> Trixie's Friendship is Clearly Superior > by Baby Boo > -------------------------------------------------------------------------- > Chapter 1: Trixie Suffers From Bad Dreams For No Reason > -------------------------------------------------------------------------- Ah, Las Pegasus! Now that’s the city for a professional magician. Forget the pokey podunks around the Mountain, never mind the sanctimoniously hip ‘sophisticates’ on the east coast. Out west on the hem of the San Palomino desert, that’s where you’ll find ponies who truly appreciate a good show when they see one. Flair and fireworks, brass and flash, noise and color — ponies in the Peg eat it right up and howl for more. The city is built as much out of glitz and glamour as it is of brick, stone and cloud. The tourists who keep the whole mad place alive want bright big spectacles to gape at while enjoying their frozen bananas; the more glitter and scarves and flashing lights you can wave in their face, the better. So what if some of Trixie's stories may be creatively embellished? Nopony needs reality mucking up a good story! So what if she brags and blusters and struts her stuff? That’s what show biz is all about! So what if she unleashed the power of a basically legal artifact and sort of temporarily conquered a small town in a fit of slight megalomania? Just the sort of grandiose, mythic gesture they like from a stylish conjurer! Although the larger resorts on the Skyward Strip above had failed to provide Trixie with bookings, her traveling wagon and an empty lot down in the groundward part of the city were enough to draw crowds ten times what would fit in any of Manehattan’s trendy little clubs. And they loved her. After the humiliations inflicted on Trixie by small-minded ponies in the cultural wasteland of middle Equestria, with its insulated gossip networks spreading slander about hard-working performers, just to stay on the good side of their ever-so-precious, ever-so-gifted, oh-now-I’m-a-Princess-too-by-the-way little — After the setbacks of recent months, that is, it felt good to perform again for an enthusiastic audience. The renewed flow of bits was nice, of course, but all the gold and gems in Equestria cannot compare to the joy of a crowd who love your performance as much as you love giving it. Trixie’s hooves may have been treading the planks in a simple field of packed dirt, but her heart was once again on top of the world. And that’s why what happened was so monstrously unfair. Trixie’s eyes snapped open, for all the difference it made in the overcast depth of the night. Her pulse drummed urgently in her temples, her breath was cold dust in her throat, but she didn't tremble; paralyzed with unreasoning terror, she couldn't. Images from the dream stayed relentlessly with her, even as the nonsense logic connecting them dissolved. An audience of ponies, melding together in an unholy agglomeration of glittering eyes and howling mouths, rising in a gelatinous wave of flesh to overwhelm the stage. Trixie herself, employing some bizarre magic to swell in size and monstrosity, roaring and lashing back at the audience-thing. Caught between them, a defenseless pony who somehow was also Trixie, yet wasn't; her dream-perspective, flowing loosely between victim and monster, knew the endangered pony had a purple coat and a darker violet mane streaked with pink. It wasn't the content of the dream, however, that held her locked stiff as steel, but the aura of horror, sourceless and immune to rationality. The palpable fear pervaded the cramped interior of her wagon berth, making every shadow a fathomless gateway, every soft tick of the wood a warning of creeping danger. Awake and alert, she knew perfectly well that it was impossible for the audience-thing to rise suddenly up at the foot of her bed. She knew equally well that it was there, just waiting for any slightest move or sound from Trixie as the signal to pounce. She managed to slide her eyes to the side enough to see the glowing enchanted face of her wall clock. Just a little past four in the morning. Oh, not again, she thought, too parched and frightened to moan aloud. Three nights in a row, and not for the first time in the past several months, her sleep had been broken by these ruthless nightmares. Not the same dream each time, but variations played on similar themes: Trixie on stage, simultaneously menaced by and becoming a host of unspeakable monstrosities, and that accursed Sparkle always close at hoof, sometimes a victim, sometimes a mastermind of supernatural villainy. Mustering her courage, Trixie made a convulsive movement, risking destruction to roll onto her side and drag the sheet over her head, tucking it carefully to leave a little breathing tunnel around the tip of her muzzle. Safe under the armor of linen, she froze up again, scalding tears trailing down her cheek as she realized there would be no more sleep until the terror loosed its grip. With a tiny cautious motion of her head she wiggled until she could see out just a little, to watch the safe, pale blue glow of her clock. Painfully aware of every dark alcove inside her wagon, especially the dreadful chasm beneath her bed, she understood with fearful certainty that even this slight peek gave the darkness a chance to notice her, and that the tiniest sign of motion in that darkness would drive her beyond madness. But the clock, with its happy design of stylized dancing ponies, was her friend. It wasn't until nearly