> Culling of the Hives > by law abiding pony > -------------------------------------------------------------------------- > 1: Reconstitution > -------------------------------------------------------------------------- Deep within a chittering hive of the Cresnox Jungle, chitin shelled changelings writhed in anticipation. Today was a day of truth. Deep in the bowels of their hive, a vast cavern housed over a thousand prisoners from Equestria alone. Every last one of them in that dim lit prison was encased in a green pod keeping them in a blissful dream. Drones crawled all over the pods, making sure their chief sources of love remained alive and bountiful. Unwanted and forgotten by their own governments, the criminals satiated the boundless hunger of a trio of princess changelings situated in the center of the circular cave. Numerous love crystals, both full and drained laid scattered around the princesses while Queen Chrysalis herself silently studied her latest brood. The princesses only partially resembled their mother. Chrysalis’ signature black chitin covered the young changelings’ neck, the upper forelegs, and the front half of their barrel. Chitin also covered the top of their hip, but the hind legs, lower forelegs, flanks, and face were all covered in light purple furry skin. Their translucent gossamer wings had a hint of blue to them, save for the leading edges baring stark crimson colors. Their deep emerald reptilian eyes were wide with a child’s curiosity. Most of their manes and tails were colored dark purple, and had stripes of cerulean along the left-center. All three of them looked up at their mother with wonder and a hint of fear. Sensing as much, Chrysalis knelt down to give them a caring hug. “There, there my little ones. You are always safe with momma.” Mimicking her love collectors was getting easier, and Chrysalis felt genuine warmth for the three little nymphs wrapped around her forelegs. She looked down at the nymph in the center. The little one’s aura glowed in a way that was still novel to Chrysalis, an aura that emanated love. The rich syrupy flavor of intended love was unmistakable. The nymph on the left gave her mother love as well, but Chrysalis’ mood soured when the nymph on the right failed to produce love. The children noticed their mother’s falling mood. Those that could produce love clung tightly to their mother, whimpering all the while. The love they were producing turned bitter with the flavor of fear. The third nymph couldn’t understand why her mother was angry with her, and started whimpering for forgiveness. Destroying this failure might be a mistake. I’ll have to find another use for her. Doing her best to look reassuring, Chrysalis stroked the third nymph’s mane, calming all three of them in the process. Buzzing wings brought Chrysalis’ gaze up to two of her sisters’ drones. Both of which were already puppets of their queens. “Yeelindrus, Jstrul, how fares your progeny?” While Jstrul’s puppet was mostly calm, Yeelindrus’ was seething. “I’ve followed your first plan so far,” Jstrul’s puppet replied with mixed resentment. “All three are still producing love. I try to keep them together so they can feed each other. Thus far, they are responding well to instruction.” Chrysalis looked to her youngest sister’s puppet with the obvious question on her lips. Yeelindrus grumbled, having never been able to hide her emotions through her puppet. Chrysalis’ hardening look brought enough fear to break through the anger. “I have failed. Chiccadi doesn’t produce love anymore. All three of my royal children are worthless!” she hissed with barely contained malice. “I should just kill the useless love sinks.” “Must you always fail at everything,” Jstrul sneered. Yeelindrus’ puppet bolted forward to kill the other drone, but was stopped short by Chrysalis’ telekinesis. “Not in front of the nymphs, dear sisters.” The nymphs cowered around their mother. “This confirms my theory; both Twilight’s blood and an overly caring upbringing are necessary. We cannot raise them like mother did us, if we want them to keep producing love.” Chrysalis levitated a few teething toys over and let the nymphs distract themselves. With their mother seemingly placated, the love they produced surged upward as they stayed close to Chrysalis for warmth and protection. The surge did not go unnoticed by Chrysalis. “Yet mother’s ways are what allowed us to thrive as queens,” Jstrul stated defiantly while stamping a hoof on the ground. “This soft approach may allow them to produce love, but they will be failures as adults.” “She’s right about that,” Yeelindrus commented begrudgingly. “We are only alive today because mother’s cruelty was necessary to survive the jungles, and I hate her for that.” “Which is why I allowed you to be the one to slit her throat,” Chrysalis replied evenly so her own hatred would go unnoticed by the nymphs. “So what do we do?” Jstrul half demanded of her elder sister. “Sneak back into the Everfree Forest to hypnotize one of Twilight’s consorts again?” Chrysalis summoned several caretakers to take the nymphs back to their chambers. “No, we don’t have the time anymore. We must enact phase one now while the other queens think we are still marshalling our forces. We have been fortunate to hide our royal daughters thus far, but they will soon be old enough to send ripples through our respective hive minds.” Jstrul bowed to her older sister. “I will make preparations immediately.” “As will I, dear sister.” “One thing before I go,” Jstrul said before she let go of her puppet. “What of Phoenix’s Roost? You have yet to tell us what must be done with those two.” “Yes, we’ll have enough trouble getting rid of the competition in the jungle as it is, the last thing we’ll need are Equestrians sticking their snouts were they don’t belong.” Chrysalis chuckled darkly at her sisters’ concerns. “Never mind the hybrids. I will make sure they have no reason to interfere. We can deal with them once the jungle is ours.” Roughly a thousand miles north, pillars of smoke rose from the center of a huge swath of clear cut forest. Surrounding the concentrated mass of buildings in the center were sweeping fields of fallow farmlands that were now blanketed in several feet of snow. Even with a cadre of drones using earth pony magic, none of them had mastered the art of a winter growing season. Their only source of food outside of trade, were two greenhouse airships, and they could never produce enough. Winter was in full swing in Equestria, and the Everfree forest, it seemed, wanted to outdo the pony driven storm systems by dumping four times as much snow than any weather team would ever permit. Rainbow Dash often commented how the Forest’s wild nature was taunting both pony and changeling alike with harsher untameable weather. Amidst the soot and snow covered hive, Twilight Sparkle was starting to suffer a migraine over the figures she, Gentle Touch, and half a dozen other accountants were going over. Of all the changeling hives in existence, only two ever had need for currency, and the all mighty bit was always in short supply in Phoenix’s Roost. Within a cramped room in her palace, Twilight Sparkle wiped her brow of sweat to keep the ledger she was crouched over dry. A wall vent pumped hot air into the squarish room, giving the five bean-counting changelings a comparatively rare comfort. Aside from the gentle sound of scribbling quills, and the droning vent, abacuses ticked constantly. Twilight Sparkle didn’t like what she saw in the numbers, but she was never one to shy away from hard evidence. “We’ll have to cut the PR campaign entirely. There’s no way we can afford it anymore.” Not if RD and I wish to keep our egg production at full. Gentle Touch sighed in agreement, but one of the younger accountants looked up from his work and spoke with a cautionary tone. “Are you sure that is wise, my queen? Our original estimates said it would take another five years or so before we achieve the same level of acceptance as griffins or donkeys have in the eyes of the typical pony. Cutting it off now could prolong that effort by a decade.” “We’ll just have to keep our progress going with normal interactions from here on,” Gentle Touch replied diplomatically. She had been the one to originally suggest cutting the program, and she gave an internal sigh of relief that her queen had finally came around. “If we’re going along those lines, my queen,” piped up another accountant, “we might want to reevaluate Princess Luna’s proposal to arm the Night Guard with the rifles she requested.” “For the last time, Ticket Counter…” Twilight pinched her muzzle as a migraine started hammering from inside her skull. “…We may not have much choice, will we?” The fear of her rifles and cannons ending up in the hands of armies across the continent had stayed her hoof at selling weapons up until now, but the hive’s future was at stake. I don’t want us start mooching off of Equestria by asking for hoof-outs. This was the first time Twilight had shown hesitation on this matter, giving Ticket Counter the courage he needed. Even then, he knew to be careful. “We keep it restricted to the Equestrian military only. We are allied with them after all.” Twilight had one of the other accountants adjust his overall estimates. “It would go a long way, but Luna’s request was fairly small. It won’t be enough.” Having his championed proposal accepted, Ticket wisely resumed his seat. He left it to others to come forward, and he didn’t have to wait long. The youngest accountant, a mare by the name of Dividends, started speaking while rechecking her findings on a scroll. “Then what about stopping egg production entirely.” Twilight felt a chill at the suggestion. “Our biggest expenditure by far is food and nursery maintenance.” “We can’t afford to stop now,” Twilight replied with forced emotionlessness. She couldn’t afford to let emotions drive this decision. “We need as many drones as possible for supporting Stripped Gear when the other queens go to war.” “With all due respect, my queen,” Dividends pressed with more than a little worry at giving the proposal. It was common knowledge among the hive that both queens relished laying eggs every day. “We also need war materials to support grandmother even more so than we need soldiers at this point. Not to mention that in all likelihood, any eggs you or Aunty lay from here on will contribute nothing to the war by the time they’re adults.” Twilight sighed wearily. Her queenly instincts to lay eggs had been sated for three years straight. The idea of lessening her laying rate shook her badly. Leveraging her experience, Twilight silenced that ill-at-ease from projecting too far over the Link. “Okay, cutting back on egg production would allow us to ease up on several other restrictions.” We could afford repurposing factory two back to war production which would allow us to manufacture the supplies Rainbow’s been too embarrassed to ask for. “But we still have to think long term. I’ll talk to Rainbow about curbing production down to one fourth.” Gentle Touch listened to the group hurry to reallocate the various budgets. She joined in the activity as well. It wasn’t long before an idea to occur to her. She looked up to Twilight who was visibly less tense, and was actually chuckling a little. Seems like her quick discussion with Rainbow Dash went well. But if we’re going to start selling more than just manufactured civic goods to Equestria… “Curbing egg production is a great start, my queen,” Twilight and a few others turned to listen. As Twilight’s chief advisor, Gentle’s words carried almost as much weight as either queen. “But I must press the need to seriously consider the implications of accepting Luna’s request. We may only be equipping and supplying her Night Guard at the moment, should Equestria be brought into a… peacekeeping action, we may have to shift more of our industrial base to war production. Ever since the dragon matriarch’s assassination, seemingly by a group of ponies, our alliance has been on high alert. If—” “Spike will never let a war break out,” Twilight cut in with stern belief. “Put more faith in my little brother than that.” A pang of pride and longingness traced her thoughts. I knew she’d react this way, but I had to voice it. Gentle Touch raised her hooves in defeat and sat back down. Twilight’s eyes recentered on the ledger, but her mind was on her scaly brother in Canterlot. If he hadn’t stayed with the last Great Dragon migration while I was searching for Rookhaven, he’d never have had enough clout with the rest of the dragonkin to act as an ambassador. I know Chrysalis was behind the assassination, but there’s no damn proof. Awfully convenient timing when mother’s spies tell me things are about to blow up in the jungle. I just wish her pride and posturing didn’t keep her from emigrating up here, or at least into the southern Chaos Lands. The room settled back into relative silence. The overarching adjustments to the budget may have been decided upon, but the minute details still needed work. Before Twilight could dive too deeply into the wonderously exciting world of budget balancing, a strong pulse resonated throughout the hive mind. Having heard it once before, Twilight instantly knew what it was. Aegis is waking, at last. All along the northwestern fields, two hundred changelings marched in step with their rifles strapped to their sides. A group of five drill sergeants made sure the mixed group of lavender and light blue drones moved in tight formation. Trying her best to ignore the bone-bitingly frigid winds, Rainbow Dash observed the first company of riflelings that had an even mix between Twilight’s and Rainbow’s drones. Strapped across her back and in-between her buzzing wings, Rainbow Dash bore the weight of