//------------------------------// // The Monster Revealed // Story: Freeport Venture: The Hunted // by Chengar Qordath //------------------------------// The Monster carried this one out over the open water. At first it feared that the Monster would just drop it and leave it to drown, but instead we just kept flying. This one wished it could find comfort in that fact, but it knew that the only reason the Monster was sparing it was probably do something even worse than drowning. However, that was not what truly scared this one. It was riding on the Monster’s back and could feel feel the way its body moved as it flew. The way it felt was ... wrong. Almost as if there was something else moving around underneath the Monster’s skin. Something hiding beneath Mom’s face. Something it truly did not wish to see. The Monster carried this one to one of the many unoccupied islands in the archipelago. There were several buildings on the island, but all of them had been abandoned and many had fallen into disrepair. It carried this one to one of the buildings, opening a trap door in the floor to reveal a pitch-black basement. It casually tossed this one down into the room, then shut the door behind it, leaving the room almost pitch black. A few motes of star and moonlight drifted in between gaps in the floorboards, just enough that this one was not completely blind. Then it was just this one, alone in the dark with a monster. At first it left this one alone, almost for long enough that it dared to hope it might have left. Then it struck, using a different method each time. Sometimes it would just cuff or trip this one, others it would ask questions. “Do you know why you’re going to die?” “How much will your parents miss you?” “What do you want to lose less: a wing, or a leg?” Once, the Monster opened up the door, and when this one tried to climb the stairs to escape it grabbed this one from behind, pulling it down the stairs so hard that it cracked its chin on one of the wooden steps. But the worst torment of all came when this one heard a terrible, wet tearing sort of sound. When it overcame its fear enough to investigate, it found Mom’s skin, hollowed out and discarded like a wetsuit. Mom’s face folded in on itself, empty eye sockets staring up at this one; a small gust caused the entire mass to ripple, and it further congealed into a mass of fur and feathers and … and… This one ran further into the dark and threw up. But the image wouldn’t go away. After what felt like hours, the trapdoor opened up once more. This one let out a sigh of relief as light entered the basement, driving the darkness back. The light was so bright that it had to be morning. That gave this one some hope—surely the Shimmer-mare and its parents would know that it was missing by now? A portly blue stallion stepped down into the basement, clad in an ill-fitting suit of Striker clan armor. This one could only assume that it was Cold Striker. He did not carry his armor like one who was used to the weight, and his body had the softness of a merchant to it, not the hard, lean muscles of a warrior. This one supposed that his parents must have done much like this one’s planned for it and Kunai: one child a warrior, one a trader. The merchant cleared his throat loudly. “I got your message. You said you’d completed the job?” The Monster spoke, its voice coming from so close behind this one that it could feel its hot, fetid breath against its carapace. “Excellent. Now we can finish our business with one another.” “Right.” Cold strolled down into the basement, his eyes blindly trying to pierce the shadows. “So where’s Kunai? I’m gonna make her pay for what she did to my sister.” The Monster chuckled mockingly, the sound seeming to come from the opposite side of the basement even though this one could have sworn that it had been right behind this one moments ago. “Kunai? Nonono, I have someone much better.” Cold blinked, then frowned in confusion. “What? Who?” A hoof suddenly slammed into this one’s side, sending it stumbling forward into the light. It tried to keep its balance, but wound up falling face-first into the ground in front of Cold Striker. The Monster’s voice was full of cruel satisfaction. “Kunai's sister, of course. It seemed ... fitting.” Cold stared down at this one, his jaw gaping open. “Wh-what? Her—that's a kid!” “Oh yes.” Fangs flashed in the darkness as the Monster smiled. “Kunai's kid sister. Her sole sibling. She killed your sister, and now you can return the favor.” Cold stumbled back, his jaw working soundlessly for several seconds before he finally spoke. “That's not ... I didn't want to bring a kid into this! I wanted you to go after Kunai!” “Tell me, what was it you told me you