six, when Celestia's mercy began pouring light around the cracks of the wagon doors, and the chorus of birdsong rose to prove that the living, sane world was still outside, that Trixie was able to close her eyes and catch a few thin, fitful scraps of sleep. Far too soon, Trixie jolted from shallow dozing to the sound of hooftaps on the wagon's rear door. The loyal clock declared, with regret, that it was almost noon. Freed from her terror by monster-banishing daylight, Trixie groaned in fully adult irritation as she dragged herself off the mattress and folded the bed up against the wall. The knocking repeated, along with a cautious voice. "Miss Trixie? You up?" Trixie yanked the door open a touch more forcefully than she meant, making the brown-coated earth stallion outside jump back startled. Crabby as she felt, she didn't want to take it out on him, so made an effort to keep her voice and expression neutral as she rasped out, "Yes yes, Trixie's awake." "Good, good..." said Two Bits. His brow wrinkled and he tipped his head, looking Trixie carefully up and down. "You, uh... you feeling all right?" Trixie blinked. Bitsy was a Peg local whom Trixie had never exactly hired as such, but who had sort of drifted into position as a publicist, ticket agent and general assistant. Like herself, the earth pony was a born hustler, slick and polished from shiny dapper jacket tail to wax-curled moustache tip. Genuine concern rarely made it all the way to the surface. "Uch, is it that bad?" Trixie asked, turning to the mirror on the door. It really was. Her mane was in a frightful bed-mussed spray, a minor nuisance, but the dark circles under her eyes and the listless sag of her features made her look centuries older. It would take some of the more expensive cosmetics, and large, immediate supplies of coffee, to refurbish in time for the first matinee. "Well..." Bitsy's eyes flicked back and forth, searching out diplomatic words. "You look a little under the weather, honestly." Trixie didn't have the energy to scoff, only to nod in sullen agreement. "No... Trixie didn't sleep well. Not sick. Just tired." Bitsy nodded, giving her another long look before shrugging back into slick business mode. "Okay, if you say so. Tell you what, I'm gonna make a donut run, you take some time waking up, huh?" "That would be good. See if they have any of those scrambled-egg taco things left," she said, lighting her horn to grab a hairbrush. The coffee was a fundamental assumption, not worth mentioning. Bitsy snapped a jaunty salute and trotted off, leaving Trixie alone with the mirror. It didn't have a lot of sympathy for her. She closed the door and shuffled around the boxes and small piles of clothes that carpeted her wagon interior, making her way to the 'dressing room' alcove, where a small counter with an inset basin sat beneath another mirror, rimmed with magelights. This one was no more merciful. The basin water was filmy with yesterday's soap, but she dipped the brush in it anyway for the first assault on her wayward mane. She wasn't about to go outside to the well looking like a tinsel rat nest. While brushing, she complained under her breath to whatever inanimate objects might listen. It just wasn't fair. She was a grown mare, she shouldn't have to be fearing the dark and monsters under the bed like a schoolfilly. If she had to suffer nightmares, they should at least be about... money, or health problems, or failed romances, things like that. Grown-up things. And the dreams, however strongly they affected her, just didn't make sense. The recurrent stage setting? Stage fright simply wasn't in her vocabulary. If anything — if — it was quite the opposite; she was always much more at ease up on the boards than down on the ground with everypony else. Monsters? Her Ursa Major story may have been exaggerated, but she had encountered dangerous creatures in her travels, such as regular bears and wolves. She respected the danger but didn't particularly fear it; her ability to scare most animals away with simple illusions, or even to defend herself with a staff, had been proven. Aside from which, she had stood eye-to-eye with a real Ursa and survived. After seeing its thigh-wide razor fangs flash and feeling the cool, ozone-stinking wind of its breath rush around her, there really wasn't much outside the caverns of Tartarus that could top it. So perhaps just a little fear of monsters there, but not beyond reason. And Twilight freaking Sparkle? Trixie wan't afraid of her. Even 'hate' would be too strong a word. Trixie just didn't like her. Really, what Trixie hated was the way everypony else fawned over Miss Purple Pants, marveling over just how wonderful she was, as though she hadn't been given everything on a silver platter: born and raised in the Canterlot gentry, taken personally under Celestia's wing, heaped with every honor and groomed like a show dog to the royal elevation she had, according to the headlines, attained. None of that, Trixie was gracious enough to admit, was Sparkle's fault, but it wasn't to her credit either. In any case, Sparkle personally was... just profoundly innocuous. Purple-dyed vanilla pudding in a fancy Canterlot dish. There was nothing about her to inspire the kind of bone-deep terror that shadowed Trixie's dreams. Trixie snorted and shook her head, letting her silver silk mane tumble forward along her cheeks in preparation for the second brushing assault. Dreams. A pack of nonsense. Perhaps Trixie