a particular flamethrower. Its name was engraved above the trigger guard: ‘Burny’. While Rainbow had prepared and polished the weapon for the main event expected to occur before sundown, her primary focus was on the stone faced riflelings below. A group of thirty were alternating between marching on the ground in tight shoulder to shoulder formation and flying in a loose rectangle. The platoon she was focusing on at the moment had smoothly transitioned from a sprint around the inner hive to marching on the ground. They’re finally starting to shape up. The small grin she had faltered when a number of her children fumbled in rearing up into firing stance along a line formation. Slowly, at least. At the order to open fire, the front rank’s wings buzzed in a short burst of heavy force to counteract the expected recoil. The wind pushed the back rank’s rifles up, and some of them off their hooves entirely. They keep getting messed up by the soldier in front of them. I keep forgetting you can’t just brain dump my skill with handling turbulence into them. I’m going to have to find a way to correct that. There’s got to be a better way than to just ‘guess’ how much wingpower to use. Shouting from the sergeants got everyone to get back in line within seconds to repeat the exercise. At the NCOs’ order, the soldiers’ first rank fired out into the open field, yet all anyone got was a resounding series of ‘clicks’. The back row recovered slightly faster from the first rank’s backwash. Another single word order commanded the first rank to kneel and begin using their telekinesis to mimic reloading, while the rank behind them dry fired as well. Rainbow Dash couldn’t help but to drag a hoof over her face out of exasperation. Why did I have to pressure Twi so much to upgrade the army’s standard firearm to rifles? What good is a better weapon if we can’t even afford the powder and ball to train anypony to use them?! The poor state of the training program brought Rainbow’s insistence on retrofitting the Deception to the forefront of her mind. It was only recently that Rainbow came to realize just how expensive upgrading a warship actually was. Every day it sits in dry dock is another shipment it can’t make. At least the ship will be ready to launch in a week or so. Maybe I should just tell Sis that I’ll stop egg production so we can begin cutting food costs. As with Twilight a few minutes later, Rainbow Dash felt her gut twist at the idea of lower her egg rate, let alone stopping it all together. It had become too much a part of her daily life, the thought of diminishing the growth of her children made her feel cold inside. “Stupid Summit. I knew the love reveal was big, but… We should be pouring our money into growing the hive, a thriving community, not a damned army!” Fast movement off to the right caught Rainbow’s eye, and lifted her spirits a little. Flying in a chevron formation, three squadrons of Rainbow’s children engaged each other in a dogfight with two squads of purple drones hovering below to catch anyone who fell. Rainbow could feel the excitement, competitiveness, and snarkiness of her fliers, with a dash of fear added in. A fear of losing. I know that feeling all too well. Rainbow Dash let a proud grin cross her muzzle at the stunts her drones were pulling. Even if these drones were from unaltered clutches during Rainbow’s proto-queen stage, some of them were already proving stronger fliers than others. Had she been her old self, Rainbow would have trumped it up to old fashioned drive to win, but Queen Rainbow Dash had to think more deeply on it. The longer she watched her prized fliers, the more curious she became. If they’re clones of me, then why are some better than others? Diet? More exercise? Is it possible that maybe they aren’t one hundred percent clones after all? A pulse across the hive mind brought a huge, fang-filled toothy grin to her face. “Looks like Aegis is finally done baking.” Rainbow’s horn glowed brightly before she winked out existence, and reappeared near the Cave of Harmony. While black and grey pillars of smoke were starting to be a permanent fixture in the skies above, the ground and soil was meticulously cared for and cleansed by the Tea’la. In fact, five Tea’la were in plant form around the entrance to the cave, both on the floor, and the top of the cave along the wall. They were held fast by their roots going deep. Their pollen absent during these frigid months. The Tea’la remained as guardians around the Tree, protecting both it and the changelings young from anything that may harm either. Rainbow Dash nearly ran into Arya who was about to settle into plant form herself in one particularly inviting beam of sunlight she had just cleared of snow. “Oh, Ruler Rainbow!” She ran over, bringing the prismatic queen to an impatient halt. “Have you told sister about idea?” Rainbow Dash could sense her sister was already down in the nursery. Aegis was moments from waking. It took monumental effort to avoid making excuses to brush the Tea’la off. “Arya, we’ve always made sure the soil anywhere near the Tree has been pollution free, and the new factories will not jeopardize that.” Arya raised a hoof and made to speak as Rainbow tried to leave, but Rainbow cut her off. “No, we still don’t have a budget to build a shield dome to capture the air pollution. You’ll have to do without it for a few more years or so. We're not going to be able to put enough focus into civilian needs until the shit storm down in the jungle either blows over or after it explodes. We'll be glad to build the air scrubbers once it's all over. Now, bye see ya later!” Arya huffed as Rainbow sped off into the underground nursery. “So much fear of battle. I’d think she need bed mate, but she get one every day.” With nothing else to do at the moment, Arya cantered back over to the sunbeam and began to root herself. “When does fear end, and living begin?” Rainbow left a prismatic contrail behind her on her path to the nursery. She blitzed past several drones before her wings kicked up a small tornado to come to a stop at the closed door to the nursery. Once the wind died down, she slammed a hoof on the wall panel to open the door. The massive chamber beyond still gave Rainbow pause, even after nearly four years of being a queen. Inside were over three and a half thousand chrysalises, with an even split between lavender and blue pods. They were all attached in huge rows stretching two hundred chrysalises each. Massive reinforced concrete pillars bent the rows in a slight concave and supported the arched roof above. Catwalks, feed tubes, and steam pipes crisscrossed everywhere in an OCD level of organization and neatness. With Twi’s drones running the show down here, I’m shocked they don’t have all of my kids on one side, and her kids on the other. Casting the thought aside, Rainbow flew up and into one of the holes in the dense rows of pods left for safe flight. She sailed past thirty columns and took a sharp right to arrive at the hatching and cocooning center. Even with Aegis emerging from her chrysalis, other caretakers had to make sure the day’s twenty four nymphs were safely enclosed in their chrysalises before moving them to vacant spots later. A small crowd had gather around the hatching area. Rainbow Dash saw her sister was already present, along with Aegis’ clutchmates. “Noo, I’m late! I’m late, cuuuurrrsssses!” By the time Rainbow finally landed with a heavy thud, Aegis was already trying to stand on shaky hooves while Intel and Ferrum helped her stand. The new princess looked exactly as she used to, save for possessing royal eyes and being a centimeter or two shorter than when she entered the cocoon. Aegis looked around at the gathered changelings right as Rainbow Dash flew over to hover beside her. “Hey kiddo, how was your nap?” “Umm, very good, my queen,” Aegis replied with more than a little trepidation in her tone. “I guess.” “Here, my daughter,” Twilight levitated a head-sized pale teal crystal shaped like the center starburst of Twilight’s cutie mark. Aegis’ confusion was painfully evident on both her face and emotional aura. “Before you entered your metaphormosis, you transcribed your memories into crystals like this.” Aegis took the crystal into her magic as Twilight surrendered it. At a silent command from Rainbow, everyone else gave the new princess some room. “My memories are in that thing? Is that why I can’t remember anything before today?” Aegis’ wings buzzed at the irritating purple fluid covering her completely. Rainbow Dash made sure to hide Burny behind her back for the moment and stepped forward to speak reassuringly. “Not exactly.” She gently tapped Aegis’ head. “They never left, they’re just hiding. Before entering your pod, you said to use this one first.” “Umm, okay.” Aegis rotated the crystal in her magic to study it. Truth be told, she had no idea how to use it. A knowing glance from Twilight towards her sister gave Rainbow Dash the go ahead to gift Aegis the simple knowledge required. Aegis glanced at Rainbow as the knowledge passed between them, but silent encouragement from both queens gave her every reason to trust them. The highly familiar two lavender drones behind her also nodded towards the crystal. She looked back at the gem with a mental shrug. Well, it’s not like I have anything else to do, except shower. The crystal glowed with faint purple light as Aegis linked her mind with it. She gasped and her eyes widened as memories flooded into her: her last day as a drone, her dreams, along with her most important memories of Twilight, Rainbow, and her clutchmates. Various other crucial bits and pieces that Drone Aegis felt were critical to reestablish her personality as quickly as possible. It took a minute to fully dive into the contents of the crystal and the moment her magic left the device, Aegis fainted to the deck. Intel and Ferrum were quick to pick her back up as Twilight used her magic to scan the princess’ snout for injury. “I feared as much. Such a sharp intake of important memories would require a short reboot.” Ferrum hefted his sticky royal sister onto his back. “How long will she be out? Not another six months I hope.” Rainbow Dash let off a snarky chuckle. “Hardly. She’ll be out of it long enough for us to clean her up in the showers. She should be up around the time we finish drying her off.” In short order, the two queens and two drones got Aegis washed up and dry. Yet Aegis slept through that as well. So she was brought up to her new quarters, adjacent to Twilight and Rainbow's own in the reformed heart of the Ashes of the Phoenix: Phoenix Castle. The venerable colony ship had been broken down into pieces, save for this section. Deck plating had been reformed to convert the section to a rather plain, rectangular castle, bereft of any real exterior artwork. Rarity's plans for decorating the exterior had, sadly, never been fit into the budget. Aegis awoke on a queen sized bed an hour later. Intel was sitting at the foot of the bed while reading a book. Ferrum was passing the time oiling Riposte’s blade. Rainbow Dash and Twilight were meditating on floor cushions. The prismatic queen had taken the flamethrower off and laid it down in front of her. “Burny!” All eyes shot towards the blur of purple that bolted forward and scooped the weapon up. Aegis hugged the flamethrower tightly, nuzzling and kissing Burny all over. “I missed you so much!” Twilight Sparkle huffed in exasperation. Great, I’ve got a pyromaniac for a royal daughter. I had half hoped she’d forget that, but at least she’s happy. A supremely sour expression marred Ferrum’s features as he turned to Intel. “I can’t believe of everypony here, she goes for the flamer first.” Missing her brother’s comment, Aegis looked up to her queens. “Momma, Aunty! I’d say I missed you, but it only feels like I went into the cocoon yesterday.” Snickering all the while, Twilight wrapped her first hatchling up in a bear hug. The purple queen relished Aegis’ return to the waking world. “Well we certainly missed you.” Aegis yelped as a cyan hoof ruffed up her mane. “I figured you’d want your hot coltfriend to be the first thing you see.” Rainbow Dash joined in the hug with Intel and Ferrum joining the love buffet shortly thereafter. Aegis’ massive thirst for love was quickly slaked within seconds, but the five changelings remained in the loving embrace for over a minute before it broke. Now free of the tangle of limbs, Aegis turned to her siblings, with her eyes centering on Intel. “By, the First Mother, you finally switched back to mare!” Intel rubbed the back of her head in mild embarrassment at Aegis’ enthusiasm. “When did that happen?” “About two weeks before you went in the pod yourself. Apparently you still don’t remember that.” “Oh,” Aegis chuckled nervously. “I’m sure I left it in one of my other memory crystals. Can you tell me why you went back to your old self?” Intel’s ears flicked a bit in thought. “Well with you leaving the Jevruun Vrunningee, and my promotion to your old position, I went over our best troops to bring our squad back up to full strength since Riposte’s… retirement.” Although the pain of their beloved brother’s death had been blunted to near imperceivable levels by time and the Days of Mourning, Intel still felt reverence to the fallen was called for. “Counterspell will be taking over magical support, and Thunderfury has taken up the last spot. And since I fully champion asymmetrical arms doctrine, it didn’t make sense to have all four of us as stallions, so I switched, simple as that.” Aegis’ ears wilted slightly at the reasoning. “And here I hoped you did it for more than practicality.” Intel tilted her head briefly with a lopsided grin. Aegis hummed in contemplation. She would have turned to catch up with Ferrum, but