PurrFect
"PurrFect"
Into The Groove Episode #2
By Ang D. & Sarah Young
There's something
sweet, and almost kind
But he was mean and he was coarse and unrefined
And now he's dear, and so unsure
I wonder why I didn't see it there before....
~ Ashken/Menken, "Something There"
~*~*~*~*~*~
Hey,
look. It's me again! Miss me? Of course you did. Everyone loves
me, baby. ... Hey. It's still all about me, so ... go ahead and
bask in the light, huh? I really don't have much setting up to do
- though I will take a moment to tell you this: Never EVER eat
Kronk's Almond Surprise as a midnight snack.
~*~*~*~*~*~
"Mmph."
Kuzco groaned, turning over in his sleep. Clutching his faithful
stuffed Wompy close, he curled up in a ball, muttering
incoherently.
~*~*~*~*~*~
Oh
no. Don't tell me we're going into a flashback!!! No. Please, no.
Not the whole thing of LLAMA!
~*~*~*~*~*~
Lightning flashed
over the horizon, illuminating the Imperial Palace. Kuzco curled
himself up in a semi-fetal position, whimpering as he claimed the
only spot of ground that was somewhat dry in the vicinity.
"Pacha." He whispered. "I should have listened to
you..." Rain poured down on his head, matting his fur to his
skin. He raised a hoof to his face, trying to wipe his eyes, but
the Emperor-Llama merely succeeded in smudging mud across his
snout. Rain dripped off his fur and into puddles at his hooves,
streaming down his tail, ears, and snout, drenching him as the
storm grew closer, stronger. Huddled in upon himself, Kuzco
buried his snout in the crook of one limb, desperately seeking a
patch of dry fur, but there was none to be found. The smell of
his own wet fur nauseated him, and he shuddered, both from cold
and disgust. The jungle vines loomed over his head like snakes,
like nooses, threatening, and he whimpered again. "Why me,
huh? Why? This isn't fair." He whined to the empty clearing.
"I had everything. Everything. Then I fired my stupid
advisor and her stupid assistant and got stuck with this stupid
peasant --" Another flash of lightning, followed shortly by
a peal of thunder, startled Kuzco, breaking his chain of thought.
"No, I'm thinking about this all wrong. Pacha's not stupid.
A little slow sometimes, but not stupid. He ... he knew. He knew
about Yzma the whole time and I didn't want to see it." And
why not? A little nagging voice in the back of his head said
quietly. Because you didn't want to admit that someone lower
than you was right. I got news for you, pal. You're a llama now,
you're as low as they come. Ain't that a kick in the head.
"Conscience."
Kuzco muttered. "Thought I got ridda you..."
Of course
not. You just didn't like to listen to me. You were *taught* not
to listen to me, remember? Huh? All those years as a little kid,
all by yourself, practically spoon-fed by that ancient dinosaur
of a witch? The still voice grew a little louder, filling
his mind.
Kuzco shook rain
from his fur. "Yzma." He admitted. "I can't
believe she'd do this to me. The whole uprising and plotting
against me and turning me into a llama thing."
Some people
are just evil.
"Good
point." Kuzco paused, horrified as a sudden thought came to
him. "Am I?"
Naw. Not yet.
You're pretty close. You shouldn't have people thrown out
windows. And think about it. What if Yzma stuck a building on
your palace? Thought of her running your place just gives you
convulsions, don't it.
"Ew, yeaugh.
Yeah." He shivered, fur bristling, as the lightning crashed
again. "Wait. .... " He frowned as a thought came to
him. "That's like ... that's sorta like me sticking
Kuzcotopia on Pacha's house, isn't it."
Bingo,
genius. Now aren't you glad you listened to me?
"Yeah. ...
Soon as this rain lets up, I'm going to find Pa ... no. I can't
go back to him. He hates me. I've deserted him. I'll just have to
make it back to the palace on my own."
It's your
call. ... I mean ... ours.
"Right."
With that, Kuzco huddled a little deeper into the dirt and closed
his eyes. He didn't see the vines snaking down towards his neck,
as Yzma stood over him, working her dark magic.
"Perrrrfect."
She hissed. "Finally, the throne will be mine!" She
reached down and jabbed a bony finger in his shoulder, poking,
making certain of the Emperor-Llama's death. Poke, poke,
poke....
Poke.
"Kuzco?"
Poke-poke.
JAB.
"HEY LLAMA BRAINS!"
"GAAAAAAAAH!"
Kuzco sat bolt upright in bed, sending the bear sprawling to the
floor. "NO TOUCHY!"
"Yeah, yeah.
Get up."
Kuzco blinked,
letting his eyes focus on the individual who'd been so rude as to
disturb his slumber. "Zola?" He rubbed at his eyes,
frowning. "The heck are you doing in my room??"
Zola chuckled.
"Pacha sent me to wake you up. .... We're going back to get
some of his stuff and he wanted to know if you were coming."
"We?"
He blinked. "How'd you get an invite?"
"Chicha."
She said simply.
"Figures."
He muttered, stumbling out of bed. "Hey ... you mind? I
mean, I know you're awed by my illustrious presence and all, but
I gotta get dressed, here."
"Yeah, okay,
fine. We're leaving in ten minutes. With or without you."
