//------------------------------// // The Fall // Story: Moonrise // by LEPShot //------------------------------// Chapter 1 -(o)--(o)--(o)--(o)--(o)--(o)--(o)--(o)--(o)--(o)--(o)--(o)--(o)--(o)--(o)- [Date: March 24th, Year 1795 of the Equestrian Era] [Location: Royal Infirmary] [Condition: Stable] Upon awakening, I kept my eyes closed as I lay on my back on the linen sheets. Despite the circumstances of my arrival to this building, I was in relative comfort. Sure, my limbs were stiff as hell and ached like they were suffering from mild burns every time I took a breath, but my stomach and right side were pressed up against another's form, and I relished in the feeling of her fur. This pony's coat was different than most. Instead of being warm to the touch, it cooled my skin, soothing and wiping away the aches, and gave my head the perfect place to rest. Just the fact that she was here, laying on the bed next to me with her neck under my head, gave me a sense of security no amount of Royal Guards achieve. A starry, blue mane, both ethereal and corporeal, shiny and matte, was pressed between my right cheek and her collarbone. It was unbelievably soft and frosty, and I nuzzled into it, wanting everything I touched from now on to be exactly like this mane. The plush wing and foreleg draped across my front added to the sense of tainted bliss. I brought my foreleg up to my chest, where the edge of her hoof was holding me against her underside, and simply lay it over her's. I wanted to make sure that it stayed there. "How are you feeling?" A quiet voice spoke up from the corner of the room, and I opened my eyes to see an uncharacteristically untidy Celestia sitting on a large cushion, gently smiling at me with saddened, sunken eyes. Her ever-flowing, warm mane had lost some of it's luster in the recent days, the twinkling quality it always held diminished with her stress. Her alabaster coat also appeared not to have been groomed in some time, and it stuck out in places like her chin and ribs, places where her hooves had touched with consistency. I returned her soft smile with my own, even though seeing her like this made my heart ache worse my body. I knew that there was no way she had allowed herself sleep since the night before I was attacked. That would make today her fourth morning of consciousness. I kept my voice low to avoid waking the others. Residing within the room were nine ponies and a dragon, scattered throughout the small area and resting on either the chairs, the bed, a cushion or the floor. Eight of the ten occupants currently asleep. "Better, I suppose," My throat was dry, my voice rugged. "The pain is starting to numb, but I feel really..." I honestly didn't know how to phrase the way I felt. It was as though my very bones were turning to ice, the joints becoming solid, and every time I shifted slightly the ice cracked and creaked. It was an extremely vexatious and unsettling sensation, and it was gnawing at the back of my mind. Something told me that I had once experienced this feeling, in a memory of years past. "Brittle." I finished my sentence. The word fit like a puzzle piece, snug in its description of me. The impervious mask of composure the Solar Princess normally adorned was gone entirely. Her emotions surfaced in the subtle movements of her flawless features, from the shallow, rapid clenching of her jaw to the fraction of an inch her shoulders fell at my words. Anyone that hadn't spent the majority of their lives around her wouldn't have noticed, but she may as well have held up a neon sign for me. She rose, her hooffalls making soft taps on the stone floor as she made her way towards me, sidestepping the purple dragon that dominated the area around the foot of the bed. As she made the short trek, her eyes moved up and down my body, resting on my bandaged horn upon her arrival to the bed. She stood to the right of the mattress, so that I would not have to move to keep her in sight, and so I could keep my lush pillow and blanket in place. She didn't say anything, but continued to gaze above my head with a look of sorrow. "Do they know what it was, yet?" I questioned after a moment. Her mild, purple eyes found mine, and the misery held in them froze my heart into a solid chunk of ice. Doing nothing but keeping her eyes locked with mine, I had a feeling that Celestia really didn't see anything, so consumed in her own thoughts as she was at the moment. It was this way for a long minute, her revelry breaking without warning and the sadness in her expression redoubling. "They think," She started with a croak. Another uncharacteristic trait on display. She cleared her throat and