enough of her old captain’s mindset was present that it forced her to look into the replacements. “Thunderfury? I don’t remember him.” “He’s one of my first hatchlings,” Rainbow Dash stated with fathomless pride. “He may not have had much of a chance to show it in real combat, but he’s fine addition to your old squad.” Ferrum chuckled lightly. “He’s coarse and unrefined, but he’s got your speed in spades, Aunty.” The group chatted the afternoon away and through lunch, before the needs of the hive required the attention of the queens. Before either queen could leave, Ferrum and Intel made for the door, but Aegis called out to the latter. “So, sis, now that you’re a mare again, does that mean you took your full name back?” Intel hung by the door with a smile on her face. “I admit, Intel ‘La Gence didn’t sound like a stallion’s name. But since that’s no longer a problem, then yes I will.” She smirked at Aegis’ obvious approval before turning to the queenly pair. “My queens.” As Intel ‘la Gence departed, both Twilight and Rainbow’s mood shifted to queen mode. Aegis climbed off the bed to stand before her queens in an equally serious manner. She may have only accessed a few crystals, but she could easily tell when it was time for business. “Now, Aegis,” Twilight began with a flat stern tone. “I suppose it should be obvious, but I feel it needs to be stated to punctuate the fact. Your life as a drone and bodyguard is over.” Rainbow Dash smoothly started talking as Twilight fell quiet. “You’ve got two jobs to do before you mature into a proto-queen.” “First,” Twilight continued, “you have to expand your fields of expertise. As you are undoubtedly aware, you are removed from all normal duties. I’ll be training you personally on matters of magic and civic rule.” “And while you may not think it once you finish recovering the rest of your memories,” Rainbow Dash cut with perfect timing. “You are in need of at least a cursory understanding of large scale military tactics. Not only for the day you form your own hive, but also for our current military forces. When the war breaks out in the jungle, and we expect that it will happen sooner rather than later, you’ll be my direct lieutenant.” Each task laid before her only stoked Aegis’ determination even further. She stood tall with her wings raised and her head held high. This is what I fought for. They’re not saying anything I didn’t already expect. Mother has put so much trust and faith in me to grant me royal blood. I promise you this, my queens, I will not fail you. Aegis made sure to keep her eyes fixed on which ever queen was speaking at the time. “And what is my second task?” Rainbow gave her sister a ‘this is all yours’ look and remained quiet. Twilight’s expression turned a touch harder. “I don’t know if you can tell, as you really haven’t had a chance to walk around. Your rebirth was a complete success. From my last scans of your chrysalis, I was able to grant you most of the alterations you wanted. I assume the form you wanted was in your first memory crystal.” “Oh yeah.” Aegis searched herself, and felt the new muscle memory Twilight had implanted in her. Pushing off with her forelegs, Aegis merely thought to stand on her hind legs. The muscles and bones in her legs felt stronger and thicker. She had only been barely aware of the difference until now. Even though she felt uneasy with her new posture, she could already tell her reshaped legs and backbone could handle an upright posture quite comfortably. Aegis had a stupid grin on her face at looking upon the room at such a high standing vantage point, for about half a second. Aegis was unable to compensate for a sudden shift in her balance, and face planted the ground before anyone could catch her. “Ooow!” Rainbow Dash snickered as the new princess rubbed her head with her hooves. Rainbow used her magic to help the ailing changeling sit up on her haunches. “I know flying and walking on four legs is easy, but we have no innate reference for bipedal movement, so you’re going to have to learn that on your own.” “Owwie… Well that can’t be too bad.” “I hope so,” Twilight used her magic to help her daughter back onto four hooves. She could see Aegis’ whole skeleton returning to its normal form within seconds. “Unfortunately, minotaurs don’t exactly believe in physical therapy, so we were out of luck on that end.” “Just makes life more interesting this way,” Aegis assured while trying to hide her mild ill-at-ease under several layers of excitement. “But I noticed my front hooves didn’t change at all. Wasn’t I supposed to get hands and fingers like a minotaur?” Twilight groaned out of disappointment. “There was only so much I could do in good conscience. The goal I had in mind was to grant you both quad and bipedal locomotion, but without any noticeable difference between you and any other changeling while you’re on four legs. Reworking both your skeletal structure and musculature to support both four and two legged movement was far more difficult and complicated than I originally imagined.” Twilight’s sour expression melted into a short lived grin as she bent down to inspect her daughter’s legs. It brought her no small amount of pride to see Aegis had shaped up so well. “I got the idea for toes from Spike. Despite his age, he’s shown some remarkable hoof - er well, footwork at times that I’ve never see out of a minotaur.” Her expression fell. “Sadly after multiple tests with a robotic mock up, toes were proving to be quite troublesome while you’re on four legs. So I had to leave your hooves as they are. In addition, I couldn’t give you cloven hooves, like a minotaur, without sacrificing your wall walking abilities.” Twilight’s horn glowed softly as she cast a spell to ease her daughter’s pained snout, and stood back up. “As for the front hooves, hands and fingers are criminally impossible to accomplish with alchemy. Between adjusting your musculature to reshaping your skeleton, the alchemy between those and forming hands causes far too many incompatibilities to accomplish.” Aegis looked on with wilted ears as Twilight watched her with sad eyes. “It was either bipedal locomotion, or hands and feet. I felt the former was more important than the latter. I might be able to figure it out eventually, but by the time I did, you’d have died of old age.” “You should have seen her,” Rainbow commented with subtle praise. “Sis had half the caretakers and twenty scientists tied up for two years giving you what you have. From what I remember, Granny Cadista and Yumia usually worked alone on alchemical research, but time is of the essence.” “Crazy.” Even with her spotty memory, Aegis knew her siblings were brilliant scientists. She knew her changes were far outside the norm, but had assumed it was simple for her mother to accomplish. “Well, I guess I have something to shoot for the day I can make a royal daughter of my own someday.” As Aegis studied her legs, Twilight and Rainbow glanced at each other. Aegis was broken out of her study when point Rainbow Dash piped up. “There’s only one problem with the alterations my sister’s implemented.” Aegis’ face scrunched and her wings quivered out of sudden worry. Twilight Sparkle hated to say it, but she had learned long ago to own her failures. “After Cadista came over to check my work on you…” Twilight swallowed a lump in her throat. “She discovered your genetic code is so different from the rest of us, that you are unable to access any known alchemical strains for your future brood.” Aegis’ face fell and her lip quivered bit. “Y-you mean my strain is a failure? How can I be a proper queen, let alone have functioning hive, if I can’t access different strains?!” Twilight didn’t bother trying to spread Aegis’ mounting despair across the hive mind to blunt the impact. We royals have to shoulder our decisions and their consequences. “It will be difficult, but the other races of the world get along just fine with only one general form, the minotaurs, griffins, and zebras to name a few.” “But it’s not our way,” Aegis insisted with barely contained panic. “I’d be a laughing stock!” “Our way is to adapt, as well as to evolve,” Rainbow Dash reminded her with an edge of steel. Aegis looked up at her aunt with reddening eyes. “The extent of your alterations is deep, but you are not alchemically inert. You may not be able to use any existing templates, but this is hardly unheard of among our people. Granny Caddy said there have been several cases where a successful queen had been advanced too far for currently known alchemy.” “Such as when Mother and Yumia shed their chitin in lieu of endoskeletons. Like them, you’ll have to completely rewrite alchemy from scratch to work with your particular strain.” Twilight tried to sound reassuring, yet it was having only limited success with Aegis. Maybe a joke will work? “Just be glad your expected lifespan gained a zero.” It wasn’t the end of the world, but it was close. Aegis sat on her haunches with her vision fixed on her back legs, the source of her miserable state. “I take it there’s no chance I can be reborn into a more malleable strain?” “It’s entirely possible,” Twilight admitted evenly. Just prohibitively expensive in reagents. She draped a caring hoof along her daughter’s back. “You championed this evolutionary direction for two months before I caved in. I’m sure you will regain that stance once you finish restoring your memories. As such, Rainbow and I feel it would be a disservice to you, to not give you a chance to make this work.” Aegis nodded slightly as Rainbow interjected. “And by work, we mean for your entire hive. It would be one thing to have a bunch of drones with two legs, but for this to be the baseline template for an entire hive…” Rainbow Dash sucked in air between clinched teeth. “Meh, you, my little Aegy, have proven to be inventive if nothing else. If anypony can prove your template can work as a baseline, it’d be you.” Aegis’ brow furrowed as her mother stepped back to resume fully regal posture. “Then it looks like I have work to do. How long do I have to prove this can work for a queen?” “Five, maybe six years,” Twilight answered with a definitive tone. “Even before finding out about the alchemy issue, you agreed to undergo a second rebirth into a less… radical evolution, should your alterations prove untenable.” “Huh,” Aegis searched her scant few memories. “That’s longer than you two had.” Both queens laughed at their own expense. Rainbow Dash wiped a tear away, still giggling. “You didn’t honestly think we’d push you into a one month trial period did you? ‘Cause you’ve always been a ling, it was possible to make sure you had a more natural royal maturation pace. Not to mention we would rather have you become a queen during a time of peace.” “Ah… well, that sounds perfectly reasonable. Still, considering the track record you two have, I wanted to double check,” Aegis replied with a sheepish grin. Rainbow rolled her eyes. “But that sounds more than fair to me.” She looked down at her forelegs. “I guess I can try to find something else to make up for the lack of fingers and toes.” “I have every confidence you will, my daughter. I set aside a very reasonable budget for you to do just that.” “Try not to go over it,” Rainbow added teasingly. Yet Aegis could tell she was very worried. As to what, she couldn’t tell. Twilight hummed in agreement. “For now though, the two of us have matters of state to tend to which can’t wait any longer, and you need time to learn how to walk again.” “Yeah, don’t trip up!” Rainbow snarked playfully as she started gathering mana on her horn. “I’ll send Resta up here to assist you.” Without further ado, both queens’ horns lit up and they teleported out of the room. “Can do,” Aegis said with sarcasm to match her Aunt. She looked down at her back legs with a scowl. “You two cost a ton more than I ever thought you would.” Wrapping her forelegs around the bed, Aegis forced herself to stand back up on two legs. “So I need to make sure it was worth it.” Now that Aegis was back on two legs, she took a minute to notice her legs were in the same shape of the minotaurs they were based on. “Quality work.” She could feel the untrained muscle was strong and could move quite smoothly, should she learn how to walk properly. “Even when I figure all this out,” she looked at her left fore hoof, “there’s no point to it if I can’t make hands out of you.” Aegis kept one hoof on the side of the bed and looked around her room. A workbench caught her attention. “If momma couldn’t figure out an alchemical way do that, then maybe I can get an engineer to find a mechanical answer.” A few minutes and three faceplants later, Aegis wobbled on two legs with only one hoof on the bed. Inch by agonizing inch, she slowly let go of the bed. Aegis had stood on two legs before, but only with her tail and buzzing wings to keep her steady. She couldn’t exactly get rid of her tail, but she kept her wings firmly planted against her barrel to keep from cheating. By now, her forelegs were outwardly extended, moving back and forth along with her tail to keep upright. “Well, I think mother’s improved muscle memory seems to be working.” Her balance shifted, causing her to flail wildly to keep from falling. “Maybe not as good as I had hoped.” A knock on the door and a ping over the hive mind distracted her just enough to keel over completely. Aegis firmly planted her snout into the carpeted floor. “Ah the floor, how are you my old friend?” Resta poked her head in and heard the pained princess moaning on the floor, unmoving. “Have I come at a bad time, sister?” “Noooo…” Aegis peeled her bruised nose off the floor and grabbed the bed again to stand back up. “But if this keeps up, I might need you to bandage me up.” Resta fully entered the room to stand by her royal