wanted me to do? You remember, don't you?” A single talon scraped along this one’s spine. “There was quite a bit of money involved.” Cold shivered and nodded slowly. “I told you to make Kunai pay. That she had to suffer for what she did to my sister.” The talons closed around this one’s throat and yanked it up onto to the tips of its hooves. It had to keep itself standing up as straight as possible, or else the Monster’s grip would cut off this one’s air. “And what better way to make her pay than to hurt her as much as you were?” The talons slowly slid along this one’s throat, never quite applying enough pressure to pierce its carapace. “A sibling for a sibling. Blood for blood. Appropriate, don't you think?” This one whimpered in pain as its leg muscles strained to keep it upright, and the Monster chuckled. “This is supposed to be your vengeance against Kunai, is it not?” Cold stared at this one for several seconds before answering uncertainly. “Yes?” “Indeed.” The Monster dropped this one, its legs collapsing bonelessly beneath it as it hit the dirt floor. Before it could pick itself up, a hoof pressed against the back of its neck. “And revenge is all about pain. Making the party that offended you hurt as much as you do.” The hoof pressed down against this one, producing a dull, deep ache that flared all the way down its back. “And then you pay back your pain with interest.” This one tried to be brave, but then the Monster pushed down even harder, and it hurt too much. Despite her best efforts, this one started crying again. Cold shook his head, staring at this one in horror. “S-stop! Leave her alone! I didn't want to bring a feathering kid into this! I didn’t want any of this!” “I’m doing exactly what you paid me to do.” The Monster yanked this one’s head back letting Cold see its tear-soaked face as it sobbed. “I'm making Kunai pay. Pay deeply for killing your sister.” The Monster chuckled, whispering into this one’s ear. “Isn't it precious, Kukri? How this stallion you never met before is willing to pay to have you tortured and killed just to make himself feel better? He must really have loved his sister.” This one sobbed in terror, desperately looking at the Striker. “P-please! This one is sorry that its sister killed yours! This one is sorry!” The Monster laughed mockingly and petted this one’s cheek. “D'aw, don't worry. You didn't do anything wrong. Nothing to be sorry about. Little fillies die in Freeport all the time because some angry stallion thinks that someone has to pay for making him so mad in the first place. It's nothing personal; you're just going to die because of something your sister did to somepony you never even knew.“ Cold’s ears went flat against his skull, his head dropping down to stare at the floor. Finally, he let out a small, broken whisper. “Just ... just let her go. Job's done.” Fangs flashed in the darkness again as the Monster smiled. “But I was already paid to do a job. You gave me all the money up front, which is a testament to my reputation. It wouldn't do to sully that carefully built reputation by letting everyone think I couldn't fulfill a simple job.” “I'll tell everyone you did the job exactly how I wanted!” Cold shouted, desperation turning his voice into a frightened shriek. “Just let the kid go!” The Monster clicked its tongue disapprovingly, like a teacher scolding a poor student. “Now why would I want to do that? Did you think I was a mere mercenary and nothing more? I enjoy hunting Free Minds. The Old Mind’s cast-out bastard children. I'm quite happy finishing this job.” A single talon stroked this one’s cheek in a foul mockery of a caress. “Slowly, of course. I want to savor every moment of her terror.” This one whined in terror, despite its efforts to prevent itself from doing so. Cold’s voice took on a broken, almost pleading quality. “I paid you! I gave you a small fortune! Practically everything I could afford!” “And I thank you for your business.” A talon closed around this one’s hind leg and began to slowly drag it out of the light. Back into the darkness, where the Monster was strongest. Cold’s face hardened. “You can’t do this! You work for me! I'm ordering you to let her go!” The Monster scoffed and tugged this one further back. “You can't tell me what to do. I don't belong to your clans. And if you wish to complain about this one's services, then you are more than welcome to try and sue me in court. I'm sure the Doos will love to hear about what you did to one of their children.” Cold froze, and his shoulders slowly slumped. “Please ... I ... I didn't—this isn't what I wanted.” The Monster laughed, cold and mocking. “Getting cold hooves? You never wanted revenge, not really. You’re just a