began again. "They think it was a modified form of the Osmose spell. The caster imbibed the life force of a Basilisk, then weaponized it against you." At the creature's name, the feeling at the back of my mind sparked, fully realizing life and taking form. That's where this feeling of icy immobility came from. A Basilisk. Celestia continued slowly, her words a whisper and her eyes watery. "I have experience with spells such as this. The concentrated life force of the creature enters your mind directly, due to the contact of your horns, and roots itself deeply, spreading and growing like a fire from there." I knew as she spoke that her words were true. The burn from the quickly-expended magic on my horn throbbed slightly at the mention of the spell, as did the solidifying feeling in my tendons and bones. A sort of numbness crashed through me as I watched my former Mentor's eyes glaze over with tears. I knew her next words, even if she couldn't find the will to speak them in their entirety. "Twilight, they... I..." It was like somepony had just clapped the world’s largest cymbals next to my ears, as they filled with a deafening ringing noise. A few days ago, the doctor’s outlook had been hopeful. Now... I felt my mind freeze over with the same sheet of ice that had claimed my body at the thought of where I would be in a few days. It was all I could do to nod once, making my neck feel fractured, before I felt my eyes burning. The alicorn lent forward, quickly embracing me and pressing her head to my neck, whether to comfort me or her, I didn't know. I ignored the cracks and splinters of ice as I mirrored her movement with my own. Some part of my mind that was not ringing with cold shock registered the contrasting heat of her fur to her sister's, and I used this as a distraction to escape from the world. My mind shut down everything not connected to the feeling of the night-and-day difference in their bodies, and I remembered how comfortable I was before this. Sleep took me in seconds, and I dreamed of the last time such a feeling had been the only thing that I was able to focus on. I dreamed of the Summer Solstice of twenty three years ago. -(o)--(o)--(o)--(o)--(o)--(o)--(o)--(o)--(o)--(o)--(o)--(o)--(o)--(o)--(o)- [Date: June 22nd, Year 1772 of the Equestrian Era] [Location: Somewhere inside the Royal maze] [Condition: Incredibly frustrated] I kicked a wall as hard as I could. Nothing happened, of course. My hind hooves went through the plants, but no damage was done to the gargantuan slab of foliage. A not-so-light blast of electrical, purple energy had the same effect - that is, none. The green walls of the massive hedge that surrounded and encased me served as my jailer, my captor, seemingly for the rest of the night. Unacceptable. I would have thought that all of Discord’s sorcery had vanished when he was imprisoned for the second time, but this maze was still under his influence. It had to be. Otherwise, there was no BUCKING way I could have gotten lost in here for what had to be hours! And why, for the love of all that was holy, WHY did I think it would be a good idea to take a “little stroll” around the Royal Maze in the middle of the night?! I forced myself to freeze in place, closing my eyes and breathing deeply, in through my nose, out through my mouth, using the simple technique Celestia had shown me. Calm down, I thought. Stop. Observe. Plan. Act. I allowed myself sight once more, this time casting a fresh eye upon the plants. So far, I had tried three methods of escape - taking all left turns, keeping a shoulder to the right wall, and aimlessly wandering - all with the same level of success. Well, there was the kicking and blasting plan, too, but that was really just a way to vent. The problem here was that the maze actually was enchanted, if not by Discord, then by my teacher. I could sense, almost feel a spark of magic running through the walls, and no matter how many left turns I made, I never hit a dead end, meaning the walls could and were re-arranging themselves at will. In all honesty, this had ceased to be a maze. This had become a riddle, a test of ingenuity and cleverness. I had thought about trying to summon wings to simply fly out, but the spell was very, very complicated and draining. And Celestia forbid something goes wrong during the transformation process. Back in Celestia’s School, I had heard horror stories of self-transformation accidents - Horns going where horns were never meant to go, to name one little gem that decided to cross my mind just then. Self-levitation was impossible, as a magical barrier had been placed over the top of the maze, and my spell’s aura