellion.” Chase turned to face Diana, poking her with great vigor as she protested Diana’s claims with passion. “I don’t care what you think you do or do not owe Orana or your reasons behind it. She is not your responsibility. She’s mine, and I am going to pay her back in full for every ounce of suffering she has caused. This is personal, and I have earned the right! Do you understand me?”
“No, Chase... I don’t,” Diana said softly, biting her lip so as not to let her tears fall. “I don’t understand why you are so willing to die when you know... you KNOW in your heart and soul that what I told you is the truth. You know we are soulmates – the soulmates of legend finally reunited after nearly three millennia of separation! How can you risk that bond so easily? Do you realize how long we have been searching for one another??”
This time green eyes met blue and Diana flinched at the fire and fury she could so clearly read directed at her. “How. Dare. You.” Chase ground the words out from clenched teeth. “How dare you come here and try to put all of this on my shoulders, Diana. I’m not the one who separated those souls in the first place,” refusing to acknowledge in her speech at least that she was the soul Diana had spent her lifetime searching for. “You see, Mama told me all the stories... including how and why the warrior died; how and why the bard was left to wander the world alone. It was only a short length of time that she survived before the pain of grief and their separation caused her to...!” Chase took a deep breath, dropping her chin and turning her face away from Diana once more. Then she spoke again in a more rational tone. “So don’t you dare come here all self-righteous trying to dictate to me and put the blame for your loneliness on my shoulders! I’m not the one who left you and I’m damn sure not the one who took your soul out of the karmic circle. Go talk to your goddesses and leave me alone.”
“No.”
“Excuse me?” turning around to face Diana directly.
“No. I am not going to let you throw away our chance at happiness... our chance for peace! Dammit, Chase! I messed up, and it cost us nearly three thousand years apart from one another! I won’t let you throw it away for spite before you even consider the ramifications of what you’re doing.”
“I know what I’m doing. This isn’t your decision, Diana. It isn’t your choice. It’s mine and I’m not willing to be a part of this. For weeks I have been plagued by thoughts of you – images and feelings and impressions. I have been driven out of my mind trying to reconcile the person I know myself to be with longings and desires and dreams I didn’t understand or want. Now you have the gall to stand here and tell me it’s not my choice?!? I don’t think so.”
Diana took a deep breath. “You don’t think we have suffered apart long enough? You’re willing to give us up forever? For spite?”
“Not for spite,” Chase whispered, the fight having drained out of her. “But yes, I’m willing to give us up forever, Diana, if it means I don’t have to live with losing you again. I can’t invest everything I am into that kind of relationship again. I did that once, and something inside me died when you did. I’m not willing to settle for less than everything from me or from you and it’s just not possible anymore. After more than two millennia, I’ve gotten used to living alone. I can live with the empty ache; at least it’s familiar. I wouldn’t survive a rejoining with you only to have it taken away again.”
Finally Diana saw a ray of hope. “What if I promise you that won’t happen again? What if I can guarantee it?”
Chase smiled sadly. “You can’t promise me that, Diana. If we are the soulmates you claim us to be, then you can’t promise me that. I’ve heard the stories, remember? Even without them, I know your heart. It won’t let you stand by when there are lives to save and innocents to protect. And you have no assurances of surviving the fight that is coming.”
“I do, Chase. I’m an immortal and so are you. It’s your Amazon birthright.” Diana’s pronouncement was met with stunned silence. “Chase? Are you all right?”
Chase blinked. “Is there anything else I need to know?” her voice an aching whisper that verged on the edge of hysteria. “Please... I’m not sure how many more revelations I can stand before my brain explodes.”
Diana shook her head. “Not as far as I know. I have told you everything I know.” More silence. “Please, Chase. All I am asking is a chance for us.”
“Do you understand what you’re asking of me?”
“Yes, but I have to ask, Chase. I have to. We’ve been apart for far too long.” Diana blew out a frustrated breath. “I know the blame for our original separation is mine, and gods, I am so damn sorry for that. But the fact that we weren’t able to find one another again until now isn’t my fault. It’s time for us to be whole again. We deserve a second chance at happiness together, Chase. We deserve it.” Diana waited, but Chase didn’t answer, instead keeping her attention on the vista below them. Diana sighed and made one last-ditch effort. “I’m sorry, Chase. Maybe I am asking for too much too soon. Do you think we could maybe at least try to be friends?”
Chase didn’t move, didn’t reply and this time Diana let the tears come as the rending seared into her soul. She turned to walk away, having said everything she knew to say....
... then stopped when a warm hand gripped her wrist.
Diana looked down. The hold wasn’t painful, but it was firm and it made her turn her attention to the woman who held her in such a solid clasp. Chase was still looking out at the view and Diana relaxed, noting the somewhat tranquil expression on Chase’s face. There were still lines and concerns, but there was also a noticeable difference as though she had come to a decision.
“You’re going to have to give me some time, Diana. You’re going to have to give me some time to consider everything you have said; time to put that against what I know and what I remember and the stories Mama told me about... us. Can you do that?”
“Do you believe we could be an us again... maybe someday?” Diana asked wistfully.
“Maybe someday,” Chase answered honestly, knowing the truth in her heart. She turned her face full towards Diana and gazed into her eyes. “But it won’t be today or tomorrow. It’s going to take time and we’re a little short on that right now.”
“Chase, for the chance of recovering us again, you can have all the time you need. You set the pace things go.” Diana couldn’t help it... she reached up and moved the loose hair that blew across Chase’s eyes. Chase’s eyes fluttered closed and unconsciously she leaned into the light touch. Diana smiled and let her fingers linger only briefly, gently tracing the soft skin before letting her hand drop back to her side. Chase took the hand in hers and held it.
“I know there is something between us, Diana; there has been since the beginning. As much as I have tried to deny it - as much as I have fought against it - I’ve been aware of it without understanding what it is. I can’t keep fighting it.” Chase sighed deeply. “I’m not strong enough to keep fighting, and it is stronger than I am. If you can give me time, I think we can start with being friends again. After that....” Chase shrugged. “Well, we have to get through this offensive first. And we need to end the war. Once we take care of Orana, we will have plenty of time to talk about us.”
“We? Does that mean you are willing to let me and my Amazons be a part of the offensive against Orana and the Reich?”
“It means I am not stupid, Diana. I’ve learned how to use all the resources at my disposal and to turn away an army of warriors would make me very stupid indeed. Question is, will they follow me?”
“They will follow me, Chase, and I will follow you.”
Chase couldn’t stop the smile that crossed her face at Diana’s words any more than she could stop the thought that passed through her mind. Would you be willing to walk beside me Diana and let me walk beside you? But she didn’t speak it aloud. She was running on overload and she knew it. Too much had happened in too short a space of time. She would need time to consider everything and the implications thereof as she had told Diana. But for now it seemed they had a firm foundation for friendship between them. There was honesty and that was a good start.
“All right,” she said aloud. “Let’s go back down and figure out the best way to incorporate your Amazon army into the offensive plan we have ready to go. It’s time to bring this damn war to an end.”
“I like the sound of that,” Diana replied as she bent and snatched up the blanket. She folded it and moved two steps towards the chest before she found her hand caught and held in Chase’s. She grinned so big it rivaled the sun, and she squeezed lightly before they walked to the tree together. Then they headed back down the hill with Chase in the lead only this time she didn’t release the hand she held.
Neither of them could have predicted the news that awaited them when they reached the bottom of the hill.
Chapter XXXVIII
Ty noticed the joined hands as they stepped from the trees, but she didn’t have time to enjoy the moment. She had actually been on her way up the hill when they had reappeared and now she hurried over to them with the radio code in her hands. Chase saw her coming and she met Diana’s gaze reassuringly before Ty reached them.
“Chase, I was just coming to find you,” extending the paper she held. “Diana would you excuse us, please?”
Diana nodded and tried to release Chase’s hand, only to find her own held tightly “No, Ty. Diana is the leader of the Amazon army. On those merits alone, if there have been developments she’s entitled to know. On a personal level, I need her to be part of things.”
Ty blinked. She had never expected something like that to come from Chase’s mouth. But she knew with certainty that Chase trusted Diana and that there was an underlying reason for it.
Diana blinked as well. Given what she knew of Chase, she hadn’t expected such a public declaration especially so soon after the personal war Chase had fought with herself on the hill. Then it occurred to her that Chase was doing her best to keep her promise. By letting Diana into the inner circle, not only on a military level but a personal one as well, she was offering Diana trust and the opportunity to start building the foundation of friendship they needed in order to develop anything deeper between them. Her smile grew exponentially.
Chase returned the look briefly and Ty looked away out of respect. Then she cleared her throat and motioned to the paper Chase still held in her hand. “Um, Chase? You may want to look at that report. The rest haven’t seen this yet and it’s....” Ty stopped speaking when Chase’s attention transferred to the paper she clasped.
She watched as Chase’s eyes tracked through the words and then stop and read through them a second time. Chase’s jaw dropped just slightly and she looked at Ty in complete disbelief. “Are we sure about this? Has it been confirmed?” Ty nodded and Chase crumpled the paper and dropped Diana’s hand. “Goddamn,” turning and walking away from them several steps.
Diana frowned slightly. The words made no sense to her; it was just so much gibberish. Then she realized that the whole thing was written in some sort of code she didn’t have the key to yet. She looked at Chase for an explanation.
Chase held up her hand, a silent plea for patience and Diana acquiesced with a nod. Chase moved back towards Ty until they were standing in one another’s space. “How long? When did this happen?”
Ty blew out a breath and shook her head. “We don’t know for certain. The best we can figure is within the last three weeks.” Then she waited for the explosion she knew was coming.
“Three weeks?? THREE WEEKS?!? Why in the hell are we just now hearing about this?? Goddamn it, Ty! This changes everything!!”
“I know it does, Chase. We think it took this long for the news to reach us because it took this long for the damage to be done. We’re still getting all the reports in. Look, let me call the staff and....” She turned to Diana. “Is there anyone from the Amazons you need as an advisor or confidante?” Diana shook her head.
“No. Having Chase will be all I’ll need. Don’t worry, Ty. I am well-versed in the school of war.”
Ty didn’t understand the remark but nodded her head anyway. “All right then. Let me go call a staff meeting for thirty minutes from now. That will give you time to bring Diana up to speed.”
“Sounds good. Are the Amazons settled?” Ty nodded. “Good. Make sure everyone brings their mission notes. We’re gonna have to make some adjustments. We’ll see you in half an hour,” taking Diana’s hand and leading the way to her quarters. She knew it was the most privacy they could hope for without returning to the hill and there just wasn’t time for that.
Diana was patient until the door closed, then she turned to Chase. “All right... what happened to drain the color from your face, Chase? Are you okay?”
“Physically, yes,” Chase answered with a wan smile. “Let’s sit,” motioning to the bed. Diana seated her, then poured a glass of water from the pitcher on the small stand, watching in concern when Chase drained it. Chase let her hand fall between her knees and dropped her chin to her chest for a long moment before she met Diana’s eyes and patted the space beside her. “Thanks,” she said, putting the glass back on the table.
“The first reason our offensive was delayed was because of that death cocktail Orana and her team developed. Hans spent a very long time working on an antidote, and of course, you were able to give him the impetus he needed to get over that last hump. Another was the new armor piercing rounds we found out about just before we were ready to launch the last time. The mission that landed me on Paradise Island was in fact the one that gave us the specifics on the ammo that caused us to postpone the operation yet again while we tried to find a way to defend ourselves against it.”
Diana nodded, figuring there was a reason for the brief history lesson.
“So twice we have postponed this mission – the mission to finally rid the world of Orana – to ensure that a majority of the rebellion survives. Makes sense, right? Kind of pointless to defeat the evil if no one is alive to enjoy it... especially if we simply create a vacuum for another evil to slip into its place with no one left to defeat that one, right?”
Diana nodded again, and again silence fell between them. Diana could tell by the evenness of Chase’s breathing she was forcing herself to concentrate so as to maintain her calm. She waited.
“So today... just now... we get the news that sometime within the last three weeks, Orana had a dozen different villages purged. All over the world and apparently randomly, but twelve different towns across the planet are simply empty shells now. Every living thing – man, woman, child... hell, even the animals were brutally massacred. She is going to make an announcement about it tomorrow night. A worldwide address to show the consequences for questionable loyalty.”
A long pause, then Diana spoke. “Gods, Chase. That’s....”
“Yeah... because of my hesitation, innocents have been murdered!”
“Oh no, Chase... NO! The blame for this falls squarely on Orana’s shoulders – not yours and not mine. What you did was make a decision that kept people alive; she went in and destroyed everything without a single regard for those who were loyal to her. We will avenge them, Chase... all of them but especially those who were part of the resistance.”
Chase sat quietly, examining her hands while she considered Diana’s words. Finally she looked up and smiled. “Thank you, Diana.”
Diana smiled back. “Any time, Chase. That’s what friends do for each other, right? They stick together.” A beat. “Now come on. I need something to eat. I only got a bite of breakfast before I got called to go to the gate to meet the incoming Amazon army, and I’m starving.”
Chase blinked. “Come to think of it, I could do with a cup or six of coffee. Let me get my notes and we’ll swing by the mess hall for a snack before we head to the conference room.”
“Does the massacre change anything...?” Diana hesitated when Chase’s accusing eyes turned her way. “From a mission perspective, Chase. I know it changes things for you personally. It does the same for me, and I don’t even have any real ties to any of the people who were killed.”
Chase ran a hand through her hair and scratched the back of her neck in awkward embarrassment. “My fault,” she said briefly. “I shouldn’t be so damn touchy about things especially with you. I promised you I would work at us being friends, and....”
“Chase,” Diana cut in, placing her hand on Chase’s arm. “I know it’s going to take a while. Real friendship takes time to develop, and we have several issues to get around besides just trying to be friends. If this is going to be too hard for you to do now, it can wait until we win the war. I will be just another member of the staff.”
Chase smiled wryly and shook her head. “Much as we’d like to think we had some semblance of control going on here, it just never works like that. Besides I need to get past this and the only way that’s going to happen is with a lot of awkward and embarrassing moments between us for a while. You’re right... I’ve got a lot of baggage, and it would be really nice if we had time to go through it all and have things nicely settled between us before we had to go to work. But we don’t have that luxury. We also don’t have time for you to coddle me through it. All right? If we’re gonna be friends, you’re gonna have to learn when to step back and when to give me a swift kick in the ass.”
Diana looked at her boots, then in the direction of Chase’s ass, then at her boots again before she let her gaze drift back to those green eyes, stopping long enough at her ass again to warrant a smirk and a twinkle. Only supreme self-control kept her from blushing.
“Gotcha. A swift kick in the... <ahem> ass. Would you like me to do so now?”
Chase did a double take to see if she was serious, then caught the mischief in those eyes that was signaling for her attention. “Not literally,” she growled, then grabbed Diana’s hand and tugged her towards the mess tent. Now she needed more than coffee.
“Back to my question,” Diana said as they crossed the threshold. “Does the massacre change any of the logistical planning? Did we lose operatives or launch sites... things of that nature?”
Chase shook her head and took a swallow of the coffee, grimacing at its bitter taste. She glared in Cookie’s direction and he held up his hands in apology, then he began assembling a tray of food for them. Chase turned her attention back to Diana who had watched the interplay between her and Cookie without comment. She put the coffee down to add something... anything... to it to make the taste a little more palatable, noting that Diana was still stirring.
“Not that I can tell at first glance. But then the missive Ty gave me was very general in its message. She should have more details for me when we get to the conference room.” She paused when Cookie approached. “Thanks, Cookie,” accepting the tray he offered her.
“Sorry about the coffee, Chase. You got the bottom of the pot. Um... am I supposed to do anything special about all them women?” Chase and Diana both looked at him dumbly and he hastened on. “I mean they didn’t eat or drink anything while they were in here. Are they gonna need something different from the rest of the troops or...?”
Diana chuckled. “No, Cookie. Like every other warrior you know, they will eat whatever you put in front of them. Unlike Chase here, most of us don’t go foraging for food if we don’t have to,” earning her a hearty laugh from Cookie and another glare from Chase. “Just call them when you’re ready to feed them. I guarantee you they’ll come and eat.”
“I know where you live, ya know,” Chase growled. Diana bit her lip to keep from chuckling, but that didn’t keep the sparkles out of her eyes. Cookie didn’t exercise Diana’s control and guffawed loudly holding his belly. Chase popped him but that only caused him to laugh louder. “I remember a time when I had a semblance of control here. What happened to that exactly?” she muttered as she made her way to the door, shaking her head and continuing to mumble to herself.
Diana and Cookie exchanged glances and grins, then Diana hurried after Chase’s retreating figure.
************
“We have a problem,” Ares said as he orbed into Orana’s bedroom. She was busy getting dressed for the worldwide appearance she had scheduled for later that evening.
“Don’t you ever knock?”
Ares snorted. “Why should I? Not like I haven’t seen it all before.”
“That’s not the point, Ares. A little respect here wouldn’t be out of line, you know.” She shook her head at his dumbfounded look and tucked her shirt in. “Nevermind, Ares. What’s the problem? I know this isn’t about the purging I did, even though it took longer than I wanted it to. You already expressed your pleasure about that tactic... several times and in a variety of positions.”
Ares smiled. “And I look forward to a repeat in the near future. But business first.”
“What business, Ares? I purged twelve villages and towns across the planet. I’ve collected information on the resistance that will enable me to put the fear of... well, me into them. I am presenting my ultimatum tonight. Everything is on track because the rebellion and the resistance won’t give up without a fight; you know that as well as I do. What could be more important than that?”
“How about an Amazon Princess?”
Orana froze mid-motion. It took a solid minute before she took a deep breath and only then did she turn her head to meet Ares’ eyes. His head was cocked and one eyebrow was raised and he was wearing the infernal smirk she despised so much.
“Excuse me?” she questioned. “What did you just say? Are you telling me...?”
“You remember that lovely bit of Amazon flesh you lusted after for millennia? The Princess who considered you a friend and mentor and nothing more, despite the obvious desire you had for her? The one you stole the title of Wonder Woman from and then proceeded to beat and humiliate within a inch of her life....”
“ENOUGH!!!” Orana roared.
“But I was just getting warmed up,” Ares whined. “It gets better.”
“Shut up, Ares, and get to the goddamn point!”
“My, my... such language. Which do you want me to do – shut up or get to the point?”
“Get. To. The. Point.” She ground out from between clenched teeth. “What does she have to do with anything... especially the coming fight with the rebellion?”
“She’s been spotted.”
“Spotted? Where... here in man’s world?”
“Yes, here in man’s world; and even better... here in Berlin.”
Orana’s eyes glowed, a combination of hatred and lust. The look made Ares shiver in arousal as well as the tiniest kernel of fear. “Where is she? When did you see her?”
“I was reviewing some of the scrying records. You remember we talked about those odd photographs you got with breakfast? I did some looking around; she’s been here.”
Orana considered his words carefully. “You think she may be what was causing the stir a few weeks ago... the one Adelia was talking about?”
He stroked his beard thoughtfully. “I think it bears looking into. If she’s here, it could complicate things immensely.”
“If she’s here, I will find her. She won’t be able to resist the temptation of trying to defeat me again. And when she tries, she will be mine.”
“Orana, don’t lose focus here. If Diana is here, the odds are she is part of the resistance or the rebellion. Please don’t underestimate her... or them. If you don’t take them seriously....”
“I take them seriously enough, Ares. I just plan to thoroughly enjoy my conquest of Diana... all my conquest of Diana as well as the final, humiliating defeat of the resistance here and the rebellion overseas. My overseers have grown lazy. I will put the fear of the Fuehrer into them as well as the rest of the world. And then I will crush them all.”
Ares watched Orana with more than a hint of concern in his eyes. She was sounding less and less like the woman he had mentored upon her arrival in man’s world and more like an obsessed madwoman. Then he lost that train of thought when she rubbed up against him like a cat in heat.
“However, tomorrow is soon enough to worry about conquering and destroying. After the announcement is made, Adelia will be coming back here to celebrate with me. Would you like to join us?” A hard, fast kiss was her answer, and Orana pulled away with a laugh. “Then let’s not keep the people waiting, War God. We have more important business to take care of tonight.”
He reached for her cape and placed it on her shoulders. She pinned it together at the neck with an emblem she had crafted for herself alone – one that showed her Amazon heritage as well as her power as the Nazi Fuehrer. An intriguing image and not one she flaunted about very often.
Ares opened the door and offered his arm. Orana accepted and they walked out and down the hall towards the square where everything had been prepared for Orana’s worldwide announcement.
************
Chase rubbed her eyes. “We can’t postpone this again.”
“But Chase....”
“NO, Ty. I know the risks. But if we don’t go now, it may be impossible. You know and I know that given the facts, the Fuehrer is going to do her damnedest to twist this to make it work for her. We got lucky – she has gotten so sloppy and arrogant, she managed to destroy more of her own loyalists than she did resistance members. But if we don’t move now... show them that we mean business about this... WE may be the ones that destroy the rebellion.”
“She’s right, Ty. It’s a show of assurance more than anything. Otherwise people start to lose faith. Then what?”
Ty looked around. “Diana?”
Diana sat quietly for a long moment, looking around the council room. What she found was reassuring. These people had worked long and hard together; they had a confidence in each other’s abilities that had been hard won. They had even expressed confidence in her after seeing the Amazons train with and without her that morning. She understood Ty’s concern; regardless of how careful they were or how well they planned, people were going to die. But there would never be a better time than the present. At least implementing the plan and moving towards its completion would give hope. And sometimes that was the best weapon to have on one’s side.
“If we’re taking a vote, I say go now. We can improvise as things unfold, but this offensive offers hope. If we’re not moving when Orana makes her announcement, we could lose an immeasurable level of confidence. And without that....”