sister’s side. “Then it’s a good thing our aunt informed me to bring a first aid kit. Her faith in this little venture is well known.” Aegis was back up and trying to find her balance again. “I guess I’ll just stay here and babysit you and catch you if you try to fall again.” “Trust me doc, I’m not tryyy!” Aegis’s miserable snout was inches from a painful revisit to the floor, but Resta’s magic brought her back up. “Heh, thanks.” “Of course, my princess.” Aegis thought there might have been a ghost of sarcasm in the medic's tone. She tried to sniff it out, but Resta concealed it well, if it was ever there to begin with. The rest of the day and the following weeks would be quite difficult indeed. In Canterlot Castle, Luna was in her chambers burning the midday oil when a thestral messenger slipped in and bowed before her scroll covered desk. “Princess Luna, I bear a message from the explorer hired for the western coasts. The seal is marked for your eyes only.” Luna’s tired eyes narrowed at the news. “Very well, hoof it over.” The Night Guard removed the scroll from his folded wing with his teeth before Luna wrapped it in her telekinesis. She promptly broke the seal and started reading. Her eyes widened at their contents, but soon settled in for playful curiosity. “Sergeant, have somepony go fetch Rolled Scroll and my sister. It seems there is a new wrinkle in the fabric of our world.” > 2: A Mechanical Solution to an Alchemical Problem > -------------------------------------------------------------------------- Princess Luna loomed in her darkened abode within Canterlot Castle. Her personal study had just barely enough candlelight to allow her to read comfortably with her heightened night vision. Overburdened bookshelves lined two of the walls while the third held the focus of her attention; a massive and detailed map of the known world. Her desk occupied the wall near the door out of an old paranoid habit of never having her back to the door for any real length of time. Celestia was seated at a small round table sipping tea, with Luna's untouched cup resting nearby. Luna was pouring over the charts and letters her field agent had sent her barely an hour ago as Celestia observed the grand map from a distance. “You know sister, I would be glad to assist you in updating the maps if you brightened the room enough for me to see my hoof in front of my face.” “The dark helps me think,” Luna mused quietly. But I could use some help to speed things along. With a brief flash of her horn, several oil lanterns floated out from one of the bookshelves and arrayed themselves to hang from empty hooks on the ceiling. Luna smirked playfully at her distracted sister and flicked the lantern on all at once, blasting the room into midday brightness. “Much better, thank you.” Celestia drank the last of her tea with Luna pouting slightly at not getting any sort of reaction out of her supposed to be blinded sister. “I have to say, this plan of yours is quite ingenious, if a bit dangerous. I only wish we could be sure that the contingency plan won’t backfire on us.” Luna’s reply was caught short by a knock on the door, followed by a thestral guard’s head poking inside. “Ambassadors Rolled Scroll and Blue Flare are waiting outside.” Luna eagerly turned away from the map at the news of the arrival of her two favorite ambassadors. “Excellent, send them in.” With a nod, the guard retreated and swung the door open wide to reveal the oddest pair of diplomats Equestria had seen in living memory. Rolled Scroll was a known sight among the royal courts, and his appearance was the principal reason why. He was effeminate to the point of being able to pass off as a mare, and did so quite often. While his manner of dress was always tactful, it wasn’t exactly welcome among the staunchly traditionalist nobility. A fact Twilight found most amusing, as such she gave her son carte blanche to dress as he wished. Only the industrial and technological power of Phoenix's Roost gave his words the heavy weight they carried among the nobility. Blue Flare by contrast was a strong and tall mare that carried a profound sense of beauty with her. She leveraged her mother-given rainbow mane to great effect to accent the bright colors of her flowing gown dress. Flare carried herself with almost artificially perfected grace. While the mannerisms of the two changelings, who always acted together, might confuse all but the wisest and most knowledgeable of the Royal Sister’s courtiers, Celestia understood them within two days of Flare’s introduction. The first to represent the drones, and the other their queens, a mystery Twilight left for others to discover. She nodded her head in respect. “Thank you for coming, ambassadors.” “A pleasure as always, your highness,” Flare purred with a wink to her lavender counterpart and a curtsy. “How might the hive be of service?” Scroll continued with his falsetto voice and a deep bow. Luna grabbed a pointing baton, but held it under her wing for now. “This will take a bit, so you might want to grab a seat.” With a nod, both changelings took the satin cushions surrounding the tea table and sat down so they could easily observe the map. Luna noticed the changelings were sitting as close to each other as possible. Celestia offered them tea, to which both accepted with gratitude. Once everyone was ready and listening, Luna levitated several scrolls from her desk. “A few years ago, I sent a pair of explorers to map out the western coastline and terrain. Unofficially, it was to investigate the rumors of ghost ships in the area. "They were ordered to instantly report anything that was out of the ordinary straight away. However, that never happened. At first, I assumed they had completed their survey of the coast without incident and simply moved on to chart the still unknown interior of the Endless Forest. "It was an expedition expected to last two years before they returned to civilization to resupply and deliver their findings.” “I take it, the due date came and went,” Blue Flare said between sips of tea. “I hope it was a simple mix up.” “That might be wishful thinking,” Celestia replied with carefully concealed unease. “From what I’ve read of the reports, we now know there’s a new civilization taking root on our western shores.” Rolled Scroll hummed inquisitively while Blue Flare’s eyes glinted at the news. Auntie Twi would love to see a new civ. “Who are they? More ponies or a new species entirely?” “A new race, and we have reason to believe they’re carnivorous.” Luna shuffled through the papers as her sister spoke before finding a few drawings and levitating them over to the drones. “So you might end up with some competition in the meat market,” Celestia teased ever so subtly. Flare took the document in her magic for both changelings to study. The parchment was torn in places, with a drop of blood or two on some of them. The drawings themselves were done in charcoal. The first few illustrations Rolled Scroll saw were separate body parts. A hastily drawn wing akin to that of a griffin barely registered to him, nor did the feline hind quarters and tail. Yet it was the simian frontal features and fascinating head that brought a curious coo out of him. The very rough sketches revealed flat faces, absurdly small eyes, and a mouth that seems too small for a carnivore. Well, it’s not like I’m a biologist. “What a strange creature indeed. Are they long lost cousins of the griffins, by chance?” “That I can’t tell you,” Luna replied with more than a little irritation. “I lost contact with my agent shortly after these missives arrived by dragon fire.” “Dragon fire?” Blue blurted out with surprise. “Those are some expensive candles, your highness.” “I’m more worried about the pony,” Luna replied with cool fire. The inexperienced drone sunk in her cushion a little at the implied reprimand. “I’m assuming he, like the explorers I sent before, was taken by these things.” “That is what I’m afraid of,” Celestia butted in smoothly to give her sister time to cool off. “We need to handle the matter delicately. We can only hope that both the explorers and the scout were unharmed.” Rolled Scroll sized up the alien creatures, but sadly there was no scale or units of measurement to go by. “I know mother would jump at the chance to visit a new species.” He chuckled darkly with a hoof over his mouth while looking at his blue counterpart. “We wouldn’t exist without mother’s scholarly curiosity about new races now would we?” Eager to put her faux pas behind her, Blue Flare jumped at the lifeline Scroll gave her. “The hive is at the ready to assist you in this matter, in whatever manner we can give.” “Glad to hear it,” Celestia replied warmly to reassure Blue, and to keep Luna from giving the drone a verbal lashing. “Now, while it is traditional for either Luna or myself to personally lead first diplomatic contact, we want to have some insurance in case these beings are unwilling to act rationally.” “In what form, if I may ask?” Scroll replied already expecting the answer to follow. Luna allowed herself a predatory grin. “Your flagship.” Sadly, that flagship was held up in dry dock for ten more days before it was declared fit for service again. Most of the seven months it had been laid up was for an overhaul and upgrade of several systems, mostly revolving around the engines and replacement cloak crystals. As a result, the ship ran much smoother, and allowed the gunners to fire accurately at moderately faster speeds. Not that any of the gun crews had time to test that, with the ship immediately heading out to the west. All that meant to Aegis is that she had steady ground onboard. She was slowly trudging along the central corridor of the Deception. She used wall walking with her front hooves to stay firmly upright on her still very shaky back legs. “Blast it. Hooves like this were never meant for two legs,” she grumbled to herself. Aegis was wearing her old uniform shirt out of sentimentality, and a way to reaffirm the reasons for her dreams of royalty. Intel was walking beside her, perfectly comfortable on four legs, and couldn’t help but snicker a little every time Aegis checked herself when the airship rocked in the wind. “You know, I could just hold you up with my magic. You keep getting blood on the floor, that stuff’s a pain to clean up you know.” “No, I got it, really!” Aegis stubbornly insisted. She gently pushed off the wall, and used her wings to stabilize on her back legs. “See?” She wobbled, but flailing her forelegs managed to save her snout another visit to the floor. “I got this.” Intel watched the princess take a few careful steps forward. Her forelegs were raised outward to keep her balance, and it seemed to be working. “Two weeks out of the shell, and you’re already taking baby steps. I might be impressed if it didn’t take us less than a day to learn to walk on four.” “Yeah, yeah, keep it up.” She finally stabilized a little better, but had to keep a hoof slightly dragging along the wall to avoid visiting the floor again. “As much as I love seeing that plot of yours, Papa said he had a surprise for me waiting in the machine shop.” “Just as well,” Intel lamented as she cantered over to Aegis’ side. “I have to check over the diplomatic contact plan with the others.” Instead of leaving right away, Intel lingered around, watching Aegis steadfastly refusing to give up on bipedal walking until she mastered it. Intel couldn’t help but to feel a sense of pride in Aegis’ royal eyes. Well, sis, you dreamed bigger than anypony I know. I hope it all works out for you. Aegis made it down to an intersection before noticing Intel was still by her side. She risked a light punch to wake her up. “Hey, you alright? I thought you had somewhere to be.” “Yeah, I’m fine…” Intel sighed with more sadness than she wanted. “It’s just that with Riposte gone, and now you’re out of the Queens’ Guard, I’ve only got Ferrum out of the original four now.” Aegis stumbled, yet she managed to deftly wrap a foreleg around Intel to rope her up into a tight hug, masking her fall. “What are you talking about? I’m still here, Intel.” The force of the hug pulled Intel full off her hooves and both crumpled in a heap. Aegis ignored the impact and just held her clutchmate even tighter. “The only difference now, is that you guard me, rather than guard beside me.” “I guess…” Intel sunk into Aegis’ hug, drawing strength from her sister’s affection. But someday you’re going to leave to form a hive of your own. “Come on girl, we don’t have time to be all mopey.” Intel seemed to react little to Aegis’ prodding, so she switched tactics and brushed a hoof across Intel’s nethers. “AAHH!” Intel half scream half moaned. She blushed furiously and looked around to find a couple other drones look at her, but kept on walking. “Damn it, Aegis, not here!” “Fine,” Aegis chuckled lightheartedly look to the right to find a broom closet and opened it with her magic. “How about I cheer you up in there?” Intel worked her jaw for a few seconds before climbing off her clutchmate. She was feeling mildly low on love, and she remembered that deepening depression was an early sign of love starvation. In the end, Intel couldn’t tell if she was sad because of the situation, or that she hadn’t fed all day. “Okay, but only for ten minutes.” “Make it twenty. I want to see what other benefits having two legs brings.” Aegis got up and leaned into Intel’s ear, and added a husky quality to her voice. “You can say you were helping me conduct research.” Intel scowled at her horny sister for a few seconds before relenting. “Fifteen, not a moment longer.” “Deal,” Aegis purred before pulling Intel into the closet. Aegis walked into the shipboard machine shop forty five minutes later with a smug grin and more than enough love to satiate her royal