simply needed to pay better attention to her diet. More fresh vegetables and grass, fewer fried sugary dough things, at least before bedtime. By the time Two Bits returned with a large grease-stained box of, well, fried sugary dough things, Trixie had made all essential face repairs, restored the sheen and curl of her mane, and recharged, to a degree, the bold shine of her persona. Resolution dissolving before the scent of sugar glaze and cinnamon butter, she made a promise to her metabolism that she would find something mostly green for dinner as she dove into breakfast. Sadly, there were no tacos. The ground city of Las Pegasus, beyond its modest central strip, lacked the grand gaudy architecture of the cloud city hovering above it, but it did have a great attraction amid the San Palomino border scrubland: the cloud city hovering above it. Beneath the broad, gently misting canopy of the Skyward Strip, even at the height of summer, ponies could gather on the treeless lot to watch Trixie's performance without suffering the desert heat. With twenty minutes left before the first show of the afternoon, a fair-sized crowd had already gathered, perhaps fifty to sixty ponies at five bits a head — two, for foals shorter than Trixie's raised hoof on the plywood sign by the ticket table. The lot was on the edge of development, where Trixie needed only a permit from the city, not a rental of the land, to park her wagon and stake out audience space with a simple fence of dowels and banner-laden twine. And a second permit, from a different office, to sleep in her wagon there, but even that was cheaper than renting a space closer to the center of town. "That's right folks, seventeen minutes to go for the most astonishing spectacle of the modern age! Come and see with your own eyes the wonders of Equestria, brought to life for you by the mystifying, the enchanting, the Dark Overmare of Ponyville herself, the Great and Powerful Trrrrrixie!" Bitsy's fast-talking cousin, perched on a soapbox dais beside the ticket booth, was good. Trixie didn't even have to write that spiel for him. Passers-by were not thick on the ground — hoof traffic passing the lot consisted, for the most part, only of those tourists who followed one of the side streets off the central strip to see if there was anything interesting out that way, which there basically wasn't — but the barker was doing a good job of waving them in with sweeps of his old-fashioned straw hat. Other relatives and cronies wandered the crowd with trays and carts, or called out pitches from lotside stalls, peddling refreshments and souvenirs, juggling, dancing, offering games of chance. Of course it was obvious that Two Bits was using Trixie's show as a convenient source of gigs for his family and chums, but he wasn't fleecing her; she got a fair percentage of the sales, and the advantage of a lively encampment, with an attractive fairground atmosphere. Flat on her back below the stage, with only a narrow strip of carpet to protect her mane from the bare dirt, Trixie growled and spat curses at her stupid new wagon. The old one, a marvel of dramatic mechanics, was made to spring open into a full-sized, ready-to-use stage, complete with mechanical music and firework fanfares, all at the pull of a cord. But that one had been taken by cruel fate, smashed to splinters by a certain great star-beast. The new wagon had a side wall that folded down, making a simple stage. It was otherwise just a box with wheels. To put on a proper show she had to park it and build the real stage setup around and under it, using big clunky folding rigs of wood and iron that were a pain to pack for travel. And before each performance, Trixie had to crawl like a bug under the stage in order to rig the firework fuses. She refined the setup after every show, doing the mechanical work herself whenever she could afford the materials, so the new wagon was getting more tolerable all the time. But it was still a long, long way from replacing the old wagon and its many tricks. Trixie reminded the wagon of its inferior status, in less than polite terms, as she sweated over the twining and placement of fuse cord. Long legs of shadow flickered across the canvas sheet that curtained the side of the stage. Trixie turned toward the motion, only to get blasted in the face with sunshine as Two Bits raised the curtain and bent to peek into the crawlspace. Her scowl, scrunched up against the light, was of monumental ferocity, but peering into his own shadow Bitsy was spared a clear brutal view of it. "You all good to go, Miss T?" he asked, employing one of the allowed nicknames. Trixie flapped a hoof at him. "Of course Trixie is good. She can do one of these low-key matinee shows in her sleep," she declared, before sabotaging her point with a cavernous yawn. Rolling her eyes, she added, "Another half-cup of coffee and Trixie will be ready to flatten these rubes." "Fan-tastic. Curtain time in ten minutes, then." He dropped the curtain, blinding Trixie again with the sudden shadow. "Ten minutes. Fannn-tastic," Trixie growled to herself, stifling another yawn as she finished with the firing timers. Trixie will admit that stage magic and sleep deprivation are not the wisest combination. On the other hoof, making mistakes with stage devices risks merely injury and embarrassment, whereas canceling a show just because one 'feels tired' would be unprofessional. Trixie employs in her act a blend of unicorn magic and effects