Chase nodded her agreement and waited for any more input. When none was forthcoming, she looked around the room. “All right. Send out the signals for them to make preparations for our arrival. We start leaving in an hour in fifteen minute increments; one of you to each wave.”
“What about you, Chase? We only have five waves going including the Amazons. We sent for another cargo plane as soon as they arrived. It should be here with just enough time for us to refuel, flight check it and load,” Mitch answered her unspoken question. Chase nodded her approval.
“Good job, Mitch. I’ll be flying the Tiger. Hans has made some improvements on it for me. I should be able to leave last and arrive first.” That statement got lots of raised eyebrows. “Make sure each of you gets something to eat and meets with your squad leaders. Explain everything in detail. I don’t want any screw-ups. We will have a final briefing with everyone in the square just before takeoff. Let’s go people. We have a war to win.”
Chapter XXXIX
“Hey, Chase... you got a minute?” She sighed and turned to find Shep behind her; she stopped walking long enough for him to catch up. Then they resumed their movement towards the lab that had been Chase’s original destination. She had sent her staff off with a nod; Diana had understood her unspoken request and had gone off to check on the Amazons. She wondered why Shep hadn’t taken the hint. Even Hans had rushed ahead to be sure to have things ready without interfering with her train of thought.
They went about ten steps without Shep speaking and Chase stopped walking and looked at Shep impatiently. “Shep, is there something I can do for you? You have things to take care of before we leave and so do I.”
“I just wanted to make sure you were all right. You’ve been all over the place lately and Jen and I have been more than a little worried about you. Especially since you ordered us to move in broad daylight. Chase, are you sure about this? It’s so dangerous.”
“Shep, if you can’t do this tell me and I will find someone who can. I don’t have time for your doubts.”
He didn’t answer immediately and Chase turned to walk away. His hand on her arm stopped her progress and she looked down at his hand before looking at his face. Shep took his hand off her arm slowly and dipped his head.
“Sorry, Chase. It’s not doubts... it’s concern. I don’t know who or what Diana is to you, but something happened to you during that week you were gone. And it only got worse when Diana got here. I just want to know that you’re all right... that you’re ready for this.”
Chase smiled and took Shep’s arm, turning them around and walking them back towards the center of the encampment. “Shep, I appreciate your concern and I do understand where it’s coming from. What is or isn’t between me and Diana is private and has nothing to do with the rebellion or this offensive. We have to leave in the daylight so we get there in the dark. Don’t worry, Shep... I’ve worked the schedule and the flight paths to draw the least attention possible to our departures. But we need to arrive after dark so we can traverse the countryside safely.”
He nodded, knowing Chase was absolutely right.
“Trust me, Shep. I’ve made the adjustments to compensate for the changes, all right?”
“All right, Chase... thanks.”
Shep saluted and took off at a fast jog to get back to the hut he shared with Jen. She had promised to pick up lunch for the two of them while he talked to Chase. Chase turned back and made her way to the laboratory, anxious to get this offensive started so they could get it over with.
Hans stuck his head out the door when he heard the footsteps. He wondered what had taken Chase so long to follow him, but a look at the frustration on her face kept his mouth shut until she spoke.
“Hey, Hans. Sorry for the delay. You got the stuff I asked for?”
“Yes. Chase, are you sure about this?”
Chase smiled wryly at Hans, then gave him a brief, reassuring hug before retreating enough to look at the things he had laid out for her perusal. “I’m as sure as I’m gonna get, Hans. No time for doubts and second guessing.”
“But Chase, the fuel is untested outside the lab, and we’ve only tested the tweaks we did on the motor in short flights.”
“Have a little faith, Hans. We do good work together. We always have. I’m gonna come back and tell you what a rush it is to fly that fast, and then you’re gonna go joy riding and maybe even invite Ty along for a little thrill.”
He blushed slightly but nodded his agreement. “All right, Chase. I’m going to hold you to it. And I will tell you, if you make me worry like I did the last time you went off... if I have to come over there and save your butt, I will call you Annabelle until the day I die.”
Chase mock-shuddered, appreciating the banter for the stress relief it was. She picked up her armor and the few special accoutrements she’d had him add strictly for her. “That’s reason enough for me to bring her home without a scratch.” A beat. “Thanks, Hans. Hold down the fort for me, will ya? And don’t let that Amazon Queen and her council run you ragged.”
“They’re staying here?!?”
“I guess. Since she handed over the leadership of the army to Diana, I doubt she’s gonna be going. I haven’t really had a chance to find out. But if they do stay, be nice, but not indulgent.”
Hans smiled. “Got it. And you be careful. I want to visit that farm of yours; maybe learn how to milk a cow or sow oats or bake bread or whatever it is you do on a farm.”
Chase looked down at her hands and smiled sadly. “All right, Hans. When I get back, we’ll see about making a farmer outta you. BUT you have to ask Ty out, too.” She held up her hands before he could protest. “If I have to teach you how to farm, the least you can do is ask the woman to dinner.”
Hans chuckled. “Chase, if you both come back I’ll ask her out. I enjoy my laboratories too much to be a real farmer.” He opened his arms for a hug and she stepped into the embrace. “Thanks for being my friend, Chase, and thank you for saving my life.”
“It was a life worth saving, Hans, and I’m proud to count you as a friend.”
Hans kissed both cheeks and released her, and Chase picked up her gear and left without a backwards glance.
Chase crossed the threshold into her hut and stopped dead. On her desk sat a steaming hot bowl of soup and two thick sandwiches accompanied by a tall glass of what appeared to be iced tea. She blinked at it a minute, fully expecting it to disappear. When it didn’t, she looked around for company, but she didn’t have that either.
She carefully placed her equipment on the bed, then turned back to the desk. There was a note next to the napkin and she picked it up with a smile. Figured one of us needed to make sure you got a chance to eat. See you shortly. Diana
Chase smiled at Diana’s thoughtfulness and thought about cramming a sandwich into her mouth on her way to the showers given how hungry she suddenly found herself to be. She shook her head. Her enjoyment of the meal was warranted given the time and effort Diana had made to ensure she had a meal to eat before they left. Instead she covered the soup bowl and snatched up her towel and clean underwear. She would set a world’s record for getting clean, and then come back to her hut and enjoy the meal with a rarely felt luxury.
Chase rushed through her ritual bathing though she was careful to follow every step. She was even completely dry before slipping into her clean clothes, but she moved with greater speed than she normally used. Then she was back in her hut enjoying soup that had cooled to a comfortably warm temperature and eating sandwiches so big she could barely take a bite out of them.
Ty briefly wondered what had happened. She had never seen Chase go in and out of her traditional shower that quickly before, but then the Amazons came back in from the direction of the river obviously scrubbed clean. Ty shook her head, speculating if Chase realized her ritual to be clean before an upcoming mission was based in Amazon tradition. Then she shrugged and decided it didn’t matter as long as it worked Chase’s normal voodoo magic.
Ty nodded at them on her way back to her hut, needing to go prepare her armor and dress before time ran short. The Amazons filed into the mess hut with single-minded determination. Diana broke apart from them and headed towards Chase’s hut.
“Diana?” She sighed and her shoulders dropped before she turned and faced her mother. She waited quietly, unwilling to address Hippolyta as her mother and uneasy about calling her by her name after being put in charge of the army.
Hippolyta was a little disappointed that Diana didn’t address her at all, but she was gratified that Diana held her gaze evenly and without rancor. That was something that hadn’t happened in over a hundred years, and Hippolyta let herself relish the experience until Diana’s gaze became piercing and one eyebrow arched sharply.
“Oh... my apologies, Diana. I just wanted to ask if it was all right with you if I went along on this mission as well. Not as the queen and not as your mother,” she continued before Diana could protest. “I would like to go as an Amazon warrior.”
Diana blew out a breath and turned away from Hippolyta. The truth was she could understand Hippolyta’s desire to go. She had been one of their greatest warriors before the Nation had been relocated to Paradise Island. Diana had actually been a little surprised that Hippolyta had handed over leadership of the army for this mission.
“Why did you make me the leader of the army for this operation?” not turning around to look at Hippolyta as she asked the question. “You would have gone as the queen and as a warrior.”
“Diana, I have made a mess of everything I have done in the last hundred years where you are concerned, but not about this. This is your fight, Diana. You deserve the right to lead the army against Orana. You, more than anyone, have the right to retribution – not just for what she did to you but for what she did to your mate as well. I would never stand in the way of that.”
“Chase is not my mate,” fiercely, turning to look at her mother with a burning look in her eyes.
“Maybe not yet, Daughter, but she will be.”
The confirmation was unlooked for and it unexpectedly warmed Diana’s heart just a little. Hippolyta saw it, but she wisely contained her reaction, not wanting it to disappear on her account. Instead she answered the plea she could just see hidden at the very back of Diana’s eyes.
“I’ve seen the way she looks at you.” Hippolyta took a deep breath. “Diana... Daughter... I wouldn’t lie to you about this. Despite everything else I have managed to do wrong, I wouldn’t lie to you about anything. Trust me, Diana, please.” A brief pause. “I know there are some things between us that no amount of time or apologies or regret will ever be able to repair. But you can trust me, Diana... especially about this.”
Diana blew out a deep breath and turned back towards Chase’s hut. “I won’t stop you from joining us on this offensive. You are one of the best warriors the Amazon Nation ever produced, and I am not stupid enough to not utilize every asset at my disposal. I’ll leave the decision up to you.”
“I would like to go, Diana; I just don’t want to make things tough for the army with my presence. Not that I think they would have difficulty following you; you’re a natural leader and a greater warrior than even I was. But it is hard to break thousands of years of ingrained protocol and tradition.”
Diana remained silent not wanting to influence Hippolyta’s decision, but she did turn to look at her.
“How would you feel if I went as an assistant healer?” Diana didn’t answer and Hippolyta realized she wouldn’t. Diana really was leaving the decision completely up to her, and somehow that knowledge made the choice easier. “I think I will stay here and prepare for the victory party because you know if we leave the rebels in charge of that we will get....” Here she made a face. “Coffee and fried sugar bread.”
Diana smirked. “You mean donuts?”
“I suppose. Now really... where did they come up with such a thing?? No – I will stay here. Amazons know how to throw a good party, and no one is better suited for doing that than the queen, right?”
“As you say,” Diana agreed without actually committing herself.
“Good! Then it’s decided.” Diana nodded and started for Chase’s hut once more. “Diana....” She stopped walking but didn’t turn around. “Thank you for giving me the choice. I appreciate the consideration.”
Diana didn’t answer except to nod again, then she walked away with a purposeful step. Hippolyta smiled, watching her go and thanking the goddesses for sending Chase to Amazons and Diana to Chase. Already Chase had changed Diana’s attitude towards her mother and for the first time in a long, long time, Hippolyta was looking towards the future.
************
Knock, knock.... “Chase?” Silence. “Chase, it’s Diana.” Still no answer. Diana bit her bottom lip in contemplation, then opened the door a crack just to see if Chase was actually in the hut. What she found surprised her.
Chase was sitting at the desk, eyes half closed in meditation. The dishes in front of her were bare of food, including crumbs and the napkin had been neatly refolded and was covering the bowl. Chase didn’t move when Diana slipped into the room, and Diana took the opportunity to remove the tray from the desk. When she turned back to Chase, she found bright green eyes focused intently on her.
Chase didn’t speak; she simply held out her hand and Diana took it. Chase led her around to sit on the only clear corner of the bed, then released her grip and folded her own hands together. “What can I do for you, Diana? Shouldn’t you be getting ready? Have you eaten?”
“Nothing... I just wanted to make sure you ate. I am ready, and yes... Cookie fed me while he was preparing your tray.”
“You just wanted to make sure I ate, huh? Well, I did and it was very good. Thank you for thinking of me. I would have just grabbed a couple trail bars to chew on the way out.”
Diana smiled and looked around nervously. Chase was exuding a raw energy now, a feral sense of danger that Diana was accustomed to wearing, not seeing in someone else, and Chase didn’t even seem aware of the change in her demeanor.
“Diana, are you all right?” wondering why Diana seemed so uncomfortable. The question was full of concern and it made Diana smile. Diana straightened and put her warrior face on, letting her own dark energy rise to the surface. Chase watched the change take place and shivered in pure reaction. Diana turned and gave Chase a feral smile.
“I am fantastic, thank you for asking. I can’t tell you how I’m looking forward to this.”
Chase grinned. “You don’t have to – I know.”
Diana motioned to the bed. “Yours is different. And you have more accoutrements.”
Chase nodded. “The parameters of my mission are a little more restrictive than everyone else’s. I have to prepare for it a little differently.”
Diana looked over each piece of Chase’s equipment, noting the thicker guards she had added to her thighs and back. She picked up the belt that held half a dozen syringe vials, and understood instantly just exactly what Chase’s plan was and just exactly how close to Orana she would need to get. Diana turned and met Chase’s eyes squarely.
“You are planning on coming back, right? Because if you’re not, I’m coming with you.”
“Actually I was planning on you coming with me regardless.”
Diana blinked and then scooped Chase into her arms for an exuberant hug. “Thank you, Chase.”
Chase smiled and returned the embrace fervently. Whatever doubts she had about herself and about the Amazon situation and even about the upcoming mission, this felt right.
They pulled apart after a long moment and Chase held on to Diana’s hands. “Diana, you have proven to be a worthy ally and a very capable warrior. Even if we weren’t trying to be friends; even without our souls having a past together or you having a personal reason to extract justice from Orana; I know you are the best choice for a partner to watch my back. All the rest just gives you added incentive.”
Diana didn’t respond verbally, but the fierce light in her eyes and the feral smile on her lips was an answer all its own. Without warning, she leaned down and brushed her lips over Chase’s, feeling Chase freeze before she pulled back.
“Sorry, Chase. I just....”
“Shh....” Chase said, covering Diana’s lips with her fingers. “It’s all right, Diana. I’m just not... I’m not ready... I’d like to be, but....”
“Shh....” Diana said, returning the favor. “My fault, Chase. I didn’t mean to; it’s just... that’s the first time in forever that someone - that you - have looked at me with such trust and confidence and....”
“Diana?”
“Hmm?”
“You’re babbling.” Diana blushed and Chase chuckled. It was nice to know Diana was as discombobulated as she was about the whole situation between them. “That’s okay, Diana. I think it’s cute,” and got to watch the slow blush travel up Diana’s face. “But I’ve got to get ready to go and I’m running short on time. Maybe we can finish this when we get back?”
“You bet we can,” Diana smiled. “I’ll see you in the courtyard?”
“Ten minutes.”
Diana pulled away from Chase and left before she could do anything else rash. They had a war to finish and an Amazon to destroy. Then they would have plenty of time to investigate this wonderful, giddy feeling that felt old and new again at the same time. And there was no way in hell she was going to let Orana or anything else on earth stop that from happening.
Then Chase stepped from her hut and a cheer went up from the hundreds of rebels gathered in the square. It was time.
Chapter XL
“Damn, it’s dark out here,” Ty mumbled, walking carefully to keep from stumbling and sliding through the mud. The darkness and rain had been their friend when they had arrived over the continent. It had enabled them to fly beneath the radar perimeter around the capital and drop in closer than they had hoped. Just as well since the weather was making it very slow going to get into position for the announcement Orana was going to make later that evening. Ty was glad they had fifteen or sixteen hours to work with. She was afraid it would take them that long to get into place and even with the sleep they had all gotten on the plane, they were going to need some rest to fight effectively tonight.
Chase had been the last to leave the rebel compound, and no one had seen her since. Her plan had been ingenious though and Ty knew Chase was somewhere ahead of them.
It was an eerie feeling. Ty knew she wasn’t alone, but due to the rain and the darkness and the silence surrounding her, she felt isolated. She wiped the rain out of her eyes and blinked rapidly. Then she checked her watch and smiled. With any luck, she and her squadron would reach their safe house within the next few minutes and then they would have the daylight to rest in before darkness fell again and they made the final short journey to the barracks they had been assigned to destroy. Ty only hoped they were as successful as Chase’s plan had shown they could be.
************
Shep and his unit were making their way to the northernmost resistance stronghold. It was slow going in the darkness, but he had peace about this mission. Chase had planned well, and the changes she had made along with the addition of the Amazons had put the odds firmly in their favor. Not just to put an end to this war but for most of them to survive it to begin a brave new world together.
His biggest concern was that no one except Chase was privy to what Chase’s part in the plan was, and no one had seen her since they had departed the compound. He sent a prayer up for her safety, then picked up his pace. Making this work depended on him and his team making it into the stronghold before daylight; it was up to them to coordinate the rest of the world for the attack. In silence they pushed on, keeping to the trees and the bushes so as not to be seen by the dim moonlight that cast its waning light over the land.
************
Diana was torn between concern and anger. She hadn’t been allowed to ride in the plane with Chase; Hans had forbidden it and given his reasoning, Diana had been unable to argue. The modifications they had made to the airplane had been based strictly upon Chase’s height and weight specifications. So Diana had ridden across the ocean with some of her Amazons.
That hadn’t been bad; it had helped Diana forge a deeper bond between her and the leaders of the Amazon army. To their delight, they found that the warrior princess they remembered had returned to them at last. And they were excited by the prospect of being led by her. Their part in Chase’s plan was right up their alley.
But Diana hadn’t seen Chase since they had arrived on the continent. They had been the first to leave as they had the farthest to travel on foot; Diana knew that Chase had been the last. They had missed the worst of the weather so far which had helped them make good time towards Berlin. Chase had promised to find her, and Diana believed Chase had meant her words. Yet they had been traveling for several hours on foot and she had seen neither hide nor hair of Chase.
“Do not worry, Princess,” one of her captains commented quietly. “She will find you.”
Only the warrior stoicism Diana wore kept her startlement from showing in her expression; even her eyes were kept carefully blank. She did turn and look a question at the woman who spoke, recognizing her as a priestess of the temple. The woman nodded when she realized Diana knew who she was.
“I believe, Princess. I have faith in what you are to be together.”
“How does that help me in the here and now, Anya?”
“For there to be a future, there must be a foundation of trust. If she breaks her word to you now, how can there be trust between you? Therefore she will find you.” A beat. “I’ve read the stories, Princess. I know who she is... and who she was... and who she will be once more.”
“Does everyone? Is this common knowledge?”
“No, Princess. The only reason I am aware is I helped Mala with the research when you started asking questions about soulmates. I helped her put all the pieces together.” Diana nodded, but didn’t speak. Anya felt compelled to reassure her further. “Princess, no one within the Nation knows beyond the council and myself, and I would never betray that trust. Besides, this news it not mine to share. It’s yours, if and when you feel compelled to do so. I wouldn’t have mentioned it if it wasn’t obvious to me that you were searching for her and that search is taking your attention from our mission.”
The rebuke was mild, but Diana felt it sharply. She nodded briskly. “You’re right, Anya. Thank you for the reminder. I’ll keep my mind focused and trust Chase to keep her word.”
Anya might have answered, but suddenly Diana stopped walking and held up her hand. The Amazon army halted and melted into the trees as a Nazi patrol made its way towards them. The soldiers had no time to appreciate the fact that they were dead men walking as in very short order they were simply dead men. The Amazons dropped in behind them, snapping their necks and letting the bodies fall silently to the ground. Diana looked at her hands, clean of blood and wondered how there could be no mark upon her for the life she had just taken. She thought she should feel some sort of guilt or remorse for the death she had caused and maybe later she would, but for now she only felt relief and gratitude for her skills and being alive.
The flick of her wrist and the Amazons cleared the road, moving the men out of sight and up into the trees where they wouldn’t be found. Mankind had lost the ability to think and fight three dimensionally and the Amazons were happy to use that to their advantage. Then they started back towards Berlin at a double time jog. The brief fight and subsequent clean-up had cost them precious time and even with the head start they’d had, they were going to be cutting it close. And since they were infiltrating the capital city itself, they definitely wanted to be in place before the sun came up.
Diana sent a prayer up for Chase’s safety, then she picked up the pace as the outline of the buildings coming into sharp focus. Diana felt the fire stir in her blood and smiled. She was looking forward to this.
************
Chase drew a deep breath. Even though it was dark out, the square in front of the Reichstag was well-lit as though in defiance of the resistance and any rumors of a rebellion uprising. There were a number of workmen trying to accomplish several different tasks. There were some who were scrubbing and cleaning the streets around the square. Others were busy painting the buildings and polishing the brass fixtures. A third group was busy stringing wires and lights in preparation for Orana’s announcement that evening.
Chase sat in the bell tower over looking the square. Behind her sat the tower guard asleep at his post, compliments of Chase’s and Hans’ efforts in the lab. If it had been later in the day he would be dead but she couldn’t risk the exposure yet. Soon it wouldn’t matter, but for now discretion was definitely the better part of valor. Chase had to live long enough to take care of Orana.
Her vantage point gave her an excellent view of everything going on below, which would be extremely useful when the Amazons arrived. Chase looked at her watch, squinting in the waning moonlight, then nodded in satisfaction. She could just make out the beginnings of a lightening of the sky in the east. And only because she was looking for it and knew exactly what to look for did she see the Amazons enter the city. She wondered if Diana would find her before she could get to Diana.
Chase smiled. Diana had been cute in her frustration about being separated from Chase after Chase had assured her they were going to go against Orana together. Only when Chase promised to find her before she went after Orana did Diana relent and leave with the first wave.
A commotion in the square caught her attention and she looked out to find Orana outside investigating the progress that had been made by the workers. They doubled their speed, not wanting to be punished for lax or shoddy work. Surprisingly Orana simply looked around, pointing out a few things that remained and then turned and walked back into the Reichstag with studied nonchalance. It was obvious to Chase that she was trying to give an appearance of calm control. She wondered if the woman who was Fuehrer had any idea how truly despised she was or how hated her reign had become.
Chase’s eyes continued to watch the preparations being completed at a fairly quick pace while her mind wandered back to the stories that had been passed down through her family for generations – since they had happened a hundred years before when Orana had become the Fuehrer.