Zola informed him curtly, stalking out of the room. Ugh. I
thought he was okay, after the whole thing at the ball. And he
was sweet enough when he was sleeping. But he's back to his old,
egotistical self. What's with him?
Kuzco stumbled,
bleary, to the mirror, and checked under his eyes for circles.
"None. Good. Boy, whatta nightmare..." He muttered to
himself, slipping on his royal red robes. Then, for good measure,
he went to his closet and slid on the poncho that Chicha had made
for him, striking a pose in front of the mirror. "Uh huh.
Sharp as a knife." He smirked, then frowned as he caught
sight of the llama emblem on the front of the poncho. His memory
instantly drifted to what remained of the nightmare. How'd
YZMA get in my dream? Freaky....
"KUUUZCO!"
Tipo shouted from outside. "Haaalp!"
Kuzco raced to
the door, and Tipo shot inside, jumping into the Emperor's arms.
"Whoooa, slow down there, buddy. What's wrong? Being chased
by crocodiles?" Tipo shook his head. "Jaguars in the
sandbox?" Another shake of the head. "Someone trying to
make you eat brussels sprouts, even?!?"
"Worse!"
Tipo cried. "Some little girl in the village KISSED
me!"
Kuzco blinked.
"Um, bud? Run the severity of that by me, huh?"
Tipo made a face,
rubbing furiously at his cheek. "She kissed me!" He
repeated, nausea setting in on his features. "And now I'm
gonna get GIRL cooties."
"Girl
cooties. Right." Kuzco said, sucking in a breath as he set
Tipo down. "Well ... was she cute, at least?" He
started rummaging around in his dresser.
"No
WAY." Tipo shook his head.
"Whoa, don't
want that head to fall off there, pal. Calm down. It shouldn't be
that bad." Kuzco pointed a finger at his little friend with
a wink. "It's only deadly if they're cute."
"Oh. For a
second I thought I was a goner." Tipo sighed with relief as
he sat down on Kuzco's bed. "You're coming with us,
right?"
"Yeeeee-up.
Fun for the whole family. Picturesque scenery and spitting
llamas." He smiled as he pulled out a washcloth. "AHA!
One surefire cure for girl cooties."
"Looks like
a cloth ta me." Tipo said dubiously.
"Not just
any cloth. The legendary Cootie Cloth of Brother Groove."
Kuzco said with all seriousness.
"Does it
work?" Tipo said, awed.
"Does it
work." Kuzco scoffed. "Hey. You don't see me with any
girl cooties, do you?" Tipo grinned as he shook his head.
"Toldja. Now, hold still." He quickly washed off Tipo's
cheeks, then his nose for good measure.
"Isn't there
a spell?" Tipo asked hopefully.
"D'oh, I
almost forgot. .... Ummmmm .... Lemme see if I can remember. Been
a while." He scratched his head. "Right. Girrrrl
cootieeeesss.... BEGONE!" He said in his most imposing
voice, then tapped Tipo on the head. "Okay. I think that
does it ... yup. There they go! Whoa, you see em go flyin' out
the window, there?"
"Really???"
"Yeah, you
missed it."
"TIPO???"
Chicha hollered from the hallway. "WHERE ARE YOU? LET'S
GO!"
"In here,
Mom!" Tipo waved. "Kuzco got rid of my girl cooties
with his magic Cootie Cloth!"
"Oh, did
he?" Chicha raised an eyebrow, smiling at Kuzco.
"Get it
straight, kid. Legendary Cootie Cloth of Brother Groove."
Kuzco said sternly. "Now come on."
"Annnnnd...."
Chicha smiled, "Boys who don't hurry to the cart miss dinner
at Mudka's."
"Mudka's?"
Tipo gasped, pulling Kuzco down the hall. "C'mon, let's
GO!"
Kuzco detatched
himself from Tipo and watched him scurry away. "You go on
ahead, bud." Chuckling, he turned to Chicha. "Soooo ...
what's new with you, huh?"
Chicha shrugged.
"I'm helping out at the royal tailor's.... and watching some
of the servants' children every now and then. But I've been
thinking about a lot of things, too."
"Thinking.
Ooh." Kuzco smirked. "From you, this means trouble,
doesn't it. What about?"
Chicha cuffed him
on the shoulder, then replied, "How come you don't have a
nice garden?"
"A ...
garden?" He wrinkled his nose. "Girls have gardens.
Emperors don't have gardens."
"I think you
need to use Brother Groove's cootie cloth on yourself."
Chicha laughed. "You want to know who takes care of our
garden?"
"Um...
you."
"Pacha."
Kuzco coughed.
"Well that doesn't mean I'm taking care of a garden!!!"
"I never
said that. I just said that it would be nice if you had one...
Zola and I were discussing it this morning."
"Zola."
Kuzco muttered. "Shoulda known she put you up to this! First
she wakes me up, now she's trying to make me build flowery
things. Typical girl."
"Well, I
just thought a garden would be nice for the wedding." Chicha
shrugged.
Kuzco turned his
head to stare at her, nearly walking into a decorative urn.
"Wedding?" He choked. "Who said anything about
that? Now?"
"Nobody did
..."
"You just
did!"
"I didn't
say it had to happen now."