produced by mechanics and chemistry. There's a game the stage magician can't win: unicorn audiences think it's cheating to use devices for 'fake' magic; earth ponies think it's cheating to use fancy horn magic in place of clever engineering and skillful sleight-of-hoof. (Pegasi don't care how an explosion is made, they just never think it's big enough.) Some choose to specialize in pure artistic magic, others focus on the material craft, but Trixie is among the majority of professionals who employ whatever best suits the show. Even the non-unicorns make use of potions and enchantments, along with clever and marvelous applications of their more subtle natural magics. It is true, as some in the unicorn arts community would point out, that if Trixie's act were focused purely on horn magic, she would have been fine to perform that afternoon. Devices have no response to one's intention or emotion; they don't do what you will them to, only what you've made them to do. If, for example, one misses her mark and stops with her hoof against the base of the firework rack, instead of the small discreet lump further upstage against which she's supposed to put her hoof to make the trick work, the mechanical device cannot do anything to correct for the error. Illusionary fireworks go wherever the caster wishes them to, while gunpowder fountains just shoot sparks where they're pointed, even if there's a flapping cape in the way. But it is true also that none of it would have happened if Trixie had been a banana. There's no real point in discussing what could have been. Fortified by the prescribed half-cup more of coffee, Trixie sprang onto the stage in a cloud of smoke, feeling perhaps not her peppiest, but more than ready to take on the show. At the climax of her introductory spiel, she flipped back her cloak and spread her forelegs wide in perfect time with the first fountain of sparkles. If all had gone correctly, the audience would have been cooing in wonder, having seen her thick fabric cloak transform to a pair of sweeping, shimmering ethereal wings. Not the most jaw-dropping illusion in her repertoire, but a good dazzle to start off the show. Instead, they were pointing and gasping in alarm. The cloak was still draped over her shoulders, not whisked away by the hidden gimmick. And the cloak was hot, very hot, it was burning; Trixie jumped but the flames followed her, they were licking up the edge of the cloak, and spreading onto the hair of her leg, she was burning! And then her other foreleg was swinging over air, as she had jumped all the way to the front of the stage, and she was still on fire when she tumbled off. It all gets very jumbled after that. Trixie remembers what happened, in general, but the memory is of confusion. Scraps of incident floated by in a blurry context soup: spectators screaming, fire extinguishers spraying, sirens wailing, an ambulance ride, a gurney, a bed. Trixie's leg, blackened and blistering, screamed for her attention far more effectively than anything happening around her. Doctors murmured. The ceiling moved around. Trixie's cloak was replaced with a green paper gown. A nurse hovered up to the green bed and dealt Trixie a sudden sharp thin pain in the shoulder. "What was that?" Trixie asked, eyeing the retreating needle suspiciously. The nurse gave Trixie's hoof a comforting pat. "Just something to ease the pain and help you sleep." "Help me sleep?" Trixie's voice came out thinner and weaker than she'd like. "Mm-hmm, that's right. You just relax now." The nurse smiled warmly and slipped away, drawing closed the green curtain around Trixie's bed as she went. Trixie dropped her head to the pillow, feeling it grow heavier already, black swirls of unconsciousness seeping up around her like ink spreading in water. "Oh, no..." > Chapter 2: Princess Luna Needs to Work on Her Communication Skills > -------------------------------------------------------------------------- The stage was a slab of black rock, vivid and hot in the blaze of a dozen large torches flanking its sides. The audience was a mad carnival of screaming, laughing ponies, dressed in chains and torn black fishnet, manes spiked and bodies painted in livid colors, dancing — or at least jumping and slamming into one another — to the tune of an unseen organ that rumbled more loudly through the dirt beneath them than the air above. Behind them a massive roaring bonfire warred with the torches, tossing the shadows of the ponies back and forth between them in jagged orange flickers. The raucous crowd gradually fell quiet, subsiding to murmurs of excitement as the announcer's gravel voice rolled deep and ominous over them. "Chlidren of the night... prepare to wreck yourselves against the horror and the glory of your Black Queen: the incomparable, the unstoppable, the unspeakable TrrrrrrRIXIE!" A line of sparkling explosions flicked across the stage, raising in their wake a billowing curtain of thick purple smoke, rising to join the black breath of the bonfire in blotting out the stars. Another bang and a flash, and there was Trixie, tall and magnificent in regalia of black straps and iron armor, banishing the smoke with a thunderous slam of her forehoof. Leathery dragon's wings flexed iron-grey talons on her shoulders, and her tail, scaled and spiked, lashed in elegant curves behind her. The broad black brim of her pointed hat cast her features in shadow, a grinning darkness from which she surveyed the throng with