sad, pathetic, silly little pony so wrapped up in his own pain that he wanted to lash out at the world. And now sweet, innocent little Kukri is going to die, just because you needed to feel better about yourself. I hope it was worth it.” . Cold’s knees quivered and finally collapsed as he slumped down to the floor, his face utterly expressionless. A moment later the Monster’s hot breath brushed against this one’s ear. “Now, where shall I start with you, little one?” The talons closer around this one’s neck, hoisting it into the air. “Let’s make a game of it. Ask me for something. Anything.” This one whimpered and sobbed as it tried to force the words out of its mouth. “P-p-p-p-p-please just let this one go.” Fangs glistened in the darkness, and the Monster’s voice was rich with almost mocking cheer. “Very poor choice of words.” It dropped this one, sending a jolt of pain up its hindquarters as it fell to the hard floor. “Go ahead, make a run for it. Let’s see how far you get.” This one whined in pain at its latest injury, but scrambled to its hooves and tried to run as quickly as it could. The basement was too dark for this one to see, so all it could do was stumble through the dark, desperately hoping to find an exit while there was still time. Then something caught this one’s leg, tripping it up and sending it face-first into the floor. The Monster’s mocking chuckle echoed through the basement. “Come on now, you're not going to get far if you trip and fall on your face like that.” This one knew it should get up and try to keep running again, but it couldn’t. What was the point of even trying? There was nowhere to go, and the Monster was only letting it try to escape as some sort of sick game. Why let it have any more fun with this one than it was already? The trapdoor flew open with a bang, the early morning light streaming through. Cold Striker stood in the doorway, catching this one’s eyes and frantically waving it towards the staircase and safety. “This way!” This one picked itself up and bolted for freedom, darting past the Striker-stallion. The Monster’s voice trailed after it, mockingly singsonging. “Run, run, run, little Kukri Doo. The Monster is coming for you!” This one frantically scrambled up the stairs, smacking the base of its hooves against several steps in its haste to climb out of the basement. In the dawn light it could now see more of the island it was on. Moss had begun to grow up the abandoned old buildings, but many of them showed damage that hadn’t been the product of time. It could only assume that the island had once belonged to one of the many enterprising merchants or smugglers who claimed small outlying islands as their base of operations. Many of those bases wound up abandoned and ruined once the owner ran afoul of one of the stronger forces within Freeport. What better place for a Monster to lurk? This one galloped through the ruined buildings, desperately searching for somewhere to hide, or maybe even escape. If it could find the docks, there might still be a boat it could use. Perhaps the Striker-stallion had not flown here? If only this one’s wings were strong enough to carry it all the way off the island... The Monster’s voice echoed mockingly through the ruins. “Little Kukri Doo! I'm coming for you!” This one spotted a small gap in the wall of what might have been a small warehouse and desperately dived for it. It had to lie flat on its belly and crawl, but it just barely managed to squeeze through the gap. It breathed out a sigh of relief once it was inside. This one had barely managed to fit through the hole, and the Monster was far larger than it. It would be safe in here. The Monster’s voice thundered from outside, seeming to cut straight through the walls. “Kuuukrrri? Kuuukrrri? I can smell your fear!” This one scrambled away from the entrance, desperately checking to make sure there was no other way for the Monster to get in. The only door into the warehouse was thoroughly blocked by a pile of collapsed boxes, and the warehouse's windows had all been boarded over. It placed itself as far away from the hole in the wall as it could, pressing itself against the wall and wrapping its forelegs around its hind legs, hugging itself for comfort as it whimpered in terror. This one saw the light streaming through that small hole in the wall blocked by a massive shadow, and the Monster’s voice drifted in. “Now where are you hoping to run to, little one? Do you even have a plan?” It tsked at this one, as if it were this one’s mother and had caught it doing a poor job of its chores. “You’ve backed yourself into a corner. Such a silly little snack. I was hoping you’d last longer than that.” This one didn’t know what it could possibly do