"Well, GOOD,
because you aren't the one who makes the decisions around here,
ARE you?" Kuzco snapped, storming ahead of Chicha down the
hall, where Pacha stood waiting for them. "Tell your wife to
remember the YOU'RE the advisor, NOT her, huh?"
Pacha frowned.
"Kuzco, what ... did I miss something?"
"Be GLAD you
did!"
The quiet farmer
looked over at his wife, puzzled, as Kuzco peered outside.
"Chicha, honey, what..."
"I think I
hit a nerve." Chicha observed.
"Well,
yeah.... but what?"
"I think ...
it was the wedding that did it."
Pacha nodded,
looking over to Kuzco. "He ... I don't think he really ... I
think he's afraid."
"Of course
he is. He hardly knows her." Chicha sighed. "That's why
I invited her to come with us - maybe they'll get to know each
other better."
"Good
thinking."
"Ah, but
you're the advisor. Not me." Chicha winked. "Now ...
let's get going, shall we?"
The three of them
headed out to the cart that stood waiting by the door. Two rather
imperial-looking white llamas were harnessed to it, and Zola sat
in the cart, Tipo and Chaca in her lap.
"You're
gonna looooove our village, Zola!" Tipo was saying.
"There's lotsa llamas, and corn, and hills, and ... and
llamas, and..." He blinked. "It's really neat."
"Tipo,"
Chaca said matter-of-factly, "Zola isn't going to think our
village is exactly all that entertaining if you can't list enough
of its finer attributes."
"Right. ....
We've got bugs!" He suggested. "And you can have Mom
measure you on the door, too. But I'm taller than ANYbody!"
"Even
me?" Pacha winked, strapping their rations to the llamas'
backs.
"Okay, maybe
not Dad."
Zola smiled.
"It sounds wonderful."
Kuzco flopped
down on the edge of the cart. "Yeah, it's nice." He
said noncommitally. "Okayyy, let's go!"
Zola stood,
helping Chicha set up a comfortable spot for baby Roca in the
corner of the cart. "I'll walk on this side and keep an eye
on him." She smiled. "You walk up front with
Pacha."
"Thanks..."
Kuzco, meanwhile,
stretched out in the cart between the children. "So, you
guys all set for the road trip? Even with the bridge rebuilt,
it's a while back..."
"Yep!"
Chaca grinned. "We're gonna play games!"
"Fun in a
basket." Kuzco remarked, buffing his nails on his robe.
"Hey,"
Zola interjected, poking him in the shoulder as the llamas
started to pull the cart down the hill, away from the palace.
"Walk."
"Why should
I? I'm the Emperor." He leant back, folding his arms behind
his head and staring up at the sky. "Ooh, look, you guys.
Bunny rabbit cloud."
"Looks like
a llama to me!" Tipo smiled.
"Yeah, well
I see a big, lazy, slug." Zola remarked.
"Where?"
All three asked, peering at the sky.
"Riiight
HERE." With that, Zola grabbed Kuzco by the shoulder and
hauled him out of the cart.
"NO
TOUCHY!" He hollered, assuming a defensive position.
"Then walk
like the rest of the adults." Zola snapped, pointing to the
cart - now slightly ahead of them.
"Um, no.
Emperors don't walk, emperors ride. Or did you miss that little
detail in charm school with the other girls?"
"For your
information," Zola growled, "I didn't go to charm
school."
"Well, that
explains a LOT."
"Neither did
you, apparently, then!"
Kuzco glared at
her for a moment. "Well, you ... you're ... you're the one
with the ... GOW!" He spluttered, folding his arms and
sulking after her as she followed the cart down the road.
Back in the
palace, Kuzco's many servants were still at work to make sure
that things remained in order in his absence. Tailors patched
together new garments for him to wear, decorators retouched the
wall paintings and made sure that the hanging tapestries were
kept from fading, and countless others polished walls, floors,
furniture, and any other acouturements to a burnished shine. Yet
by far, the busiest of all the servants were the laundresses,
slaving away in the hot boiler rooms of the palace to make sure
that every sheet, pillowcase, and other form of textile was in
perfect, spotless condition.
One of those
laundresses was not pleased in the least with her duties.
"Here. Dish
towels."
Kronk smiled as
he took the bundle of clean linens from the servant before him,
dressed in the conventional blue and white, her long hair rolled
up in a coif against her head. "Thanks. Hey, don't I know
you?"
"Kari."
She said flatly. Never fails, lately. You watch. "Ohhhh,
you're the one who crashed Kuzco's party last week.... why'd you
do a stupid thing like that?"
"Hi there.
I'm Kronk." He flashed her a smile. "Didn't I see you
at the party? That was a great hat."
"You think
so, really?" She paused, startled. "I mean, it was the
same as Miss Zola's..."
"It was? Oh.
Well I bet she felt weird. Wearing the same hat and all."
Kronk shrugged, adding some spices to a pot of soup. "So,
hey, since Kuzco's outta the palace for a week or so, I'm stuck
cooking for myself and the rest of the staff." He said,
looking almost disappointed. "I was thinking of trying out
some new recipes, but they're all too fancy for us..."
Kari shrugged.
"Whatever, go nuts." She turned to go, balancing the
heavy basket of sheets on her hip.