dangerous, amused eyes behind her domino mask The audience howled for her, a single wild beast with a thousand throats, as the scarlet glare of her magic raised a pair of long, thick bullwhips over her head and cracked them in peals of thunder. She laughed and paced the edge of the stage, stabbing and stunning random audience members with the weight of her direct gaze. "Now you will all bow down, my foals! Now you will learn to serve your Queen! For now is the hour you face Trixie!" A flash of lightning, another burst of thunder; the crowd was electrified, their screams resolving to a chant of Trixie's name as she reared onto her hind legs and spread her forehooves over them, anointing them all knights and vassals of her reign. But an angry stallion, with mane of leafy green and coat of chocolate brown, pushed forward to the space between the audience and the stage, stabbing an accusatory hoof upward at Trixie with venomous fury in his glowing amber eyes. "There is no Queen!" he snarled in a thick bubbling voice, anger so heavy in his breath that oily dark vines curled from his lips and crawled across his face. "Your stone is worthless." Trixie glared ice at him and reared back, touching the silver and ruby medallion at her throat. "You know nothing!" she snapped. "The stone was made for Trixie!" The vine pony laughed an alligator laugh and moved toward the stage, gripping its edge with a paw of twisted branches, scratching the slab with vicious thorn claws. "Then why can't you keep it?" "Well, really, there is no stone," Twilight Sparkle said, reasonably, from just behind Trixie. The Black Queen turned to jab her hoof toward the tiny purple Princess. "YOU! The center of all my woes! Why is it always you hiding behind my curtains?" Trixie demanded, her outstretched leg beginning to tremble and smoke with the strength of her fury. Twilight Sparkle shrugged and gave a sheepish, humble smile. "Golly, it doesn't mean anything." "Nothing!? Fraud! Buffoon! If you knew the first thing about anything, you would have driven away the wolves by now!" Trixie screamed in the alicorn's face, but Twilight Sparkle only repeated the same aw-shucks shrug and grin. Trixie waved her hoof across the audience of vine-ridden timber wolves, slowly creeping up on the stage with their luminous, lethal green eyes. Already her own limbs were half dissolved into thick plumes as her smoke-bomb body burned away. "She can't. Nothing works that way," growled the lead wolf. He leapt across the stage, but the Black Queen had become an untouchable body of smoke, a dark cloud with a hat and an amulet. She gave a cruel metallic laugh as her vapor closed around the wolf, seizing him in place. "I'll take you apart," she said, almost playfully, tightening her grip around the vines and branches that made up his body. He howled and snapped, writhing in her tendrils of smoke. Twilight Sparkle rushed to the front of the stage and gave frantic orders to the pit of baying timber wolves, trying to organize them to put out the bonfire. Trixie found herself separate from the Black Queen, hovering inside the massive body of smoke, powerless to do anything but look out through its eyes, and hear it speaking with her voice, while it focused on cracking open the timber wolf. The wolf shouted strident, guttural slogans about ethics, and with each point he made, his teeth sank more firmly into the cloud that gripped him. But too late, to no effect; his wooden bones creaked and the tangled vine mesh of his ribcage split ever wider open, spilling sickly green light from inside. Twilight's fire brigade managed to get buckets of water onto the bonfire. As it hissed in protest, so did the Black Queen, and she paused in her work on the lead wolf to flow her black choking influence out over the whole pack. Twilight Sparkle tried to explain why she should stop, but only Trixie, unable to act, paid any heed. The Black Queen just laughed, and puffed herself up even bigger, as she set about pulling all of the timber wolves apart. "Stop," Trixie whispered. She tried to move her legs, to move the smoke-thing's legs, but she couldn't even do that. Closing her eyes did no good either. She could not stop seeing through the Queen's glowing red eyes as the wolves broke open, their inner lights exposed. "Please, stop!" Trixie couldn't stand to see into the sickly green death-light inside the wolves, but the Queen was determined to dissect them. Twilight Sparkle screamed and so did Trixie, struggling to find her hooves and cover her eyes. The Black Queen roared as she uncovered the secret of the wolves. Inside each one was curled a helpless, sleeping pony. As she ripped open the foliage shells, sharp edges of branch and thorn collapsed in on their soft, frail bodies, tearing them apart in their sleep. Trixie tried to curl herself up in defense, but her body was as unresponsive as the smoke-creature in which she was trapped. Some part of her mind recalled something about a hospital and a shot. There would be no escape from the depths of this horror; she was caught in the darkness of sleeping drugs and could not awaken. She screamed in desperate terror, feeling jagged branches biting into her own sides. "Stooooooop — !" In the waking world, on a bed in a darkened hospital room, Trixie's hooves twitched and her head jerked side to side, face clenched in agony. A faint, tiny, dry little groan escaped her throat. "BEGONE!" The voice boomed from the heavens, scattering the bonfire's