Day 3
"Habemus Papam"
GULF WARS XXII
Day 3: Habemas Papam
Apparently I’m not the only one for whom all the details of Gulf Wars blur together. I should never have committed to doing this story one day at a time. But I do know that we did go to pick up Ceanag on Day 3. Or more accurately, we went out into the nether and retrieved Laurah so she could take off that silly Laurah disguise and revert to being Ceanag. We disengaged docking clamps and left orbit around Scadia Prime. I didn’t even dress down. Wrap pants and filly cotton shirt for me. You have to ease a person’s transition, you know? She just spent a few hours on a hurtling metal bird thing.
I also remember this was the first day I got to see real fighting. Now like I said, what day which thing happened. Let’s blur the lines and just talk about the combat.
The first battle I saw was an archery battle. I happened upon a ravine I hadn’t discovered before. That’s how big this event is. I missed a whole gorge with trees about the size of a football field. People were scattered out, launching arrows at each other.
I had considered doing archery for a while. But I immediately got the impression that everyone hates an archer. Someone told me that when they catch up with one they smack him on the back of the leg where he has no armor. I also heard that they’re hated because when approached in this way, they simply take a dive and avoid that kind of attrition. This is a pity, because when I actually got a look at the archery battle, I was really impressed for a number of reasons. First, you can tell a lot of these people made their own bows and crossbows. I can’t even begin to figure out how to do this. Second, in most battles, an arrow shot only counts as a kill if they shoot you right in the faceplate. I can’t do that either. The thing that really threw me though was a particular shooter out there in the open. It was an armored man on an electric wheelchair. He was rolling around the field, stopping every so often to grab an arrow out of a big paint bucket between his feet and launching it at someone. Nobody treated this as weird. This wasn’t what threw me, what threw me was the fact that it didn’t throw me. What the hell am I talking about? I was not at all surprised that someone in a wheelchair was out there in combat and that was just something people did, and it struck me that it seemed so natural. Why not let him fight? If I’ve got my bearings right he’s actually pretty well known.
And he’s not the only example of ‘accessibility’ on the field.
I didn’t see him in person, but as soon as I Shared this picture on Facebook I learned that he goes to Gulf Wars, and is a genuine article fucking Knight. Oh, and not an hour later I got a post that said “yeah, that’s me!” He’s a solid dude and I hope I can fight him someday. We’re Facebook friends now, maybe he reads this. Come get me!!
And there’s more. I heard of a young woman who was wheelchair-bound who wanted to join a battle. In an SCA precedent, she was borne on the back of a friend, who was declared a “horse” for the purpose of the battle and not to be harmed. I would like to point out he was carrying a woman in full armor.
People just accept this. That’s what’s so fantastic. And you get other things outside of combat, men with female personae, and vice versa. Men learning to bellydance. A woman who became Queen, not by ‘inspiring’ a Knight, but bringing down all the other Knights and taking the crown.
The other thing that struck me was the arrows. Okay not literally ‘struck’ me. You’re not allowed to shoot spectators. Or in the direction of spectators. So if the battlefield takes a convex formation, you can stand behind your friends on the field and their enemies can’t legally shoot arrows toward them. People were actually doing this at Gulf Wars, it was very amusing.
The arrows. Right. They’re not normal. I was in the Merchant’s Row and at first and saw them on sale, and didn’t recognize them as arrows. The heads look like this:
That’s well and good and makes sense. What threw me off was the tails. They’re not feathers, they look like this:
That’s what I couldn’t figure out until I saw them in piles after a battle. I asked about it. This is an APD, an anti-penetration device, legally required to be on an SCA arrow. Why? So an arrow doesn’t bounce backwards and stab you in the eye through your helmet. From what I hear, this was a problem they anticipated before it hurt someone. Once again, mind blown. They took a concept several thousand years old and re-invented it and it still flies. It forms a sort of wind tube, and is completely safe on a bounce-back. No, it doesn’t fly quite as well, but plastic ends are a lot harder to break. I love it.