now. It was trapped, and soon the Monster would find a way in and eat it. Then a sudden, desperate thought sprang into its mind as it remembered something the Shimmer-mare had said: that knowing what kind of monster she faced was the first step to beating it. “Wh-what are you?” “Hm?” Something slammed into the wall loud enough to make this one jump and scream. “I'm the monster that's going to kill you, Kukri. And I am going to enjoy it.” “But what kind of monster?” This one asked again. “Are you a fetch? A boggart? A shadow demon? A popobawa?” The Monster scoffed indignantly. “What an ignorant little fool you are. Do I look like a one-eyed bat monster? Did I hop out of the mirror to snatch you away? Did I shapeshift into your worst fear? Such crude, amateurish methods. You think me something as pathetic as that? If I weren’t already going to kill you, I would do so for the insult of comparing me to such creatures.” The Monster’s voice seemed to cut through the wall right behind this one. “Let me tell you the truth, little Kukri: there are things that hunt changelings. Monsters from the primordial times of changelings that think little changelings like you are so. Very. Delicious.” Something started scraping along the outside wall. “The Old Mind did her experiments back then, too. Dark, secret, horrible things that made monsters that ponies and changelings only talk about in whispers. Back then, she didn’t sup on anything so sophisticated as love. No, we feasted on simpler, more primal emotions. And we grew mighty, until the Old Mind cast us aside, believing her new children were closer to the perfection she sought.” This one could scarcely believe its ears. “Y-you're a changeling?!” There was an almost deafening crack, and a leg burst out of the wall, grabbing this one across the chest and yanking it until it was pinned against the wall. “Oh yes, and so much more.” A long, wet slimy thing that could only have been the Monster’s tongue slowly stroked the side of this one’s face, working down to its neck. This one screamed and desperately tried to free itself. After frantically struggling against the iron foreleg pinning it to the wall, it finally managed to squirm its way free, running for the gap it had first entered the building through. It dove down and frantically scrambled underneath the wall, back into the sunlight. The Monster was already waiting there when this one emerged from underneath the wall. This one immediately tried to reverse course and scramble back into the building, and whatever safety it might have to offer. However, it was halfway through the gap when it felt talons latched onto its hind leg, squeezing until hot pain flashed through this one’s leg and it could feel the wetness of its own ichor beginning to drip out. It screamed. Not so much because of the pain in its leg as because it knew that the Monster had it now. What was happening to its leg was only the beginning. Yet that very wound proved to be its salvation. As this one’s ichor splashed against the Monster’s talons and coated its leg, the Monster’s grip slipped. With a final desperate tug, this one managed to pull its leg free and quickly scrambled back to safety, clutching its wounded limb and sobbing in relief. But the safety this one had found was nothing but an illusion. An instant later the Monster smashed straight through the wall, bursting through the old decayed material as if it were nothing but tissue paper. A single talon slapped this one out of the building, with the Monster following this one’s flight. Falling rubble from the destroyed wall fell on the Monster, ripping away strips of its flesh and allowing this one to finally see what lay beneath the mask. The Monster beneath the mask of flesh looked like a changeling—but one from an age long lost to history. Its heavier brow ridge, longer skull, and more pronounced snout reminded this one of the pictures it had seen of the massive tyrant-lizards said to dwell in the depths of the Zebrican jungles. Serrated fangs overlapped its lower jaw to form a permanent, predatory smile that traced up to its coal-black eyes— cold, soulless and lifeless, staring at this one and past it and through it and a thousand miles away all at once, such that this one could never tell if it was looking at it or not. But it was. This one knew it always was. Everything about it seemed primal, ancient, and evil. Pure evil. Its legs locked up in terror as it beheld the Monster’s horrifying visage. It couldn’t run any more, even if it wanted to. And it didn’t. It was tired, hurt, and knew in its heart that it could never hope to escape. All running did was let the Monster have the fun of chasing this one. The only thing this one could do now