hunger for the day. The shop itself was a small affair, as befitting the cramped quarters onboard. A single pair of light bulbs gave more than enough light to illuminate the various machine parts laid out in painstaking organization. Each piece had a tag on it, denoting the work order. Along two of the walls was an array of drawers of various sizes no doubt holding tools waiting to be used. A painfully bright point of light was coming from the single rainbow-maned engineer in the room, who was welding something Aegis couldn’t see. The blue drone in question freaked at the sudden address and nearly dropped her welding torch. She shut it off and removed her oversized protective helmet to greet the newcomer. “Hey there, Aegis.” She grinned at the princess. “Welcome to my humble shop.” Aegis fell back down onto four legs and trotted over to give Blitz a brief hug. “Where’s papa? I thought he had something for me.” “He was called away to oversee Factory Seven’s refitting, but don’t worry I can handle things for him.” Blitz found a series of cubbyholes with scrolls in them and pulled them all down with her magic to look over each one. “No, no, no, ah here it is.” Blitz skimmed her technical notes in depth before putting them all all back except the one she was reading. She then walked over to one of the back wall lockers and opened it to reveal a set of small machines. Finding a cleared workbench, Blitz placed them down. “After hearing about the nature of your rebirth, Uncle and I got together to give you a waking up present, but it wasn’t ready until last night.” There were four boot-like objects in total. All of them had small cables and pipes running through the structure of the boot with four sets of actuators for each. “What are they?” “A mechanical solution to a biological problem!” Blitz chirped proudly. “Granny Caddy’s been making prosthetic replacement limbs for drones for about two centuries now. Ever since Aunty Twilight thought the minotaurs would be great customers, she commissioned my engineering section to make arms and fingers. So when I heard about your little experiment, Papa and my team modified that design to fit your legs. Go ahead and try them on!” “Ahh-” Aegis bumbled as one of the smaller boots was thrust onto her left foreleg. “Okay.” With her tongue sticking out the side of her mouth, Blitz grabbed a headset with a collection of magnifying lenses. Aegis sat on her rump while Blitz held the captive hoof outstretched so she could examine it. “Good, good. Aunty Twi’s predicted measurements of your hoof size were spot on. No surprise coming from the mother of OCD herself. Now, you might feel some discomfort with this next part.” Fear shot through Aegis. No pony using that phrase ever tells the truth. “What are you doing?” “Just wait,” Blitz admonished as her magic latched onto three long thin bars and slowly inserted them through the boot and into three of the five holes that Aegis’ leg possessed. A thought struck her, causing Blitz to look up to the table and levitate a cord of bound leather, and shoved it in Aegis’ mouth. “Now, you might feel a little pressure.” Aegis barely had time to even register the disgusting taste or the request before her hoof and leg felt like molten lead was pumping through her veins all the way up to her neck. “Rrrraaaaooww!!” She nearly bit the leather in half and ripped her hoof away from Blitz to cradle it as the pain spiked through each hole. She whimpered with the leather in her mouth for a bit before spitting it out. “Damn it all to Flaming Flamingo Friday! Get it oooff!” Blitz stared at the princess with stunned bemusement. “Sorry, Princess, painkillers weren’t part of the budget. Just be glad the bonding is a one time thing.” Her eyes drifted to the first aid kit by the door with a note taped on it. “Ooohhh wait a second, actually I think they were. My bad.” She flew over the sobbing princess and grabbed the kit and thrust it open, only to have Aegis bark at her. “Don’t bother, you quack!” The pain subsided slowly, sadly, she would be throbbing for a couple of days if not a week. “What was that for?” “Ah, hello! That was the finger-boot attaching to your nervous system. Don’t tell me you don’t know anything about how prosthetics work. Last I checked, you’re ex-military.” Aegis shot her a scathing glare with bloodshot eyes. Maybe I should talk about why she shouldn’t rip my head off. “We uhh, we used a corrosion resistant alloy of aluminum and quadrinix. That’s why the boot’s red. We can get it painted later.” Aegis’ mood soured the longer Blitz rambled on. Brilliant, Blitz, juuust brilliant. “Can I take this thing off?” Aegis grumbled as she tested her weight on the boot. Despite her pained nerves, the fit was otherwise snug and comfortable. “I don’t see why you’d want to,” Blitz replied with a giggle to lighten the mood. “Once your body gets used to them, they’ll give you everything Aunty Twi couldn’t. Toes to help you stand on two legs, and fingers that’ll let you grab things.” “Showering and cleaning come to mind.” Aegis’ curt reply caught the engineer up short. Yet once Blitz’s words had a chance to sink in, Aegis took the time to fully examine the metal boot. It felt slightly heavy, with most of the weight around the hoof itself. The top of the boot stopped a few centimeters from her knee, so it didn’t impede dexterity in that respect. Her concentration on the boot caused it to hiss with steam, thankfully away from her face, and four two jointed fingers popped out of the boot and curled into a fist directly in front of her hoof. They were long enough to curve around the hoof with ease. Hidden within their quadrinix alloyed casing, Aegis could hear whirring gears. Taking Aegis’ silent curiosity as an excuse to talk, Blitz bounced over to hold the boot with a hoof. “As you can see, our mana steam engines have made great progress lately. The device only needs a few bits of your mana to function, but it can get very tiring after a full day’s use. I’d say if you learned to sleep with these on, it’d retain enough of a charge to where you’d never feel the strain.” Aegis’ wings buzzed loudly with excitement, the ache in her leg forgotten. “This is awesome! I could probably fight like a minotaur in no time!” Aegis yanked her hoof back to get a closer look. She tried to flex or move the fingers, but aside from slight twitching they remained locked into a fist. “Any reason I can’t move them?” “You can, just try one at a time. You’re holding the fingers in a ball because you think like a changeling, and not a minotaur.” “Is that a fact?” Aegis replied derisively. “And how am I supposed to think like a walking steak?” Blitz just shrugged with a bemused half-grin. “I don’t know. This whole thing was your idea in the first place. I guess you could just think of the fingers like a bunch of tiny legs, or monkey tails, or something grippy.” Blitz shrugged at any further questioning along that route. Honestly, what’s with her fascination with all this whole hand thing when telekinesis is so much easier? I only took this job as a favor for her, and it was a pretty interesting challenge from an engineering standpoint. “Better than nothing, I guess.” Aegis focused on one finger at a time while Blitz grabbed the other boots and placed them on one by one. Flying ahead of the cloaked Deception, was the luxury yacht Crystal Blue puttering along at a speed that made the crew of the changeling frigate groan. The yacht was half the length of the warship behind it, but it overflowed with creature comforts the likes of which neither Twilight nor Rainbow Dash had ever expected to enjoy any time soon. With a bitterly harsh winter in full swing outside of pony controlled territory, Princess Luna and the two queens lounged on beach chairs while the entirely glass roof and one side of the wall gave a magnificent view of the snowy forest below. The room was practically a sauna from all the heating vents releasing a steady stream of steam. Twilight was sipping on a heavenly red wine, a luxury she hadn’t tasted in years thanks to the eggs. With the decision to cut egg production to one fourth, both she and Rainbow Dash thought it best to simply go full production one week a month for the time being. Alcohol had been a much needed distraction from the mounting impulse both queens suffered every day they went without laying. For Twilight at least, the book on griffin culture was a close second. With a warm blanket wrapped around her, and the large book with its wealth of information at her hooftips, Twilight was one extremely happy bug. Rainbow Dash had drowned herself in alcohol. An empty keg of Sweet Apple Acres' Hard Cider gently rocked between a small table and the sky blue queen’s head which was hanging off the side of the chair. With all of the business coming in from the Jiyya industry, Sweet Apple Acres was profitable enough to give Rainbow Dash a free lifetime supply of cider. Something she was only recently able to take advantage of now that she wasn’t ovipositing every day. Even with Twilight’s best noise dampener spell, Rainbow’s thundering snores still rattled the floor. Twilight had learned to live with it, even if it normally wasn’t anywhere near as bad as tonight. If Twilight was truly honest with herself, the snoring was a sort of white noise to her now. A sign that her sister was at peace and close by. Twilight’s concentration was broken by Captain Rourke’s scheduled update. The distraction caused her to look up at Luna who was watching the setting sun with a forlorn expression. Celestia having decided to remain behind in Canterlot, lest the sudden departure of both princesses create a panic. Twilight’s instincts wanted to probe the ebony alicorn with her empathy, but she caught herself in time. It was an unspoken agreement between the alicorns and queens that the changelings would avoid using their empathy on any one of the three princesses. For the most part it was fairly easily to abide that, but there were times when Twilight couldn’t help but to pick up on flashes of intense emotion. Now was one of those times as the specter of loneliness crept into Luna’s heart. I can’t imagine what sort of scars a thousand years on the moon would do to somepony, no matter how long they have to heal. While such stark isolation would be a nightmare to most beings, the deathly silence of space and being alone with one’s own thoughts chilled Twilight to her core. Luna was staring off into space, but Twilight kept picking up brief moments of anger and a sense of urgency. With Rainbow Dash in a drunken stupor, it fell to Twilight to comfort the stoic night princess. “How are you holding up, Luna?” Luna briefly thought about giving a non-answer. What good is that with an empath around? A waiter refilled Luna’s drink and brought over a bowl of expensive salted nuts. With a flick of a wing, Luna dismissed him, and the three guards in the room. Twilight removed her blanket and draped it over her sister after propping Rainbow’s head back onto the chair. She scooted her chair over to be next to Luna before sitting down again. From there she remained silent, allowing Luna time to gather her thoughts. “I admit I am a little concerned about contact. There seem to be powerful wards all over the western shore that makes finding my scout amidst the dreamscape akin to trying to find a single fish from the ocean.” Twilight gasped at the news. “You don’t think they’re expecting us do you?” “I have no way of knowing that for sure, Twilight Sparkle. But given the sheer size of the shrouded area, I do not believe so. It could merely be what these half-griffins normally do.” “Ahh, I see. I hope you’re right. Do you have any idea if your field agent is still alive though?” Twilight inquired carefully. She was grasping at straws to see if she could pull the mare into a conversation. “Slippery Shadow is a fine operative, and these beings must be most cunning indeed to have captured such a cautious stallion. I doubt they would intentionally kill him. In any event, I will not leave him to rot out here. Alive or dead, I am bringing him home.” “Well he had to be wearing some equipment if he fire-sent those reports to you. I find it hard to believe these beings would eat him before finding out more about us.” “Perhaps.” Luna took a slow deep breath to calm herself. I hope the original explorers are still alive as well. “One thing you should never do, Twilight Sparkle, is assume anything with a new species.” She craned her head towards the lavender queen. “That mistake is how you ended up a changeling in the first place, after all.” “Oh… right.” Awkwardness suddenly filled the room as Twilight shuffled her hooves nervously. “I’m… I’m a little surprised you’ve been able to enjoy the pampering this boat has to offer, what with your valid concerns and all.” Luna didn’t answer for a few minutes. The pregnant pause was too much for Twilight, who was about to drop the issue right as Luna spoke up. “You get used to such things, eventually. What is it the Guard often say…? ‘Hurry up and wait.’ Yes, that’s it.” Twilight nodded slowly. “Since there is nothing left for me to do until we arrive, there is little gain in brooding until I know Shadow’s fate.” A minor issue back at the hive drew Twilight’s attention away from Luna, not that the moon princess noticed. Luna was too busy going over how she would present herself to the beings she didn’t even have a name for. At least we knew what the griffins called themselves when we first officially met. She summoned her scrolls to pore over them again. Barely an hour later, both queens were snoozing on their chairs, content to spend time with Luna. The alicorn might have been touched by the companionship if she hadn’t been so focused on her work. The three royals had spent every day for the past week going over the mountain of possibilities and responses, so the queens decided to rest up early. Luna finally snapped from her scrolls on an impulse and looked at her sleeping companions. She frowned slightly at them and the night sky in the windows beyond. Just because the crew believes we’ll arrive at the coastal town in the evening, it doesn’t mean we won’t make contact before then. I better get some sleep too while I can. If things go poorly, I may not get another chance until we return to Canterlot. Before departing for her private cabin, Luna ordered the servants to keep the observation deck’s temperature comfortable for the sleeping queens. Yet like the Dreamwalker herself, Twilight Sparkle would not sleep normally this night. As her body rested, Twilight’s mind finished fabricating a small dojo within the Linkscape. The room was little more than ten meters square with hard mats for the floor and walls. The dojo was well lit, but there was no identifiable source of light. Twilight had just completed putting the finishing touches on the wall mounted clock when Aegis appeared, already standing on her hind legs. “Hey momma! You didn’t have to make the dojo for me anymore, I can handle it.” With a beaming motherly smile, Twilight swept her daughter up in a squishing hug. “You can’t blame me for wanting to dote on you.” The room was filled with giggling delight as Twilight slipped fully into mother mode. Aegis basked in her mother’s presence, content to let it last as long as possible. She could feel her mother’s pride in her, and that only made the moment that much sweeter. This was the sixth night Aegis was to spend her sleeping hours in the lucid dreaming world of the Linkscape. Each night Twilight or Rainbow Dash would craft a room for Aegis to train herself in. While this form of training did nothing for her muscles, it did wonders for her muscle memory. Normally it was a rather isolated affair. Intel or some of Aegis’ other close siblings would visit her early on, but only the royals of the hive could rest properly while also spending time in the Linkscape. As it seemed with every occasion, Twilight had to be the one to break contact. “So how’s your progress so far?” “Well, it was kinda slow for a little while, but Blitz and Papa’s gifts are making it a lot easier and a bit harder at the same time.” Twilight was about to inquire as to why, when Blitz materialized and quickly performed a formal bow to Twilight. “Good evening, Queen-Mother, Princess Aegis.” With practiced grace, Twilight slipped back into queen mode. “Evening, Blitz. I trust everything went well.” “Oh it was a complete success, my queen!” Blitz flustered before holding out a hoof. A few seconds later, one of Aegis’ mechanical hand gauntlets appeared. “A roaring success if I do say so myself.” She looked pointedly at Aegis. “At least it will be once somepony learns how to use the hand attachments properly.” “Hey, I said I was sorry.” Aegis grumbled a bit, but everyone could see there was more apology than bite to it. “It’s my first day ya know.” Twilight arched an eyebrow at the exchange, but neither young mare was willing to share. Blitz simply yawned and let her gauntlet dissolve into the air. “Yes, I know, I already forgave you, mostly. Anyway, if you’ll let me, I should go ahead and recreate them on your hooves to real world conditions.” Sharing a look with her daughter, Twilight nodded at Blitz. “Go ahead. The sooner you do, the sooner you can get some sleep.” “Amen to that.” Knowing her creation inside and out, Blitz brought each of the four gauntlets into being around Aegis’ hooves. The room was already set to mimic real world gravity and other forces as close as possible. Aegis felt her limbs go heavy one by one for an hour as Blitz worked to recreate the gauntlets in excruciating detail. The engineer knew every facet of her creation, and she wanted to make sure Aegis would too. While Twilight knew of the gauntlets, being the one to authorize its budget, she wanted to see them in use. Even if this strain doesn’t work out for a royal, it could have serious potential for a cadre of drones. With the items in their latest stage of development, Twilight took the time to study the gauntlets, particularly, the back legs. As with the front ones, the ‘foot’ gauntlets were secured in place with bars laced through Aegis’ leg holes. Instead of fingers, three metal toes arrayed out in front which reminded Twilight of Spike’s feet. A solitary and slightly larger toe completed the set on the back of each hoof. It was only when Blitz was testing them that Twilight noticed the toes would fold up and into the gauntlet when Aegis stood on all fours. “Knowing you, Aegis,” Blitz eventually piped after thoroughly inspecting her work. “You’ll end up wanting to punch and kick things before much longer, so I made sure to reinforce the joints as much as possible. But!” she barked as a manic grin started splitting Aegis’ face. “Do not, I repeat, do not hit anything with your front gauntlets unless the fingers are in the fist configuration. The reinforcement only works while they’re closed like that.” Aegis lifted her left foreleg up to inspect Blitz’s work. “Use fists to punch, eh? I think I can remember that.” “Right,” Blitz replied sardonically. “I explained everything else to you earlier. If there’s nothing else…” Aegis started walking around on all fours to get a feel for the weight. “Seems good to me.” She closed in to give Blitz a peck on the cheek and whispered softly. “How about I thank you later in private?” “Hmmm…” Blitz tapped her chin with mock contemplation. Twilight inwardly rolled her eyes and glanced away out of some shadow of embarrassment. Honestly. Mother never warned me how lecherous my kids would end up becoming, and it seems RD’s inclusion didn’t help matters at all. She was very good at disguising her discomfort as being distracted. But curbing it might end up being detrimental. I’d rather my children be overfed with love, than to possibly starve themselves, even a little, out of modesty that I guess isn’t really needed within the hive. Even with such allowances, Twilight wasn’t going to sit there as Aegis and Blitz started going at it right there in front of her. “Thank you, Blitz,” she said with a mild edge to break the two up. Aegis huffed, but meant nothing of it, while Blitz felt rather embarrassed to keep her queen waiting. “Sorry, sorry. Whelp, I’ll see you later, Aegis.” Blitz gave Twilight sad puppy dog eyes, sitting on her haunches. It was an act Twilight and Rainbow Dash knew all too well. With a playful snort, Twilight opened her forelegs to allow Blitz a chance to race forward and cling to her aunt. Aegis waited an impressive five seconds before joining in. “Alright, off to bed with you. You can check Aegis’ progress in the morning.” “Okaaaay.” Blitz dropped the sad puppy act and hoof bumped Aegis. “See you later Princess!” A moment later, Blitz vanished, leaving Twilight alone with Aegis. The atmosphere quickly shifted to all business. “Well, you’ve told me about your progress, now I want to see it. I haven’t had a chance all day.” “Oh you’re going to love these toe things.” Aegis quickly propped herself up, using a kick off with her front legs with a short wing burst to keep her balance. As soon as her stance shifted, her back gauntlets shot its three metal toes forward, giving the princess enough stability to stop using her forelegs to balance. Aegis easily fell into a rifle firing stance with her legs apart, and her hands woefully empty. “If I didn’t know any better, I’d think you rewired my brain a bit to work with toes to begin with.” She tried to show off by spinning in place, only to land flat on her rump. Twilight gave her an amused smirk as Aegis climbed back up. “Well, you get what I’m saying.” “I do, actually, and I’m glad to see you progressing. Sadly, as much as I would love to stay up all night to help you, Rainbow and I have already worked through the last four nights over this diplomatic meeting, and I don’t think I can handle another night of lucid dreaming. I’ll see you in the morning, Aegis.” Some days ago… Chirping crickets gave a deceptively peaceful backdrop to the second night Slippery Shadow twiddled his hooves in a cage adjacent to the Sphinxes’ town hall/ governor’s manor. Luna’s night sky gave the dark colored thestral some comfort. The snow on the ground was kept at bay thanks to the roaring fire pit keeping both Shadow and his guards warm in the cold winter night. The scout looked for all the world to be languishing on his back while scuffing his hooves together, yet his mind was far from inactive. Three stationary guards around me at all times, plus two of the flying types constantly patrolling the air. They already have a few logging camps and a stable perimeter far outside the city. Do they fear an escape attempt this much, or are they always like this? His eyes wandered to the closest guard, a wingless female if his estimation was accurate. Reminds me of Bertha, Spirit of Strength. ‘Bertha’ was eyeing the stallion closely. The hungry glint in her eye, and the runed morning star she held did a fine job of planting a cold pit of fear in him. Unlike the lost ones, these beings had the cold calculating intelligence of a sapient predator. Shadow tried to nonchalantly look away, but something told him she knew it was out of fear. Explore the world I said, it’ll be fun to see what the future brought! Bah… maybe I should have taken Queen Twilight Sparkle’s offer to stay with the hive instead. Sure she may be a freakish bug thing, but she’s still a recognized Imperial descendent. Neither Celestia or Luna know or even care of the old ways. He grumbled as the smell of cooked meat over a fire reach him from an open window of the manor. I wouldn’t mind dying in combat. The executioner’s block isn’t exactly what I had planned though, but at least that would have some modicum of respect. I got a super bad feeling about these – whatever they are. How long are they going to let me marinate in my own fear before these bastardized gryphons eat me? With the guards keeping such a close eye on him, Shadow groaned and tried to sleep on the pile of straw he had for a bed. At least it’s dry after yesterday’s rain. Yet before he could try to get some sleep, two wingless soldiers exited the backdoor of the manor and talked briefly to the guards. Shadow readied himself for anything as the group moved over to his cage door. “Ge’ta!” the one with gold trimmed armor commanded. She jabbed a paw at the metal collar and chain in her possession. “Fel da lerma foosh.” Taking his sweet time, Shadow slowly stood up and stretched to pop his joints. “Yeah, yeah, hold your oats.” While he had not been tortured thus far, Shadow didn’t want to test his hosts’ hospitality, so he jumped outside and presented his neck for the collar to be slapped on. “Go on girly, I know your knickers are in a bunch. A bit too big for my tastes though.” The lead guard briskly applied the restraint before starting to pull him towards the manor’s rear entrance. The interior was much like he remembered it the first time he’d been brought here. Statues big and small were scattered about in strategic locations. All of them were painted in a fresco style with pleasing colors. Without his soft shoes, Shadow was painfully aware of his loud hooves as opposed to the nearly silent paws of the feathered felines surrounding him. He was brought into the main throne room where Thaddaeus stood beside Governor Ventras’ seat of power. The governor and his majordomo had spent a few hours each personally studying the stallion. Between them and the guards, Shadow been able to pick up on their names. The Majordomo had a small table in front of him, a large blank scroll completely blanketing its surface. Thaddaeus was sitting on his haunches with his forepaws shifted into hands. His left held a black inkpot while the right held a thin brush. Shadow was entranced by the sphinx’s chanting as he wrote onto the air itself. Foreign runes of black ink hung in the air, waiting for the incantation to finish. The stallion was placed on a simple mat in front of Ventras who was lording over his wooden throne. With a wave of his paw, the guards removed the pony’s restraints. That fireplace doesn’t look like it’s for cooking. I hope this behemoth doesn’t like his food raw… or still alive. Try as he might, Shadow couldn’t stop his terror from leaking through, earning him a few contemptible glances from the ten guards surrounding the room. Ventras silently studied Shadow while one of the guards jabbed Shadow to get him to look at her. “Valus!” the guard commander barked. She moved her paw from the base of her throat and sweeping out through her mouth. “Valus!” “Oh, so you want me to speak?” That got her to stop, and give a mildly pleased look. “Well why didn’t you say so? I love to talk! Let me tell you something else. The old language of the Moonlit Empire was so damned flowery it drove everyone I knew crazy, so I got speech lessons from an old bean name Earl Grey. Dapper fellow, let me tell you. Physically anyway, not in speech, but it was good enough for me to blend into the modern world better, let me tell you what. "So yeah, apparently you guys can’t understand me, but hey, you’re not telling me to shut up so I was wonder if you guys have a court jester position open, by chance? It's degrading, but its healthier than being on the menu, am I right?” Shadow paused briefly to notice the ink floating around Thaddaeus was flowing from the inkwell and onto the page, the more he spoke. He chose to ignore it to keep his hosts happy. “You want me tell you about the Labors of Marecules? Great heroine if I do say so myself. It all started with a bout of insanity.” Ever since Shadow was a little colt