When Steve Trevor had returned from Bermuda, rumors followed of a woman who had the strength of ten men, the speed of a moving car and the ability to stop bullets. But before any investigation could be done, their spies reported the same phenomenon taking place in Berlin. Only this woman was taken directly into the heart of the Reichstag to meet with Hitler and his generals and she never came out.
Instead she became first Hitler’s confidante and enforcer, then according to rumor, she became his lover and advisor. Eventually Hitler faded out of the scene completely, dead from causes that didn’t bear close examination. It didn’t actually matter; by that point, Orana had a firm grasp on the entire Nazi regime, and the generals cowed or they died.
She did lead the Nazis to victory, but victory was not at all what they expected it to be. Things did improve some, but never back to even pre-war standards. And for a people who had expected to be at the top of the world once they won the war that was quite a blow to morale. They had expected to be living in luxury, but except for a very few, the people toiled hard everyday for the bits they had just as they had always done for centuries. To have lost sons and daughter to such an outcome made them bitter, but the relaxation of restrictions had made them less than eager to upset the applecart either. It was easier just to live with the known than to step into the unknown again and perhaps have yet another war with less-than-favorable results.
Orana had also signed an agreement with Japan that allowed them regency of the Far East territories for a large chunk of the profits. The Japanese had argued briefly, but Orana had been glad to show them the error of their ways and they had capitulated rather quickly after that, understanding well that part of the pie was better than no pie at all. It was easier to let the Japanese fight and die for the bounty she received. Her advisors had argued against such action, feeling the Nazis deserved all the pie. They had seen the futility of such an idea at the end of a noose. She didn’t have the time or the patience to explain it to men too stupid to understand it without being told anyway.
Exterminating the Jews in Europe had robbed the Nazis of many of the minds and skills they had once depended on, and there had been no recovery from that devastation. Thousands had escaped and disappeared but millions had died. Only because Orana felt it a waste of resources and manpower did any of the race survive – mostly in America. This too caused hard feelings as many felt that the Jews and the blacks and all the rest who failed to fit the Aryan mold should be rounded up and either completely wiped out or made to serve the regime as all who lived beneath Orana’s boot had to.
Most felt the same about those who lived in America; because of their indifference to the plight of the English and the French, no supplies had been given to them and few Americans had joined the fight to keep the Nazis from overrunning the European continent. The Nazi people firmly believed there should be some benefit for them from the supposed prosperity that remained in America despite the war. The Americans had been mostly unwilling to fight and die and instead allowed themselves to become subjugated with only Nazi overseers to keep them in line. This kept the land from being destroyed and the people from dying, because for the most part the overseers were lenient in executing their responsibilities as long as they got fed and the first choice of companionship in whatever town they happened to be checking on.
Such conditions had allowed the resistance to grow, and the rebellion to flourish. Now the time had finally come to change things, Chase thought grimly.
While her thoughts had been occupied with the past, the present had been turning to daylight around her and now the sky was full of color and light. With a glance at the guard who remained asleep, Chase left the bell tower and headed across the roofs of Berlin in search of an Amazon princess.
************
Dawn found each of the rebel groups tucked safely away into numerous safe houses scattered across the European continent and into Russia and Great Britain. When darkness fell, they would all be moving again. But for now the people of Berlin and Paris and London and Moscow went about their daily lives unaware of the changes brewing just beneath the surface.
Chase walked the roofs above where she had last glimpsed the Amazons, knowing precisely where they were supposed to be and noting with satisfaction that there was no way to find them unless you knew where to look. She found the building and crept in, unnoticed by the guard who stood watch. The Amazons were scattered throughout the old warehouse, hidden in plain sight on the outskirts of the city. They had concealed themselves inside though Chase had no difficulty finding them and slipping around them without being seen or heard. She realized then that the skills her mother had taught her were Amazon skills and she smiled grimly. That kind of confirmation wasn’t something she was looking for, but it allowed her to slip right up to Diana... only to be caught and held by sparkling blue eyes when Chase reached out to touch her. Diana caught her hand and held it lightly.
“I promised you, didn’t I?”
Diana smiled and nodded. “You did. I’m glad you made it. Are you all right?” Her words were whispered and she leaned up on one elbow. She could see the exhaustion in Chase’s eyes, remembering that while the troops had all had the chance to sleep on the flight over Chase had been going full throttle since early the previous morning. She tugged on the hand she still held lightly clasped in her own and pulled Chase down beside her.
“Diana!” It would have been more of a protest, but it was hard to squeal when you were forced to whisper to keep from waking up the rest of the room.
“Hush!” smiling when Chase glared in her direction but didn’t move away from her. “Chase, you’ve been working for over twenty-four hours. You need to get some rest before we go after Orana tonight.”
“But....”
“Shh!” Diana commanded. “You’re taking care of everyone else; let me take care of you.”
Chase smiled, feeling a familiarity at Diana’s words. “Isn’t that supposed to be my line?”
“Normally, yes... but not this time. You’re the warrior leader and I’m the Amazon princess. Something kind of karmically circular about the whole situation, isn’t there?”
Chase yawned, their combined body warmth and her exhaustion making her almost too sleepy to comment - almost. But she had enough of her bardic ancestor in her to warrant giving Diana an answer.
“Somethin’” she mumbled before allowing her fatigue to assert itself and closing her eyes.
Diana waited until she felt Chase’s breathing deepen and even out in sleep; then she shifted, trying to get more comfortable without disturbing Chase. She froze completely and held her breath when Chase snuggled into her, wrapping around her like an earthbound octopus and grounding Diana in a way she hadn’t been in more than twenty-six hundred years. She smiled at the bittersweet feeling of familiar intimacy that washed through her being at the feeling of having Chase in her arms. Diana wrapped her arms around Chase and closed her eyes in sweet contentment.
Anya watched a moment longer, then closed her eyes and sent up a prayer of gratitude to the goddesses, hoping they were watching over the Nation and could see what was happening between Chase and Diana here in man’s world.
************
The other five goddesses watched in disbelief as Aphrodite gyrated and shimmied all over the room. It had been such a long time since they had seen her do a happy dance that no one recognized it for what it was. They weren’t sure if Aphrodite was happy or in pain, though judging by the look on her face pain wasn’t an issue. Finally Athena couldn’t stand the gyrations any longer and took Dite by the shoulders to bring her to a screeching halt. Dite glared at Athena and blew her blonde curls back out of her eyes.
“Whaddya go and do that for?”
“Are you all right?”
“I am awesome, Babe... simply fab. But thanks for asking.”
Athena rolled her eyes and prayed for patience. “Aphrodite, why were you wiggling around like that? Did you find an ant bed or something?”
Dite snorted. “As if. Nah, Babe. Check the radical scene I scryed across.” She pointed to the bowl and Athena changed the focus and threw the image up on the wall for all of them to see. They all gazed at the reflection for a long moment, then the other five goddesses got up and started doing happy dances of their own. Dite just laughed joyfully and joined in.
************
Darkness had fallen but was not quite complete when Diana woke Chase from her sleep. She had spent a few moments simply looking at her, easily imagining the times they had shared like this before. Unlike her predecessor though, Chase woke with a single touch. She looked at their positions tangled up together and immediately moved out of Diana’s arms. Diana felt the cold immediately with Chase’s withdrawal, but she plastered a smile on her face.
“Chase....”
“Sorry,” Chase muttered. “I don’t know....”
“Chase, it’s okay. Thanks for keeping me warm.”
Chase nodded, still a little embarrassed by her clinginess. “All right... what time is it?” Chase looked at her watch and nodded in satisfaction. The Amazons were already up and dressed, eating from the rations they had brought. Shortly they would be dispatched by Diana to their assignments. Ty and her squad should already be working, eliminating the soldiers in the barracks and assuming their duty stations in the square.
Diana handed Chase some of the rations her mother had brought along from Paradise Island, and Chase smiled at the newly familiar tastes that met her palette.
“Thanks. This is good.”
“Anytime. This is an old family recipe and they’re a Nation favorite – we actually dry fruit specifically for these.”
“Well whoever came up with them was pretty clever.”
“Thanks,” Diana said cheekily, then got up before Chase could question her further.
It was unnerving to see her sisters dressed as Nazis, but this group was taking the place of the technicians who were supposed to be running the sound and camera equipment for Orana’s big announcement. The rest had already moved out to hide in the shadows; they would help infiltrate the Reichstag and work with Ty to prevent any of the Nazis in the square from leaving. This was not a hit and run mission – they were out to seek and destroy.
“All right, sisters. It’s time. Each of you has your assignment. Whatever you do, make sure that this broadcast doesn’t go anywhere but to the people in the square. Chase has people infiltrating the control room, but work under the assumption that they won’t make it. If we kill it at the source, the rest is moot. It is a fail-safe for us. We want to control what gets broadcast.”
“Watch for the signal. When you see us move in, that will be your cue to start recording. We want Orana’s downfall broadcast.” A brief pause that was so silent heartbeats could be heard. No one had expected Chase to speak since Diana was their princess and defacto leader. “Thank you all,” Chase said quietly. “Good luck.”
“The goddesses watch over you, sisters,” Diana commended. “We would see you all safe and Orana destroyed when this is over.”
They couldn’t roar; stealth was too important to their mission. But they raised their fists triumphantly, shaking them in unity until at Diana’s signal they went from darkness to darkness, each of them intent on the fight to come.
Part 6
“This better be some sort of sick, fucking joke! DON’T!!” Chase shouted as Drea started to move within touching distance. “You stay right there.”
“Chase, if you will just give me a chance....”
“NO! You cannot possibly have anything to say that I want to hear! I don’t know what is going on here, and I really don’t care. I don’t need this right now. I’ve got way too much on my plate to worry about who you really are or why you’re here.”
Drea stopped moving and looked to Jasmine for guidance. She’d known Chase was going to be angry, but the proportion of her rage was much greater than either Jasmine or Drea had expected it to be. Drea wondered what exactly had brought Chase to them. Perhaps that would explain why her reaction, though well contained, bordered on furious.
“Annabelle,” Jasmine said softly, “let me explain....”
“No, Mama,” with cold, deliberate calm. “There is nothing for you to explain.”
“ANNABELLE!! Sit down please.”
“NO!! No, you lied to me!”
“Annabelle, I never once lied to you. Never! I have always been honest with you, Baby Girl.”
Chase turned her back to Jasmine and Drea and walked away from them. “No,” she said wearily, her back still facing them. “You didn’t tell me the truth, and that’s the same as lying.” Her shoulders slumped in defeat. “Drea, I’ll bring Diana to see you as I imagine that is the real reason you’re here. Then ya’ll can make whatever arrangements you need to return to your home.” She turned back briefly and gestured towards Jasmine. “Maybe you can take her home with you since you obviously belong to each other.” Then she walked away without another backward glance.
“Do you want me to follow her?” Drea asked, watching Chase get further and further away from them. Jasmine shook her head and sank to the ground with her hands covering her face. Drea followed her down, wrapping her arms around her sister and just holding her, wondering how they were going to fix this.
Chase drove back to the rebel encampment at a rapid pace, deliberately keeping her mind carefully blank. She stopped the jeep in front of the laboratory and hopped out, striding into the work area with deliberate steps. Hans and Diana looked up at the interruption, then at each other in disbelief as they saw who the interruption was. Chase had not been back to the lab since she had originally brought Diana in to talk to Hans.
“Diana, do you have a moment please?”
The request was so unexpected Diana nodded and moved away from Hans before consciously thinking about it. When she got close to Chase, Diana remembered her hurt and asked coolly in her low voice, “Is there something I can do for you?”
Chase was glad for the cold attitude; it made it easier to maintain her detachment. “Yes. Can you spare me a few minutes of your time?”
Diana looked back at Hans who was watching them with interest even though he couldn’t hear a word of the conversation between them. They were at a point in their work where she didn’t have to be there for them to continue to make progress, and she admitted to needing a break even if it required being in Chase’s presence for a little while to get it. Chase had never given her a reason not to trust her so she nodded. “Yes. What can I do for you?”
Chase didn’t reply but simply waved Diana towards the jeep. Then she looked back at Hans. “Staff meeting as soon as I return. Pass the word.” An order... not a request.
He nodded, only just refraining from saluting. She hadn’t been that harsh since her mother was killed, and he wondered what had set her off this time. He didn’t think it was Diana though; Chase’s reaction to Diana had been all over the place with Diana herself, but she had never been harsh with the rest of them because of it. Mostly she had simply withdrawn from them completely, stonewalling their every effort to talk about it. So something new must have happened to return the recklessness Chase had possessed after her mother’s death before she had settled down to lead them.
A hand signal from Chase as she left the lab garnered her a distant escort; someone who knew to follow but not too closely.
Chase didn’t speak when she got into the vehicle. She couldn’t think of anything to say that wasn’t weak or sappy to her ears and she really wasn’t in the mood for either. In a way though, this scenario would work out better for all concerned. Diana would return home where she belonged; Chase would get her focus back on the rebellion where it belonged; and the war would finally be over once and for all. After that? It wouldn’t really matter, would it? At least this way Diana would be safe.
“Where are we going?” Diana asked as they left the compound. Though she didn’t get the feeling Chase meant her actual physical harm, she had the distinct impression she was being set up for something she wasn’t going to like. Suddenly her trusting Chase seemed like a bad idea.
“Not far,” Chase answered briefly.
Diana tried to pay more than peripheral attention to their direction and destination, but her mind was torn in three different directions. She was trying to find a way to break the ice without coming across as begging or condescending, but everything she came up with sounded lame and trite to her mind. Why does that always happen when I am around her? she thought. Any other time or with any other human being, I can be a calm, rational adult. But I get close to her and my brain freezes up. Gods, it shouldn’t be this hard. We know each other... our souls belong to one another – they always have. So why can’t I just tell her that? Why won’t she let me mean something to her? Then Chase’s words interrupted her train of thought.
“I’m sorry, Diana. I really am. If things had been different, we could have at least been friends but....” Chase spoke as they turned into the lane. She covertly checked to be sure the other vehicle was still following, then took a deep breath to finish her apology. “For what it’s worth, I never meant to push you away. I wanted... I just... I thought.... Well it doesn’t really matter what I thought now. I think she is waiting for you.” She turned the jeep off and pointed to the figure on the porch. “I hope you find whatever it really is you came here looking for. Goodbye, Diana.” Then Chase jumped from the driver’s seat and into the jeep that pulled up right next to her. Then the driver hit the gas, and the vehicle roared back down the lane the way that it had come.
Diana got out and started running, but Amazon or no, she couldn’t keep up with a motor vehicle without Wonder Woman’s powers, and she was literally left in the dust as Chase disappeared from view. Great, she thought, what am I going to do now? She turned and headed back to the small farmhouse, wondering what had brought Drea into man’s world.
************
“What do you think you’re doing?” Ares leaned against the doorframe with his arms crossed over his chest. Orana didn’t deign to look at him but dropped her robe and walked into the closet to get dressed. “I asked you a question; I want an answer.”
“And I want to go out and destroy the rebellion once and for all. I don’t think I owe you any more of an explanation than that. I am the one in charge here, Ares... not you.”
“Uh huh,” he said, pushing away from the wall and moving further into the bedroom. “And then what? What exactly are you going to do if you destroy the rebellion? Hmm? Are you going to sit around on your ass waiting for something exciting to happen? Hoping I’ll come around once in a while to share your bed?” cupping her cheek and stroking his thumb over her lips.
She jerked her head out of his grasp. “Don’t flatter yourself, Ares. You’re not that good.” She tucked her shirt in and snatched up her boots before pushing past him to sit on the bed. He followed her and jerked her chin up til their eyes met.
“Don’t push me, Amazon. I am a god, and I own you, remember?” fingering the mark she wore on her neck. “You need me to remind you who is in charge?”
Deciding to change tactics, she stood and ran her hands up his chest. “Ares, I just want to go out and have a little fun. Is that so hard to understand? Come on... we haven’t had a really good fight in a long, long time. And I’ve heard rumors....”
“Oh yeah? What kind of rumors?”
“Well, I’m hearing things about some sort of offensive. My spies haven’t been able to pin down anything specific, but there are just too many rumors running around out there for there not to be something behind them. I want to go find a little action.”
“Well, Baby... you should have said something. You know if you want action, I’m you’re man... and I’m always ready to go.”
She pinched his ass and he jumped, not expecting it. “Wrong kind of action, Ares. I want a fight.”
“Well, I’ve been working on that too. I’ve got several fights star....”
“No, Ares. I want battles and wars and glory like it was in the beginning.”
Ares scrubbed a hand across his beard and looked intently at Orana. Truth be told, he missed that kind of action as well because it had been so long since they’d had a good fight. But something about the timing of this whole thing wasn’t sitting well... not with the goddesses renewed interest in the Amazons of Paradise Island. However.... “You think that’s what this is?”
“I don’t know yet, but I would like to find out. It’s making my fingers prickle.”
“All right,” he finally agreed. “Just be careful. We don’t want this to backfire. We’ve got a really good thing going here.”
She reached up and drew him to her, kissing him hard and passionately on the mouth. “Not a problem. I’m just looking for a little diversion. Now,” she said moving out of his reach and picking up her belt and lasso. “I’ve got work to do.”
“So do I,” he agreed. “”But I’ll be back.” Then he shimmered out of the room, and she walked out, leaving the room in darkness.
************
“All right – that’s it. Countdown starts now. We will commence the operation in forty-eight hours. Everyone’s got their assignments. Questions?”
“Yes. Where is Diana and what is her part in all of this?” This from Hans since he was the only one who knew that Diana and Chase had left together earlier and that Chase had returned alone. He hadn’t shared that knowledge with anyone, curious to know what had happened between them but anxious to give Chase the benefit of the doubt. She had been his best friend for a long time, and he’d never once know her to act without honor. But he’d never seen her out of sorts like she had been with Diana either.
“There was an emergency in her family, and they came looking for her. She went with them so I’m guessing she’s got some things to take care of that don’t involve us or this mission. That’s all right – she wasn’t really ever a part of this mission to begin with so we didn’t have to make any alterations. Anything else?”
The silence around the room made it seem like there was more that each of them wanted to say... questions they wanted to ask... but they let it go. Chase was focused on the rebellion again, and that was what they needed. As much as they liked Diana, they needed Chase. No one stopped to consider that Diana was what Chase needed.
“All right,” Chase nodded, picking up her notes. “Everyone make sure to see Hans before we head out to get their shots and pick up their new armor. No one goes on this operation without both. Move out – we’ve got a hell of a lot to get done and not much time left to do it in.”
She was out the door before any of them could even get up from their seats.
***********
“That is why you’re here, Drea? It has nothing to do with me then?”
“No,” Drea said, “though of course your mother did ask me to check on you and make sure you were doing all right. She really is concerned.” Diana nodded but made no other attempt to acknowledge acceptance of Drea’s words. “Is that how Chase got you here – under the guise of me needing you?”
“Actually she just asked for a few minutes of my time, then she apologized and left me here.”
“But she left you a vehicle....”
“... that I cannot drive.” Diana bit her lip. “All right; I guess that means I start walking. Would you like to come with me or would you prefer to stay here?”
“Given my choice, I will come with you of course. Let us have something to eat first.”
“Yes, and Aunt Jasmine can explain why she never told Chase about her heritage,” glaring at the spirit of the woman who sat in the window seat looking across at the tree beneath which her body lay buried.
Jasmine looked at Diana with eyes that were full of despair, and Diana was inclined towards sympathy for her. But the truth was she had unwittingly managed to complicate Diana’s life immensely and thrown any chance of Chase accepting Diana or her heritage into a tailspin. It made things more complicated, Diana sighed, but not impossible. One more hurdle on the path to being whole again.
“First things first. Jasmine will tell her story for you while we eat, then you and I will head back to the rebel encampment. Do you think you can find it again?”
Diana nodded. Then she took a seat and waited expectantly for Jasmine to begin speaking.
It took Jasmine through their meal and a little longer to finish her telling and Diana listened and ate without interrupting. Drea watched Diana as she listened, noting with interest how she absorbed the details about Chase’s life. The sun had almost set by the time that Jasmine finished.
“I didn’t keep it from her maliciously, Diana. It just never seemed like a good time to tell her... especially not as a teenaged child... and then it was too late. I ran out of time. I am hoping after she settles down and thinks about it calmly that she will realize that.”
“Do you know why she came out here?” Diana asked.
“No. We never got that far.” A pause. “I wonder if she suspected the truth or if she came looking for answers about something else.” Drea met Diana’s eyes. “How are things progressing between the two of you?”
Diana shook her head. “They aren’t. She’s been avoiding me, but I don’t know if it just me or if there is more to it.”
“Well, what do you say we go and find out?”
“Drea,” Jasmine interrupted before Diana could answer. “Take care of my baby girl, and remind her that I love her – that I never meant to hurt her with any of this.”
Drea took Jasmine’s hands in her own. “Do not worry, Sister. It may take a while to convince your stubborn child of the truth, but we will make Chase understand it eventually. Have a little faith. Diana and I will bring her back here as quickly as we can.”
Jasmine leaned forward and brushed a cool kiss across Drea’s cheek. “Go with my blessing then.”
Then Drea turned to Diana and held out her hand and the two walked out of the house and down the lane, headed back to the rebel encampment.
************
“My queen??”
“Find a way, Nubia. Given what Paula has been able to record in the last few days in man’s world, it has become imperative that we get involved. We have to do something. We have stood by unknowing in our ignorance while man’s world has suffered and bled and died under the hand of one of our own. Diana and Chase have both suffered so much to get to this point. I think we owe them whatever help we can provide, but it needs to be now.”
“As you say, my queen. But without divine intervention, I am not sure we can arrive in man’s world in time to make a difference for them. We’re still piecing it together, but from all the data we have managed to cull together something big is coming and it’s going to happen soon. Within days, if we are understanding the transmissions correctly.”