to defy it was to deny it the pleasure of the hunt. This one lay down, ready to die. In its true form, the Monster’s voice was a primal, feral snarl. “What's the matter, can't run anymore?” A hoof lashed out, striking this one in the face. “Good, that means the pain can start. I like this part. I like it a lot. It takes a lot of work to get to this point, you know. Like aging a fine wine. You really have to work to get fear this invigorating.” This one curled up into a ball, wrapping its forelegs over its head to protect its face from any more blows. That was the only thing it could do. “So how do you want to die, Kukri?” The Monster’s hoof slammed into this one’s side, knocking the air from its lungs. “Shall I just beat you to death? That’s so pedestrian, but sometimes it’s fun to get back to basics. But why stop there? Have you ever wanted to know what drowning feels like?” It casually ripped away the forelegs protecting this one’s face, leaning down until our snouts were practically touching. “Or perhaps I should suck the fluids right out of you?” The Monster’s tongue slid out and slowly ran across this one’s throat, its canines lightly touching the soft sections of this one’s neck. “But really, we have all the time in the world. Why limit ourselves? Let me show you a thousand possible deaths, until we find the one that provides you with the sweetest terror. I will—” There was a bright flash of blinding turquoise light, and this one suddenly felt as though it were on fire. And yet, the fire itself wasn’t unpleasant. It a strange way it felt cleansing, almost purifying. As if all the pain, terror, and horror that the Monster had inflicted upon this one was being burned away, leaving this one safe and happy once more. This one blinked several times, slowly recovering its vision. The first thing it saw was a pair of amber hind legs and a red-and-yellow tail, as well as fire and ice swirling through the air in a fierce, barely controlled maelstrom. The Monster itself was now standing far away from this one, his lifeless eyes just a touch wider than they had been. This one lifted its gaze, confirming its hopes. The Shimmer-mare had come for it. The Monster’s lips pulled back, showing its fangs. “My, my, what do we have here? I suppose I should have realized it wouldn’t be that easy to steal the little grub out from underneath your nose, magus. But no matter. That just makes the game more inter—” “Burn,” The Shimmer-mare snarled, hurling a wave of fire at the Monster. The blast threw it back into the warehouse, which immediately burst into flames. “Burn!” The flames leapt up higher, shifting from yellow to blue. This one had to cover its face as a few blades of grass next to its hooves smoldered ominously. “Burn!” This one staggered back as a fresh wave of heat shot out from the flaming structure as it collapsed into the growing firestorm. “BURN!”  As the new bonfire reached high into the sky, this one dared to hope that the Shimmer-mare had struck down the Monster. The fire was burning so hot that this one could see the nails in what remained of the warehouse melting. Surely not even the Monster could survive that. But then it saw something moving within the flames. A voice rang, more guttural than before but louder—loud enough to be heard over the roaring fires. “Rudimentary creature, thinking fire can burn your nightmares away.” A figure rose from the inferno, fleshy strands dripping from its body; the creature’s outer carapace was cracked all over its body, and ichor hissed in the heat. Yet for every instant it stood in the fire, its wounds closed faster than they opened, though the skull-like muzzle locked onto this one, those dull, black eyes finding their target through ash and pain and flame. This one moaned in terror. Not even the Shimmer-mare could stop the Monster. The Shimmer-mare looked over her shoulder at this one, and her eyes widened. “Dammit! Get out of here, Kukri!” “Yesss,” the Monster hissed. “Run away, while your precious little magus gives up her life in a futile sacrifice to buy you a few more seconds to escape.” This one whimpered and stayed where it was. “I said get out of here, Kukri!” Before this one could say or do anything else, there was another blinding flash of turquoise light. However, just as the pleasant heat of the Shimmer-mare’s spell washed over this one, something else slammed against it. A cold, wriggling sensation like dozens of frozen worms crawling over this one’s skin. When the light faded, this one was still standing exactly where it had been before. “Now now,” the Monster’s voice sang out mockingly. “You didn’t really think I’d let you steal away my precious little snack, now did you? I want little Kukri to watch