//------------------------------// // Unspoken - The Princess Rarity // Story: Chaos and Sunshine: the Discord x Celestia Group Collab // by The Princess Rarity //------------------------------// There are many vital, important things that Princess Celestia has said in her lifetime and in reign over Equestria. Some have changed the nation, others riled it up and the rest are in between. Nonetheless, they have all been documented and written down for memory, in one way or another. There was her Saddle Arabian union declaration - which was implanted in every Equestrian History textbook. Her coronation speech, from way back when she vowed to take over the duties of her late father, King Solaris. The words she uttered to all of Equestria, promising that the nation would be safe now that her younger sister was gone. A thousand years later, Celestia was proud to announce that her sister was back home, no longer corrupted. The announcement that rocked the nation, that a new Princess - her most loyal student - would join the royals. From new laws to new royals to new treaties, if Princess Celestia said it, somepony would write it down, save it for the History books and send it to the media, making sure that everypony else in Equestria would know what their ruler declared. ...but some things, of course, were kept private. After all, even if she was a Princess of Equestria, she was obviously allotted alone time. And strangely enough, the words she wanted to say when there were no cameras or reporters, she couldn't seem to. They were trying to escape - really, they were, but somehow, in someway, something was holding back... Although, somehow, just by looking into her eyes, the one soul who knew her best could know what she was going say, before she ever even so much as attempted to say it. "I love you too," Discord smiled. Celestia could only blush, and her shy schoolfilly-with-her-first-crush embarrassment only increased as he quickly kissed her. With a playful wink, the draconequus let out a low chuckle. "You never changed," he mused. "Neither did you," she countered, with a sweet little smile. Perhaps saying close to nothing at all was just as good as saying everything.