I saw a Heavy battle on the same spot with archers and melee. It’s spectacular. A line forms down the middle, shields on either side, spears just behind those. Some kingdoms actually get organized, trying to push forward. You get skirmishes and scraps outside of this but what basically happens is you get up in the “crunch” and fight it out until you get hit hard enough that you don’t feel like another one harder than that. You run off back to where everyone’s sitting down with their piles of equipment to the “res point,” then get back in there. The archers are standing behind these lines preying on people. Honorably though. I see them shoot, make hand signals, ‘that shot was no good, you’re okay,’ and get them back, ‘no, it hit right here *point*,’ a self-policing honor system, people actually take shots at each other, discuss it, complement each other, maybe that’s just how they do it in the South. But it’s a very intense and yet very cerebral sport. And nonetheless, there are people standing around waiting to get into the crunch, and they get pegged unawares square in the face by a fair shot, and they look upset. I mean I would, that’s kind of annoying. All this happens under the watchful eye of Marshalls, most of which have a staff with yellow tape on it. These people are all fighters themselves, and most of them very tough. I was walking by the big scuffle of the ravine and an arrow streaked out of nowhere, bounced off the ground and hit a marshall in the face. She stumbled a little, smirked, and called “light!” I think the crowd applauded.
I also saw a tournament happening. I didn’t have any idea what any of it meant at the time, or who the people with the crowns were, but to watch the event was fascinating. I’d been doing some fighting myself thanks to Tanaka, but I’d never seen a live fire tourney. Would you believe me if I told you it was like a golf game? They stand there, staring at each other, sizing one another up for several seconds on end. This seems like an eternity to a spectator. Then there’s a scuffle, sometimes an extremely violent one, sometimes just a quick test of one another’s defenses. This then generally leads to a hushed discussion between the combatants. It was off the top of your helmet, are you sure, yeah you’re good it doesn’t count, and then they resume staring. Then once in a while, you get theatre. I saw one fighter get legged and take a knee like you’re supposed to. This is usually when the theatre starts, with a leg hit. The fighter still standing hesitates for a moment, then whacks his own leg and takes a knee to polite applause. Now even, they continue fighting. I’ve heard mixed responses to this. On the one hand it’s honorable, but on the other hand, it doesn’t make sense to some fighters not to take the advantage they’ve earned. Sometimes though, when someone loses a limb, you get a speech. Usually it’s an offer for the other to forfeit, laced with admiration of their tenacity so far. And in keeping with that tenacity, the other fighter refuses and the fight continues. But the whole fight stops when they decide to do this. Some are better actors than others.
A funny thing happened to me here. But I have to confuse you some more and back up a little. At some point after one fight had ended, I was at loose ends and drifted back to the Merchant’s Row. Now remember, this was March 2013, during the Papal Conclave. My whole time at this event, everyone kept asking me, “father, why aren’t you in Rome?” Skopa hates Conclaves. He knows there’s no mechanism to keep a conclave from going on for 3 years (one did!), or even 5 or 12, so he refuses to attend them, getting someone to pay him not to go. So I’m walking around the Merchant’s Row and for some reason I was carrying my cell phone. Good thing too, because I got a text from a friend. We had a pope! I tried to get details, but my phone died then and there. So I ran back to camp. I called my mom, and she supplied me all available details about Pope Francis. Because I knew people were going to ask.
So here I am watching the tournament. Mostly no idea what’s going on except people are hitting each other, and then suddenly someone is at my shoulder. “You look epic! Keep it up, you look epic!” she says, pressing something into my hand and disappearing back into the crowd.
I’m led to understand this is known as a “favor.” So I’m stoked on this of course. Someone asked me “why aren’t you in Rome, padrĂ©?” Well I had an answer this time. It’s over! Habemas Papam! Shortly thereafter, someone else approached me. “Excuse me, can we talk to you for a second?”