as I rip the flesh from your bones and suck the marrow from them.” The Shimmer snarled in frustration. “Just run!” The Monster chuckled. “She knows she's going to diiie, little Kukri Doo. And since she’s only here to save you, that means it’s all. Your. Fault.” This one whimpered in terror as the Monster charged out of the flames, moving impossibly fast for something as badly hurt as it should be. The Shimmer-mare met its charge by conjuring up a thicket of icy spears that slammed into its body, pinning it in place. However, the Monster suddenly grew a tail out of the same material its mask of flesh had been made of, which snapped out quick as a snake’s bite, slamming into the Shimmer-mare’s chest and knocking her flying from her hooves. The Monster pulled itself off the Shimmer-mare’s icy spears, its wounds closing almost as soon as the spears were removed. Its tail snapped around again, slamming down at the Shimmer-mare. At the last second before it struck, the Shimmer-mare surrounded herself with a globe of painfully bright fire which disintegrated the Monster’s tail the instant it struck. The Monster let out an ear-splitting roar of pain, staring at the charred stump of its tail. A charred stump that, right before this one’s very eyes, began to grow back. “I hate magi,” the Monster snarled. “Thinking they're so clever and making my meals so much more difficult. But at least I can console myself with the fact that your death will increase little Kukri’s terror tenfold. And she’s already so very delicious.” The Monster’s fangs gleamed in a horrible parody of a smile. “Still, you would probably make it far too difficult to kill you if we continued this little dance, so I think it’s time I changed up the game.” The Monster turned to face this one, and a beam of sickly yellow-green energy shot out of its horn, aimed directly at this one. Time seemed to almost freeze as this one watched the blast of deadly energy slowly arc towards it, knowing that it could do nothing to protect itself. The Shimmer-mare rushed in, placing herself between this one and the blast while conjuring up a shield of solid ice. The Monster’s attack slammed into the shield, causing cracks to spiderweb across the once-clear formation. This one watched in terror as more and more cracks spread across the plane of ice, wondering when the defenses would shatter and this one would be destroyed along with the Shimmer-mare. However, just when it seemed that the Shimmer-mare’s shield would shatter, the pestilential tide of the Monster’s magic ceased. Despite its attack failing, the Monster didn’t seem annoyed. It threw back its head, barking out a laugh that pierced this one’s ears. “How amusing. It must be terrifying for you, Magus. To think how close your precious little Kukri came to death.” The Shimmer-mare snarled defiantly, though this one couldn’t help but notice that she was sweating and breathing hard. “You think your stupid head games are gonna work? It’s no wonder you go after kids, because no adult would fall for such lame tricks.” The Monster chuckled evilly. “So the prospect of poor, innocent little Kukri suffering means nothing to you? How heartless.” “Shut up,” the Shimmer-mare snapped, lashing out with fire. The flames briefly scorched the Monster, but the damage healed so quickly that this one barely even saw the injury before it vanished. It countered with another beam, this one nearly snapping the Shimmer-mare’s shield in half before she managed to fend it off. The Monster struck again, reducing the Shimmer-mare’s shield to nothing more than a collection of ice shards held together by the force of the Shimmer-mare’s will. “How long do you think you can last, Magus?” It chuckled throatily. “Tell me, do you want to die first, or do you want to watch the little one suffer for a while?” The Shimmer-mare glared at it defiantly. “You spend too much time talking and not enough doing.” “There’s nothing wrong with savoring your meal.” The Monster stalked forward, a predatory grin splitting its hideous face. “It’s just so much fun watching you squirm as you slowly realize that you're going to lose, that you're going to. Die. Terribly. And there isn't anything you can do to stop me. After I'm done with you two, I'll do this again, and again, and again. Like I have done for longer than you can comprehend.” This one whimpered. “Sh-Shimmer-mare, just leave this one. The Monster only wants it, you can still get away.” “No way,” she growled, shifting so that she was still standing between this one and the Monster. The Monster threw back its head and laughed. “What pointless bravery! Really now, little magus. What made you think you could possibly defeat me all by yourself?” The Shimmer-mare