he loved the stories the city elders used to tell, and he had felt an itch to find a listening audience for years. Granted, none of the sphinxes could understand him, but if they wanted him to speak, then by golly he would speak. He did so for hours, on and on he went about the epic tale of Marecules. He even went so far as to act out his favorite parts, only to be prodded by the butt of a spear if he ventured beyond the mat. Despite his stoic outwardly appearance, Ventras had to admit he rather enjoyed the comical dramatic little pony. He held no fear for the dark brown stallion, on the contrary, he was feeling rather attached to the amusing creature. It helped that Equestrian sounded quite melodious, rather than the gruff tongue of the sphinxes. “So there she was! Staring down the fifty headed dog-beast with nothing more than her wits about her!” “Git!” one of the guards commanded with a halting gesture. “Ferus malin.” Shadow stood there with profound sadness in his eyes. “But I was just getting to the best part.” “Git!” she repeated more forcefully. He slumped on his mat, and looked to Thaddeus who now had forty scrolls around him. He said something to Ventras who climbed off his throne while trying to hide the crick in his back from sitting too long. A few attendants shuffled into the room and helped scatter the scrolls all around Ventras, then everyone pulled back to give him space. Shadow watched with intense curiosity as Ventras shifted his front paws into hands, and opening a nearby bag, rubbed powder all over his arms. After closing the bag, he rubbed his hands and made a sweeping motion to cast the powder all over top of the scrolls. He started chanting while making a strange sign with his fingers interlocked with each other to form a triangle. Ventras chanted quietly at first, slowly growing louder until he peaked right above a normal speaking voice. The ink from the scrolls started to float up to surround the governor. Finally, he started noisily inhaling the ink which quickly fled into his mouth. That is the weirdest magic I’ve ever seen, and I even saw arcanum in action once. Shadow got a chill up his spine when Ventras seemed to swallow the mass of ink. A few moments later, he looked Shadow dead in the eyes speaking Equish in the thestral's accent. “So, this is the tongue of prey. How very… interesting.” “Ohhh, heebe jeebe you know Equestrian.” Shadow’s ears fell flat at Ventras’ knowing toothy grin. “Is that what you call yourselves? Or just your language?” Ventras slowly, methodically advanced on Shadow. “Know that I am Ventras, First son of Felnarious, and patriarch of this house.” Shadow was familiar enough with predators to know to keep from showing too much weakness. Maybe not sapient predators, but the analogy probably fit well enough. He tried and failed to prop his ears back to their normal posture. “I’m ahh, my name is Slippery Shadow these days. Not many seem to like the old naming conventions sadly.” The governor took notice of the odd excuse, it would be a question he would ask later. Do these beings even have titles, or are they that culturally backwards? “Good, cooperation will see you live another day. Now, Slippery Shadow, you’re going to tell me all about your people and where you come from, and in return I’ll let you have better accommodations than the cage outside.” “Oh?” Shadow’s ears perked right back up again. “Well, if you really want to know all about the Moonlit Empire, then I simply have to tell you about the Labors of Marecules. An absolute need-to-know, but ahh…” His stomach growled noisily, and his throat was dry from regaling folklore for hours. “Any chance I can get some food? Maybe I could tell you all about it over dinner?” He plastered the biggest friendliest smile his fang filled mouth could produce. They’re cat things. I’m sure fangs look fine to them. Ventras mulled over the idea for a moment before letting off a belly laugh. “You want to dine with us?! Very well then, grass-eater, provide tonight’s entertainment, and you shall live quite comfortably within my walls.” He switched to his native language. “Thaddeus, prepare a proper room for our guest, but watch him carefully. If he tries to run, throw him back in the cage.” “At once, Governor.” He barked a few commands and sent the servants scurrying. Shadow inwardly smirked at how easily it was to exploit the ignorance of others. Such a pity you never asked about Equestria or Phoenix's Roost. The next several days would be filled with wild tales and outdated strategic information about Shadow’s old homeland, much to his profound amusement. > 3: First Contact > -------------------------------------------------------------------------- The lands surrounding the sphinx colony were blanketed in snow, and the blizzard was determined it stayed that way. Logging Center Flex was just one of dozens hemming the forest down to size, to make way for the latest arriving colonists set to head inland within the week. It was situated along a wide moderately fast flowing river, perfect for sending logs downstream for processing. The overseer of one such logging team was busy shouting a rhythmic cadence as three winged sphinxes stood on the end of a clearing with four wingless sphinxes with axes standing at the ready. The winged spellweavers were hovering just off the ground as they made sweep and pulling motions with their forelimbs, churning the earth around a particularly large tree. “Clear!” shouted the overseer, the weavers forced rock and dirt away from the roots of the tree, weakening it's hold. “Push!” he ordered with a sense of urgency. The rock and dirt that was removed, now floated up and pushed on the tree. “Chop!” The lumberjacks moved in on the exposed roots, clearing out each scrap of wood as far from the trunk as possible. Over the course of five minutes, the tree gave off a deep cracking groan as the high angled push, coupled with the missing roots, finally toppled the wooden ancient. Further orders were not needed from the overseer. The earth shapers moved on to another tree while the lumberjacks processed the fallen tree. A second team of woodsmen moved in to assist the magi. Behind them all were a small army of foresters and civic planners bundled up and huddling against the cold with a few campfires spread around camp. The planners mapped out where future roads and buildings would be placed while the foresters replanted local tree seeds and uprooted saplings. The need for wood was massive, and would only grow as winter pressed on and as the ships with inbound colonists increased with every convoy. Every scrap of wood from the strong heartwood, to the roots themselves, were consumed by the burgeoning colony, nothing was wasted. Aside from the various structures and sawmills around the camp, situated right in the middle was arguably the most critical structure to the entire frontier; the pub. Well, for morale at least. The establishment was the size of a large house, and on this cold snow covered afternoon, well over three dozen workers and a detachment of soldiers were engaging in getting drunk under the table. It was perhaps the only pastime that transcended species and cultures. While there was a standing order to be on the lookout for more natives, with the exception of Slippery Shadow, not a single soul had even been spotted, let alone found. With no other intelligent natives to check the expansionist sphinxes, the land seemed ripe for the picking. While the Federation was slow to move inland, they were rapidly spreading out along the coast thanks to their strong maritime culture and the sheer overabundance of fish and other large marine animals. The pub was in the middle of a drinking song about the last war ten years ago when a rather young winged scout burst through the front door with a frantic look on his face. “Legionary!” He cursed the fact that his commanding officer wasn’t at the Guard post. The bitterly cold blizzard slammed the door wide open, sending the nearby patrons into growling belligerence. “Shut that door before I plant your skull in the ground!” The scout ignored further spite from the patrons when he saw his commander on the second floor awning leaning against the railing. The scout shut the door and bolted up to his commander and threw up a salute. “Legionary, I spotted more natives to the east roughly ten miles out. My wingmate is keeping an eye on them now.” The officer both cursed and thanked the fact he had yet to start drinking today. “More of them?” The scout nodded. “Good. Evocati,” he barked at the NCO who was sitting at the nearest table. “Gather a search and recover party. We have more guests to capture for the governor.” “On it, sir!” Yet before the evocati could give orders to the surrounding soldiers, the scout shouted to get both the officer and the NCO’s attention. “Actually, sirs, we need to bring this to the governor’s attention straight away. I don’t think we’re equipped for this.” “Equipped for what?” the Legionary growled earnestly. “Spit it out!” “We don’t know if they’re the same natives we’ve captured so far because there’s a flying boat headed our way, held aloft by a giant balloon.” The NCO scoffed at the notion. “A flying boat you say?” he chuckled deeply. “On a balloon of all things? I thought you scouts were sober by choice. You haven’t suddenly discovered the wonders of scotch have you, boy?” The officer had more faith in the scout corps than his underling. “What kind of boat? Are you sure it wasn’t one of our warsmiths testing a new invention? There’s always at least one trying to get a flying machine to work.” “Not a chance, sir. It’s on straight course coming in from the east. It even has flags that don’t match up with any of the warsmith families that have immigrated here.” He changed a paw into a hand to fish out a hastily drawn picture of two winged and horned creatures circling a sun and moon. The frantic look on the scout’s face was disconcerting enough already, the figures on the flag looked too much like the prey they had already captured so far. The idea of a flying boat spoke of technological or magical power none of them expected from the natives, and that alone was something the governor needed to know as soon as possible. “Go to the outpost and get a marathoner to send word of this.” “As you say, sir,” the scout said hastily before zipping off, again ignoring cries of indignation at leaving the door open. With his commander taking such a believing stance, the evocati couldn’t help but to rethink his options. “What are your orders, Legionary?” “Gather every abled body you can find. We don’t have the numbers here in camp to make a show of force, but we can at least prepare for a fight. Send word to the other Legion outposts and to Chevalier Headquarters. We’ll need our best at the front.” As for me, I need to see this air-boat for myself. “You think they noticed us yet?” Rainbow Dash asked aloud sarcastically as she, her sister, and Luna watched sphinxes swarm on the ground and at a wide berth in the air. The Crystal Blue was passing over the logging center with no intention on coming to a halt until it reached the colonial capital. They had best-guessed their way so far, but now the road and log filled river gave them a straight run to the coastal town that was just barely visible in the distance. Tittering a little with a hoof to her mouth, Twilight stopped all pretense of regality and plastered her face to the glass for a closer look. “No. I think we might need to sound the trumpets first. You know, test their auditory senses.” Rainbow arched a mildly exasperated eyebrow at that. “You could just say ears.” “Ahh, but what if they have more than just ears? What if their whole body can pick up sound!? This is just too much!” Rainbow Dash was listening in, and groaned at the over the top exuberance from Twilight. For Luna’s sake, she’s bouncing on her hooftips like a school filly. You’d think the trade convoy attack that started this whole ‘ling’ thing would have her acting more like Rarity or Fluttershy. Rainbow Dash dismissed her sister stealing a pair of binoculars with an eye roll to focus on security concerns. A small part of her was actually quite touched that Twilight trusted her so completely with everyone’s safety. The new head of the Jevruun Vrunningee was fully geared up along with two squads of eight drones each, and twice that number in royal guards. Unlike the royals one deck above them, the pony and changeling soldiers remained hidden behind the wooden deck. Reflective portholes allowed eight of them to watch the sphinxes outside without fear of discovery. Of the sixteen drones, half were of Rainbow Dash’s brood. It was a clear declaration that both queens shared power. Intel watched them, seeing the excited tension race through them. Every last one of Twilight’s drones here were veterans of Rookhaven, and a few other small skirmishes with probing attacks by other queens. Thunderfury was the only blue changeling to experience real, albeit brief, combat along the railroad between Stripped Gear and Ponyville. That fight’s the very reason he’s in my squad to begin with, Intel mused. She briefly spoke to the greater bulk of her soldiers on the cloaked ship. Good, they don’t seem to be noticing the Deception at all. Let’s hope they don’t give us a reason to make it noticeable. As the luxury yacht puttered along with the western ocean becoming more pronounced on the horizon, the sphinxes started to vastly grow in number around the Crystal Blue. Through her looking glass, Rainbow Dash spotted many armored sphinxes either being ordered closer, or were working up the nerve to close in. Not a single airship in sight. Did we slip through the net, or do they not have them at all? Another matter she noticed was that dozens of the half-griffin