Sunday, September 23, 2012

THEM BONES, THEM BONES

Gabrielle is fishing around with a sai for a certain type of mushroom that is supposed to help cure Xena's morning nausea.  Suddenly, Xena begins screaming in tremendous pain and Gabrielle rushes her to a healer.  We see Xena's nightmare in which a baby-sized skeleton pierces its way through her belly.  She wakes up obviously alarmed but Gabrielle and the healer are already by her side.  "When your friend brought you in, you were in considerable pain; I gave you a sedative," explains the healer.  She also prescribes bed rest as she can't find anything physically wrong with Xena or her child.  Amarice then runs into the room, having just gotten word.  Against the healer's advice, Xena abruptly sits up and starts gathering her belongings, mentioning something about a shamaness named Yakut (leader of the northern Amazons).  "That was no dream I had," explains Xena, "It was a premonition.  Something's trying to kill my baby."  So, Xena, Gabrielle, and Amarice take the long journey northward.  Once in the Amazon camp, Yakut greets Xena and claims to have seen a vision and, thus, was expecting her arrival.  "Come, we have much work to do," she tells the warrior princess.  With Xena lying down and Yakut's hand on Xena's belly, Yakut draws something on the dirt floor –– clearly making an unseen observation.  "Your child is being drained of its life-force in the spiritual realm," Yakut concludes.  After being told that the stalking entity bears the mark of the shamaness, Xena realizes that the villain here is, yet again, Alti!  (Alti can only attack through the spiritual realm at this point, however, since Xena killed her....)  Soon enough, Gabrielle convinces a weak Xena to let her go in Xena's place to fight Alti.  "I love your baby like it were my own," argues Gabrielle, "I will do anything I can to fight for its life and I deserve that chance as much as you do!"  With bow and arrow, animal and blood, dance and chant, Gabrielle performs the ritual of crossing over.  Xena hands Gabrielle a dagger and warns her not to let go of it on any account as it is their only chance of killing Alti in the spiritual realm.  "If we can destroy her there, we destroy her soul."  (Through all of this, Amarice stands around, skeptical and out-of-place.)  Finally, Gabrielle passes to the other side.  Dagger in hand, she explores strange and physically-impossible sights (motion frozen in time and space) when she spots Alti standing nearby.  "Xena's little bitch!  Welcome to the doghouse."  We learn that Alti wants the baby to be born!?  Meanwhile, back in the physical realm, Xena sits by Gabby's body and pleads for her to use the dagger.  She doesn't realize that Alti has managed to get the dagger up to Gabrielle's neck until she notices a cut forming on Gabrielle's skin.  "Alright, Gabrielle, that's enough.  Come back now!"  But as Alti counts down from ten, Gabrielle's body shuts down and, to Xena, she is as though dead until Xena breathes life back into her.  Later, Gabrielle is able to recall and relay to Xena, Yakut, and Amarice that Alti doesn't want to hurt the baby but wants it to be born.  "Alti wants to steal my baby's soul; she wants to replace it with her own," concludes Xena.  She then sends Gabrielle and Amarice to the temple of Chi'ah to get some amber that should trap Alti's soul if poured on her remains.  Xena and Yakut head for Alti's grave to retrieve her bones.  (Just before they leave, Yakut warns Gabby and Amarice that the temple is guarded by an Amazon mystic who can see the truth in your heart; it cannot be hidden from her.  At this, Amarice looks a little shifty).  At the gravesite, Xena finds that Alti's skull is missing...and that Yakut (who, come to think of it, has been acting a little shifty from time to time herself) is in posession of it.  She confesses that she'd tried to harness Alti's power for good, but unleashed her soul instead.  Xena, however, is too angry to acknowledge her shame.  At night, then, in what appears to be an attempt to make it up to Xena by trying to defeat Alti herself, Xena wakes up to a Yakut who has already performed the ritual of crossing over!  Seeing her struggle, Xena crosses over, too.  In short, on the other side, Alti steals the baby's soul and offers to give it back if Xena and the Amazons return her to the physical world.  "I'm sorry," Yakut says lamely.  "Let's get back to camp," is Xena's mere response.  Elsewhere, Amarice and Gabrielle find themselves facing Chi'ah herself, who reveals that Amarice hides behind a title she has not earned...the title of Amazon.  Ashamed, she leaves and Chi'ah allows Gabrielle to pass.  Once she's retrieved the amber, she tries to console Amarice.  "Well, you'd better get going, she's waiting for you," says a still disheartened Amarice.  "She's waiting for us," Gabrielle says truly –– which seems to cheer her up a bit.  With all four of them back at camp, the gang must devise a new plan.  (They can't use the amber yet; it would risk trapping the baby's soul as well.)  "She wants us to bring her back?  Why don't we do that," says Xena.  But they trick Alti into thinking Xena has agreed to take her back to the physical world...when, in truth, she has taken her into another dream world.  One where Alti has let her guard down.  They, as skeletons in that world, fight.  (And Xena is backed up by the mind-power of the entire tribe.)  Gabrielle, Yakut, and Amarice surround Xena awaiting a signal.  (Alti's remains lie nearby.)  They feel life return to Xena's belly and take that as the sign to pour the amber on Alti's bones.  With a whirlwind and an agonizing scream, Alti's remains ascend, destroyed.  Gabby runs to Xena's side and soon finds her alive and with child.  Later, before they depart, Gabby tells Amarice that she doesn't think what Chi'ah said is true...anymore.  A grateful Amarice decides to stay with the northern Amazons to "learn a few things."  Lastly, as Xena and Yakut say their goodbyes, Xena spots a dove on a tree branch, which we learned signifies Xena's acceptance of motherhood.  (She'd feared that bringing a child into a world of suffering wasn't the right thing to do.)  But it also signifies the child's response: Thank you.         

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