"Stay for a
sandwich?" He offered. "That basket looks heavy, and
you look like you could use a nice roast beef sandwich, with a
little bit of cole slaw or something."
She blinked.
"Uhhhhhh ... sure." Kari set the basket down in the
corner, near the door, then caught sight of the little squirrel
chopping celery on the counter. "Did you know there's a
squirrel in your kitchen, Crank?"
"Uh,
Kronk." He said absently, setting two sandwiches down on the
small table at the back of the kitchen. "And that's Bucky.
He's my assistant."
"Goo ba ga
cha!" The little squirrel said proudly, showing off its tiny
chef hat.
"He says
he's very happy to meet you." Kronk translated.
"Something to drink?"
"Just
water."
"Okay."
Kronk got up and started to fish around the cabinet for a water
glass.
"So...."
Kari said slowly, staring at her plate. "I heard from some
of the girls that you worked with Kuzco's old advisor?"
"Yzma."
Kronk said quietly, setting a glass of water down in front of
Kari. "Yeah."
"Tell me
about her ... she sounds interesting... I heard she had a secret
lab in the basement and stuff."
"She does. I
can show it to you sometime."
"Wait."
Kari set down her glass. "Does? ... I thought she was
gone."
"Oh, she's
still around. Got turned into a cat." Kronk took a bite out
of his sandwich and shrugged lightly, as if having your old boss
turned into a cat was the most common thing in the world.
"Cat."
Kronk swallowed,
wiped his mouth, then replied, "Uh huh. White poufy cat. I
feed her every night, seein's how nobody else really knows she's
around."
"Oh
reeeeally." Kari blinked. "So what's the deal with
that? The cat thing. I wanna know."
"Really?"
Kronk paused, stunned.
"Why would
she want to know about that? She sounds suspicious."
"My shoulder
angel." Kronk whispered to himself. "What do you
mean?"
"I'm talking
about she wants to know about Yzma. The one who said she didn't
like our spinach puffs. The one who tried to KILL people. That
can't be good."
"Aw come off
it. She's just curious."
"She is NOT!
She wants to do something."
"Would you
two stop confusing me? Please?" Kronk pleaded. "I'm
sure she's just a nice laundry girl who likes roast beef
sandwiches and wants to know about cats. Maybe she needs a
pet."
Kari blinked,
watching Kronk participate in a conversation with his shoulders.
"First squirrels, now thin air. What's he gonna talk to
next, the cat?" She muttered to herself.
Kronk turned back
to her. "Hey, sorry 'bout that. Those guys just like to try
and tell me what to do every now and then... they're kinda rude
about interrupting conversations." He explained. "So
are you looking for a pet cat? Cause I gotta warn you ... Yzma's
not any normal cat. She still talks, and she still acts normal.
She's just ... a cat."
Kari scratched
her head. "Kronk.... did you eat any rotten food today, or
what?"
"Why?"
He smiled.
"Never
mind." But if he's telling the truth, and Yzma still
speaks ... maybe she can help me get rid of Zola ...! Ooh. That's
a good idea. Brilliant, really. I must be a genius! "Kronk
... can you take me to see her? I want to help you take care of
her." Kari cooed.
"Uhhh, sure
thing." Kronk smiled, clearing away their plates. "We
can go tonight after dinner."
"Excellent."
As the morning
sun rose higher over the countryside, Kuzco was quickly
discovering a common law of nature - more heat equals less shade
- and he didn't like it at all.
"It's hot
out." He proclaimed, leaning on the side of the cart as his
companions walked along, cheerfully tolerant of the weather.
"What's with you guys? Aren't you hot and sweaty and grubby
and ... yech?"
Chicha shook her
head. "We're used to working outside, Kuzco.... this is fine
weather for us."
"Oh, right,
the whole work thing. Uh huh." Kuzco realized, scuffing his
sandals along the dirt as he walked, kicking up clouds of dust.
"You're
going to ruin those sandals." Zola proclaimed from the other
side of the cart, where she was watching little Roca sleep.
"Why should
you care?" Kuzco snapped. "They're my sandals, and I
can get a new pair easy enough. I mean ..."
"I'm the
Emperor." She said in unison with him for what seemed like
the tenth time in the past hour. "As if you'd ever let me
forget."
"As if
..." He mocked her. "Ooh, scary, that one was a real
zinger. Ow, she hurt my feelings." Kuzco pouted, putting a
hand to his chest. "You know, fiancee or no, you're still
just a peasant and you have no right to speak to me that
way."
Zola let out
something between a gasp and a cough. "WHAT was that?"
Chicha spun
around, her eyes blazing. "That was exTREMEly rude, young
man." She growled. "I say you apologize to her."
Pacha nodded,
bewildered by his friend's harsh words. "Uh, yeah, Kuzco.
That was ... " His shock faded and he found his words.
"That was completely uncalled for, and you know it. Now
apologize!"
"Who are you
to tell me what to do?" Kuzco snarled, kicking at a pebble
and watching it fly down the path.
"Your
ADVISOR." Both of them said in unison.
"Oh. Right.
....Well I don't NEED you. I can make my own decisions."
"As I
recall," Pacha said dryly, "the last time you said
that, you ended up trapped on a cliff by a pack of jaguars. So
from where I stand, that statement's rather questionable."