“My queen, we know for certain Orana is out and about again. Now that we know she is involved in this, we have stepped up our surveillance, but it is still all piecemeal. We do not know if she is out looking for something specific or simply trying to relieve her boredom.”
“What of the rebellion?”
“Again, just bits. Short of asking the goddesses, it is all guesswork on our part. But there has been a lot more activity over the past month or so. That in and of itself indicates things are happening. Can we ask the goddesses?”
“I already have,” Mala finally spoke. “The queen is right. The time has come for the Amazons to take their place again as the warriors they once were. Be ready tomorrow before dawn.”
A cheer went up from the council. Then they scrambled to get the warriors of the Nation ready to go into man’s world. The time had finally come, and the women of the Amazon Nation were spoiling for a fight. Knowing they were going to support their princess and redeem themselves from Orana put a fire in their bellies the Nazis were going to have a very hard time putting out.
Chapter XXXIV
"Chase, you got a minute?" Ty asked, sticking her head in the door of Chase's hut. Chase leaned back in the chair and gave Ty her full attention.
"Sure Ty," she said, pushing her papers away from her. "What's up? Problems with your preparations or...?" extending her hands in inquiry. Ty shook her head.
"No, no. Nothing like that. I want to know what really happened to Diana, Chase. I know how she feels about things," not wanting to reveal a confidence. "I want to know why you made her leave."
Instead of becoming angry as Ty half feared she would, Chase sighed sadly and crossed over to the small window that looked out over the compound. Everywhere she looked there was activity; to the untrained eye it appeared much like controlled chaos. But to Chase's knowing gaze, it was the steady, forward progress of war preparation. She didn't sense fear but instead saw excitement simmering just below the surface of the purposeful commotion.
Ty didn't interrupt Chase's musing, sensing the conflict within her cousin even though Chase kept her eyes on the hustle and bustle taking place just outside her hut. Ty figured her patience would be rewarded sooner or later if she remained quiet; Chase had been like this before – when her father had died and again when her mother had been killed. Eventually Chase was going to need to share with someone if only to vent before she drove herself crazy. So Ty waited.
"I didn't make her leave, Ty. Someone who is from Diana's home found me and I took her to them." Truth mostly, as far as it went, but Ty wasn't buying it. She knew there was more. She waited but Chase didn't speak further, and Ty slapped her legs in frustration.
"Damn it, Chase! What the hell is going on with you?? I know there is more to this story than you are telling me. Now you wanna start from the beginning and just tell me the truth, or you want me to pick and pry it out of you until I'm satisfied??"
Chase almost had to laugh. Ty would do it too; she had before. One thing Chase knew she could count on her cousin for was absolute honesty and a swift kick in the ass if she needed it. Unconsciously, she rubbed her butt and Ty chuckled, forcing Chase to turn and glare at her before smiling sheepishly.
"Start at the beginning, Chase, and tell me everything. Maybe I can help; at least you might feel better for sharing the burden with someone. C'mon. I know something has been bothering you since you came back from wherever it was you disappeared a few months ago."
Then Ty waited. She knew if Chase didn't share now she never would, or at least not for a very long time. By then, with a little luck, the war would be over and Chase wouldn't need the focus she needed now. But it would still eat at her until she had nothing left, and Ty didn't want to lose Chase to madness. And this, Ty feared, would be the final push Chase needed to cross the line.
"Do you remember the stories my mother used to tell, Ty? Stories from the old country, she called them - about ancient cultures and heroes and myths."
"Oh yes," Ty answered enthusiastically. "My favorites were always about the Amazons. I loved...." She broke off when she realized what she was about to say and to whom she was saying it. "I'm sorry, Chase. I didn't...."
Chase smiled at her sadly before turning her attention back out the window. "Don't be sorry, Ty. I loved the ones about the two who traveled together the best, but the Amazon stories were some my favorites too. At least until...."
"Yeah."
"Anyway, do you remember how real she made those stories seem... like they were real people who lived in real time and had real lives and adventures? Do you remember how much we wanted them to be real so we could meet them?"
"Do I? My daddy tanned my backside more than once for going on and on about them when I should have been concentrating on other things. Said the Amazons were nothing more than myths and I needed to focus on the here and now. He said Aunt Jas just made up stories to give us some strong female figures to aspire to."
"For a long time, I figured he was right. Don't get me wrong... I loved Mama's stories, but they couldn't be real, right? Things like that were just make-believe in our world. Then I met Orana, and she made me hate the thought of there being Amazons if they were like her."
"You think differently now." A statement, not a question.
Chase shook her head. "No, Ty. I know differently now. Those dreams... you know the ones I had when I first got back from that mission?" looking over her shoulder at Ty and seeing her nod her agreement. "Those weren't dreams, Ty. It really happened. The Amazons, the island... everything."
When she realized that Chase wasn't going to continue, Ty prodded. "How?" Suspecting it had everything to do with Diana.
Chase took a deep breath. "Diana was there. She's an Amazon princess." Her pronouncement was met with silence, and Chase turned to meet Ty's eyes. They were widened and her jaw was slack. Chase smirked just a little and went over to wave her hand in front of Ty's face. It took several passes before Ty blinked and met her gaze. Then she cleared her throat and spoke.
"An Amazon princess?? Oooooookay. Did she tell you this?"
"Ty, trust me when I tell you I know it is true; you know I can sense if a person is lying or not. She told me things she could only have known if they were true and she was there."
"That doesn't make her a princess."
"No, but I have reason to believe that part is true."
"Is that why you made her leave? Because she's an Amazon princess?" Chase shook her head but made no more effort to elaborate. "C'mon, Chase," Ty finally huffed. "You gotta give me something more here. You know I have never been good as guessing games."
Chase walked back over to the window, careful to keep her back to Ty. "No, Ty. I told you the truth about that. An Amazon, the woman who healed me on that island, was at the homestead today when I went to talk to Mama." Ty didn't comment; she knew Chase usually went to back to her old home to talk to Jasmine's grave whenever she needed to talk. It was only very rarely that she would open up to one of them so as not to appear weak. "Since Diana had made it fairly clear to me that she was here because she had nowhere else to go, I thought it was best to give her the chance to go home when the opportunity arose."
"Uh huh," Ty said dryly. "Did it ever occur to you to ask her what she wanted?"
"Ty," Chase finally said with more than a hint of exasperation and asperity in her voice. "She was a distraction for me. I needed her to be gone from here as much as she wanted to be away from me."
"But...."
"Ty, she left here of her own volition, all right? She walked out of this hut and away from me without a word of explanation. No amount of window dressing is gonna change that little fact. But by taking her back to her family, I did what was best for everyone; the timing just happened to fall into place like it did by sheer coincidence."
Ty stood up and stomped her way over to the window. She grabbed Chase by the shoulder and swung her around so their eyes could meet. "I don't believe you," she swore, throwing her hands up into the air. "You are... argh!" words failing her completely. Ty held up a finger and glared when Chase opened her mouth to speak, pacing back and forth across the small room, her anger apparent in her attitude as well as her actions. "Did it ever ONCE occur to you to talk to Diana? To ask her why she moved out in such a hurry? To find out why she really stayed here? It didn't, did it? You let your feelings get hurt over something you won't even acknowledge, much less try to understand. You pushed her away - making sure you couldn't even be friends because you were afraid."
Ty turned to look at Chase who hadn't stirred at all, her gaze appearing to be completely riveted on the world going on around her just outside her hut. "Chase, are you even listening to me??" anger coloring her tone.
"Ty, are you done?" never removing her eyes from the window.
"Yes, damn it! I'm done." She blew out a deep breath and spoke more calmly. "I'm finished, yes."
"I hope you will respect that what I shared with you was done so in confidence. I would appreciate if you wouldn't share it with the others."
"Chase, even if you had shared something private like that with me – which you didn't, by the way - I wouldn’t go out and share it with the rest. I never have. I treasure your trust in me; I'd hoped you understood that by now and felt the same in return." Her voice was saddened by remorse and her shoulders slumped in an air of utter defeat.
"I do, Ty. You know that. I just... this is awkward for me, and I'm not sure why or...." Her brow furrowed in consternation. "Wait, I did share with you. I told you the dreams were real and not dreams and that Diana is an Amazon princess."
Ty nodded. "Yes, you did, and of course I would never share that with anyone. But you still haven't shared why you sent Diana away. Or why you won't talk to her. Or how you feel about the whole thing. Or...." Ty had to stop speaking when Chase's hand covered her mouth. She met her cousin's green eyes, expecting to find anger or frustration... anything but the amusement she found there.
"All right, Ty. All right – I get the point." Her eyes turned serious. "I appreciate the concern, and if I had anything to share, you know you'd be the first to hear about it. In all honesty, maybe I'll have time to think about it and worry about all that later. But for right now, I have to focus on the here and now – the rebellion and winning this goddamn war once and for all. Once it's all over and everything is taken care of, maybe I can worry about the rest... maybe I can worry about me for a change. But I can't let this distract me now. This is about more than just me, Ty; this is about all of us and is critical to our survival."
Ty clasped Chase's hands in hers. "All right, Chase. I can accept that for now. But you promise me... when this is all over and everything is taken care of... you promise me that you will take care of Chase. I want you to be happy. You deserve it so much. You especially," she said, not letting Chase interrupt her, "because you have done so much for everyone else."
"Okay, Ty. I promise. When we're done, I'll try to take some time for me and figure out what I need to do to be happy. Then I'll go out and do it."
"You promise me that you'll talk to Diana – give her a chance?"
"Ty, I doubt Diana will be anywhere around, but if she is, I promise that I will talk to her and give her a chance," knowing in her heart that Diana was going to be a very long way from anywhere Chase expected to be, assuming she survived the coming battle. Because she knew someone was going to have to be the one to take down Orana, and she had already granted herself that special task. She felt she deserved as much, and she certainly wasn't going to put anyone else in harm's way.
Ty nodded, not liking the vibe she was suddenly getting from Chase but unable to do more than accept her word. "All right. C'mon," she said, pulling her towards the door. "It's time for dinner, and I know you're hungry. You missed lunch, and I can hear your stomach growling. Don't bother," when Chase tried to pull free. "I'm not taking no for an answer."
Chase chuckled wryly and shook her head, then followed Ty out the door and across the compound to the mess hall where they were greeted with hails and cheers.
************
"So what are you going to do when we get there?" Drea asked Diana as they walked down the road in the twilight that was swiftly fading to darkness. "Do you have a plan?"
Diana shook her head. "Not yet. Only that I'm not going to throttle Chase when I see her. Because she did leave me a vehicle to use even if I don't know how to use it. I think she brought me to you because she wanted to keep me safe and out of the way."
"Is that a good thing?"
Diana considered the question, then nodded slowly. "I think so. From what I know of Chase, it is almost the ultimate compliment. She knows I’m not incompetent or stupid and she expects everyone to pull their weight. So either she is protecting me because she cares about me to some degree or getting rid of me because I am a distraction.
“Maybe a little of both?”
Diana sighed and shrugged. "Maybe. I would prefer if she would talk to me, though. I really want...." She stopped speaking with a blush when it occurred to her just who she was talking to. Drea smiled.
“It’s nothing to be ashamed of, Diana. I think it is wonderful that you really want, and even better that you’ve found the one you really want to with.” Drea took Diana’s arm as they continued walking down the road. “I’ve missed this with you. I’ve missed you.” Diana patted the hand that rested on her arm, but she didn’t speak. “Your mother misses you too, you know. She has for a long time. She just couldn’t seem to find a way to reach you and eventually she stopped trying.”
“Drea, I know you mean well, and I know that sooner or later Hippolyta and I will need to come to some sort of an understanding. But not right now. Right now, I have enough to worry about without having to consider any of that. So can we leave it alone... please?”
“I am sorry, Little One. You are entirely correct, of course. You do know that Paula has continued to monitor things here and in the Nazi capital as well as she can. If she has been able to see any of what you say has been going on, Hippolyta will be preparing the warriors to come join the fight.” She held up her hand when Diana would have spoken. “It is their fight as well, Diana. We all bear the responsibility for Orana, and no one wants to be left out of providing a solution for dealing with her.”
“No, Drea. This is my fight – mine and Chase’s. We lost the most to Orana’s machinations. I hate to be the one to point this out, Drea, but I doubt very sincerely Chase is going to let anyone but her deal with Orana... especially not an Amazon.”
“Does she know about what happened with your mother?”
Diana nodded. “She knows about everything except why I followed her here. I couldn’t find the words to tell her when we were talking, and then she stopped talking to me. I wonder if I had told her the truth... even part of it... if....”
“If perhaps she might have reacted differently? If something might have already happened between you?” Diana nodded, the motion barely visible in the light of the waning moon. Drea pulled them to a halt and cupped Diana’s face in her hands. “Little One, what is the one thing I have tried to teach you, hmm? The one thing you know to be true despite everything.”
“Everything happens in its own good time.”
“Exactly. Even if we do not understand the reasons; even though we cannot see the big picture; even when we do not agree with what has happened and why,” the last bit muttered under her breath, “eventually things do come together of their own time and their own volition.” Drea removed her hands from Diana’s face and took her arm again, resuming their walk down the road.
“Besides,” she continued, “she needs to discover the truth that is the two of you for herself. If Chase had been told the truth about the two of you and then found out she was an Amazon, there is always a chance she would feel manipulated, and that is never a good foundation for a relationship of any kind – even friendship. At least this way, she knows the truth about her heritage, and the rest will come with time.”
“Do you really believe that Drea? Do you think she’ll figure it out and accept it for everything it is?”
“Yes, Little One. I really do. Aside from knowing her mother pretty well, and realizing that both her mother and her aunt are brilliant and have impeccable taste, it sounds like she already has feelings for you, Daughter. She is not going to pass that up. Her soul won’t let her. The down side, and of course you knew there had to be one - knowing her mother and aunt as well as I do, I can safely say she is a fighter, and she’s going to fight every step of the way to realization.”
Diana chuckled wryly. “Given her original soul, I can believe that. Do you think I am losing my mind over this... maybe being a little impatient with the whole process? I mean Chase and I have really only just met in this lifetime – we’ve only known one another for a very few weeks when you really think about it... a couple months at most.”
“But this is something you have been searching for for a very long time, Diana. And your soul recognized her and your heart knew the truth even before your mind figured it out. Hers is the same way except that she doesn’t even realize she has been looking for you through her lifetimes. She just knows there is something about you and for whatever reason, it terrifies her. But she will figure it out. I would be willing to guess that part of her problem is her leadership of the rebellion. Jasmine told me Chase has always been very singularly focused, and it only got worse after the death of each parent and then her incarceration by Orana. She is going to need to learn a new focus.”
It was quiet for a long while as they walked along the road while Diana considered Drea’s words. She had missed their talks as well as the sage advice Drea always seemed to have well in hand. And with Drea’s belief, she felt her own belief reassert itself. She knew Chase felt something. Now it was simply a matter of getting her to see and acknowledge what that something between them really was. But first they had to win this war.
It was just after midnight when they crossed the outer boundary of the rebel encampment. At Diana’s request, Ty was called to meet and vouch for them instead of Chase. Ty did a double take when she saw Drea and was introduced to her casually by Diana as ‘my other mother.’ Instead of asking the questions that dripped off her tongue, Ty reassured the guard with alacrity so the trio was soon crossing the grounds to Diana’s small quarters. Diana looked around, easily able to see the preparations that had already been made and were in fact still in progress. She turned questioning blue eyes to Ty and waited for an explanation.
“I’ll explain everything in the morning,” Ty promised. “But for now, let’s just say it’s time to wrap up this war and go to bed, all right? Please, Diana. It’s been a very long day.”
“She’s right, Diana,” Drea said, placing a hand on Diana’s arm. “There will be time for discussion and explanations in the morning.”
Diana looked at Drea, noting for the first time an exhaustion she could plainly see written on her face. She nodded her head. “All right,” looking back at Ty. “In the morning, then.”
************
But the morning was going to bring even further complication to their lives.
Chapter XXXV
Hippolyta looked around at the homestead in the bare light of the approaching dawn. Though there were obvious signs of neglect, still the place had the look of recent occupation. Despite the repairs that needed to be done, the walk had been swept and the flowerbeds had been weeded. Hippolyta knocked on the door and waited, then turned to look at her warriors – her warriors – she thought with pride. They stood waiting patiently for her orders and she turned to her advisory council.
“Well there doesn’t appear to be anyone home, though I don’t think she’s been gone too long.” The goddesses had transported them to Chase’s homestead figuring to meet up with Drea and going to the rebel encampment together and to find she was no longer here.... “We will have to figure out where they are and make our way to them. Best guess as to which direction we should go?”
It was only an answer on the wind, but they all heard it as clearly as though Artemis was standing among them when she spoke. East. So the warriors formed ranks and began a comfortable run east, hopefully towards the rebel compound.
************
Chase was up before the sun and looking over every aspect of the camp as it continued to make preparations for the final assault. At each place she stopped, listening to concerns and answering questions, helping make things run smoother for everyone. Most of the rebels here, directly under her command, were long veterans of the war against the Nazis. Most of them at one time or another had served on the front line, and all of those that had, had served more than once in the face of death. Those that hadn’t were young and scared, and Chase did her best to reassure them as much as possible. And so she slowly made her way across and through the camp until she was satisfied that everything that could be done was being done.
Ty, meanwhile, had gotten up as the sun peeked over the horizon of the eastern sky. Given her late night, she felt like she could have slept til noon but knew that was completely out of the question. She went to the mess tent to pick up some breakfast and then made her way directly to Diana’s hut. She had questions she wanted answers to as well.
Ty knocked, but she didn’t wait for an invitation before she entered. She didn’t want Chase to see her loitering outside Diana’s hut especially with food in her hands. Chase would start asking questions of her own before Ty herself got some answers. Immediately she was met by two blades on opposite sides of her neck until the two Amazons got a good look at their intruder. Drea turned to Diana for advice and Diana simply nodded and removed her own blade from Ty’s throat. Drea was only a beat behind her. Ty placed the tray down on the small table.
“We do not rate the courtesy of inviting you in first?” Drea asked in a curt tone. Diana just looked at Ty and waited for her response. She had her own suspicions why Ty had done what she did and was curious to know what sort of explanation she would offer. Ty handed each of them a cup of coffee and a roll before picking up her own and giving Drea a well-thought out answer.
“Under normal circumstances, you would rate that and much more besides, but we are not under normal circumstances, are we? And I want some answers before Chase discovers you’re here. You,” looking directly at Diana, “are supposed to be on your way back home to that island. And you,” turning back to Drea, “are obviously related to my Aunt Jasmine. So how are you related to Diana and what are you doing here? What are you both doing here?”
“We’ll answer you questions, Ty, if you will answer ours.”
“Of course, Diana. I told you I would, but please....”
By accident or design, Ty had become her confidante when she couldn’t talk to Chase and needed an outlet. Though Diana had only shared small snippets, Ty had proven trustworthy and loyal and able to keep a secret. So Diana told her the whole story in all its excruciating detail. Everything that was relevant to this situation anyway – who Drea was and why she had really come and why they had returned to the rebel compound together instead of going home. Ty just covered her eyes as she listened and scrubbed her hands through her hair when the recitation was over.
“Damn sonofabitch!” she cursed, making Drea’s eyes widen in surprise. “Is there anything else I need to be aware of?”
“Not to my knowledge,” Diana answered honestly. “I have told you everything I know that happened once I left here. I only found out most of this myself yesterday. I knew about Drea and Jasmine being twins, of course, but I didn’t know about the rest.”
Ty squeezed her eyes shut and pinched the bridge of her nose. “Chase is gonna kill me,” she muttered, “just on general principle, much less for knowing things I shouldn’t.” She sighed. “Well as long as I am going to have to die because of all this, let me bring you up to date on my side of things.” Drea and Diana exchanged glances wondering what they had missed in Diana’s narration.
“First and foremost, you have to know that though she didn’t always, Chase hates Amazons now because of something that happened to her when she was captured by the Nazis in Berlin some time ago. She never shared with me what happened; only that it was an Amazon who had caused the damage I could see, and obviously the psychological damage I couldn’t. Anyway that’s not the important part, though I think ya’ll needed to understand – especially you, Diana. It helps explain why she is having problems... um, relating to you.”
Diana nodded, understanding far more than Ty was aware of, though her expression gave none of that away.
“You also need to understand that she didn’t share with me the fact that she is an Amazon, which means she hasn’t come to terms with it. It would probably be in all our best interests if number one, she doesn’t know you told me this and number two, you,” motioning to Drea, “stay out of sight. Seeing you probably hurts Chase more than she would ever admit to. Aunt Jasmine was her best friend, and her death was agonizing for Chase, especially since Chase still feels a guilty responsibility for it.”
“Okay not to seem cold but what does that have to do with what is going around here now?” This from Drea. “Obviously something big is happening.” Diana remained quiet.
“Something big is happening. We are preparing for our final offensive against the Reich. This is an all or nothing gamble, and thanks to Diana’s and Hans’ work, most of us now have a huge hope of not only succeeding but actually coming through this alive.”
“You didn’t expect to succeed before?”
Ty shook her head. “Oh yes, we always expected to succeed; the actual plan hasn’t changed. We just didn’t have much chance for survival. Diana’s efforts helped change all that. It’s one reason we are moving now, and it’s one reason Chase took you to Drea, Diana. She cares for you too much to endanger you though she won’t admit that to herself. She claims you are a distraction, which is true enough, though again, she’s not analyzing the why behind the distraction.”
Diana tilted her head in question. “Do you know something?”
“I know Chase. That’s enough,” but she didn’t say anything else.
“Would you like to share?”
“Nope. I am in enough trouble as it is. Besides, I have enough to worry about with ops prep. I’m not about to get involved in someone else’s love life – or lack there of.” Ty would have laughed at the way Diana’s eyes bugged out of her head if she hadn’t been so engrossed in her thoughts. “My big concern right now is how to tell Chase that you are back here. She’s not going to be happy.”