smoke before it, and a blast of brilliant silver light shot down from above. With it came a scouring hurricane wind, crashing onto the Black Queen and unmaking her. The monster of smoke had not even time to scream defiance; as the light touched her, she was already made unreal, a fading withering dream, and an instant she was gone, scrubbed from existence by the force from on high. Not only the Queen, but the wolves, and Sparkle, and the stage, and all the world around Trixie; all reduced in a flash to dust and then to less than dust. Trixie floated in darkness for a moment, the wind a sweet soothing breeze on her body, and then her hooves touched on cool grass. All at once Trixie found herself sitting on the crest of a rolling hill, beneath a tapestry of brilliant starlight. She was just a filly now, her cloak draped like a tent around her small body, only the immature stub of her horn keeping her hat from dropping down over her eyes. Wide-eyed and panting with lingering terror, she looked frantically around. The landscape was placid, crickets chirping carefree in the gently rippling grass. Soft strains of music and golden light from beyond the curve of a nearby hill spoke of happy ponies living without fear of monsters or foul magic. Gradually the pounding of Trixie's heart steadied and her breathing slowed, at least until she spotted the silver-shod hooves of a pony standing right next to her. "Gaah!" Trixie made a froglike hop backward, looking up, and up, and up some more, jaw dropping as much from the awkward craning of her neck as from surprise. Her hat tumbled backward off her head as she met the calm gaze of the tall dark stranger's brilliant aquamarine eyes. Aside from those eyes, the features of Trixie's unexpected companion were cast in shadow by the bright disc of the moon directly behind her. But the mere fact of her height, the ethereal billowing of her night-sky mane, and the silver moon crest at her throat — not to mention the frankly overdramatic placement of the moon itself — made no mystery of her identity. "Puh-Princess?" Trixie managed after bobbing her chin fruitlessly for a few tries. "Princess Luna?" "Indeed," replied the Princess of the Night, smiling gently as she lowered herself to sit on the grass. "Fear not, your nightmare now is fled." Out of the lunar backlighting, the Princess seemed less a creature of magic and power, more a warm and living mare with a hint of mischievous humor in her composed expression. By instinct Trixie wanted to scoot up closer to the reassuring royal presence. Instead, she stood to retrieve her hat. As she did, she realized something so obvious that she felt a bit stupid for having needed to notice it. "Of course. Trixie is still dreaming," she said. Luna nodded. Feeling less than dignified to be seen as a little filly, even in imagination, Trixie went on analytically, "I — Trixie supposes it makes sense that her mind would conjure you as a protector against nightmares." Luna gave a soft snort. "You flatter me. But no, I am no phantom of your dreaming; I am here in fact, in my capacity as guardian of the night." "Really?" Trixie found, somewhat to her surprise, that she believed the claim at once. Something about Luna's presence was too... real, for lack of a better word; too clearly not of Trixie's own self to doubt. She had heard rumors about this sort of dream visitation since the Moon Princess's return. Cautiously, she said, "You... do Trixie a great honor, Your Highness." Luna tipped her head with a knowing smile. "Fret not. I cannot read a pony's mind, only see what she projects onto the canvas of dream. And even there, I do not idly spy, but enter only when I sense the cry of terror or sorrow too great to bear." "How very intriguing," Trixie said, sinking to a seat beside the Princess. Again Luna seemed to discern with ease the thoughts behind Trixie's words, and she held up a hoof to forestall any questions. "Would that I had time to discuss the nature of dreaming magic, eager pupil, but my domain is wide and I cannot tarry long. There are more immediate matters on which I would speak with you before I part." Trixie frowned, and briefly opened her mouth, then checked herself and settled instead for a humble nod. "Too often recently have I detected distress in your nightly journeys, but judged you strong enough to stand without my help." Luna ducked her head slightly in apology, but Trixie smiled, more pleased by the implied compliment than bothered by the lack of assistance. "I fear, though, that I have held off too long, if your worries have grown so severe as to put you in a hospital bed." "Hospital?" Trixie grimaced, and let out a squeak of distress as memory flooded in on her from the waking day before. "The show — the, the fire —" "Yes, alas, that part was real," Luna said casually, then caught on to Trixie's panicked reaction. "Oh! But soft, soft! Please, forgive my blunt and foalish tongue!" She reached up to put a comforting hoof on the fretful filly's shoulder, drawing her closer. Gently she held Trixie's right forehoof, which, with the easy suddenness of a dream, was now swaddled in bandages. With her attention drawn to it, Trixie could feel a distant tingling sensation, not quite pain itself but a warning that pain existed, shut away in another realm by thick heavy curtains of anesthetic. "All is well, I promise thee — promise you. You've sustained burns on this leg, along with scrapes and bruises, and a bump on the head from