sparked and died as soon as it rose over the top of the hedge. Teleportation was also off the table; I had not the start of an idea of where I was in the maze, and trying to “zap”, as most non-horned ponies called it, to a place of unknown distance and direction was extremely inadvisable. I could end up inside of a wall, or in two different locations at once. Of course, I could have sent up a flare or signaled for help at any time, but that would have been admitting defeat. Plus, how embarrassing would it be to find the Princess’ personal protege stuck in a maze? It was looking as though I would have to play the maze’s game. My options were very limited, and I was fast running out of ideas and patience. I stopped pacing (Not that I realized that I ever started), instead sitting back on my haunches, rubbing my temples with my forehooves and trying to conjure a solution from the myriad of worries and doubts that constituted my brain right now. I could feel a little idea try to wriggle through the mire, like an earthworm through mud, but no matter how hard it struggled, the mud just kept piling on top of it and pulling it down into the muck. My teeth clenched and ground audibly, and I felt warmer by the second. I could feel my heart hammering at my chest, creating a tightness in my upper body, and my breathing slowly climbed in frequency. This was the most infuriating thing I had ever encountered, even topping the fiasco with Pinkie’s “Pinkie Sense” last year. How in Tartarus was I supposed to solve a maze when it could change the layout of itself at will? The earthworm of an idea in my mind found a little ray of daylight under the tons of mud. There was a simple algorithm (Tremare’s, I believe it was called) that consisted of drawing lines at intersections and following and marking the paths you take. It would be lengthy, and contained more trial-and-error steps then I would have liked, but I was getting desperate. The sun rose in about three hours, and there was no way I could miss the Celebration for anything. Personal pride intact or not, I was getting out of this Alicorn-forsaken maze tonight. Now, seeing as the walls could move, simply drawing a four-point star at junctions and marking the direction I took would be insufficient. I would have to mark the path I walked as well, to make sure I knew when I was moving in circles or when the layout had changed. For this, I sent my horn aglow, gathering the energy I was emitting and sending it to the bottom of my hooves. They tingled with a rather intense heat, but it was far from unpleasant. I lifted one of my legs up, looking down to see a translucent, lavender hoofprint that twinkled with magic. Pleased with myself at my idea, I set off down a random pathway. I spent about an hour wandering, but now, it was with a plan and hope in my mind. Whenever I came to a junction where hoofprints already led down the paths, I took the least-traveled one, and soon started to sense progress. There wasn't any physical sign that I was getting closer to an exit, but I could feel the magic of dozens of Unicorns that had gathered for the Celebration not far away. I zeroed in on the magic’s direction, and I was positive I had plenty of time to spare. I would have looked at the moon for confirmation, but tonight’s was a New Moon. I gave myself an internal pat on the back and grinned as I rounded a corner. The ponies should be right on the other side of this wall, and there was a gap not ten feet away. But something was off; There was absolutely no sound anywhere, except for the light breeze blowing overhead. As I reached the gap, I noticed why. There wasn’t a single pony in the boxed clearing, and this wasn’t an exit - I had reached the center of the maze. Before I could explode with fury, my brain nudged my towards something odd; If there was nopony in the clearing, then why could I sense what had to be thirty Unicorns’ worth of magical energy in here? Stepping into the center, I cast my head to the right, where the magic seemed to be radiating out from, and immediately found my answer. Sitting with her back almost touching the wall, head skywards and eyes closed, was Princess Luna. She was different then the last time I had seen her. Gone was the monocolored, ice blue mane. Floating in the solar wind, just like her sister’s did, a midnight, starry mane hung around her head and flank. It looked as though the stars themselves shone within. Her coat also looked a few shades darker, but even so, it sparkled like every fiber of hair was woven by silky diamonds. There was no denying that she was the night itself. Luna was stock still, the only part of her that moved