“Does she need to know?” Drea asked. “If I need to stay out of sight, why can’t Diana? I mean if it would make it easier....”
“Drea, even if I wanted to let Chase protect me... which I don’t...” with a glare at both of them, “I have a score to settle with Orana as well. For my sake as well as Chase’s. I worked hard to make myself a productive part of this rebellion and I am not going to be left out of it because Chase considers me to be a distraction to her for whatever reason.” She turned her gaze strictly on Ty and it was all Ty could do not to flinch at the intensity she felt flowing from Diana in waves when she became the sole focus of it suddenly and without warning.
Ty blinked. “Um, Diana?”
“You let me take care of Chase, Ty. I should have before.”
“Why didn’t you?”
“The million dollar question. Any number of reasons; this isn’t the time to get into it. I’ll talk to Chase and we will work out some sort of compromise.” She started to stand when Ty’s name was hollered out and the door was jerked open. “Ty, what are you doi... Diana?” Shep stopped short and dropped his head to his chest before blowing out a frustrated breath. “What are you...? Nevermind. This just gets better and better. C’mon, Ty. You don’t want to miss this.” Drea stood and Shep finally noticed her presence in the room. His eyes bugged right out of his head. “Holy shit! Jasmine??”
Drea shook her head and extended her hand. “Jasmine was my twin sister. My name is Drea. And you are?”
“Shep. Um, I don’t want to seem rude, but Ty, if we don’t get out there....”
“Shep, what’s wrong?” Ty asked as she took the two steps to the door. “Please excuse us,” she said to Drea and Diana. Shep shook his head.
“They should probably come along... at least Diana should.” They stepped from the hut as a group and followed Shep swiftly towards the front gate. “There is a woman at the gate who mentioned her by name.”
Drea exchanged looks with Diana. “You don’t suppose...?”
“One way to find out,” Diana said and hastened towards the gate.
************
Hippolyta couldn’t say what made her bring her troops to a silent halt, but without warning she stopped and held up a hand. Immediately the Amazons stopped running and though they didn’t draw their weapons, they were hyper alert to everything around them as they slowly spread out to search the area and find whatever it was that had caused Hippolyta to stop their forward progress.
Erilani saw them first, but only because she literally walked into the outermost guard. He was so well disguised Hippolyta couldn’t blame the royal guard for her strangled yelp. Had she been two steps to the left she would have been the one to bump into him.
“State your name and your business,” the man commanded as he and several others stepped forward with their weapons drawn and highly evident to block any further advancement. Hippolyta had to remind herself that this was man’s world and they had no idea who she or her warriors were. And remembering that these were rebels against the Nazis in a fight for their life, it was no surprise that simple courtesy did not exist for unexpected guests into their encampment.
“My name is Hippolyta. I was looking for a woman named Chase or my daughter, Diana Prince.”
“What business do you have with them?” the man asked without batting an eyelash in surprise, though Mala picked up on the slight widening of his eyes at the mention of Diana’s name. She wondered what the princess had done to make such an impression so quickly here, though she had always been able to captivate people easily before she had become so angry. She hoped to see that charismatic princess again, but first they had to find her.
“I have come as the Queen of the Amazon Nation to offer my warriors to aid the rebellion in the destruction of Nazi tyranny.”
This time the man did blink at Hippolyta for several long seconds before he turned his attention to the woman who stood beside him. “Go find Ty or Shep – someone in authority,” not wanting to confirm Chase’s presence in the camp. “Now!” The woman nodded and ran off, disappearing into the brush with an ease that the Amazons appreciated for the art form it was. The man turned his attention back to Hippolyta. “You might want to find a place to wait. It might be a little while before anyone gets back here,” not mentioning that the gate was just out of sight behind the trees and brush.
Hippolyta smiled. The man was young, but he had strength in his gaze as well as in his bearing, and Hippolyta respected that. She motioned to her warriors, and the Amazons settled down to wait.
The wait wasn’t very long all things considered. Hippolyta rose as soon as she heard the sound of people approaching and the warriors rose behind her as one. The council formed a semi-circle at her back and they waited in silence for the rustling to morph into something more tangible. Shep was in the lead and was the first of the little group to the gate outpost. Directly behind him was Ty, followed by Drea and finally Diana.
A couple discrete hand signals from Drea kept Hippolyta and thus everyone else, in place as the quartet stepped closer to the Amazons. Shep stepped forward with his arm outstretched and Hippolyta accepted it with a warrior handshake. He adjusted quickly and introduced himself, then moved aside so Ty could do the same. They had agreed that Ty would take the lead once they had introduced themselves to the Amazons.
“Hello, Queen Hippolyta,” she said graciously, bowing her head briefly in respect. “My name is Ty. I believe you know Drea and Diana,” motioning to the two women who stood just behind her.
Hippolyta couldn’t stop the huge grin that crossed her face. It was good to see both Drea and Diana again. She had missed them greatly for obviously different reasons, but she knew there was business to take care of first. Besides, she had a feeling she was going to like Ty; there was something about her that was refreshing. “I believe you are right, Ty.”
“So I understand ya’ll want to help us out. Can I ask why you want to help and how you found us?”
“The why is simple – Orana was... is an Amazon though we’ve only just recently been made aware of her activities here in man’s world. That makes her our responsibility. We’d like to offer whatever assistance we can to help rid the world of her. As for how we found you, well, let’s just say we had divine assistance and leave it at that for now. Perhaps when this is all over we can get into the details.”
“All right,” Ty said. “But Queen Hippolyta, before you commit yourself and your warriors to this fight, there are a few things you need to be aware of. No bullshit now – just honest truth.” Hippolyta’s eyes widened at Ty’s choice of words, but she nodded for her to continue. “First of all, we do not stand on ceremony here. If you join us, you will not be a queen here; you will just be Hippolyta, like I am Ty and your daughter is Diana. Next, we have one leader and what she says, goes. We are allowed to voice opinions and ask questions of course, but at the end of the day when the choice is made, we follow her. If you can’t give up both your title of queen and your warriors won’t accept orders from another authority, you can’t do any good here. You may as well go back to wherever it is that is home for you because we can’t use you here.”
Ty waited and finally Hippolyta felt compelled to speak. “Is there anything else?” wondering if Ty knew about Chase’s hatred of the Amazons. “I would like to hear all the negatives before I make any comments or decisions.”
Ty nodded. She really did like this woman’s spunk. If Jasmine had been telling stories about real Amazons – these Amazons – then the woman standing in front of her was nearly three thousand years old. Regardless of the fact that she looked to be a woman of less than middle age, that was a very, very long time to have been alive, and Ty had a sneaking suspicion immortality was not always what it was cracked up to be.
“The last critical thing you should know is that our leader may have issues with the fact that you are Amazons. She was captured and tortured by the Fuehrer... the one you call Orana... and she made it a point to rub her Amazonian heritage in her face. I would like to believe she would be fair and give you the opportunity to prove yourselves, but the fact is there is a lot of hate and a lot of hurt she will have to overcome first to do so.”
She noticed Ty was very careful not to mention Chase’s name and she applauded her caution, as frustrating as it was not to have her suspicions confirmed, though surely Drea and Diana would not be here if Chase wasn’t. Hippolyta turned to her council and gave them a brief word Ty couldn’t hear, but whatever it was caused them and the warriors behind them to drop to one knee and bow their heads while waiting for their queen to speak.
“As for the first, I will be happy to be called by you as my consort Drea calls me... Pol. It is much less formal and much easier to say than Hippolyta every time you would like to get my attention. I don’t know if the rest of the Nation can remember to call me by anything other than ‘my queen’ as they have done so for such a very long time, but I give you my word they will try. For the second, I had hoped to turn the leadership of the Amazon warriors over to my daughter to lead as she knows each of them and how the skills they possess could best be utilized for the good of the rebellion. But if she has sworn fealty to your leader then we will of course do the same. For the last, I have hope that if your leader is the woman I remember her to be, she will remember that we gave her aid in her hour of need and will give us a chance if only for that reason. I believe in her heart she knows the truth. We merely have to guide her to it. So if Chase is willing to let us fight beside you, we will prove ourselves worthy allies indeed.”
“Very well then, Hip... Pol. Let’s get you all into the compound and let Chase know we have reinforcements and unexpected allies.” The Amazons rose as one before Hippolyta put a restraining hand on Ty’s arm.
“Ty, would you mind very much... I would still like to turn over leadership of the warriors to Diana. I believe she will be better suited to, if not lead them into combat, at least give Chase good advice on their placement within your ranks.”
Ty looked at Diana whose eyes widened in reaction to her mother’s words. It was the only change in her expression. She shrugged her shoulders at Ty who in turn nodded at Hippolyta. There was no ceremony – no pretty words and flowery speeches. Instead Hippolyta simply took off her signet ring and slid it onto Diana’s finger, then brushed her cheek with the very lightest of kisses before Diana could move out of range. Hippolyta motioned to Ty.
“Can we go into the compound now? I am somewhat anxious to see the changes time has wrought in man’s world. And I would like a proper introduction to Chase.”
Drea took Hippolyta’s hand in her own and the council closed ranks around the three women and Shep as they walked the short distance to the front gate. Diana took her place at the head of the Amazon army, and though they didn’t make a sound, she could feel the pulsating energy of them cheering behind her. It made her smile.
************
Harry knocked on the door of her quarters where Chase was finishing up her own last minute preparations. “Come in,” she called, checking the status of her armor. Hans had added some extra pieces knowing Chase would be going into the lion’s den. She looked up when Harry crossed the threshold and her expression became one of immediate concern.
“Harry? Is there a problem?? Have you gotten news from our outposts overseas??”
“No, ma’am! No, nothing like that. But I think you’d better come outside and see this for yourself.”
Chase followed him out of the hut and then stopped dead at the sight that met her gaze. The courtyard was filled with women – Amazon women – and chief among them stood Diana and her mother’s twin. She considered her alternatives and decided a strategic retreat was in order before she said or did something stupid she might regret later. Suddenly nothing was easy anymore, and this situation was becoming more and more complicated by the minute.
Chapter XXXVI
Orana walked into the conference room, and every man snapped to attention until she put them at ease. They waited until she sat down and gestured at the table before they assumed their seats, and they did so with alacrity. Something about their Fuehrer was different; she exuded an edgy energy that they had only heard about from the oldest elders or had on the rarest occasions, seen in action – though even then, it had been a residual effect of a particularly nasty torture session. And there had only been one noteworthy session in their lifetime.
This energy was subtly different. When Orana had Annabelle Chaser in her custody, she had been first thrilled with her conquest and then furious at being outwitted by someone she considered inferior to her both physically as well as intellectually. Their only saving grace had been that she had been in too much agony immediately after Chase’s attack and subsequent escape to do more than give cursory orders; otherwise the lot of them would have been strung up... or worse.
Then she had been angry, but by the time she had healed, she had moved her focus on to other things and had withdrawn into her own world. It had made them relax slightly. But it was obvious from her attitude today, something had happened to bring back the feared Fuehrer who had originally deposed Hitler and built the Nazi regime into the most powerful war machine the world had ever known.
This Fuehrer had purpose and determination and marked the return of the legendary Black Widow into their midst. Every single man and woman in the room with her sat a little straighter in their chair. They hadn’t felt this kind of excitement before and they enjoyed the tingle that ran across their skin from the energy that skittered throughout the room.
Orana let them absorb the new sensation, letting it build into something of a controlled frenzy. She wanted to infuse the feeling into their being so their desire for it ran hot and strong. In that way she would be able to utilize it to destroy the rebellion. Because once they had the burning, they would do anything to keep it and tightening her grip on the world would be easy.
She had gotten lax since she had brought the world under her iron grip of domination, and except for the episode with the rebel spy, had been little more than a name used to keep both her army and her subjects in line. Now it was time to take action to assure that she didn’t lose her hold on her regime. This was hers and she wasn’t about to let any threat real or imagined take it away from her. When she cleared her throat to speak, all heads turned her direction and flinched at the intensity of purpose that burned in her eyes.
“Rumors have reached my ears that the rebellion,” said with a sneer in her voice, “is making a big offensive push against the Reich. But I cannot seem to get confirmation on this one way or another. The signs are there, but I need more details. So what do you have for me?” looking around the room for some sort of response, not pleased with the lack thereof. “This is not rocket science, people. I have scientists for that if I want to indulge in that sort of speculation. This is military security. Do you mean to tell me not one of you has any idea of any problems going on in your region? No rebels, no discontentment – everything is perfect.”
Her voice and demeanor was calm but none of them were stupid enough to miss the clenching of her jaw or the flexing of her fingers. Finally one small woman, braver than the rest and a personal favorite of Orana’s, rose to speak. Orana nodded towards her graciously and motioned for her to speak. The woman bowed her head in acknowledgement and drew breath to speak.
“Mein Fuehrer, we haven’t had any clear cut reports of rebel activity in my region, but we did notice some awkward movement by those we suspect might be rebel sympathizers or resistance members a couple months ago. Nothing we could have arrested them for without causing a panic, nothing we would have even noticed as being odd if we hadn’t been looking for it. As it stands, it was only unusual... a little out of the ordinary. And it didn’t last very long... a few nights, then everything stopped again and settled back down.”
Orana leaned back thoughtfully. “What happened? What was the change in routine?
“It was more of a rumbling, sort of like the atmosphere change. The people seemed to have a new kind of energy. But it only lasted for a few days and then it was gone like it had never been. We looked around; checked papers more carefully; searched houses and cars and the like thinking perhaps someone was being smuggled through, but we never found any evidence of it.”
“Was anything else done about it? Any arrests made?
“No, mein Fuehrer. We have nothing but suspicions. The people we have been watching aren’t even confirmed rebels. We’ve continued to watch, but short of purging entire villages, I....” The woman shrugged.
Orana sat silently, gesturing absently to the woman to resume her seat. Orana waited, wondering if anyone else would be able to gather the courage to speak. When no one else was forthcoming, she leaned forward. “Ladies and gentlemen, let me make a couple of things perfectly clear for you. We are going to meet back here in twenty-four hours, and in that twenty-four hours you are going to dig up every bit of information on rebellion and resistance activities in your area of responsibility. Because when we meet back here, I want names and numbers and locations and any other pertinent data you can find. Am I clear?”
They answered as one body, their volume loud enough to rattle the windows. Orana smiled. She doubted they had been as terrified as recruits as they were at this very moment.
“I don’t care how you get it done, just do it. Failure is not an option, ladies and gentlemen. Because I assure you, each and every one of you can be replaced, and there are plenty of good little Nazis clambering for your position, eager to take your place.” She rose, and they rushed to stand as well, snapping to attention and hardly daring to breathe while Orana walked around the table, then made her way to the door. “Oh, by the way,” she paused and looked back over her shoulder at them, meeting each and every set of eyes in the room. “Adelia, I like your idea.”
“Mein Fuehrer?”
“Each of you choose a village or town in your region... preferably one that has known or heavily suspected rebel activities and purge it. Completely.”
Eyes widened and jaws dropped. “Co... co... completely, mein Fuehrer? Buh... but we have loyalists in those towns as well. What about them?”
Orana shrugged. “What about them? They are obviously not loyal enough or there wouldn’t be any rebels there now, would there?” She exchanged glances with each of them again. “Take care of it. I want reports on my desk in the morning detailing your actions in this regard. Am I understood?”
“YES SIR!!!” The words resonated throughout the room and down the hall as Orana exited and made her way down to her office. For the first time in a very long time, she felt alive. She wondered what other chaos and mayhem she could cause, and she turned her attention to her Reich, feeling enthusiasm rush through her in waves.
************
Chase looked idly around her hut, wishing she had taken up smoking or drinking or tap dancing or any other number of vices that could be considered a nervous habit – anything to expel some of the panicky energy she suddenly found herself full of. She paced back and forth across the length of her hut before taking herself in hand and breathing deeply.
“All right, Chase. You can do this. You are the leader of the rebellion and you have faced down the Fuehrer and lived to tell the tale. It doesn’t matter that the courtyard is full of Amazons. It doesn’t matter that your mother’s twin is out there with them, and it certainly doesn’t matter that....” She blew out a shaky breath. “It does matter that Diana is here. Goddamnit! I don’t need this right now!” She clenched her hands into fists and dropped onto the bed.
“All right, Chase, all right,” she repeated to herself again, closing her eyes and focusing on taking deep even breaths. “You can do this. You can put all of this out of your mind.” She sat for long minutes and just breathed – in, out, in out. She took every concern that could interfere with the upcoming offensive and put it away in a box in her mind... something she could deal with later. First her mama and the issues she had only just discovered; then Drea and the Amazons that now occupied the entire compound courtyard; and finally Diana.
That one was harder. There were so many variables involved where Diana was concerned. Things Chase hadn’t come to terms with completely herself yet much less discussed with anyone or admitted to Diana. Memories and feelings and desires and needs – anger and friendship, love and lust. Only when she heard the door to her hut open did she allow her eyes to slowly open and her thoughts to return to the present. She looked up to find Shep glaring at her impatiently.
“Chase, what the hell are you doing? I know Harry came to get you. What the hell are you still doing in here? C’mon. We have guests and they might be able to give us an unexpected edge.”
“I’ll be there in a minute, Shep.”
“But....”
“SHEP!!”
He backed out hastily and met Ty’s eyes. She arched an eyebrow and he shook his head, holding his hands up in the universal ‘Beats me’ sign then he started back over to where Ty was waiting. He hadn’t made it but three steps before being shoved out of the way from behind by Chase. Not hard, but enough to make him stumble, and he ran to catch up.
Meanwhile Chase had on her game face and she strode confidently over to where Ty waited flanked by Hippolyta and Drea. Diana remained at the head of the Amazon army waiting for the proper time to be acknowledged by her mother as the leader of said force. With luck, it meant that she would in turn be acknowledged by Chase. Anything to break the stalemate and tension that lingered between them.
Ty blew out a breath of relief. She knew Chase was going to be furious by the unexpected arrival of Amazons, but from all indications – mainly the fact that she hadn’t yet gone completely ballistic – she was at least going to be cordial if not accepting of their presence here.
“Chase, I’m glad you could make it. I was afraid you were going to be too busy,” Ty’s only reproach for the amount of time it took her to arrive after she was summoned. She continued speaking before Chase could reply. “I believe you know Drea,” not mentioning the obvious relationship between Chase and Drea. “And have you met Hippolyta?”
Chase extended her hand to Drea, not even a twitch to betray her thoughts. Certainly no one could have guessed the anger and foul words she had thrown at the older woman only the day before. “It’s nice to see you again, Drea. And Hippolyta, was it?” she asked withdrawing her hand from the healer’s as politely as possible and clasping Hippolyta’s briefly. “I don’t think I have had the pleasure.” She clapped her hands together. “So what can I do for you ladies? Your arrival here was completely unexpected so I really can’t offer you much – maybe some refreshment?”
Hippolyta exchanged glances with both Ty and Drea. Though they had tried to explain a little of the situation to her on the very brief walk, she had expected... had hoped for a little warmer reception. Though given what Chase’s reaction could have been, all things considered, she figured she was ahead of the game with the offer.
Hippolyta nodded and took Chase’s arm, ignoring the flinch she could feel shudder under the skin at her touch. She wondered at the cause – if it was her being an Amazon or the fact that she was Diana’s mother or if there was something more even beyond that.
“Please, Chase. Some refreshment would be most welcome by not only myself but also by my warriors. It has been quite a trip here. Besides, it will give us some time to talk about why we have come.” Hippolyta halted their progress briefly and turned, signaling to Diana. “I believe you know my daughter and the head of the Amazon army, Diana.”
“Yes ma’am, I do,” Chase acknowledged with a nod of her head then turned back to Hippolyta. “C’mon. Let’s see if we can throw Cookie into a tizzy. I highly doubt he is expecting this large a post-breakfast, pre-lunch crowd for snacks.”
Chase and Hippolyta led the way, fully expecting the rest to follow. Ty and Shep did as did the Amazon council, but Diana and the warriors went to the practice field. No one said a word, but they could see in the tension that sang across Diana’s shoulders that they were in for quite the workout indeed. They didn’t realize that work in the encampment had come to a screeching halt and everyone followed after them, anxious to see what was coming.
It was obvious fairly quickly that Diana and the army had failed to follow them into the mess hall and before they could even begin dialogue, Hans rushed in and slid to a stop in front of Chase. “Chase... you’ve got to... oh excuse me,” he said to the small group of people sitting around the table with her. “But Chase, you need to come to the practice field – quickly.”
Chase and Ty exchanged a glance that was the exact replica of the one Hippolyta exchanged with Drea. Then they looked at one another and exclaimed simultaneously, “Diana!”
Chase was out the door before the rest could even get out of their seats, but they were quick to follow. Hans and Shep were the fastest, followed by the council. Ty, Hippolyta and Drea brought up the rear, not conversing, but simply swapping knowing smiles.
When Chase arrived at the field, she couldn’t see anything for all the bodies that blocked her view. However, a simple, deep breath allowed her to project her voice from the depths of her diaphragm and her roar caused everyone and everything to suspend its motion – even the fighters on the field. “What the HELL is going on here?!? Did someone call an unscheduled break and forget to send me the memo??? Get back to work... NOW!!!!”
The rebels scrambled to get back to their tasks, creating a wide berth around Chase in their haste to return to work. Their exodus slowed the arrival of the others so they missed the altercation between Chase and Diana.
The army had frozen as soon as Chase started to bellow. It had honestly startled them, having never actually heard that kind of roar from someone so relatively small. Diana had nudged them aside so by the time Chase finished yelling at the rebels Diana was out of the circle and waiting for Chase’s attention. Chase wanted to... well, there were any number of things she wanted to do, and the confusion she felt showed in a ripple effect across her communicative face. But she schooled her expression before Diana could express any concern.