your fall. But your injuries are minor, and all signs for quick recovery are good." Trixie allowed herself to be calmed, but couldn't help giving Luna a sour look. The Princess replied with a small sheepish grin which said, all too clearly, both that she was sorry and that Trixie's scowl was just too cute. Trixie took a deep breath and, with a slight roll of her eyes, composed herself in chin-raised dignity. "As you were saying, Your Highness..." "Yes, right," Luna said without quite giggling. "As I was saying... bad dreams I can banish on the spot, but I cannot reach into your heart to resolve the deeper turmoil that brings forth these nightmares. That which weighs on your mind is for you alone to face and vanquish, lest it continue to haunt your sleep." Trixie looked out across the shadowed hills, silent for a long while. "Well. Of course," she said, voice dry and quiet. "Trixie has... any pony has her share of troubles in life." "And if I might presume, I would hazard that some of those troubles have to do with your experiences in Ponyville — in particular, your dealings with a certain librarian?" Biting her lip, Trixie pulled her chin from Luna's grip to look down and away, with a sideways bob of her head that wasn't precisely a nod. Luna dipped her head lower to peer beneath the shield of Trixie's hat-brim. "Trixie Lulamoon, Great and Powerful, I cannot tell you precisely what to do. I am not half the heart-wise counselor my sister is. But if you would take my advice, it would be that you should consider carefully the nature of Twilight Sparkle's achievements: that they rely on the power of friendship." Trixie blinked. "Umm? Friendship? What do you mean?" "Friendship is magic, Trixie. No mere slogan that, but profound and simple truth." Luna rose to her hooves, a rising wind and a pale blue light surrounding her. Trixie stood as well, reaching up as though to hold the Princess back. "Wait! Trixie doesn't understand!" "Friendship is magic!" Luna declaimed in a lofty, ethereal voice, her form glowing ever brighter at the center of a vortex of wind-tossed leaves and swirling ribbons of sparkling magic. Trixie tried to approach her, bouncing in frustration, but the Princess seemed to get further away with every hop Trixie took toward her. "What does that even mean —" Trixie shouted against the rushing wind, blinded by Luna's light. The light grew brighter, the roar still louder, and then... ... darkness, and silence. "— friendship is magic?" Trixie whispered, opening her eyes. After a scant moment of confusion, she grasped that she had awakened, and lay in a bed at the hospital, returned again to her heavy and aching grown mare's body. At least this time she hadn't woken to stark terror. The aura of security brought by Luna's presence had not departed, and while the room was dark, light from beneath the door and the soft sounds of activity beyond combined with the cool, magically processed air and its faint medicinal scents to create a feeling that things were, essentially, under control; that Trixie may be in solitude, but was not all alone. She drew a deep breath and let it out again, pouting at the ceiling. The Princess of the Night could have been more clear with her advice, she felt. Riddles and mysteries were all part of the night's domain, of course, but that was no reason to be deliberately obtuse. In the waking world, the pain in Trixie's foreleg was sharper, though muffled still under the thick fog of the injection she'd been given. The same fog shrouded Trixie's thoughts, in collaboration with simple exhaustion, but she paddled against the undertows of sleep, trying to make some sense of Luna's words. Part of the message was clear enough. It was something Trixie had been thinking herself, in recent months, though she hadn't really examined it consciously amid the distractions of the day-to-day. There was something out of balance in Trixie's life. Even as her career came back together piece by piece, she hadn't been happy, not deep down. Leisure time, things she used to do just for fun, had faded almost entirely away — in part because she was busy, but even when she had time to spare, she hadn't much felt like doing anything with it. She wasn't even taking guilty pleasure in the amount of junk food she'd been eating; it was just cheaper than real restaurants and less effort than cooking for herself. The bad dreams were only the sharpest tip of something bigger and darker that shadowed even her greatest moments of triumph onstage, and clearly the time had come when she could no longer throw herself into professional work to avoid dealing with it. Grimly, she prodded at the things it hurt most to think about. Of course, right at the center of all the worst was Ponyville. Wretched little train-stop of a town! She never should have gone there in the first place. But of course, she had, and sometimes it seemed as though all of her problems flowed from that, even those that happened earlier, like a shadow of looming fate reaching back to her birth. The first visit was bad enough: financially ruinous, personally humiliating, professionally disastrous. But it hadn't left her scarred and sleepless, only aggravated, and determined to claw her way back up from the mud. She had fostered a certain grudge against Sparkle, but it wasn't genuine, not deep down; it was really more of a sour running joke, something to grumble over as she broke rocks and waited tables, saving up her bits while seeking out