smirked. “Who said I was alone?” A pair of knives hissed through the air, going right over this one’s head and burying themselves into the Monster’s chest. The Shimmer-mare smirked and looked back over her shoulder. “Took you long enough.” This one looked back as well, and a relieved smile blossomed on its face. “Kunai! You’re here!” This one’s elder sister landed next to it. “‘Course this one is. As soon as this one heard you were in trouble, it turned around and came straight back to Freeport. This one accompanied the Shimmer-mare when it learned she could track you.” The Shimmer-mare snorted. “You could’ve followed me a little bit faster.” Kunai rolled her eyes. “Some of us can’t teleport.” The Monster snarled and brushed the knives out of its flesh, the wounds slowly closing once the weapons were removed. An impossibly wide smile creased its lips when its eyes fell upon this one’s sister. “Kuuunai, it's so good to see that you've joined us.” Its long, slimy tongue licked its lips. “I did promise to hurt you, after all. So you’ve come to die with your sister? Well, as they say, the family that dies together stays together.” This one’s sister wrapped a foreleg around its belly, hauling it up onto her back. “Don’t worry, Kukri. We’re getting you out of here.” This one sobbed in relief, clutching her neck like a life preserver. However, when its sister spread her wings and was about to take off, it realized something was wrong. “Wait! What about the Shimmer-mare?!” “This one needs to get you out of here first,” Kunai insisted. “She can hold her own. This one will come back to help her once you’re safe.” “But, the Shimmer-mare needs help now!” this one insisted. The Monster chortled malevolently. “Yes, run away. That’s what you should do when you’re scared! Don't worry, I'll be coming for both of you as soon as I'm done with the magus. I’ll take my time with it. I know! We can begin the chase all over again! It will be a nice little bonding exercise between you and your sister, fleeing in terror as I hunt you down.” This one swallowed, took a deep breath, and made its choice. “This ... this one doesn't want to leave the Shimmer-mare behind. It would rather face the Monster than abandon her.” The Monster charged at the Shimmer-mare again. She tried to stop it, this time using a small, tight beam of fire aimed at its legs. The attack struck and charred through the Monster’s carapace, sending it tumbling to the ground. The wounds didn’t close this time. A moment later, this one realized what it had done. The Monster had been so powerful because this one’s fear empowered it. But now... “This one isn't afraid of you anymore!” it shouted triumphantly as the Monster fell. The Shimmer-mare paused to give this one a proud smile. “Great job, Kukri!” “Let’s not celebrate yet,” Kunai cautioned. “It might not be instantly healing anymore, but we still need to take it down.” She turned to the Shimmer-mare. “Got another round of firebolts in you?” The Shimmer-mare smirked. “I’ve got something even better.” Her gaze shifted to the Monster. “Let’s see you heal this!” The fire that erupted from her horn this time was pitch black, and when it struck the Monster it clung to it instead of bursting out and spreading like normal flames. As the Monster shrieked, this one saw that the black flames weren’t actually burning it; they were making its flesh wither and fall away. This one’s sister also joined the fight, sending a dozen of her namesake weapon through the air. Kunai was constantly in motion, flying at some points, and on the ground at others, never staying in one place long enough for the Monster to strike back. Not that it stopped the Monster from trying. A dozen sickly yellow beams shot out at this one’s sister, several coming far too close but none of them actually connecting. It also tried to strike out at the Shimmer-mare and this one, but now that the Monster’s wounds were adding up, the Shimmer-mare seemed to have found her second wind, and the ice shields protecting us absorbed and deflected every single attack. Then the Monster started to scream. It was a horrible, piercing sound that made this one cover its ears and scream as well, just so it wouldn’t have to hear it. It kept screaming until its throat was raw and its voice ragged, its hooves so tightly clamped over its ears that they were throbbing. Its eyes remained fixed on the ground, for it didn’t want to watch anything that could produce such an awful sound. Finally, the noise stopped, and this one’s sister gently picked it up and set it on her back. Then she Shimmer-mare reached over and gently removed its hooves from its ears. “It’s over, Kukri. We got him.” This one hugged them both, using one foreleg for