“Diana,” Chase said, meeting those deep blue eyes but careful not to get too close. “It was unexpected to see you here again. I had hoped you would be on your way home by now.” She looked like she wanted to say more before realizing they had an audience that was listening intently. Diana recognized the reason behind her hesitation and motioned to the army to get back to drilling then gestured to Chase, directing her away from the melee.
“Please, let’s find somewhere to talk a moment that we won’t be interrupted.”
Chase considered, then nodded. She knew she had been unfair to Diana because of her own feelings and confusion, and it wasn’t fair to continue with that treatment, especially since Diana had obviously returned to help and even brought in reinforcements though Chase was still a little unclear on exactly how and why the Amazons were here. Besides, Chase had a handle on her feelings for Diana now, right? She had put them away for the duration, and this would be over and Diana would be gone before she actually had to deal with them.
Chase led the way out of the camp and up towards her thinking hill. Everyone knew when she went there, Chase was going for the peace and solitude it afforded her, and only the direst of circumstances would cause them to disrupt whatever bit of peace she was able to find there.
Hippolyta and the rest arrived just as Diana and Chase stepped into the tree line, and Hippolyta made a move to follow when a hand placed on either arm stopped her progress in its tracks. She looked questioningly at Drea and then Ty.
“They are going there for privacy, Pol. We don’t intrude on Chase when she goes to the hill. It’s the only time she gets a modicum of privacy or peace.”
“Besides, Pol,” Drea continued. “They are going to have to work everything out for themselves sooner or later. Have a little faith.”
Hans and Shep had returned to their duties as soon as Chase had shouted loud enough to be heard in Berlin. The council hadn’t been far behind and had watched with great respect at the speed with which everyone moved when Chase commanded it, then with greater amazement at the sparks they could see flying between Chase and Diana as hard as Chase was trying to avoid it.
“Come,” Mala said, taking Ty’s arm and turning the group back to the compound. “I believe we were going to partake in a bit of refreshment before the late excitement. Do you think Cookie might have had time to prepare a snack by now? I am ravenous.” Not really, but it did accomplish what she had set out to, and soon the little troupe was moving back to the mess hall, marveling at the frantic preparations so apparent now that people were working again.
Diana followed Chase only because the path was narrow and could not accommodate them side-by-side. Several times Chase extended a hand to Diana to help her over a rough spot but immediately released it as soon as she could. Diana held on the last time just before they crested the hill. Chase tried to pull away again until Diana’s low voice stopped her.
“Please, Chase. I’m not going to hurt you. Can’t we at least be friends? I thought we were headed in that direction before.”
Chase’s shoulders slumped in defeat. “We were,” she admitted quietly and walked over to the chest to retrieve a blanket before leading Diana to the edge of the hill. Diana accepted two corners and together they placed the blanket on the soft grass overlooking the water as they had that morning weeks before. Only this time the awkward history between them was out in the open and sitting like a white elephant, making things even more difficult. Finally Chase tried to pick up the thread of their earlier conversation.
“Why are you here, Diana? I had expected... I had hoped you would have returned home. It’s why I left you the jeep – so you could get to an airfield. You don’t have any business here, Diana. This isn’t your fight.”
Diana’s smile was feral, and it sent a chill skittering up Chase’s spine. “Oh this is very much my fight, Chase, for more reasons than you could possibly imagine right now. And though I appreciated the thought of the jeep,” here her smile became playfully mischievous, “you probably should have taught me how to drive it first.”
Chase colored slightly for that oversight. “Oh... sorry. I was mostly focused on getting you out of here,” not mentioning Drea or Jasmine, and Diana let it go in the interest of pursuing other avenues of questioning.
“Why?” blunt and to the point.
Chase shrugged her shoulders and shook her head negatively. “It doesn’t matter.” And she kept her attention on the interesting sparkles the sunlight was creating on the water below.
“It does to me,” Diana said softly. When Chase still didn’t answer, Diana muttered to herself, “Hard to believe you’re the bard here,” but it was spoken too low for Chase to understand. Diana took a deep breath and steeled herself for what was coming next. Then she focused her attention on the water as well and spoke. “Do you want to know why I came here?”
Chase‘s forehead creased in a frown, and she turned to look at Diana. “I had you brought here for your safety as well as that of the rebellion.”
Diana smiled wistfully. “Yes, but do you want to know why I left Paradise Island and came to man’s world? Would you like to know why the fight against Orana is very much my fight? Why I stayed despite everything even when you made it clear I should leave?”
Chase considered, and Diana let her take her time. Chase knew that with this – this crossing the last barrier of knowledge that lay between them – things would change irrevocably. There would be no way for her to pretend she did not know or understand that there was something between them even if it was something she didn’t want. But having reached the bridge, there was no way to turn back. Things would change between them no matter what decision she made. So she turned her face back to the vista that lay before them and nodded.
Chapter XXXVII
“Do you remember the stories your mother told you growing up... about the Amazons and their origins?” Chase blinked; this had not been at all the tack she had expected Diana to take, though she couldn’t have honestly told what she had expected. Diana waited, giving Chase’s mind a minute to catch up, knowing she had caught her completely off guard. Chase swallowed and nodded again, more slowly this time.
“Did she ever tell you the Soulmates’ stories?” At Chase’s blank look she elaborated. “Did Aunt Jasmine,” wincing at the not-quite-hidden flinch that title got her. “Sorry, did Jasmine ever tell you the stories about the warrior and the bard who traveled together across most of the ancient world sharing adventures and doing things for the greater good?”
Now Chase smiled unexpectedly and Diana found herself enchanted by the change in expression. She couldn’t help but respond to the enthusiasm she could feel pouring from Chase.
“Oh yes,” she replied joyfully. “Those were my very favorites. They saw and did so many interesting things together and they seemed... they were so much a part of each other,” she said wistfully. “Even before they became lovers... when they were still just two people getting to know one another... there was something between them.”
“Yes, there was,” Diana agreed quietly.
Chase smiled again, this time a bit wistfully. “Despite the trials and tribulations they faced together, I always wanted them to be real. What they had together was so rare I wanted them to be real just to be able to see that kind of – I dunno... it was more than love and commitment to each other. It was a bonding, almost.”
“It was a bond. They were soulmates.”
“You mentioned that before, but I’ve never heard the term. What are soulmates?” wondering how they had gotten so far afield from Diana’s reasons for coming to man’s world but enjoying the conversation nevertheless. Ty was the only other person Chase had ever talked to about the stories her mother had told, and she found she liked having someone else she could share these things with especially since Diana obviously had her own handle on those same stories.
Diana blinked at Chase’s question. “Your mother never explained soulmates to you?”
Chase shook her head. “No, why would she? It’s not like they were real; they were just stories she told to keep me, and sometimes Ty, entertained and out of trouble for five minutes. She never gave me any reason to think they were more than just stories,” the last added bitterly and Diana knew she was treading dangerously close to thin ice. She almost missed Chase’s whispered comment. “Those stories made me want to be a storyteller when I was a kid before the war took those dreams.”
“Maybe someday, Chase. The war won’t last forever, you know. We’re going to win... soon. We just... we need to settle things between us first so I’m not a distraction and neither of us loses our focus at a critical moment.” A beat. “Would you like to know what soulmates are?”
Chase nodded, watching Diana’s expression in fascination. She had a twinkle in her blue eyes that was lit by an inner fire and just the tiniest hint of a smile graced her lips. Diana indulged herself in a long look at Chase, seeing depths and shadows in the green eyes that gazed back at her. She took Chase’s hands in her own and squeezed them lightly before settling in to tell Chase the story of soulmates that had been a part of Amazon lore since time began. She was gratified when Chase returned the clasp and held on.
“Soulmates are a caprice of the gods and a rarity in any world. They are two whole parts to a single whole entity.” Diana took a deep breath, seeing the confusion in Chase’s face.
“Legend says that at one time, human beings had two heads, four arms, four legs, and a single soul between them. When the gods saw how happy they were, it made them angry. So the gods split humans into two beings and separated the halves they had created, leaving human beings whole but at the same time, incomplete. Most people spend their entire lifetime unconsciously searching for something they don’t even understand they are looking for, And only very rarely and only in some lifetimes do they find that other half. And when those two halves of the same soul find one another again, the two are known as soulmates.”
Diana sighed. That had been exhausting and she wasn’t even to the hard part yet.
Chase thought about Diana’s words. “Wait... are you saying the two women my mother told stories about were more than just stories? That those women really existed... really loved one another?”
“Yes, they did,” with absolute conviction.
“You sound so certain.”
“I am.”
Chase looked at Diana, searching her eyes intently. “Why? How can you be so sure they were real people – real soulmates - and not just the made up figments of some ancient bard’s fertile imagination to make people believe in impossibilities?”
Diana returned the look, and she saw the shift in Chase’s expression when it happened; felt the gasp as an indrawn breath. But instead of pulling away, Chase tightened her hold and tilted her head in a way that rang a bell of sweet memory in Diana’s soul. She smiled gently.
“I know, Chase. I know because I was one of those soulmates.”
Chase stopped breathing. She stopped breathing so long Diana became concerned and then alarmed, and she finally blew air in Chase’s face, forcing an instinctive inhale out of her. Then Chase sat there simply breathing while her mind wrapped around the ramifications of what Diana had said. At last she shook her head and released Diana’s hands so she could stand up and pace.
Diana simply watched. She didn’t feel like Chase was trying to pull away from her as much as she was trying to come to terms with what she had been told. Eventually she came back to where Diana still sat, her attention turned back out at the view. Chase squatted to one side in front of her and waited for Diana’s eyes to track to her.
“You... you’re... how do... um.... Shit!” Chase scratched her head in frustration. Diana took Chase’s hands in her own again and chafed them gently. Then she gave Chase a crooked smile that was at once comforting and familiar.
“Chase... take your time, all right? We’re not in a rush here.”
“Okay... okay.” She dropped to her knees from her crouch and let her gaze drop to their conjoined hands. “How do you know you are one of the soulmates written about in the Amazon chronicles?”
“I have some residual memories from that time – not real memories, but a familiarity... a feeling. It’s kind of hard to explain, but it’s real, Chase. I know it is even without the goddesses’ confirmation.”
Chase just blinked. “The goddesses confirmed...?” She cleared her throat. “Nevermind. If you want to believe that you are the soul of a three thousand year dead warrior, then who am I to say you’re not? But what does that have to do with me and the here and now?”
Now came the really hard part. It was obvious that Chase didn’t quite believe what Diana was saying about herself being part of those ancient soulmates though she did think Diana believed it. It was equally obvious from her reaction yesterday as well as her reaction to her mother’s name earlier that she was still not all that enamored of being an Amazon. Diana wasn’t very confident of the response she was going to get from Chase once she related the rest of her story.
“Chase, I never told you I was the warrior half of the pair; how did you know?” Chase blinked rapidly and swallowed. “But you’re absolutely positive of that knowledge, aren’t you?”
“I... I....”
Diana released one hand and let her free hand comb through Chase’s hair that was being blown into her face by the gentle breeze. “Chase, I know you’ve had a rough time since I arrived... especially the last day or two. But I want you to consider why that is, and why you know in your heart and in your mind and down to the depths of your soul that I am that warrior.”
Silence.
“Chase, I came to man’s world for you.”
“NO!”
“Chase....”
Chase ripped her hands free from Diana’s grasp and stood, rapidly moving to the edge of the hill. She stood staring sightlessly at the water that continued to shimmer and sparkle as it moved on its way, all unknowing of the turmoil that was occurring in Chase’s mind or the hollow ache in her chest only a few feet above its chuckling trickle.
Diana came up behind her more slowly and put her hands lightly on Chase’s shoulders. She felt the tension sing through Chase’s body as though it was a tautly pulled bowstring. Diana removed her hands when Chase shuddered at the sensation of her touch and Chase stiffened to the point that the rigidity in her body was painful to look at.
“Chase,” Diana said softly as her hands fell to her sides. “I did come to man’s world for you. I wanted to give us a chance to maybe at least become friends. After all, we can’t get to know one another if we aren’t in the same world, right? But I also came to settle an old score. I owe Orana, Chase... for what she did to me; for what she did to you; and for what she did to the world. Even if you weren’t my soul....” stopping when Chase flinched again at the implication and feeling the pain of rejection lance through her. “Even if you aren’t....” She cleared her throat and dropped that line of thought. “Let’s just say I owe Orana and leave it at that, all right?”
“No,” flat and unemotional. “No, it’s not all right, Diana. You don’t get to just to show up here and start making those kinds of claims... not on me and not on the rebellion.” Chase turned to face Diana, poking her with great vigor as she protested Diana’s claims with passion. “I don’t care what you think you do or do not owe Orana or your reasons behind it. She is not your responsibility. She’s mine, and I am going to pay her back in full for every ounce of suffering she has caused. This is personal, and I have earned the right! Do you understand me?”
“No, Chase... I don’t,” Diana said softly, biting her lip so as not to let her tears fall. “I don’t understand why you are so willing to die when you know... you KNOW in your heart and soul that what I told you is the truth. You know we are soulmates – the soulmates of legend finally reunited after nearly three millennia of separation! How can you risk that bond so easily? Do you realize how long we have been searching for one another??”
This time green eyes met blue and Diana flinched at the fire and fury she could so clearly read directed at her. “How. Dare. You.” Chase ground the words out from clenched teeth. “How dare you come here and try to put all of this on my shoulders, Diana. I’m not the one who separated those souls in the first place,” refusing to acknowledge in her speech at least that she was the soul Diana had spent her lifetime searching for. “You see, Mama told me all the stories... including how and why the warrior died; how and why the bard was left to wander the world alone. It was only a short length of time that she survived before the pain of grief and their separation caused her to...!” Chase took a deep breath, dropping her chin and turning her face away from Diana once more. Then she spoke again in a more rational tone. “So don’t you dare come here all self-righteous trying to dictate to me and put the blame for your loneliness on my shoulders! I’m not the one who left you and I’m damn sure not the one who took your soul out of the karmic circle. Go talk to your goddesses and leave me alone.”
“No.”
“Excuse me?” turning around to face Diana directly.
“No. I am not going to let you throw away our chance at happiness... our chance for peace! Dammit, Chase! I messed up, and it cost us nearly three thousand years apart from one another! I won’t let you throw it away for spite before you even consider the ramifications of what you’re doing.”
“I know what I’m doing. This isn’t your decision, Diana. It isn’t your choice. It’s mine and I’m not willing to be a part of this. For weeks I have been plagued by thoughts of you – images and feelings and impressions. I have been driven out of my mind trying to reconcile the person I know myself to be with longings and desires and dreams I didn’t understand or want. Now you have the gall to stand here and tell me it’s not my choice?!? I don’t think so.”
Diana took a deep breath. “You don’t think we have suffered apart long enough? You’re willing to give us up forever? For spite?”
“Not for spite,” Chase whispered, the fight having drained out of her. “But yes, I’m willing to give us up forever, Diana, if it means I don’t have to live with losing you again. I can’t invest everything I am into that kind of relationship again. I did that once, and something inside me died when you did. I’m not willing to settle for less than everything from me or from you and it’s just not possible anymore. After more than two millennia, I’ve gotten used to living alone. I can live with the empty ache; at least it’s familiar. I wouldn’t survive a rejoining with you only to have it taken away again.”
Finally Diana saw a ray of hope. “What if I promise you that won’t happen again? What if I can guarantee it?”
Chase smiled sadly. “You can’t promise me that, Diana. If we are the soulmates you claim us to be, then you can’t promise me that. I’ve heard the stories, remember? Even without them, I know your heart. It won’t let you stand by when there are lives to save and innocents to protect. And you have no assurances of surviving the fight that is coming.”
“I do, Chase. I’m an immortal and so are you. It’s your Amazon birthright.” Diana’s pronouncement was met with stunned silence. “Chase? Are you all right?”
Chase blinked. “Is there anything else I need to know?” her voice an aching whisper that verged on the edge of hysteria. “Please... I’m not sure how many more revelations I can stand before my brain explodes.”
Diana shook her head. “Not as far as I know. I have told you everything I know.” More silence. “Please, Chase. All I am asking is a chance for us.”
“Do you understand what you’re asking of me?”
“Yes, but I have to ask, Chase. I have to. We’ve been apart for far too long.” Diana blew out a frustrated breath. “I know the blame for our original separation is mine, and gods, I am so damn sorry for that. But the fact that we weren’t able to find one another again until now isn’t my fault. It’s time for us to be whole again. We deserve a second chance at happiness together, Chase. We deserve it.” Diana waited, but Chase didn’t answer, instead keeping her attention on the vista below them. Diana sighed and made one last-ditch effort. “I’m sorry, Chase. Maybe I am asking for too much too soon. Do you think we could maybe at least try to be friends?”
Chase didn’t move, didn’t reply and this time Diana let the tears come as the rending seared into her soul. She turned to walk away, having said everything she knew to say....
... then stopped when a warm hand gripped her wrist.
Diana looked down. The hold wasn’t painful, but it was firm and it made her turn her attention to the woman who held her in such a solid clasp. Chase was still looking out at the view and Diana relaxed, noting the somewhat tranquil expression on Chase’s face. There were still lines and concerns, but there was also a noticeable difference as though she had come to a decision.
“You’re going to have to give me some time, Diana. You’re going to have to give me some time to consider everything you have said; time to put that against what I know and what I remember and the stories Mama told me about... us. Can you do that?”
“Do you believe we could be an us again... maybe someday?” Diana asked wistfully.
“Maybe someday,” Chase answered honestly, knowing the truth in her heart. She turned her face full towards Diana and gazed into her eyes. “But it won’t be today or tomorrow. It’s going to take time and we’re a little short on that right now.”
“Chase, for the chance of recovering us again, you can have all the time you need. You set the pace things go.” Diana couldn’t help it... she reached up and moved the loose hair that blew across Chase’s eyes. Chase’s eyes fluttered closed and unconsciously she leaned into the light touch. Diana smiled and let her fingers linger only briefly, gently tracing the soft skin before letting her hand drop back to her side. Chase took the hand in hers and held it.
“I know there is something between us, Diana; there has been since the beginning. As much as I have tried to deny it - as much as I have fought against it - I’ve been aware of it without understanding what it is. I can’t keep fighting it.” Chase sighed deeply. “I’m not strong enough to keep fighting, and it is stronger than I am. If you can give me time, I think we can start with being friends again. After that....” Chase shrugged. “Well, we have to get through this offensive first. And we need to end the war. Once we take care of Orana, we will have plenty of time to talk about us.”
“We? Does that mean you are willing to let me and my Amazons be a part of the offensive against Orana and the Reich?”
“It means I am not stupid, Diana. I’ve learned how to use all the resources at my disposal and to turn away an army of warriors would make me very stupid indeed. Question is, will they follow me?”
“They will follow me, Chase, and I will follow you.”
Chase couldn’t stop the smile that crossed her face at Diana’s words any more than she could stop the thought that passed through her mind. Would you be willing to walk beside me Diana and let me walk beside you? But she didn’t speak it aloud. She was running on overload and she knew it. Too much had happened in too short a space of time. She would need time to consider everything and the implications thereof as she had told Diana. But for now it seemed they had a firm foundation for friendship between them. There was honesty and that was a good start.
“All right,” she said aloud. “Let’s go back down and figure out the best way to incorporate your Amazon army into the offensive plan we have ready to go. It’s time to bring this damn war to an end.”
“I like the sound of that,” Diana replied as she bent and snatched up the blanket. She folded it and moved two steps towards the chest before she found her hand caught and held in Chase’s. She grinned so big it rivaled the sun, and she squeezed lightly before they walked to the tree together. Then they headed back down the hill with Chase in the lead only this time she didn’t release the hand she held.
Neither of them could have predicted the news that awaited them when they reached the bottom of the hill.
Chapter XXXVIII
Ty noticed the joined hands as they stepped from the trees, but she didn’t have time to enjoy the moment. She had actually been on her way up the hill when they had reappeared and now she hurried over to them with the radio code in her hands. Chase saw her coming and she met Diana’s gaze reassuringly before Ty reached them.
“Chase, I was just coming to find you,” extending the paper she held. “Diana would you excuse us, please?”
Diana nodded and tried to release Chase’s hand, only to find her own held tightly “No, Ty. Diana is the leader of the Amazon army. On those merits alone, if there have been developments she’s entitled to know. On a personal level, I need her to be part of things.”
Ty blinked. She had never expected something like that to come from Chase’s mouth. But she knew with certainty that Chase trusted Diana and that there was an underlying reason for it.
Diana blinked as well. Given what she knew of Chase, she hadn’t expected such a public declaration especially so soon after the personal war Chase had fought with herself on the hill. Then it occurred to her that Chase was doing her best to keep her promise. By letting Diana into the inner circle, not only on a military level but a personal one as well, she was offering Diana trust and the opportunity to start building the foundation of friendship they needed in order to develop anything deeper between them. Her smile grew exponentially.
Chase returned the look briefly and Ty looked away out of respect. Then she cleared her throat and motioned to the paper Chase still held in her hand. “Um, Chase? You may want to look at that report. The rest haven’t seen this yet and it’s....” Ty stopped speaking when Chase’s attention transferred to the paper she clasped.
She watched as Chase’s eyes tracked through the words and then stop and read through them a second time. Chase’s jaw dropped just slightly and she looked at Ty in complete disbelief. “Are we sure about this? Has it been confirmed?” Ty nodded and Chase crumpled the paper and dropped Diana’s hand. “Goddamn,” turning and walking away from them several steps.
Diana frowned slightly. The words made no sense to her; it was just so much gibberish. Then she realized that the whole thing was written in some sort of code she didn’t have the key to yet. She looked at Chase for an explanation.
Chase held up her hand, a silent plea for patience and Diana acquiesced with a nod. Chase moved back towards Ty until they were standing in one another’s space. “How long? When did this happen?”