any kind of bookings anywhere that she wasn't known as a laughingstock. The purple creampuff hadn't been trying to overshadow Trixie, just defending her town against the blasted Ursa. It wasn't anypony's fault that Sparkle happened to possess a freakishly high level of natural power, and it certainly wasn't Sparkle's fault the Ursa was there; being perfectly honest with herself, in the hospital darkness, Trixie knew that the blame for that rested with those two idiot colts. But then there was the second visit, when the joke had been picked up and taken too far by... by the artifact, and things had gotten out of control. Trixie had thought she knew enough to manage more power than she was born with, but she just didn't; it was too big, it ran away with her, she had been hanging on in its wake while things happened she never intended, and then... and then Sparkle had beaten her, even with all that power... For too long Trixie had been hiding behind the self-assurance that it wasn't a fair victory. By the strictest terms of the magician's duel, Sparkle had cheated. But the duel was an old tradition, and in the modern age, it was more widely understood as a battle of wits than a contest of technique. Among the countless rifts dividing the scholarly community, one was between those who held that cheating in a magic duel was an unforgivable breach of etiquette, and those who believed that part of the legitimate challenge in a duel was cheating without getting caught. Trixie winced with a pain unrelated to her burns. No, it wasn't cheating that bothered her. The fact was that even if Sparkle hadn't won by the honorable terms of a magic duel, she had beaten Trixie fair and square... with stage magic. Not even with good stage magic. Switching ponies out behind a puff of smoke? A move so basic it couldn't even be called a complete trick. Sparkle may as well have defeated Trixie, and the amulet, by pretending to find coins behind a filly's ear. If she had been outdone with proper magic, Trixie could have swallowed that with only a trace of bitterness. Magic of that sort was Sparkle's talent, after all, and not Trixie's. But deception and misdirection were Trixie's domain, and being beaten in that was a sting. Oh yes, that burned, worse than her current, literal wounds. Trixie realized that she was barely breathing, her entire body clenched with tension, and she forced herself to take another deep, calming breath. Bruised pride notwithstanding, all of that was the past, and nothing could change it. Clearly, the experience had left traces on Trixie's mind that wouldn't leave her alone until she went forward and addressed them. Equally obvious was that Princess Luna, in her enigmatic way, was trying to point toward a way to do that. Friendship is magic... the words lingered in Trixie's mind, as Luna no doubt intended. It was a line Trixie had heard often enough over the past year or so, quoted in nearly every article about Miss Sparkle Pants, all part of her acclaimed breakthroughs in magical research. It sounded like high-class hokum to Trixie, who knew her hokum to be sure, but she couldn't dismiss it as casually when it came as counsel straight from the lips of a Princess — a proper Princess, that is. This so-called 'magic of friendship', and the Elements of Harmony, were all the rage among magical scholars these days. None of that had been on the curriculum while Trixie was attending Celestia's Academy. Perhaps she should have been keeping up more with magical studies since leaving the school, but after coming to realize that her talent lay in entertainment rather than magic itself, there hadn't seemed to be much point. She couldn't see what the fuss was about, really. The magic of love, now, that had been a topic of study — one of the fundamental principles, so essential to modern magic that it was among the prerequisites for every major. From Trixie's understanding, it seemed that 'friendship' would be, at most, a minor subset of that. Seriously, if there were a Princess of Fire, why would anypony fuss over a new Princess of Matches? Still, the whole friendship and harmony thing was being taken seriously by some quite distinguished ponies, whose opinions Trixie couldn't brush lightly aside. There must be more to it than she knew. So... what, was the message that Sparkle's power came from having friends? Trixie had friends. Her mobile lifestyle meant she couldn't see most of them very often, but there were ponies she corresponded with, and others she could always look up when she came to certain towns. Of course, it wasn't as though her friends were these marvelous Bearers of Harmony, whatever that meant... Could that be it? Was Sparkle's success based on having the right friends? Trixie's features clenched into a scowl. Too many things in life were determined not by who one was, but who one knew. It would be a horrible irony of the world if magical power itself worked on the same good-old-bays-network principles. And then suddenly, it clicked, the proverbial light snapping on in Trixie's head. Her eyes widened and a small, calculating smile broke out on her lips. "Yes... Trixie can be a good friend..." she muttered to the night. Her smile spread to a bright sharp crescent, widening as a plan took shape all of its own, complete and elegantly simple in its outline, even if it would take considerable work to execute. "Trixie can be the most magnificent friend in all of Equestria!" she added, beginning to laugh.