"Well I ...
I'm different now!" Kuzco blurted, flailing his arms as he
turned away from the cart. "People just refuse to recognize
that!!!"
Pacha and Chicha
exchanged glances, then Pacha walked over to Kuzco as Chicha
continued to guide the cart down the path.
"Siddown."
Pacha said quietly, pointing to a large rock on the roadside.
Kuzco leant up
against a tree trunk. "No thank you." He replied
curtly.
Heaving a sigh,
Pacha sat down and folded his arms. "Look, Kuzco, you say
you want people to recognize that you've changed. .... Now don't
take this the wrong way, but they might recognize it more if you
showed it a little more. You were doing great when you first
turned back to normal, but the minute we got back to the palace,
it was almost like you were your old self again. I don't
understand."
Kuzco picked
absently at the hem of his poncho. "Well... " he began.
"People expect it ... I'm afraid if I overdid it, they
wouldn't ... I dunno. Some people just ... "
"One of
those 'some people' wouldn't happen to be Zola, would it?"
Pacha guessed.
Kuzco froze.
"Well .... no?" He paused. "I mean, NO!
Nononononononono, absolutely not. I mean ... No. Nuh uh. Zola me
no likey."
"Mmhm."
Pacha nodded.
"I'm
SERIOUS, Pach!" Kuzco insisted, with a stomp of his foot.
"I don't see why everyone's gotta be so gung-ho about this.
'Oh, you and Zola' or 'Oh, the future empress'...." He
clamped his hands to either side of his head. "It's driving
me INSANE! Did anyone consider I might actually not WANT to marry
anyone?" He paused. "Not even her?"
Pacha smiled
slightly at Kuzco's choice of words, but chose to excercise the
better part of valor. "Well, it is a law," he reminded
him.
"One of the
few stupid ones I can't change." Kuzco muttered, kneeling
down to pick at a tuft of grass.
"You think
you have it so tough, Kuzco..." Pacha sighed. "Did you
ever ask Zola where she was before she came to the palace? You
might be surprised."
"She told
you? And not me?" Kuzco blurted. "That's not fair! Tell
me!"
Pacha looked
around, then said quietly, "Can you keep a secret?"
"Yeah!
Course I can."
"So can
I." Pacha smiled, standing up and heading down the path.
"So, you coming? ... I suggest you work up a nice apology to
have ready when we stop at the stream for lunch."
"Oh, you're
real funny, Pacha." Kuzco scrambled after him, managing to
land a cuff on his friend's shoulder. "Regular
comedian...."
Kari frowned as
she stood in the lower level of the palace, clutching a bowl of
something that - remarkably - did not have spinach in it.
However, it did smell ... interesting. "Ew. Kronk, what IS
this stuff?"
"Special
recipe." Kronk said flatly. "Being a cat sorta ...
screwed up her eating habits." He walked up to a sculpture
on the wall and peered at it closely. "Now ... it's the
right." He muttered. "No, the left ... nooo.... Oh, I
can't REMEMBER!"
"Just pull
one, then! I don't have all night!!" Kari stomped up to him
and yanked on one of the levers.
"No, wait
--- " Kronk held up a hand as Kari plummeted through the
floor with a screech. ".... I just remembered that was the
wrong one ...." He admitted meekly as she came running
through a door in the back, dripping wet, her dress torn.
"That's the crocodiles..."
"I see
that." She hissed, shoving him aside. "Why is that
lever even THERE?"
"I've often
asked myself the same question." A voice squeaked from the
shadows in the corner. "And whoooo exactly are you, my dear?"
Kari jumped,
nearly dropping the bowl of food she held. "I ... " She
blinked. "My name is Kari... I came to have a word with
you... Miss Yzma."
"A
word?" There was a flash of blue in the corner, a slight
twitch in the darkness.
Kari knelt,
setting down the dish. "Yes ... I want to speak to you about
Emperor Kuzco."
"Kuzco."
Yzma spat, her voice almost a snarl. "That little
brrrrat!"
The
handmaiden-turned-laundress froze as Yzma began to move out of
the shadows, expecting a fearsome jungle cat, a lean, sleek,
dangerous panther or a mountain lion. When she caught sight of
the tiny white furrball advancing toward her, she had to clap a
hand over her mouth to hold in her laughter.
"What?"
YzmaCat glared, ruffling her fur.
"You ....
" Kari giggled. "You're just a cute widdaw
pussycat!" She laughed. In a flash, she clapped a hand to
her arm, wincing. "Ow."
"A cute.
Widdaw. Pussycat. With claws." Yzma hissed, sniffing at the
dinner dish. "KRONK! What do you CALL this?"
"Your
dinner. You want something else, you cook it," Kronk said
simply.
"I can't
cook. Why do you think I hired you?"
Kronk folded his
arms defiantly. "But you said you didn't like my spinach
puffs," he replied, a twinge of pain in his voice.
"I
don't." She said plainly, pushing the food dish down the
crocodile hole. "But I don't care forrrr this either! You
know what, Kronk? You're fired."
Kronk blinked.
"Um ... okay." He shrugged. "See you at lunch
tomorrow, Kari? I'll need some more towels." He smiled
awkwardly, pointing an oven-mitted finger at her as he headed
upstairs.