being her mane. That made two of us. I felt as rooted to the ground as a tree, and my mane flapped with the wind along my neck. Suddenly, the quiet breeze shifted, blowing from my right and towards the Lunar Princess. I didn’t react, though, even as my mane tickled my cheeks and obscured some of my vision. I didn’t really do anything except continue to stare at her, watching her mane dance and flap across her withers, roving the perfection she was in the moonlight and seeing her in her proper place as the Goddess of the Moon. Her eyes twitched slightly, and her head snapped towards me in a flash. Her eyes snapped onto mine, immobilizing every aspect of my body and mind, and a hard edge was present the cyan orbs, like I had caught her doing something private. They softened quickly, though, and a hint of a smile pulled at her lips. “Twilight Sparkle.” It wasn’t a challenge, or a greeting, or anything other than an announcement of my presence. She stood, and hundreds of thoughts, from incarceration on a celestial orb, to a slow and agonizing death for interrupting a Princess in something crashed into me. I stumbled backwards as she lowered her head in what I thought was a charge, and just before I snapped into a deep bow to beg for forgiveness, she froze. Her forelegs were forward and locked, her head low and eyes shut. Her hind legs still had their hooves on the ground, and the necklace-like peytral that was emblazoned with the moon of her cutie mark, one of the symbols of her royalty, threatened to touch the floor of the maze. Princess Luna... was bowing to me. I imagine my face must have looked similar to the first time I had met Rainbow Dash, when she fulfilled her promise of clearing the sky. When Luna stood after a few seconds, her face brightened considerably at the sight of mine, and the ghost of a smile she showed before fully materialized on her lips. It was like the alicorn had shoved a steel wrench into my cognitive processes. I felt the gears straining against it, trying to come to any conclusion that made sense, but that bar was unbreakable. After a few seconds of have my brain fry over a hot stove of dumbfoundment, all I could do was just shake my head and sputter incoherently. “Wha-what? Why...?” Her smile died slightly, but it was still plain to see. “You saved our life, Twilight Sparkle. Rescued us from our own creation of misery.” She shook her head softly. “We owe you a debt that is doubtful to ever be repaid. Think not that you need ever to bow or defer to us.” I pulled my head back slightly at her misinterpretation of the night, two years ago to the day, where my friends and I had freed her from Nightmare Moon’s grasp. It was a team effort, not just me... “I couldn’t have done that alone, my friends are equally responsible...” I explained as my cheeks grew hotter, slightly embarrassed. Her brows arched slightly, but not in a condescending way. More like... surprise. “Though we were imprisoned in the deformed, twisted version of our own body, we could still observe the world as it transpired around us.” She sat back before continuing, but her eyes never broke away from mine. For the first time, I noticed the strange cadence of language she was using. It sounded ancient. “It was you who faced us in singular combat in the tower, and no soul excepting you could have realized and harnessed the full power of the Elements of Harmony.” Her words brought an even greater blush to me, and I pawed at the ground as I looked away. “I think you’re looking a little too closely at me. I’m not as special as you’re making me out to be.” “We do not believe for a moment that you are anything less the the most powerful Unicorn in Equestria.” She paused, then motioned to her side, as we were standing at a considerable distance and our voices were much louder than they needed to be. “Come, sit with us. We would greatly enjoy your company.” Something fluttered down in my stomach at the idea of being so close to her. I swallowed and nodded as I started forward. Even though the trepidation I felt grew stronger and stronger the closer my hooves took me, I never once thought about stopping. Something about her eyes - the unexpressed feelings held there, the way they never wavered from me - pulled me forward. It only took a second to reach her. I sat to her left, about a foot away, and immediately noticed another change since our first meeting; She had gotten a bit taller as well, her nose about level with the base of my horn. She flashed me a quick smile before resuming her original position, turning her head skywards, and I followed suit. The stars were a welcomed sight for me anyway, and I enjoyed their