each. Kunai gently rubbed this one’s back. “Let’s get you home, grub.” “This one is not a grub,” it protested wearily. “It is eleven-and-a-half years old.” Kunai carried this one to the island’s worn-down docks, where two sailboats were tied up. One of them was empty and waiting for us, but the other contained Cold Striker. The stallion was too focused on trying to free the boat to even notice our arrival. Kunai stared at him for a long moment, then lifted this one off her back. “Excuse this one for a moment. It has unfinished business to attend to.” She passed this one over to the Shimmer-mare, then flitted up into the early morning sky, silently swinging around and homing in on Cold. The Shimmer-mare stared at the stallion for a long moment, then glanced down at this one. “Is that Cold Striker?” This one nodded. “He ... he did not want to hurt this one. He was angry with the Monster when he learned that it was attacking this one instead of Kunai.” The Shimmer-mare stared at him for a long time as Kunai closed in. “He still set the Monster on you. None of this would’ve happened without him.” This one slowly nodded its agreement. It wondered if it should tell its sister how Cold had opened the door to help it escape the Monster. It wondered if that fact would change Kunai’s mind. It wondered if it wanted Kunai to change her mind. This one wasn’t sure if Cold Striker deserved to die, but it also wasn’t sure he deserved to live. Kunai made her move, steel glinting in the early morning light as one of her throwing knives pinned his leg to the boat. As he screamed in pain, Kunai dove down on him, grabbing his head and slamming it against the side of the boat. This one turned its head away from the sight, but it could still hear the sound of his skull bouncing off the wooden side of the boat over and over. When the sound finally stopped, this one looked up and saw Kunai dragging the stunned Striker out of the boat, dropping the stallion on the shore. She glanced back at the two of us. “Shimmer-mare, if you could get everything ready to go and see to this one’s sister, it still needs to conclude its business with the Striker.” The Shimmer-mare grimaced. “He’s already down. What more did you plan on doing?” Kunai’s eyes narrowed into a cold, heartless glare. “Cold Striker nearly caused this one’s sister to be horribly murdered. His punishment has only begun.” The Shimmer-mare’s frown deepened. “So it’s about revenge?” “No.” Kunai shook her head. “Justice.” The Shimmer-mare sighed. “I bet he thought the same thing when he hired someone to go after you.” Kunai scowled. “Are you going to try to stop this one?” The Shimmer-mare was silent for a long time before finally saying. “I’ll take Kukri home. Whatever you do ... that’s on you.” “Good enough for this one.” As the Shimmer-mare carried this one down to the boat, Kunai turned her back on both of us, advancing on the wounded stallion. “This one can understand your reasons for hating it. If its sister were slain, it would not forgive the killer either. It would not even have blamed you if you sought to kill it. Such a reaction is natural.” Another of her knives struck Cold’s remaining foreleg. “However, you crossed a line. Attacking this one’s sister. That, it cannot forgive.” The dazed stallion blinked one hoof cradling his wounded head and his lips struggled to form a coherent sentence. “I ... I didn’t ... I tried to...” Kunai closed the remaining distance, pulling out a set of chains and wrapping them around his wings so that they were pinned almost straight up, away from his barrel. Then she removed a gemstone from her saddlebag, setting it in the middle of the chains. “This fire gem’s on a random timer. It might go off in five seconds, five minutes, or five hours. You’d better hope it lasts a long time, because those chains are made of the best tempered steel money can buy. Without purpose-made tools, it would take you hours to break them.” She pulled a dull, rusty blade from her saddlebag, then dropped it in front of Cold. This one’s sister smirked cruelly, then almost casually announced, “Did you know that if you place the cuts correctly, you can sever a pegasus’s wings in a matter of minutes? This one just thought it would mention that.” This one’s jaw dropped, and it tried to think of what it should do. What this one’s sister was doing was— An amber leg grabbed this one from behind, and the Shimmer-mare pulled it against her, burying its head in her chest. Her coat smelt of soot, blood, and things this one probably was happier not recognizing. “Don’t look, Kukri. You don’t need to see this.” This one was still sobbing against the Shimmer-mare’s chest when a loud bang announced that Cold’s time had run out.