Kari slapped a
hand over her eyes. "What a dork." She sighed.
"Tellllllllll
me about it." YzmaCat purred, grooming her tail. "Now,
you wish to tell me about Kuzco. Frankly, I could care
less."
"You don't
understand." Kari sputtered. This was supposed to be my
chance for vengeance and it's being ruined by some FUZZBALL? How
humiliating.
"Look."
Yzma stretched, kneading her claws against the floor. "Take
me upstairs to someplace less drafty, get me some real food. A
pillow, maybe. Then we'll talk."
Kari sighed,
scooping the cat up in her arms. "Terrific, I've got a pet
cat."
YzmaCat extended
her claws just enough so that they pricked into her 'owner's'
arm. "Don't get too used to it."
Zola sighed as
she sat at the edge of a small stream, dipping a swatch of cloth
in the water, then wringing it out to wash her face. The cool
water felt exceptionally soothing on her face, and she smiled,
letting the cloth remain on her brow for a moment or two before
folding it and tying it around her neck. With another sigh of
contentment, she took off her sandals and dipped her road-weary
feet into the water. "Mmm. That's better." She said
quietly.
"How's the
water?"
Zola frowned as
she noticed Kuzco's reflection, distorted in the rippling water
as he loomed behind her, twiddling his thumbs. "Cold. Go
away."
"Look, ah
... " He paused. Ugh. Apologies. I just DID this a few weeks
ago. Why's it so hard again all of a sudden? ... "I ...
"
"Are you
talking?"
"Yeah,
actually, I am." He said firmly, planting himself on the
grass beside her. "And I'm trying to tell you I'm actually
sorry, but if you're not going to listen to me, you're never
going to hear it, now, are you." He snapped, folding his
arms. "Well, fine, then."
Zola blinked.
"Wait. Wait. Slow down. Was that ... was that an actual
apology I just heard coming from the mouth of His Highness I'm
Always Right?"
"Mm. Maybe.
But don't get used to it." He said quickly, tossing a pebble
into the stream.
"And don't
get used to my accepting it."
"Oh, don't
worry, I WON'T."
The two of them
locked eyes for a moment, then looked away, glaring. Kuzco picked
sullenly at the grass, ripping it up into confetti and tossing it
into the stream, watching it drift. Somewhere on the opposite
bank, a frog croaked.
"Frog."
Zola pointed out.
"Ya
think?"
"Yeah."
Ribbit.
"Loud little
bugger." Kuzco fidgeted with the edge of his poncho.
"S'hot out here."
"Ya
think?"
"Yeah."
Ribbit.
"Kuzco
--"
"Zola
--"
She coughed.
"Emperors first."
"O-kaaaay. I
... I really am sorry, ok?"
"Did I say I
didn't think you were?" Zola said quietly, trailing her
fingers in the water. "I know how you're used to getting
your way. Chicha and I were talking about it. ... I woulda paid
money to see you as a llama."
He shuddered.
"Please don't bring that up, Zol."
"Why not? It
was a good thing, from what I heard."
"I was
bathing for weeks. And I ..." Kuzco hung his head. I can't
tell her ... how the heck am I supposed to explain the feeling
you get when your whole world falls down around your ankles?
"I have an excellent idea. Let's change the subject. What
about you? Where you from?"
She blinked.
"One of the little villages around your palace. Hurin."
"Oh. That's
the one with the market."
"The market
kinda connects Hurin and Hanin." She said plainly. "And
I bet you've never even been there. Your own city. That's
sad."
Kuzco folded his
arms. "Well, if we wanna talk about sad, then ..."
"Then
what?" She snapped, standing, anger flashing in her eyes.
"Um ...
" He frowned. "I can't think of an insult." He
said, amazed. "Now that's sad."
"Gee, Zola
two, Kuzco nothing." Zola smirked.
"Are you two
ready to go?" Pacha called from the wagon. "It's still
a good hour and a half to Mudka's."
"An hour?
I'm starving," Kuzco whined.
"Me too,
Dad," Tipo chimed in.
"Me
three," Chaca nodded, her pigtails bobbing. "Can we
run?"
"Ugh, no
thank you!" Kuzco shook his head. "I'd rather walk and
starve than tire out the Imperial feet prematurely. Let's
go..."
Zola sighed as
she fell into step beside Chicha. "I don't get it,
sometimes," she admitted. "He just apologized for the
same thing he's doing right now. Whining."
"That's
Kuzco," Chicha smiled, shaking her head. "Give it a
while. He'll have cooled down again by dinner, you watch."
"I hope so.
He's getting me irritable."
"Well,"
Pacha volunteered, as they started back down the path, "you
kind of have to get used to that sort of thing when you're around
Kuzco. He still has a long ways to go."
"You didn't
tell him, did you?"
"Tell him
what?"
"About my
--"
Suddenly, there
was a rustle of branches from the trees above them, and a blur of
red, green, and gold tumbled down into the hay of the cart with a
screech.
"AAAH!"
Tipo cried out, as he and his sister scurried to opposite corners
of the cart. "It's a... a... "
A rumpled,
straw-covered head of raven hair poked out from beneath the hay,
followed by a hand clutching a sole, bruised pear. "The
things I do for lunch," a voice moaned.
