“Look, that's not the way it works!” Diocletian shouted. Over on his hibachi, Thiranduil whimpered and covered his ears. They'd been going on like this for almost half an hour, and even a mini-Balrog has his limits. Diocletian, however, ignored the mini's obvious distress in favor of jabbing a finger into her partner's chest.“If you'd listen for five seconds, you'd know that!”<br><br> “It's a damn stupid way to do things,” Suicide retorted. “Telling all your problems to some useless old graybeard who makes his living telling other people why they're mad? That's not healthy, that's the kind of thing Athenians got off on!”<br><br> “It <i>is</i> healthy, believe it or not. And if you hate psychology so much, why do you ask me for advice all the time?”<br><br> “That's different. I actually respect you occasionally!”<br><br> “Occasionally! Truer words never spoken. I still can't believe you're being so stubborn!”<br><br> “Maybe you're the one who's being stubborn. Why the hell should I talk to one of these headshrinkers, anyway? They can't even really shrink heads!”<br><br> “Because that's why! You have this . . . “ Diocletian gripped the air as if trying to throttle her partner's less admirable traits. “This . . . <i>thing</i> about how violence is the only way to get stuff done! Like riding a horse is somehow better than reading a book!”<br><br> “I'm in the PPC!” Suicide pointed out, throwing his arms wide. “Why the hell d'you think they recruited me?”<br><br> “That doesn't change the fact that you're treating the DSM-IV like a to-do list. There are limits!” Thiranduil burrowed deeper into the hibachi, knowing that, like plagues and '80s fashion, the original topic of the fight was about to return yet again. “Limits that <i>don't</i> involve you trying to murder Agent Snafu just because I went to dinner with him!”<br><br> “I told you, he's no good for you. He's practically a stick. A stick who wouldn't know how to be a man if you injected liquid John McClane into his veins!”<br><br> Diocletian facepalmed. “You'd probably try it, too. But that doesn't change the fact that you nearly frightened him to death, and for no good reason!”<br><br> Suicide huffed. “I said I was sorry!”<br><br> “You didn't mean it, and you know it.”<br><br> “What the hell does that mean?”<br><br> “Exactly what it means.”<br><br> “Stop being such a girl, Dio, and just spit it out!”<br><br> Diocletian scowled, planting her hands on her hips as she aimed a venomous glare at her partner. “Stop being such a girl? Oh, smooth, very smooth! I feel so bad for Jenni Robinson, having you following her around like a horny charmless wolfman.”<br><br> “All right, you caught me. I'm not sorry.” Suicide flexed his hands, with audible cracking noises from the oversized knuckles. “I'm not sorry that I did the sensible thing by trying to scare off a useless squish of a human being who shouldn't even be looking in your direction. I'm not sorry that your idea of a good time is trying to knacker me by hitting me over the head with how modern people handle their differences! How modern people behave, how 'civilized' people spend their time—-if I hear the words 'peaceable conflict resolution' again, I'm going to go out there and kick a puppy just for the hell of it! Dammit, Dio, I'm a Scythian, not a sociologist!”<br><br> Diocletian's scowl wavered. She fought valiantly to keep it in place, but the urge was too strong. With a snort, she burst out laughing, covering her mouth with both hands but unable to suppress the mad giggles. Suicide stared, not quite sure what had come over his partner.<br><br> “A Scythian . . . not a . . .” She broke down again, choking. “Oh Eru, oh my Eru, you are, aren't you . . . ahahaha . . .”<br><br> Suicide glanced at the door as Diocletian gasped for air. “I take it back. Maybe you do need one of those headshrinker things.” That sent Dio into another fit of laughter, and Suicide grinned uneasily, not sure what he'd said. As a rule, his partner was supposed to be the levelheaded one; barring the occasional spot of Bursar Disease, Diocletian was the one who acted calm(ish) and sane (in a manner of speaking). Maybe the pressure had finally gotten to her? Tentatively, he prodded one shaking shoulder with a fingertip, only making her laugh again.<br><br> “No,” she managed. “You're not. You're really, really not.”<br><br> “Are you trying to start the argument again? Because I can do this all day.”<br><br> “No, I'm not,” she said, taking a deep breath and trying (and failing) to wipe the smile off her face. “Look . . . Su . . . you're right.”<br><br> He raised an eyebrow, surprised. This was a first. “I am?”<br><br> “You are. Sort of. Maybe I've been too hard on you.” Suicide's other eyebrow joined the first, giving him an expression of either extreme surprise or recent Botox use, and Diocletian held up a qualifying finger. “<i>Maybe,</i> I said. I'm still mad at you. But I have been badgering you a lot lately.”<br><br> “Honey-badgering, practically.” Diocletian's giggles started again, and Suicide could help grinning too. <br><br> “You suck, Su.”<br><br> “I'm rubber, you're glue. You actually mean it?”<br><br> “Yeah, yeah. I think I do.” She took another breath. “Look, Su. You wouldn't be half as much fun if you were . . . well . . . modern. Normal. But there's a time and a place, you know? Breaking into Snafu's RC and attacking him while he's asleep isn't one of them.”<br><br> “I was trying to see how well he reacted to a dangerous situation. A man needs to be able to protect himself and his loved ones.” It's a testament to Suicide's acting ability that he said that perfectly straight-faced. <br><br> “Protecting himself and his loved ones, says the man who's named . . . look. I don't need protecting, okay?” Diocletian shook her head, even as Suicide opened his mouth to object. “Okay, there was the Shelob incident. But most of the time, when I want to have dinner with another agent, I don't need you biting his head off. Okay?”<br><br> “Okay,” Suicide said. Reluctantly. Biting peoples' heads off was practically a spectator sport in the PPC, after all.<br><br> “And I'm sorry I called you a charmless horny wolfman.”<br><br> “Horny charmless wolfman, actually. And that one was actually accurate.”<br><br> “You're a wolfman?”<br><br> “Ask Jenni.”<br><br> “Oh, Su—-<i>ew!</i>”<br><br> And once again, in RC #2771a, all was well. Because attempted murder is one thing, and badgering about what defines civilized tendencies is another, but a bond of humor shared by inadvertent science fiction references is in a class of its own.