Ty blew out a breath and shook her head. “We don’t know for certain. The best we can figure is within the last three weeks.” Then she waited for the explosion she knew was coming.
“Three weeks?? THREE WEEKS?!? Why in the hell are we just now hearing about this?? Goddamn it, Ty! This changes everything!!”
“I know it does, Chase. We think it took this long for the news to reach us because it took this long for the damage to be done. We’re still getting all the reports in. Look, let me call the staff and....” She turned to Diana. “Is there anyone from the Amazons you need as an advisor or confidante?” Diana shook her head.
“No. Having Chase will be all I’ll need. Don’t worry, Ty. I am well-versed in the school of war.”
Ty didn’t understand the remark but nodded her head anyway. “All right then. Let me go call a staff meeting for thirty minutes from now. That will give you time to bring Diana up to speed.”
“Sounds good. Are the Amazons settled?” Ty nodded. “Good. Make sure everyone brings their mission notes. We’re gonna have to make some adjustments. We’ll see you in half an hour,” taking Diana’s hand and leading the way to her quarters. She knew it was the most privacy they could hope for without returning to the hill and there just wasn’t time for that.
Diana was patient until the door closed, then she turned to Chase. “All right... what happened to drain the color from your face, Chase? Are you okay?”
“Physically, yes,” Chase answered with a wan smile. “Let’s sit,” motioning to the bed. Diana seated her, then poured a glass of water from the pitcher on the small stand, watching in concern when Chase drained it. Chase let her hand fall between her knees and dropped her chin to her chest for a long moment before she met Diana’s eyes and patted the space beside her. “Thanks,” she said, putting the glass back on the table.
“The first reason our offensive was delayed was because of that death cocktail Orana and her team developed. Hans spent a very long time working on an antidote, and of course, you were able to give him the impetus he needed to get over that last hump. Another was the new armor piercing rounds we found out about just before we were ready to launch the last time. The mission that landed me on Paradise Island was in fact the one that gave us the specifics on the ammo that caused us to postpone the operation yet again while we tried to find a way to defend ourselves against it.”
Diana nodded, figuring there was a reason for the brief history lesson.
“So twice we have postponed this mission – the mission to finally rid the world of Orana – to ensure that a majority of the rebellion survives. Makes sense, right? Kind of pointless to defeat the evil if no one is alive to enjoy it... especially if we simply create a vacuum for another evil to slip into its place with no one left to defeat that one, right?”
Diana nodded again, and again silence fell between them. Diana could tell by the evenness of Chase’s breathing she was forcing herself to concentrate so as to maintain her calm. She waited.
“So today... just now... we get the news that sometime within the last three weeks, Orana had a dozen different villages purged. All over the world and apparently randomly, but twelve different towns across the planet are simply empty shells now. Every living thing – man, woman, child... hell, even the animals were brutally massacred. She is going to make an announcement about it tomorrow night. A worldwide address to show the consequences for questionable loyalty.”
A long pause, then Diana spoke. “Gods, Chase. That’s....”
“Yeah... because of my hesitation, innocents have been murdered!”
“Oh no, Chase... NO! The blame for this falls squarely on Orana’s shoulders – not yours and not mine. What you did was make a decision that kept people alive; she went in and destroyed everything without a single regard for those who were loyal to her. We will avenge them, Chase... all of them but especially those who were part of the resistance.”
Chase sat quietly, examining her hands while she considered Diana’s words. Finally she looked up and smiled. “Thank you, Diana.”
Diana smiled back. “Any time, Chase. That’s what friends do for each other, right? They stick together.” A beat. “Now come on. I need something to eat. I only got a bite of breakfast before I got called to go to the gate to meet the incoming Amazon army, and I’m starving.”
Chase blinked. “Come to think of it, I could do with a cup or six of coffee. Let me get my notes and we’ll swing by the mess hall for a snack before we head to the conference room.”
“Does the massacre change anything...?” Diana hesitated when Chase’s accusing eyes turned her way. “From a mission perspective, Chase. I know it changes things for you personally. It does the same for me, and I don’t even have any real ties to any of the people who were killed.”
Chase ran a hand through her hair and scratched the back of her neck in awkward embarrassment. “My fault,” she said briefly. “I shouldn’t be so damn touchy about things especially with you. I promised you I would work at us being friends, and....”
“Chase,” Diana cut in, placing her hand on Chase’s arm. “I know it’s going to take a while. Real friendship takes time to develop, and we have several issues to get around besides just trying to be friends. If this is going to be too hard for you to do now, it can wait until we win the war. I will be just another member of the staff.”
Chase smiled wryly and shook her head. “Much as we’d like to think we had some semblance of control going on here, it just never works like that. Besides I need to get past this and the only way that’s going to happen is with a lot of awkward and embarrassing moments between us for a while. You’re right... I’ve got a lot of baggage, and it would be really nice if we had time to go through it all and have things nicely settled between us before we had to go to work. But we don’t have that luxury. We also don’t have time for you to coddle me through it. All right? If we’re gonna be friends, you’re gonna have to learn when to step back and when to give me a swift kick in the ass.”
Diana looked at her boots, then in the direction of Chase’s ass, then at her boots again before she let her gaze drift back to those green eyes, stopping long enough at her ass again to warrant a smirk and a twinkle. Only supreme self-control kept her from blushing.
“Gotcha. A swift kick in the... <ahem> ass. Would you like me to do so now?”
Chase did a double take to see if she was serious, then caught the mischief in those eyes that was signaling for her attention. “Not literally,” she growled, then grabbed Diana’s hand and tugged her towards the mess tent. Now she needed more than coffee.
“Back to my question,” Diana said as they crossed the threshold. “Does the massacre change any of the logistical planning? Did we lose operatives or launch sites... things of that nature?”
Chase shook her head and took a swallow of the coffee, grimacing at its bitter taste. She glared in Cookie’s direction and he held up his hands in apology, then he began assembling a tray of food for them. Chase turned her attention back to Diana who had watched the interplay between her and Cookie without comment. She put the coffee down to add something... anything... to it to make the taste a little more palatable, noting that Diana was still stirring.
“Not that I can tell at first glance. But then the missive Ty gave me was very general in its message. She should have more details for me when we get to the conference room.” She paused when Cookie approached. “Thanks, Cookie,” accepting the tray he offered her.
“Sorry about the coffee, Chase. You got the bottom of the pot. Um... am I supposed to do anything special about all them women?” Chase and Diana both looked at him dumbly and he hastened on. “I mean they didn’t eat or drink anything while they were in here. Are they gonna need something different from the rest of the troops or...?”
Diana chuckled. “No, Cookie. Like every other warrior you know, they will eat whatever you put in front of them. Unlike Chase here, most of us don’t go foraging for food if we don’t have to,” earning her a hearty laugh from Cookie and another glare from Chase. “Just call them when you’re ready to feed them. I guarantee you they’ll come and eat.”
“I know where you live, ya know,” Chase growled. Diana bit her lip to keep from chuckling, but that didn’t keep the sparkles out of her eyes. Cookie didn’t exercise Diana’s control and guffawed loudly holding his belly. Chase popped him but that only caused him to laugh louder. “I remember a time when I had a semblance of control here. What happened to that exactly?” she muttered as she made her way to the door, shaking her head and continuing to mumble to herself.
Diana and Cookie exchanged glances and grins, then Diana hurried after Chase’s retreating figure.
************
“We have a problem,” Ares said as he orbed into Orana’s bedroom. She was busy getting dressed for the worldwide appearance she had scheduled for later that evening.
“Don’t you ever knock?”
Ares snorted. “Why should I? Not like I haven’t seen it all before.”
“That’s not the point, Ares. A little respect here wouldn’t be out of line, you know.” She shook her head at his dumbfounded look and tucked her shirt in. “Nevermind, Ares. What’s the problem? I know this isn’t about the purging I did, even though it took longer than I wanted it to. You already expressed your pleasure about that tactic... several times and in a variety of positions.”
Ares smiled. “And I look forward to a repeat in the near future. But business first.”
“What business, Ares? I purged twelve villages and towns across the planet. I’ve collected information on the resistance that will enable me to put the fear of... well, me into them. I am presenting my ultimatum tonight. Everything is on track because the rebellion and the resistance won’t give up without a fight; you know that as well as I do. What could be more important than that?”
“How about an Amazon Princess?”
Orana froze mid-motion. It took a solid minute before she took a deep breath and only then did she turn her head to meet Ares’ eyes. His head was cocked and one eyebrow was raised and he was wearing the infernal smirk she despised so much.
“Excuse me?” she questioned. “What did you just say? Are you telling me...?”
“You remember that lovely bit of Amazon flesh you lusted after for millennia? The Princess who considered you a friend and mentor and nothing more, despite the obvious desire you had for her? The one you stole the title of Wonder Woman from and then proceeded to beat and humiliate within a inch of her life....”
“ENOUGH!!!” Orana roared.
“But I was just getting warmed up,” Ares whined. “It gets better.”
“Shut up, Ares, and get to the goddamn point!”
“My, my... such language. Which do you want me to do – shut up or get to the point?”
“Get. To. The. Point.” She ground out from between clenched teeth. “What does she have to do with anything... especially the coming fight with the rebellion?”
“She’s been spotted.”
“Spotted? Where... here in man’s world?”
“Yes, here in man’s world; and even better... here in Berlin.”
Orana’s eyes glowed, a combination of hatred and lust. The look made Ares shiver in arousal as well as the tiniest kernel of fear. “Where is she? When did you see her?”
“I was reviewing some of the scrying records. You remember we talked about those odd photographs you got with breakfast? I did some looking around; she’s been here.”
Orana considered his words carefully. “You think she may be what was causing the stir a few weeks ago... the one Adelia was talking about?”
He stroked his beard thoughtfully. “I think it bears looking into. If she’s here, it could complicate things immensely.”
“If she’s here, I will find her. She won’t be able to resist the temptation of trying to defeat me again. And when she tries, she will be mine.”
“Orana, don’t lose focus here. If Diana is here, the odds are she is part of the resistance or the rebellion. Please don’t underestimate her... or them. If you don’t take them seriously....”
“I take them seriously enough, Ares. I just plan to thoroughly enjoy my conquest of Diana... all my conquest of Diana as well as the final, humiliating defeat of the resistance here and the rebellion overseas. My overseers have grown lazy. I will put the fear of the Fuehrer into them as well as the rest of the world. And then I will crush them all.”
Ares watched Orana with more than a hint of concern in his eyes. She was sounding less and less like the woman he had mentored upon her arrival in man’s world and more like an obsessed madwoman. Then he lost that train of thought when she rubbed up against him like a cat in heat.
“However, tomorrow is soon enough to worry about conquering and destroying. After the announcement is made, Adelia will be coming back here to celebrate with me. Would you like to join us?” A hard, fast kiss was her answer, and Orana pulled away with a laugh. “Then let’s not keep the people waiting, War God. We have more important business to take care of tonight.”
He reached for her cape and placed it on her shoulders. She pinned it together at the neck with an emblem she had crafted for herself alone – one that showed her Amazon heritage as well as her power as the Nazi Fuehrer. An intriguing image and not one she flaunted about very often.
Ares opened the door and offered his arm. Orana accepted and they walked out and down the hall towards the square where everything had been prepared for Orana’s worldwide announcement.
************
Chase rubbed her eyes. “We can’t postpone this again.”
“But Chase....”
“NO, Ty. I know the risks. But if we don’t go now, it may be impossible. You know and I know that given the facts, the Fuehrer is going to do her damnedest to twist this to make it work for her. We got lucky – she has gotten so sloppy and arrogant, she managed to destroy more of her own loyalists than she did resistance members. But if we don’t move now... show them that we mean business about this... WE may be the ones that destroy the rebellion.”
“She’s right, Ty. It’s a show of assurance more than anything. Otherwise people start to lose faith. Then what?”
Ty looked around. “Diana?”
Diana sat quietly for a long moment, looking around the council room. What she found was reassuring. These people had worked long and hard together; they had a confidence in each other’s abilities that had been hard won. They had even expressed confidence in her after seeing the Amazons train with and without her that morning. She understood Ty’s concern; regardless of how careful they were or how well they planned, people were going to die. But there would never be a better time than the present. At least implementing the plan and moving towards its completion would give hope. And sometimes that was the best weapon to have on one’s side.
“If we’re taking a vote, I say go now. We can improvise as things unfold, but this offensive offers hope. If we’re not moving when Orana makes her announcement, we could lose an immeasurable level of confidence. And without that....”
Chase nodded her agreement and waited for any more input. When none was forthcoming, she looked around the room. “All right. Send out the signals for them to make preparations for our arrival. We start leaving in an hour in fifteen minute increments; one of you to each wave.”
“What about you, Chase? We only have five waves going including the Amazons. We sent for another cargo plane as soon as they arrived. It should be here with just enough time for us to refuel, flight check it and load,” Mitch answered her unspoken question. Chase nodded her approval.
“Good job, Mitch. I’ll be flying the Tiger. Hans has made some improvements on it for me. I should be able to leave last and arrive first.” That statement got lots of raised eyebrows. “Make sure each of you gets something to eat and meets with your squad leaders. Explain everything in detail. I don’t want any screw-ups. We will have a final briefing with everyone in the square just before takeoff. Let’s go people. We have a war to win.”
Chapter XXXIX
“Hey, Chase... you got a minute?” She sighed and turned to find Shep behind her; she stopped walking long enough for him to catch up. Then they resumed their movement towards the lab that had been Chase’s original destination. She had sent her staff off with a nod; Diana had understood her unspoken request and had gone off to check on the Amazons. She wondered why Shep hadn’t taken the hint. Even Hans had rushed ahead to be sure to have things ready without interfering with her train of thought.
They went about ten steps without Shep speaking and Chase stopped walking and looked at Shep impatiently. “Shep, is there something I can do for you? You have things to take care of before we leave and so do I.”
“I just wanted to make sure you were all right. You’ve been all over the place lately and Jen and I have been more than a little worried about you. Especially since you ordered us to move in broad daylight. Chase, are you sure about this? It’s so dangerous.”
“Shep, if you can’t do this tell me and I will find someone who can. I don’t have time for your doubts.”
He didn’t answer immediately and Chase turned to walk away. His hand on her arm stopped her progress and she looked down at his hand before looking at his face. Shep took his hand off her arm slowly and dipped his head.
“Sorry, Chase. It’s not doubts... it’s concern. I don’t know who or what Diana is to you, but something happened to you during that week you were gone. And it only got worse when Diana got here. I just want to know that you’re all right... that you’re ready for this.”
Chase smiled and took Shep’s arm, turning them around and walking them back towards the center of the encampment. “Shep, I appreciate your concern and I do understand where it’s coming from. What is or isn’t between me and Diana is private and has nothing to do with the rebellion or this offensive. We have to leave in the daylight so we get there in the dark. Don’t worry, Shep... I’ve worked the schedule and the flight paths to draw the least attention possible to our departures. But we need to arrive after dark so we can traverse the countryside safely.”
He nodded, knowing Chase was absolutely right.
“Trust me, Shep. I’ve made the adjustments to compensate for the changes, all right?”
“All right, Chase... thanks.”
Shep saluted and took off at a fast jog to get back to the hut he shared with Jen. She had promised to pick up lunch for the two of them while he talked to Chase. Chase turned back and made her way to the laboratory, anxious to get this offensive started so they could get it over with.
Hans stuck his head out the door when he heard the footsteps. He wondered what had taken Chase so long to follow him, but a look at the frustration on her face kept his mouth shut until she spoke.
“Hey, Hans. Sorry for the delay. You got the stuff I asked for?”
“Yes. Chase, are you sure about this?”
Chase smiled wryly at Hans, then gave him a brief, reassuring hug before retreating enough to look at the things he had laid out for her perusal. “I’m as sure as I’m gonna get, Hans. No time for doubts and second guessing.”
“But Chase, the fuel is untested outside the lab, and we’ve only tested the tweaks we did on the motor in short flights.”
“Have a little faith, Hans. We do good work together. We always have. I’m gonna come back and tell you what a rush it is to fly that fast, and then you’re gonna go joy riding and maybe even invite Ty along for a little thrill.”
He blushed slightly but nodded his agreement. “All right, Chase. I’m going to hold you to it. And I will tell you, if you make me worry like I did the last time you went off... if I have to come over there and save your butt, I will call you Annabelle until the day I die.”
Chase mock-shuddered, appreciating the banter for the stress relief it was. She picked up her armor and the few special accoutrements she’d had him add strictly for her. “That’s reason enough for me to bring her home without a scratch.” A beat. “Thanks, Hans. Hold down the fort for me, will ya? And don’t let that Amazon Queen and her council run you ragged.”
“They’re staying here?!?”
“I guess. Since she handed over the leadership of the army to Diana, I doubt she’s gonna be going. I haven’t really had a chance to find out. But if they do stay, be nice, but not indulgent.”
Hans smiled. “Got it. And you be careful. I want to visit that farm of yours; maybe learn how to milk a cow or sow oats or bake bread or whatever it is you do on a farm.”
Chase looked down at her hands and smiled sadly. “All right, Hans. When I get back, we’ll see about making a farmer outta you. BUT you have to ask Ty out, too.” She held up her hands before he could protest. “If I have to teach you how to farm, the least you can do is ask the woman to dinner.”
Hans chuckled. “Chase, if you both come back I’ll ask her out. I enjoy my laboratories too much to be a real farmer.” He opened his arms for a hug and she stepped into the embrace. “Thanks for being my friend, Chase, and thank you for saving my life.”
“It was a life worth saving, Hans, and I’m proud to count you as a friend.”
Hans kissed both cheeks and released her, and Chase picked up her gear and left without a backwards glance.
Chase crossed the threshold into her hut and stopped dead. On her desk sat a steaming hot bowl of soup and two thick sandwiches accompanied by a tall glass of what appeared to be iced tea. She blinked at it a minute, fully expecting it to disappear. When it didn’t, she looked around for company, but she didn’t have that either.
She carefully placed her equipment on the bed, then turned back to the desk. There was a note next to the napkin and she picked it up with a smile. Figured one of us needed to make sure you got a chance to eat. See you shortly. Diana
Chase smiled at Diana’s thoughtfulness and thought about cramming a sandwich into her mouth on her way to the showers given how hungry she suddenly found herself to be. She shook her head. Her enjoyment of the meal was warranted given the time and effort Diana had made to ensure she had a meal to eat before they left. Instead she covered the soup bowl and snatched up her towel and clean underwear. She would set a world’s record for getting clean, and then come back to her hut and enjoy the meal with a rarely felt luxury.
Chase rushed through her ritual bathing though she was careful to follow every step. She was even completely dry before slipping into her clean clothes, but she moved with greater speed than she normally used. Then she was back in her hut enjoying soup that had cooled to a comfortably warm temperature and eating sandwiches so big she could barely take a bite out of them.
Ty briefly wondered what had happened. She had never seen Chase go in and out of her traditional shower that quickly before, but then the Amazons came back in from the direction of the river obviously scrubbed clean. Ty shook her head, speculating if Chase realized her ritual to be clean before an upcoming mission was based in Amazon tradition. Then she shrugged and decided it didn’t matter as long as it worked Chase’s normal voodoo magic.
Ty nodded at them on her way back to her hut, needing to go prepare her armor and dress before time ran short. The Amazons filed into the mess hut with single-minded determination. Diana broke apart from them and headed towards Chase’s hut.
“Diana?” She sighed and her shoulders dropped before she turned and faced her mother. She waited quietly, unwilling to address Hippolyta as her mother and uneasy about calling her by her name after being put in charge of the army.
Hippolyta was a little disappointed that Diana didn’t address her at all, but she was gratified that Diana held her gaze evenly and without rancor. That was something that hadn’t happened in over a hundred years, and Hippolyta let herself relish the experience until Diana’s gaze became piercing and one eyebrow arched sharply.
“Oh... my apologies, Diana. I just wanted to ask if it was all right with you if I went along on this mission as well. Not as the queen and not as your mother,” she continued before Diana could protest. “I would like to go as an Amazon warrior.”
Diana blew out a breath and turned away from Hippolyta. The truth was she could understand Hippolyta’s desire to go. She had been one of their greatest warriors before the Nation had been relocated to Paradise Island. Diana had actually been a little surprised that Hippolyta had handed over leadership of the army for this mission.
“Why did you make me the leader of the army for this operation?” not turning around to look at Hippolyta as she asked the question. “You would have gone as the queen and as a warrior.”
“Diana, I have made a mess of everything I have done in the last hundred years where you are concerned, but not about this. This is your fight, Diana. You deserve the right to lead the army against Orana. You, more than anyone, have the right to retribution – not just for what she did to you but for what she did to your mate as well. I would never stand in the way of that.”
“Chase is not my mate,” fiercely, turning to look at her mother with a burning look in her eyes.
“Maybe not yet, Daughter, but she will be.”
The confirmation was unlooked for and it unexpectedly warmed Diana’s heart just a little. Hippolyta saw it, but she wisely contained her reaction, not wanting it to disappear on her account. Instead she answered the plea she could just see hidden at the very back of Diana’s eyes.
“I’ve seen the way she looks at you.” Hippolyta took a deep breath. “Diana... Daughter... I wouldn’t lie to you about this. Despite everything else I have managed to do wrong, I wouldn’t lie to you about anything. Trust me, Diana, please.” A brief pause. “I know there are some things between us that no amount of time or apologies or regret will ever be able to repair. But you can trust me, Diana... especially about this.”
Diana blew out a deep breath and turned back towards Chase’s hut. “I won’t stop you from joining us on this offensive. You are one of the best warriors the Amazon Nation ever produced, and I am not stupid enough to not utilize every asset at my disposal. I’ll leave the decision up to you.”