company. “So, what are you doing out here, Princess?” I asked as I scanned the summer sky for the familiar shapes of the constellations. The little orbs of light were truly shining this morning, glimmering and dancing across the deep blue of the sky and casting their soft light on the world. “We are simply sharing the company of the stars. It is one of the ways we often retreat and reflect on the world around us.” “Out in the center of an enchanted maze? How did you even make it here without getting stuck?” I asked with a slight grin and raised brow. Massive wings slowly grew from her side, extending to their full length of twelve feet in a few seconds. As the tips of her silky feathers glided over my back, I felt a small shiver run across my skin. The area where the wing had brushed over felt hotter than the rest of my body, which is saying something, seeing as my cheeks must have been crimson. “Being an alicorn does have its advantages.” She grinned slightly, almost like she knew about my reaction even though she was not looking at me. “As for your original question,” She began as she folded her wings (I bit the inside of my cheek to repress a shudder as the light scrapes of feathers heated my back again), “From here the lights of the capitol are far away, and it allows for an unobstructed view of the night sky. We find it a shame that, with such focus on Equestria’s expansion across land, ponies forget the pleasures the sky can bring them. What about you, Miss Sparkle? What brings you here on the morning of my sister’s Summer Sun Celebration? Should you not be with the partygoers and your friends?” “Please, Princess. It’s just ‘Twilight’, if you don’t mind.” I wanted to stop this before it started to become a habit. It was bad enough when Celestia used my full name, but it was just unnatural when Luna did it. “We propose a trade, then. We will cease the pronunciation of your surname, and you will not refer to us by our title as Princess.” She turned to me slightly, just enough to make eye contact. “Deal?” I gladly nodded, reciprocating the smirk she was giving me. She seemed satisfied, then turned back to her creations. “Anyway,” I restarted, answering her inquiry. “I was at the Dawn Party a few hours ago, before wandering into this ridiculous maze.” She laughed ever so slightly, and though the wind was against us and snatched some of the sound away, the sound rang and bounced in my ears. I immediately wanted to hear her laugh again. “Yes, this stands as yet another practical joke of our sister’s. Even when we were foals, there was hardly a day that went by where you needn't watch your back for her tricks. We must comment on the remarkable change in reception they now receive, however.” Her last observation made me frown, and I turned to her before asking an explanation. “One thousand years ago, Twilight, society was much more... uptight.” The use of the modern word seemed alien to her, but it still showed her progress with the changed times. I could only imagine what she had been like after first returning. “Ponies did not take well to my sister’s tomfoolery.” A rueful smile took hold of her features. “We find it rather ironic, that society’s attitude would brighten with the banishment of the Goddess of the Night.” Her words pained me unbelievably. It must have shone as plain as the sun on my face, for her sad smile deepened when she turned to me. Her jaw clenched, and for the first time, her eyes dropped to the ground as she looked away. There was only the wind to fill the silence that had taken hold of us for a few moments. “We apologize,” She turned her head up again, closing her eyes and taking a deep breathe. “Our words did not carry harmful intentions with them.” I shook my head even though she couldn’t see me. “It wasn’t your fault, Luna.” It was really the only thing I could think to say, even though she’d probably heard it more times than I’d like to know. Again, a smile crossed her lips. She looked like she was fighting to keep it on, as if it somehow masked all of her other emotions. It was the same smile her sister often wore. “We are past the need for comfort, Twilight. What is done, is done. We have come to terms with it, and it will forever remain in our past.” Her cyan eyes found mine again. “Thanks to you.” The third blush of the night crept onto my cheeks, but even through the mild embarrassment, our eyes stayed locked. “You don’t have to thank me, you know.” “We do not believe this. Your’s is a favor we will never be capable of expressing enough gratitude for.” Her eyes flickered, and her head cocked almost imperceptibly. “Though perhaps this morning will relieve some