"It's just a
girl," Chaca pouted, disappointed. "And here I thought
it was some big magical thingie."
"Nope, just
me," the girl smiled, straightening out her skirt before
polishing her pear on it and taking a bite.
Kuzco leant
nonchalantly on the side of the cart and peered at the intruder
suspiciously. "And yooou are?" He asked, raising an
eyebrow.
"Chicheni,"
she replied, shaking his hand and leaving it sticky with pear
juice. "And you're Sapa."
"Emperor
Kuzco," he corrected her, wiping his hand off on Pacha's
poncho.
"Sapa,"
she nodded, smiling.
Kuzco paused.
"Nobody's called the emperor that for at least two
generations," he realized. "What's your deal,
huh?"
"I was just
getting lunch, and I lost my balance," Chicheni shrugged,
picking straw out of her tightly coiled bun. "But I knew I
was going to land safely enough. After all ..." She paused,
staring at him. After a moment, Chicheni froze, her head cocked
to one side, her eyes glazed over slightly. "Chibil Kin....
black, and red, and grey ... never drink the vintage ... no ...
never ..."
As she continued
muttering to herself, Pacha and Kuzco exchanged glances. The
entire traveling party shrugged.
"I think her
bun's on a little too tight," Zola whispered to Chicha.
"Definately..."
Chicha nodded, as her eyes fell on Chicheni's hair. A large cloud
of straw had fallen loose, revealing a streak of hair as blue as
the afternoon sky running through the young girl's bun.
"Odd."
"Weird,"
Kuzco mumbled. "Pacha, while she's in that whatever it is,
can we just shove her off the cart and keep going? She's kinda
scaring me." He folded his arms. "Not to mention that
she got pear juice all over my hand and she's in my seat."
Instantly,
Chicheni's head snapped back upright and she smiled broadly.
"So where are you headed, Sapa?"
Kuzco blinked
repeatedly. "Um .... um .... we were going for dinner."
"Mind if I
tag along?"
Kuzco shot Pacha
a nervous glance, but his peasant friend merely smiled and
shrugged his shoulders. "Gow. .... Why not, go
ahead..."
"Thanks. Um
... you might want to put some warm water on that," Chicheni
pointed to Tipo's leg.
"Huh?"
Tipo blinked, looking down at his calf. "Nothin's wrong with
it, though."
"Yep, nice
warm water, that works," Chicheni nodded, oblivious, as she
hopped out of the cart and straightened her striped dress.
"Mudka's Meat Hut, eh? Well, can't say it's the best place
around, but I do love their cheddar potatoes."
As she continued
to babble, Kuzco scurried over to Pacha. "Okay, Mr.
Humanitarian, if she freaks me out any more, you're walking in
back!"
Chicha blinked.
"She's certainly unique. I wonder where she's from. She's
got a very odd accent... and she looks so lost... but not ...
it's very strange."
Zola shrugged.
"I think she's nice enough. But I wonder what she was
talking about before? Black, red, and grey?"
"I know what
Chibil Kin is," Kuzco shuddered involuntarily. "Yzma
used to tell me stories about it to make me behave."
"What is
it?" All three of his companions asked in unison.
"It's ...
it's an eclipse of the sun," Kuzco stammered, rubbing at one
arm. "Yzma used to say that when it happens, bad things
happen to the Emperor because he is the sun.... but I know there
isn't supposed to be one for years now. So I dunno what she's
talking about," he finished, indicating Chicheni, who was
busy playing clapping games with the children in the cart.
"But needless to say, she freaks me out. Knowing that whole
old formal business of calling me Sapa ... the Chibil Kin thing
... and just the way she stared at me. Ugh!" He shuddered
again. "Let's keep going, huh? Maybe a meat pie can take my
mind off of this kook."
Kari sighed as
she lounged in the chaise by her window. "Look, all I need
to know is how to get rid of Kuzco."
"You can't,
sister," Yzma yowled, kneading her claws into the pile of
laundry she'd been perched upon. "Believe me, I've tried.
Countless times."
"You never
considered just finding some way to get him away from the
palace?"
"Well ... I
did have him out for a while," Yzma purred, slicking back
her fur with one paw. "When he was a llama. But that
peasant!"
"I heard
alllllll about it," Kari nodded. "But what if there was
nobody to help him? We'd have to get Zola out of the way, too, of
course."
"Right..."
Yzma nodded. "And there is no human potion left, or I would
have used it on my beautiful self. ... My recipe seems to have
gone missing, as well."
"Terrific."
Kari rubbed her hands together. "Now, let's see ... what to
do?"
"What are
you doing?"
"I'm going
to turn him into something very small. Maybe someone will step on
him." Kari cackled. "Wait ... I think I know. I'll turn
him into a flea."
"Too
complicated," Yzma interrupted her. "And besides, the
postage rate just went up."
Postage rate?
Kari scratched her head for a moment, then shrugged. "Uh ...
right. But I need some kind of animal that nobody will
notice..."
Yzma grinned
wickedly, showing off rows of sharp teeth. "I know just the
thing ... but we'll need time to make it ... and time to
plan."
"Just tell
me what to do..."