I was brought before an older woman in a leather crown. “We heard you talking about the new Pope,” she said. “What can you tell us?”
I launched right into it.
Jorge Mario Bergoglio is our 266th Pope. He’s an Argentinian born Italian, the first non-Italian in basically forever and the first ever from the Americas. He’s 76 and should die properly this time, and who else could do his last rites but Benedict, at which point Catholicism will have finally kissed its own elbow. Yes, I actually said that. Yes, it got a laugh.
The sun went down and I started back toward the colonies, maybe something fun was happening at the Green Dragon. I went trotting past Ansteorra again. They were having a huge party after the kickass battle they’d had that day. The sun had already gone down, but that’s the thing about wearing all red, you stand out anywhere, and someone from the party noticed me and shooed me inside. They were having a milk and cookies party of all things, and the soldiers I’d blessed the day before apparently went out and cleaned house. So they were pretty happy to see me again. I think I was standing there with a sugar cookie when I got an idea. It had been a good day for me thus far, but that only meant I still had to cap it off with something epic. So I did. I quickly nipped back home to Murdaigean for something to fill my goblet. He advised me to drink it slowly.
I don’t drink. I mean, I don’t drink much. I never got into it, the stuff tastes awful. I’d only discovered intoxicants of any sort recently, and I’d found one I liked a lot more, but when you’re at Gulf Wars you’re bound to have some booze at least by accident. It was at this event I actually found my limit, and got good at staying there, no more or less.
Well I’m right there when I get back to Ansteorra. I look around for a little bit and find someone not engaged. “Which one of those guys has a sense of humor?” I ask a yellow-hooded fighter.
Along the wall of Ansteorra’s huge tent are a number of handmade wooden thrones starting with the King and going down in descending order of importance. My guide pointed to a younger man with a ponytail and beard and big smile. “Try Prince Laughlyn, he’d like it.”
I took a deep breath and approached the Prince.
He noticed me, and looked up with a cautious smile, trying to gauge how drunk I was, and figure out why I was holding up a sugar cookie. Until I said,
“The body of Christ!”
His mouth dropped open. I lay the cookie on his tongue. He nodded, still smiling beatifically, still aloof, until I held up the goblet.
“The blood of Christ!”
And when I tipped the goblet to his lips, and he tasted the Jim Beam, that’s when he nodded again, this time with approval.
“Your Majesty, a word if I may?”
“Sure!”
I told him briefly about how this was my first event, and everyone had been very accepting. And we had a new Pope. While I was on the phone with mom, I made sure to get a certain traditional address the Master of Ceremonies gives the masses when a Pope is elected. Ansteorra had been very kind to me. While I wasn’t presumptuous enough to try to address the entire camp, I was the only priest I’d seen around, and the only Cardinal I’d ever heard of, and perhaps the Prince would like to hear it.
“Yeah!” He jumped right up and all his friends formed a semicircle around me.
I read the address, which in Latin goes like this:
Annuntio vobis gaudium magnum:
Habemus Papam!
Eminentissimum ac Reverendissimum Dominum,
Dominum [Jorge Mario],
Sanctae Romanae Ecclesiae Cardinalem [Bergoglio],
qui sibi nomen imposuit [Francis].
In English, and with the specifics taken out,
I announce to you a great joy:
We have a Pope!
The Most Eminent and Most Reverend Lord,
Lord [forename],
Cardinal of the Holy Roman Church [surname],
who takes to himself the name [papal name].
I read this, and the assembly said amen. I’m not even sure you’re supposed to do that. Prince Laughlyn was all excited. “I’m gonna go find our guys so you can bless ‘em again!!”
He tore ass into the night. He didn’t come back. He didn’t remember this event the next day. His friends tell me he was partying hard. I don’t even care. I have witnesses.