of our debt.” With those cryptic words and a knowing smile, she put me slightly off guard. “This morning?” I asked quizzically. Her smile brightened by a few levels as she turned away from me. “Let us simply state that this year’s Summer Sun Celebration will be... different, than in years past. We will elaborate no more.” She added, quickly cutting off the stream of questions starting to flow from me. “Speaking of this morning...” Her horn glowed with an azure aura as she looked off to the left, above my head. “There is only about an hour’s time until the sun is scheduled to rise. If you wish to be present for the ceremony, you’d best make haste with your departure.” That sent me scrambling through my mind for an answer to the question posed by the maze; How in the world do I escape? Luna seemed to sense my agitation, because she moved to the wall behind us, her horn contacting the tall hedge as it poured with energy. “We will negate our sister’s spell until you can locate an exit. Simply ignite red sparks over the maze to signal when you have rejoined the group.” I beamed at her gesture; She literally just saved me from a disaster that I would never recover from. As I trotted to the other end of the clearing, Luna called out to me. “Twilight!” I turned, and for the second-to-last time that day, our eyes met; Cyan and violet, neither backing away or averting. For the first time, she sounded hesitant in her words. “We just wanted to tell you... This morning belongs to you alone.” I nodded, continuing out of the maze. Her eyes were the last thing I saw as I rounded a corner and left the clearing behind. With the enchantment from my teacher removed, I knew that the most basic technique would allow me to solve the maze. I kept my shoulder to the left wall, and sure enough, I found my way to the Dawn Party in the courtyard of the castle, just as the a golden glow was forming at the horizon of the east. Red sparks ignited from my horn, and I sent them hundreds of feet into the air to make sure Luna saw them. My friends greeted my enthusiastically, asking where I was and why I left as we trekked to the front of the grounds, where the ceremony was taking place. Rarity complimented me on my hoofprints, seeing as they were still glowing with faint magic, and told me how they were actually quite pretty, even as I banished the spell with a wave of my horn. There was a stage set up, raised about my height off of the ground, with the usual sun emblem raised in the back, but there were, as I noticed, a few tweaks to the floor of the stage. Where in the past, a single raised section of the stage sat centered for Celestia to stand on, there were now two daises on either side of the golden sun symbol. I remembered what Luna had said about this year’s Celebration being different, and my curiosity at her words peaked. It was a short wait from our arrival to the stage. Behind us, a throng of hundreds had gathered in anticipation, and every single one erupted into cheers as Princess Celestia, wings thrown out wide, ascended onto the stage from behind. At the sight of Princess Luna, whose wings were also extended, following from behind, however, the chorus of cheers died down significantly, and there was a general murmur from the group as we all wondered the same thing; What was going on? The Princess’ nodded to each other as they stood on a dais each, with Celestia on the left and Luna on the right. Their horns glowed simultaneously, and the aura of the sunrise changed. Now, as the sisters rose into the air with synchronized beats of their wings, the golden-red color of the dawn adapted a deep, rusty hue as the moon rose in front of the sun. As the orbs grew higher in the sky, the colors of the clouds in the sky shimmered constantly, glowing crimson, violet, and every color in between. Both Princess' seemed to reach the height of their climb as they past the top of the spire, and both threw their forelegs towards the sky in harmony. The eclipse reached the center of the sun emblem, and suddenly, the sky was white, brilliant and shining, and the iridescent colors created by the sisters lit up everything around me. It was as though tendrils of pure, silken rainbow wafted with the breeze, absorbed into everything that reflected light, and the raised sun emblem on the stage shimmered like water with blues and reds and golds, its opalescence framing the burning white of the sun and moon in a halo of color. “This morning belongs to you alone.” I don’t think I've cried harder since the events of that morning. I still think on it, from time to time, and the more I do, the more it becomes clear that I am now the one in debt.