The brightly
colored decor of Mudka's Meat Hut was a welcome respite from the
dust and heat of the road, and the seven travelers all piled into
the largest booth in the restaurant. Chicha cradled young Roca in
her arms as Chaca sat to one side of her, while Pacha sat on the
other with a bouncing Tipo in his lap. Chicheni had seated
herself between Tipo and Zola, concentrating her attention on the
Emperor, who perched at the edge of the booth, scowling over his
menu.
"Too much
gravy. That's got cheese. Nope, fish me no likey. .... Gow, did
they take the meat pie off the menu, or what?" Kuzco griped,
setting the enormous parchment down on the table with a sigh.
Wordlessly, Zola
reached out and flipped the menu over, pointing to the list of
specials.
"Aha.
Thanks."
The waitress
waddled over to them, peering out over her notepad through
mascara-caked lashes. "Welcome to Mudka's Meat Hut, home of
the Mug of Meat," she intoned, taking the pencil from behind
her ear. "What'll it be?"
Pacha grinned.
"Four pillbugs, cheddar potatoes..."
"Two cheddar
potatoes," Chicheni chimed in.
"Vegetable
fritatta with peppers and onions," Zola smiled.
"Meat pie,
hold the gravy, all lean meat, and noooo bones. Oh - and can you
not burn the crust? I like it just right. Not too hot, see, or
I'd burn my tongue and that hurts...."
"Whaddaya
think this is, kid, the Imperial Palace?" The waitress
chuckled, writing down the order. "That'll be a few
minutes..."
"Imperial
Palace," Kuzco sniffed, setting his chin in his hands.
"I've got half a mind to go in there and --"
"Kuzco,
you've already made one of these chefs quit," Pacha reminded
him. "Besides, they're usually very good about the food
here."
"Dad, can we
get an onion log?" Tipo asked.
"Sure,
kiddo," Pacha smiled. "Just run over and catch the
waitress at the counter, she'll fill it in."
Tipo grinned as
he clambered over his mother and sister. As he went to step onto
the floor, his sandal caught on the edge of the bench and he
tripped, falling headfirst onto the floor. "OW!"
Chicheni shook
her head, frowning. "That's gotta sting," she remarked.
"Are you
okay, honey?" Chicha bit her lip, helping her son to his
feet.
"Yeah ... my
leg hurts." Tipo whimpered, pulling a splinter out of his
calf. "Ew."
Chicha waved her
arms, flagging down the waitress. "Can we get some warm
water over here, please? My son's got a splinter. ..."
Instantly, Kuzco,
Pacha, and Zola all turned to stare at Chicheni.
"Huh?
What?" She blinked, sipping at her iced tea. "Have I
got something in my teeth?"
Kuzco whistled,
raising his eyebrows. "Uh, nooooooo.... you just said about
an hour ago that that kiddo needed warm water. What do we
need?"
"What is
'warm water'," Zola finished.
"Bingo. So
what's the deal, huh?"
Chicheni
shrugged. "I just ... I've always known things like that.
Always." She twisted her napkin in her hands. ".... I
knew I was going to get separated from my tribe. That bothered
me..."
Pacha frowned,
sliding out of the booth to help Chicha with Tipo's leg.
"Your tribe?"
"Uh huh. It
was so long ago, I don't even remember who they are or where
they're from. I just know I've been everywhere. All over these
hills... and the ones you can't see..."
"How'd your
hair get all blue like that?" Chaca asked, pointing to the
streak.
"Uh - I
don't know. It's always been there." Chicheni shrugged.
"But I just... I know things, that's all. I see them."
"Chibil
Kin," Kuzco murmured, looking around nervously.
"You said
that wasn't going to happen," Zola reminded him.
"There's nothing to worry about. Nothing at all."
"And
besides," Pacha smiled as the waitress plodded over with a
heavily laden tray, "our food's here. So just relax - we'll
be back to my house soon, and you can show Zola and Chicheni your
place --"
"My
Kuzcotopia," he said proudly, puffing out his chest.
"You should see it. It's got these great rugs, and Chicha
made the wall hangings, and there's a reeeeeally cool birdbath,
and a waterslide, and ..."
Pacha sighed as
he listened to Kuzco lose himself in his ramblings. "Do you
think ...?" He asked Chicha conspiratorily, cracking open
their pillbugs.
"I don't
know, quite honestly," Chicha shrugged. "We'll just
have to wait and see."
~*~*~*~*~*~
That
Chicheni, she's some weird kid, huh? Chibil Kin .... brrrrr, that
scares the HECK out of me! .... You'd be scared, too, if you
heard stories like that. I bet you probably have, in fact. But
anyway, I gotta feeling there's more to that girl than meets the
eye. Oh well. Till next time, everyone ... I'll see you at
Kuzcotopia! Buh-bye!
(Author's
Note: Yes, Chibil Kin really is a term. It literally means
"the biting of the sun", and I got it out of a book on
Mesoamerican religion and schtuff. .... Sorry for the
cliffhanger, but I felt like this installment was getting rather
long, and I like to have my series in short little bits. Besides,
I've been keeping you all waiting far too long. Lemme know what
you think! ... Oh, and if you want to see Chicheni, she's here...
http://www.geocities.com/odducks/chi1.jpg. Dig that crazy blue
streak.)