We stood around talking for a while, they told me about Ansteorra, asked about my story, wished me good luck and welcomed me to Our Great Organization. One of them pressed something into my hand.
After this little gathering dissolved, I eventually headed back to the warm embrace of Crawhere.
I’d gotten to know them a little better by then. I’d had long talks with Az (yes, the photograph guy) at the longhall. I saw him smoking a cigar.
I love cigars.
I asked him what it was. “You want one?” he said. Did I want one?! Oh my god it tasted like vanilla and happiness in cloud form. We talked about it. About lots of stuff. Crawhere, his experience, the Longhall, cigars, “and if you come back tomorrow I’ll have another one for you.” I loved this man.
The Longhall was my favorite place to be, and I’d bounce between it and the Crawhere campfire, and the occasional safety meeting. I got to tell them I gave the Prince of Ansteorra communion with Jim Beam and a sugar cookie. I think it was tonight I really got to know Stilicho.
There’s going to be an entire piece in this blog on Stilicho. I’ll give you the facts here. Stilicho, the Legend, founded the fighting unit Crawhere, originally known as Leg LXIX. That’s right, the Fighting 69th. About 4 years ago he handed battlefield command to a Knight called Gnaeus, but all matters are dealt with democratically with all the fighters and their spouses getting a vote. Steve Corn, the man, is an artist who makes toys. Before that he was a blacksmith, before that he was in TV production, and before that he was a bouncer. He’s about 6’2” and is an avowed redneck with a ready smile and an uncanny wisdom and progressiveness of thought no one associates with Southerners. He welcomed me to Crawhere in the first place, and I think it was tonight he and I really talked. I told him that I’d just learned to sew, and if making things like my cassock could be my career, I’d be happy. And he told me a story.
He was a blacksmith for about a decade, until he threw his elbow out and couldn’t do that anymore. One day he was researching old toys from his childhood, looking to sell one. He found a collectors’ club and in the process of selling them, someone asked if he could make a bowie knife for a cowboy figurine. Then he was asked to make some revolvers. Tiny ones, about the size of a quarter. Then he was getting orders for ten at a time. Now he tells me he kind of hides his website because he can’t handle all the work coming in. He makes everything. Tiny cowboy hats, little dynamite sticks, Steve-O’s toys does it all. 60 day minimum wait. Stick with it, he tells me. Practice, get better. It’ll progress. Have a salad.
Ladies and gentlemen, I give you St. Evecorn.
Yeah, he’s a character.
And he just sent me this one as I’m writing this. His will be done.
If you ever get the chance to party with Crawhere, do. If you ever get the chance to mess with St. Evecorn, don’t.
After talking to him I bounced back to the longhall and was intercepted by Aliquis, the younger guy who’d taken me in the night before and had a discussion about my persona. We had another safety meeting.
A lot of Early Period, I’m led to understand, and St. Evecorn included I think, have a certain aversion to mucky-mucks with crowns. It is in the innate nature of my persona to want to schmooze these people, but a lot of Scadians avoid the Longhall if there are too many “pointy-hats” there. That’s kind of what the conversation turned to.
He told me he was an army brat. That he’s lived in 18 places in 22 years. And that his only real consistent friends are the ones he sees only once a year. So fuck these lawyers, these bankers with their shiny kits, these people who are rockstars in their real lives, he tells me. This place is for us.
“But Aliquis,” I say after a while, “weren’t you telling me last night that you’d just gotten a job as a beer taster at a brewery? Aren’t you kind of a ‘rockstar?’”
His face spread into a grin again. “Yup,” he said, nodding. “I am a rockstar.”
Despite what a great day I’d been having, I’m plagued by a certain doubt at the back of my mind. I wonder if I’d found the SCA earlier in my life, been introduced to such a powerful motivator at about age 16, if I’d be as accomplished as St. Evecorn or as cool as Aliquis by now. But Stilicho also told me to keep working on it.
Here we are.