“I would like to go, Diana; I just don’t want to make things tough for the army with my presence. Not that I think they would have difficulty following you; you’re a natural leader and a greater warrior than even I was. But it is hard to break thousands of years of ingrained protocol and tradition.”
Diana remained silent not wanting to influence Hippolyta’s decision, but she did turn to look at her.
“How would you feel if I went as an assistant healer?” Diana didn’t answer and Hippolyta realized she wouldn’t. Diana really was leaving the decision completely up to her, and somehow that knowledge made the choice easier. “I think I will stay here and prepare for the victory party because you know if we leave the rebels in charge of that we will get....” Here she made a face. “Coffee and fried sugar bread.”
Diana smirked. “You mean donuts?”
“I suppose. Now really... where did they come up with such a thing?? No – I will stay here. Amazons know how to throw a good party, and no one is better suited for doing that than the queen, right?”
“As you say,” Diana agreed without actually committing herself.
“Good! Then it’s decided.” Diana nodded and started for Chase’s hut once more. “Diana....” She stopped walking but didn’t turn around. “Thank you for giving me the choice. I appreciate the consideration.”
Diana didn’t answer except to nod again, then she walked away with a purposeful step. Hippolyta smiled, watching her go and thanking the goddesses for sending Chase to Amazons and Diana to Chase. Already Chase had changed Diana’s attitude towards her mother and for the first time in a long, long time, Hippolyta was looking towards the future.
************
Knock, knock.... “Chase?” Silence. “Chase, it’s Diana.” Still no answer. Diana bit her bottom lip in contemplation, then opened the door a crack just to see if Chase was actually in the hut. What she found surprised her.
Chase was sitting at the desk, eyes half closed in meditation. The dishes in front of her were bare of food, including crumbs and the napkin had been neatly refolded and was covering the bowl. Chase didn’t move when Diana slipped into the room, and Diana took the opportunity to remove the tray from the desk. When she turned back to Chase, she found bright green eyes focused intently on her.
Chase didn’t speak; she simply held out her hand and Diana took it. Chase led her around to sit on the only clear corner of the bed, then released her grip and folded her own hands together. “What can I do for you, Diana? Shouldn’t you be getting ready? Have you eaten?”
“Nothing... I just wanted to make sure you ate. I am ready, and yes... Cookie fed me while he was preparing your tray.”
“You just wanted to make sure I ate, huh? Well, I did and it was very good. Thank you for thinking of me. I would have just grabbed a couple trail bars to chew on the way out.”
Diana smiled and looked around nervously. Chase was exuding a raw energy now, a feral sense of danger that Diana was accustomed to wearing, not seeing in someone else, and Chase didn’t even seem aware of the change in her demeanor.
“Diana, are you all right?” wondering why Diana seemed so uncomfortable. The question was full of concern and it made Diana smile. Diana straightened and put her warrior face on, letting her own dark energy rise to the surface. Chase watched the change take place and shivered in pure reaction. Diana turned and gave Chase a feral smile.
“I am fantastic, thank you for asking. I can’t tell you how I’m looking forward to this.”
Chase grinned. “You don’t have to – I know.”
Diana motioned to the bed. “Yours is different. And you have more accoutrements.”
Chase nodded. “The parameters of my mission are a little more restrictive than everyone else’s. I have to prepare for it a little differently.”
Diana looked over each piece of Chase’s equipment, noting the thicker guards she had added to her thighs and back. She picked up the belt that held half a dozen syringe vials, and understood instantly just exactly what Chase’s plan was and just exactly how close to Orana she would need to get. Diana turned and met Chase’s eyes squarely.
“You are planning on coming back, right? Because if you’re not, I’m coming with you.”
“Actually I was planning on you coming with me regardless.”
Diana blinked and then scooped Chase into her arms for an exuberant hug. “Thank you, Chase.”
Chase smiled and returned the embrace fervently. Whatever doubts she had about herself and about the Amazon situation and even about the upcoming mission, this felt right.
They pulled apart after a long moment and Chase held on to Diana’s hands. “Diana, you have proven to be a worthy ally and a very capable warrior. Even if we weren’t trying to be friends; even without our souls having a past together or you having a personal reason to extract justice from Orana; I know you are the best choice for a partner to watch my back. All the rest just gives you added incentive.”
Diana didn’t respond verbally, but the fierce light in her eyes and the feral smile on her lips was an answer all its own. Without warning, she leaned down and brushed her lips over Chase’s, feeling Chase freeze before she pulled back.
“Sorry, Chase. I just....”
“Shh....” Chase said, covering Diana’s lips with her fingers. “It’s all right, Diana. I’m just not... I’m not ready... I’d like to be, but....”
“Shh....” Diana said, returning the favor. “My fault, Chase. I didn’t mean to; it’s just... that’s the first time in forever that someone - that you - have looked at me with such trust and confidence and....”
“Diana?”
“Hmm?”
“You’re babbling.” Diana blushed and Chase chuckled. It was nice to know Diana was as discombobulated as she was about the whole situation between them. “That’s okay, Diana. I think it’s cute,” and got to watch the slow blush travel up Diana’s face. “But I’ve got to get ready to go and I’m running short on time. Maybe we can finish this when we get back?”
“You bet we can,” Diana smiled. “I’ll see you in the courtyard?”
“Ten minutes.”
Diana pulled away from Chase and left before she could do anything else rash. They had a war to finish and an Amazon to destroy. Then they would have plenty of time to investigate this wonderful, giddy feeling that felt old and new again at the same time. And there was no way in hell she was going to let Orana or anything else on earth stop that from happening.
Then Chase stepped from her hut and a cheer went up from the hundreds of rebels gathered in the square. It was time.
Chapter XL
“Damn, it’s dark out here,” Ty mumbled, walking carefully to keep from stumbling and sliding through the mud. The darkness and rain had been their friend when they had arrived over the continent. It had enabled them to fly beneath the radar perimeter around the capital and drop in closer than they had hoped. Just as well since the weather was making it very slow going to get into position for the announcement Orana was going to make later that evening. Ty was glad they had fifteen or sixteen hours to work with. She was afraid it would take them that long to get into place and even with the sleep they had all gotten on the plane, they were going to need some rest to fight effectively tonight.
Chase had been the last to leave the rebel compound, and no one had seen her since. Her plan had been ingenious though and Ty knew Chase was somewhere ahead of them.
It was an eerie feeling. Ty knew she wasn’t alone, but due to the rain and the darkness and the silence surrounding her, she felt isolated. She wiped the rain out of her eyes and blinked rapidly. Then she checked her watch and smiled. With any luck, she and her squadron would reach their safe house within the next few minutes and then they would have the daylight to rest in before darkness fell again and they made the final short journey to the barracks they had been assigned to destroy. Ty only hoped they were as successful as Chase’s plan had shown they could be.
************
Shep and his unit were making their way to the northernmost resistance stronghold. It was slow going in the darkness, but he had peace about this mission. Chase had planned well, and the changes she had made along with the addition of the Amazons had put the odds firmly in their favor. Not just to put an end to this war but for most of them to survive it to begin a brave new world together.
His biggest concern was that no one except Chase was privy to what Chase’s part in the plan was, and no one had seen her since they had departed the compound. He sent a prayer up for her safety, then picked up his pace. Making this work depended on him and his team making it into the stronghold before daylight; it was up to them to coordinate the rest of the world for the attack. In silence they pushed on, keeping to the trees and the bushes so as not to be seen by the dim moonlight that cast its waning light over the land.
************
Diana was torn between concern and anger. She hadn’t been allowed to ride in the plane with Chase; Hans had forbidden it and given his reasoning, Diana had been unable to argue. The modifications they had made to the airplane had been based strictly upon Chase’s height and weight specifications. So Diana had ridden across the ocean with some of her Amazons.
That hadn’t been bad; it had helped Diana forge a deeper bond between her and the leaders of the Amazon army. To their delight, they found that the warrior princess they remembered had returned to them at last. And they were excited by the prospect of being led by her. Their part in Chase’s plan was right up their alley.
But Diana hadn’t seen Chase since they had arrived on the continent. They had been the first to leave as they had the farthest to travel on foot; Diana knew that Chase had been the last. They had missed the worst of the weather so far which had helped them make good time towards Berlin. Chase had promised to find her, and Diana believed Chase had meant her words. Yet they had been traveling for several hours on foot and she had seen neither hide nor hair of Chase.
“Do not worry, Princess,” one of her captains commented quietly. “She will find you.”
Only the warrior stoicism Diana wore kept her startlement from showing in her expression; even her eyes were kept carefully blank. She did turn and look a question at the woman who spoke, recognizing her as a priestess of the temple. The woman nodded when she realized Diana knew who she was.
“I believe, Princess. I have faith in what you are to be together.”
“How does that help me in the here and now, Anya?”
“For there to be a future, there must be a foundation of trust. If she breaks her word to you now, how can there be trust between you? Therefore she will find you.” A beat. “I’ve read the stories, Princess. I know who she is... and who she was... and who she will be once more.”
“Does everyone? Is this common knowledge?”
“No, Princess. The only reason I am aware is I helped Mala with the research when you started asking questions about soulmates. I helped her put all the pieces together.” Diana nodded, but didn’t speak. Anya felt compelled to reassure her further. “Princess, no one within the Nation knows beyond the council and myself, and I would never betray that trust. Besides, this news it not mine to share. It’s yours, if and when you feel compelled to do so. I wouldn’t have mentioned it if it wasn’t obvious to me that you were searching for her and that search is taking your attention from our mission.”
The rebuke was mild, but Diana felt it sharply. She nodded briskly. “You’re right, Anya. Thank you for the reminder. I’ll keep my mind focused and trust Chase to keep her word.”
Anya might have answered, but suddenly Diana stopped walking and held up her hand. The Amazon army halted and melted into the trees as a Nazi patrol made its way towards them. The soldiers had no time to appreciate the fact that they were dead men walking as in very short order they were simply dead men. The Amazons dropped in behind them, snapping their necks and letting the bodies fall silently to the ground. Diana looked at her hands, clean of blood and wondered how there could be no mark upon her for the life she had just taken. She thought she should feel some sort of guilt or remorse for the death she had caused and maybe later she would, but for now she only felt relief and gratitude for her skills and being alive.
The flick of her wrist and the Amazons cleared the road, moving the men out of sight and up into the trees where they wouldn’t be found. Mankind had lost the ability to think and fight three dimensionally and the Amazons were happy to use that to their advantage. Then they started back towards Berlin at a double time jog. The brief fight and subsequent clean-up had cost them precious time and even with the head start they’d had, they were going to be cutting it close. And since they were infiltrating the capital city itself, they definitely wanted to be in place before the sun came up.
Diana sent a prayer up for Chase’s safety, then she picked up the pace as the outline of the buildings coming into sharp focus. Diana felt the fire stir in her blood and smiled. She was looking forward to this.
************
Chase drew a deep breath. Even though it was dark out, the square in front of the Reichstag was well-lit as though in defiance of the resistance and any rumors of a rebellion uprising. There were a number of workmen trying to accomplish several different tasks. There were some who were scrubbing and cleaning the streets around the square. Others were busy painting the buildings and polishing the brass fixtures. A third group was busy stringing wires and lights in preparation for Orana’s announcement that evening.
Chase sat in the bell tower over looking the square. Behind her sat the tower guard asleep at his post, compliments of Chase’s and Hans’ efforts in the lab. If it had been later in the day he would be dead but she couldn’t risk the exposure yet. Soon it wouldn’t matter, but for now discretion was definitely the better part of valor. Chase had to live long enough to take care of Orana.
Her vantage point gave her an excellent view of everything going on below, which would be extremely useful when the Amazons arrived. Chase looked at her watch, squinting in the waning moonlight, then nodded in satisfaction. She could just make out the beginnings of a lightening of the sky in the east. And only because she was looking for it and knew exactly what to look for did she see the Amazons enter the city. She wondered if Diana would find her before she could get to Diana.
Chase smiled. Diana had been cute in her frustration about being separated from Chase after Chase had assured her they were going to go against Orana together. Only when Chase promised to find her before she went after Orana did Diana relent and leave with the first wave.
A commotion in the square caught her attention and she looked out to find Orana outside investigating the progress that had been made by the workers. They doubled their speed, not wanting to be punished for lax or shoddy work. Surprisingly Orana simply looked around, pointing out a few things that remained and then turned and walked back into the Reichstag with studied nonchalance. It was obvious to Chase that she was trying to give an appearance of calm control. She wondered if the woman who was Fuehrer had any idea how truly despised she was or how hated her reign had become.
Chase’s eyes continued to watch the preparations being completed at a fairly quick pace while her mind wandered back to the stories that had been passed down through her family for generations – since they had happened a hundred years before when Orana had become the Fuehrer.
When Steve Trevor had returned from Bermuda, rumors followed of a woman who had the strength of ten men, the speed of a moving car and the ability to stop bullets. But before any investigation could be done, their spies reported the same phenomenon taking place in Berlin. Only this woman was taken directly into the heart of the Reichstag to meet with Hitler and his generals and she never came out.
Instead she became first Hitler’s confidante and enforcer, then according to rumor, she became his lover and advisor. Eventually Hitler faded out of the scene completely, dead from causes that didn’t bear close examination. It didn’t actually matter; by that point, Orana had a firm grasp on the entire Nazi regime, and the generals cowed or they died.
She did lead the Nazis to victory, but victory was not at all what they expected it to be. Things did improve some, but never back to even pre-war standards. And for a people who had expected to be at the top of the world once they won the war that was quite a blow to morale. They had expected to be living in luxury, but except for a very few, the people toiled hard everyday for the bits they had just as they had always done for centuries. To have lost sons and daughter to such an outcome made them bitter, but the relaxation of restrictions had made them less than eager to upset the applecart either. It was easier just to live with the known than to step into the unknown again and perhaps have yet another war with less-than-favorable results.
Orana had also signed an agreement with Japan that allowed them regency of the Far East territories for a large chunk of the profits. The Japanese had argued briefly, but Orana had been glad to show them the error of their ways and they had capitulated rather quickly after that, understanding well that part of the pie was better than no pie at all. It was easier to let the Japanese fight and die for the bounty she received. Her advisors had argued against such action, feeling the Nazis deserved all the pie. They had seen the futility of such an idea at the end of a noose. She didn’t have the time or the patience to explain it to men too stupid to understand it without being told anyway.
Exterminating the Jews in Europe had robbed the Nazis of many of the minds and skills they had once depended on, and there had been no recovery from that devastation. Thousands had escaped and disappeared but millions had died. Only because Orana felt it a waste of resources and manpower did any of the race survive – mostly in America. This too caused hard feelings as many felt that the Jews and the blacks and all the rest who failed to fit the Aryan mold should be rounded up and either completely wiped out or made to serve the regime as all who lived beneath Orana’s boot had to.
Most felt the same about those who lived in America; because of their indifference to the plight of the English and the French, no supplies had been given to them and few Americans had joined the fight to keep the Nazis from overrunning the European continent. The Nazi people firmly believed there should be some benefit for them from the supposed prosperity that remained in America despite the war. The Americans had been mostly unwilling to fight and die and instead allowed themselves to become subjugated with only Nazi overseers to keep them in line. This kept the land from being destroyed and the people from dying, because for the most part the overseers were lenient in executing their responsibilities as long as they got fed and the first choice of companionship in whatever town they happened to be checking on.
Such conditions had allowed the resistance to grow, and the rebellion to flourish. Now the time had finally come to change things, Chase thought grimly.
While her thoughts had been occupied with the past, the present had been turning to daylight around her and now the sky was full of color and light. With a glance at the guard who remained asleep, Chase left the bell tower and headed across the roofs of Berlin in search of an Amazon princess.
************
Dawn found each of the rebel groups tucked safely away into numerous safe houses scattered across the European continent and into Russia and Great Britain. When darkness fell, they would all be moving again. But for now the people of Berlin and Paris and London and Moscow went about their daily lives unaware of the changes brewing just beneath the surface.
Chase walked the roofs above where she had last glimpsed the Amazons, knowing precisely where they were supposed to be and noting with satisfaction that there was no way to find them unless you knew where to look. She found the building and crept in, unnoticed by the guard who stood watch. The Amazons were scattered throughout the old warehouse, hidden in plain sight on the outskirts of the city. They had concealed themselves inside though Chase had no difficulty finding them and slipping around them without being seen or heard. She realized then that the skills her mother had taught her were Amazon skills and she smiled grimly. That kind of confirmation wasn’t something she was looking for, but it allowed her to slip right up to Diana... only to be caught and held by sparkling blue eyes when Chase reached out to touch her. Diana caught her hand and held it lightly.
“I promised you, didn’t I?”
Diana smiled and nodded. “You did. I’m glad you made it. Are you all right?” Her words were whispered and she leaned up on one elbow. She could see the exhaustion in Chase’s eyes, remembering that while the troops had all had the chance to sleep on the flight over Chase had been going full throttle since early the previous morning. She tugged on the hand she still held lightly clasped in her own and pulled Chase down beside her.
“Diana!” It would have been more of a protest, but it was hard to squeal when you were forced to whisper to keep from waking up the rest of the room.
“Hush!” smiling when Chase glared in her direction but didn’t move away from her. “Chase, you’ve been working for over twenty-four hours. You need to get some rest before we go after Orana tonight.”
“But....”
“Shh!” Diana commanded. “You’re taking care of everyone else; let me take care of you.”
Chase smiled, feeling a familiarity at Diana’s words. “Isn’t that supposed to be my line?”
“Normally, yes... but not this time. You’re the warrior leader and I’m the Amazon princess. Something kind of karmically circular about the whole situation, isn’t there?”
Chase yawned, their combined body warmth and her exhaustion making her almost too sleepy to comment - almost. But she had enough of her bardic ancestor in her to warrant giving Diana an answer.
“Somethin’” she mumbled before allowing her fatigue to assert itself and closing her eyes.
Diana waited until she felt Chase’s breathing deepen and even out in sleep; then she shifted, trying to get more comfortable without disturbing Chase. She froze completely and held her breath when Chase snuggled into her, wrapping around her like an earthbound octopus and grounding Diana in a way she hadn’t been in more than twenty-six hundred years. She smiled at the bittersweet feeling of familiar intimacy that washed through her being at the feeling of having Chase in her arms. Diana wrapped her arms around Chase and closed her eyes in sweet contentment.
Anya watched a moment longer, then closed her eyes and sent up a prayer of gratitude to the goddesses, hoping they were watching over the Nation and could see what was happening between Chase and Diana here in man’s world.
************
The other five goddesses watched in disbelief as Aphrodite gyrated and shimmied all over the room. It had been such a long time since they had seen her do a happy dance that no one recognized it for what it was. They weren’t sure if Aphrodite was happy or in pain, though judging by the look on her face pain wasn’t an issue. Finally Athena couldn’t stand the gyrations any longer and took Dite by the shoulders to bring her to a screeching halt. Dite glared at Athena and blew her blonde curls back out of her eyes.
“Whaddya go and do that for?”
“Are you all right?”
“I am awesome, Babe... simply fab. But thanks for asking.”
Athena rolled her eyes and prayed for patience. “Aphrodite, why were you wiggling around like that? Did you find an ant bed or something?”
Dite snorted. “As if. Nah, Babe. Check the radical scene I scryed across.” She pointed to the bowl and Athena changed the focus and threw the image up on the wall for all of them to see. They all gazed at the reflection for a long moment, then the other five goddesses got up and started doing happy dances of their own. Dite just laughed joyfully and joined in.
************
Darkness had fallen but was not quite complete when Diana woke Chase from her sleep. She had spent a few moments simply looking at her, easily imagining the times they had shared like this before. Unlike her predecessor though, Chase woke with a single touch. She looked at their positions tangled up together and immediately moved out of Diana’s arms. Diana felt the cold immediately with Chase’s withdrawal, but she plastered a smile on her face.
“Chase....”
“Sorry,” Chase muttered. “I don’t know....”
“Chase, it’s okay. Thanks for keeping me warm.”
Chase nodded, still a little embarrassed by her clinginess. “All right... what time is it?” Chase looked at her watch and nodded in satisfaction. The Amazons were already up and dressed, eating from the rations they had brought. Shortly they would be dispatched by Diana to their assignments. Ty and her squad should already be working, eliminating the soldiers in the barracks and assuming their duty stations in the square.
Diana handed Chase some of the rations her mother had brought along from Paradise Island, and Chase smiled at the newly familiar tastes that met her palette.
“Thanks. This is good.”
“Anytime. This is an old family recipe and they’re a Nation favorite – we actually dry fruit specifically for these.”
“Well whoever came up with them was pretty clever.”
“Thanks,” Diana said cheekily, then got up before Chase could question her further.
It was unnerving to see her sisters dressed as Nazis, but this group was taking the place of the technicians who were supposed to be running the sound and camera equipment for Orana’s big announcement. The rest had already moved out to hide in the shadows; they would help infiltrate the Reichstag and work with Ty to prevent any of the Nazis in the square from leaving. This was not a hit and run mission – they were out to seek and destroy.
“All right, sisters. It’s time. Each of you has your assignment. Whatever you do, make sure that this broadcast doesn’t go anywhere but to the people in the square. Chase has people infiltrating the control room, but work under the assumption that they won’t make it. If we kill it at the source, the rest is moot. It is a fail-safe for us. We want to control what gets broadcast.”
“Watch for the signal. When you see us move in, that will be your cue to start recording. We want Orana’s downfall broadcast.” A brief pause that was so silent heartbeats could be heard. No one had expected Chase to speak since Diana was their princess and defacto leader. “Thank you all,” Chase said quietly. “Good luck.”
“The goddesses watch over you, sisters,” Diana commended. “We would see you all safe and Orana destroyed when this is over.”
They couldn’t roar; stealth was too important to their mission. But they raised their fists triumphantly, shaking them in unity until at Diana’s signal they went from darkness to darkness, each of them intent on the fight to come.
Part 6