things had spyglasses as well. “Can they see us through the glass?” “No,” Luna replied evenly while keeping her eyes on the town that was still off in the distance. “This ship is named Crystal Blue due to how the glass dome looks like from the outside. They won’t know what we look like until we step outside.” “Ummm,” Twilight grinned sheepishly at Luna’s oversight. “Aren’t we flying the Equestrian flag? That has both you and your sister prominently displayed on there, after all.” Luna let the slight embarrassment roll off her withers. “By the time they figure that out, we’ll have already revealed ourselves so I doubt that matters.” Twilight let the matter with Luna fall away. The yacht steamed ahead for another hour straight towards the harbor town until a living wall of two hundred fliers formed in front of the ship. With so much attention focused on the Crystal Blue, the Deception climbed four hundred meters above to keep any nosy sphinxes from accidently flying into the cloak bubble. Not wishing to provoke them further, the Crystal Blue came to a full stop half a kilometer in front of the wall of fliers. A large procession walked out along the road with tall blue flags mounted on an open carriage pulled by a brown beast of burden akin to a rhinoceros that had far too many horns all over its body. Several more sphinxes carried family coat of arms around the carriage. With so many warriors in both the air and on the ground, Ventras waved off any further escorts. From her perch in the observatory, Luna turned to the queens and an earth pony aide. “Looks like we have the newcomer leader’s attention. Shall we?” Rainbow Dash glanced at her sister with a playful smirk. “No sense in making our guests wait.” Within short order, the alicorn, both queens, and one changeling princess moved down to the chariot hangar, where a team of four pegasi were already hitched up and waiting for them. As soon as the bay doors opened, and the chariot departed, the Royal Guard and Queens’ Guard flew out right behind them, numbering a total of forty nine escorts. A thrill of excitement coursed through Rainbow Dash at the sight of so many creatures that reminded her so much of her old friend, Gilda. “Say, Twilight. How are we going to be able to talk to these guys? Last I checked, your translator spell needed hours to get simple phrases.” “Let me handle that,” Luna answered for her. “Despite my looks, I’m a rather accomplished linguist myself.” She didn’t afford herself a smile. The tension of the moment coupled with Shadow and the explorers’ fate killed any good humor she had. The cloud of sphinxes moved to stand or hover behind the virtual line that Ventras formed as he exited the carriage with his majordomo and daughter following up behind him. None of them had time to dress more formally. Rasua barely had time to remove her protective blacksmithing clothing, and was reduced to wearing a soot covered wooly brown blouse with a heavy black jacket on to snuff out the cold. Thaddaeus was the lucky one, as he was already wearing very warm clothing in the form of a furry overcoat. Ventras wore a long sleeved white topped and red bottomed hakama, which Twilight took for something similar to Rarity’s dresses, except for the very masculine style. At least I think the big one’s male. By contrast, the royals were wearing somewhat matching wind resistant form fitting clothing with Luna’s regalia sitting on top. Twilight’s warm clothing was navy blue with Rainbow’s being a hue of many different colors. Aegis was certainly glad one of the anchor rods in each gauntlet had a warming spell to keep the cold metal from freezing her hooves. Having no faith in her ability to walk upright on snow, Aegis remained on all fours. The four of them disembarked the large chariot with all of the Guard staying behind to mimic the sphinxes’ forbearance. One of the military scouts glided down and quickly spoke a few words with Ventras before flying off again. The royals and governor closed the hundred meter distance between their respective carriages. It was only now that both parties could truly size each other up. Thaddeus and Ventras were eye level with the queens, while Resua easily matched Luna’s height. Aegis, who was currently two inches shorter than her original self, felt rather dwarfed by everyone. Luna would have made her sister proud with her emotionless regal posture, but she couldn’t shake the rather disturbing superior look the center newcomer was not even bothering to hide. He must be feeling quite comfortable with having five times our soldiers. How telling. The whole time both parties were walking towards each other, everyone was studying each other intently. With the distance closed to speak comfortably with the windy blizzard now slowing down, Luna prepared her translation spell, only for Ventras to speak in nearly perfect Equish, catching them off guard. “I greet you, Princess Luna of the Moonlit Empire. I, Ventras Talarn, High Governor of the Sphinx Federation, welcomes you to our colony; Stratholme.” Ventras concealed his mirth at the royals’ surprise, but his hunter’s eyes picked up on Luna hiding some humor as well. “I see you have me at a slight disadvantage.” Mentally smiling at the misinformation, Luna made no effort to correct Ventras’ error. “Since you know of me, please allow me to introduce my close friends and allies, the Sister Queens of the changeling city-state Phoenix's Roost. Presenting Queen Twilight Sparkle," she said as she gestured to Twilight. Twilight gave a slight nod and friendly smile. “A pleasure to make your acquaintance.” “Likewise, your majesty.” Ventras and the others internally scoffed at the notion of a monarchy. Such a strange attempt to fix a primitive form of government. It doesn’t matter if it’s one queen or two, a nation should not be ruled by the whims of so few. "And to her right is her sister, Queen Rainbow Dash." Ventras and Rainbow locked eyes for a moment before anyone spoke further. He had briefly done the same with Twilight, and what he saw in her eyes confounded him. What is with that gaze… Are they warrior-queens, or iron fisted rulers? “You and your allies are welcome, Queen Rainbow Dash.” Funny thing, since you’re welcoming us to Equestrian land. Rainbow bit down on that reply before it could leave her lips. “Ventras,” she replied tactlessly. Cultural barriers were not enough to hide her obvious distaste for him. “Lastly, their heir, Princess Aegis Altair.” By the First Mother, why did I spend all my time learning to walk instead of first contact training. Oh right, there wasn’t any. Aegis brought a hoof to her mouth to cough nervously. “It is an honor to meet you.” Ventras snorted with a mirthless grin. “Yes, it is. Let me introduce my Majordomo, Thaddaeus Windscar, and my daughter, Rasua Talarn." “It is a most welcome honor to be among the first of our kind to greet the leaders of another.” Rasua bowed a little more deeply than Ventras would have allowed towards prey. Yet she saw something in the pony and former ponies’ stance that gave her a torrent of instinctual signals, some of them were conflicting. If she had to pin that feeling down to any one thing, it would be the comfortable confidence that none of the so called ‘prey’ should possess. She vastly preferred to have actual information on the natives before making a judgement call, but any huntress worth her salt knew to trust their instincts. They are not prey. I hope father realizes that before he does something the Federation will regret. Thaddaeus may not have had Rasua’s insight on the true nature of the foreign leaders in front of him, but he saw what he could only surmise to be a weapon on Aegis’ back. During the introductions, he tried to look at the changeling and pony guards’ weapons. Even from a distance of a hundred meters, he could see the ponies had a small variety of weapons, but they were mostly spears and short swords, ultimately nothing he was concerned about in the least. However, a number of changelings carried weapons that were unmistakable to him. He had studied Trail Mix’s musket long enough to recognize firearms at a glance. Most sphinxes would mistake the rifles for headless spears or quarterstaffs, but one look at Aegis’ unusual weapon told him that these hole riddled creatures were the ones to be cautious about above all others. He smoothly returned to the conversation when attention shifted to him. “I would be honored to extend our hospitality to you all.” He wanted to say more in terms of maintaining peace, but it was not his place. Ventras turned and frowned at his majordomo’s genuine courtesy. While Rasua could hide her ill-at-ease well enough against the natives, she utterly failed to do so against her father. Why are they so afraid of prey? He didn’t like it one bit. We are the predators, not them. Perhaps everyone needs to be reminded of that. Instead of offering the Equestrians passage to his warm manor, the aging governor sought to reaffirm everyone’s position as predator and prey. Tradition and honor demanded as such. This is not for just personal honor, but for the entire Federation! He returned his eyes to Luna with a slick smile. He had been too focused on the rulers themselves to notice the drones’ equipment. “So, for what purpose do you come before us?” Rainbow Dash gave her sister a questioning look. she queried with more than a little distaste for the governor. Twilight replied calmly. Being ignorant of the exchange, Luna spoke. “I have come to secure the release of my explorers, and to negotiate a treaty regarding your seizure of our land.” “Your land?” That was the perfect angle to use for Ventras to assert everyone’s respective roles. He let a brief howling wind pass before speaking with carefully crafted superior civility. “We were unaware that anyone claimed these lands, seeing how there was no one to be found when we landed here. We’ve barely seen a handful of your people over the years we've been settled here.” He turned to the changelings. “And none of yours.” “That is why I’m here to negotiate a treaty, rather than use less… pleasant means of persuasion.” Luna fully believed that a careful mix of courtesy and show of force was needed for any first stage negotiations. The griffins and minotaurs know full well of Equestria’s armed forces, which were now backed by the technological might of the sisters’ hive. Unfortunately that was only long after bloody wars with both species that ended far too many lives than either alicorn thought necessary. Our task here today is to make sure a war never happens. Luna’s choice of words regarding violence was extremely poor. If this had been a few months later when both races got to know each other better, it would have been just fine, but Ventras and every other sphinx within earshot saw it as a sign of weakness. While his daughter and majordomo assumed it was cultural ignorance, Ventras was operating under the lies and half-truths Slippery Shadow had been feeding him, along with his political obligations to tradition and the Federation. As a result, he took the sign of weakness at face value. It didn’t help the fact that prey had just threatened a predator with violence. Ventras’ expression became as cold as the blizzard snow. “I am more than willing to return your explorer as a sign of good faith, but if this was truly your land, then you should have properly claimed it as such with a physical presence. Why should we abide any treaty when you are incapable of enforcing your claim?” Rasua nearly freaked at the insult her father dropped on the equines. Why is he antagonizing them so much!? This isn’t a rival faction that we know the strength of. They could have an army of millions for all we know! Rainbow Dash wanted to step forward, but Twilight held her back with a hoof. “My good governor,” Twilight said placatingly. “We’re all reasonable, civil-minded people.” Her tone grew friendlier as her internal diplomat came out in full. “How about we talk about each other’s position before deciding on anything further?” Thaddaeus noticed the changeling warriors fidgeting with their weapons, moving them from their backs to being ready to use. He practically jumped at the chance when Ventras leaned towards him, gesturing for his council. He tried his damnedest to keep the edge of panic off his tongue. “I highly suggest we at least agree to talk with them, old friend. There is something highly unsettling about the queens that I can’t put my finger on,” he whispered in the off chance the royals might know their language. “Do not be fooled by deception, Thaddaeus. Does not the Flarehound burn his surroundings to make it seem like there are more of them? We need only to assert our position of power to dictate the terms of this treaty.” We can always send the army over for conquest later. “I think it unwise, my lord.” Ventras nearly followed Thaddaeus’ warning in the face of such formal address, yet he was certain to be correct. Ventras faced an increasingly impatient Luna. She may be the Princess of the Night, but she still hated the cold. Rainbow Dash was scant inches from pushing her way past sister’s hoof, and Twilight was equally close to unleashing her. “Very well, I grant you and your allies free passage through my city for the duration of the talks, and I will still release your explorer as previously mentioned.” The royals picked up on the singular version of ‘explorer’ and hoped that it was due to a miscommunication. “But let us not forget what roles we truly play here,” he said with a dangerous edge. “My soldiers outnumber yours five to one, and while impressive, your flying boat has no weapons at all, does it? “So if anyone should worry about less pleasant forms of negotiation, it will not be us.” All Rainbow needed to do at that point was to glance at her sister’s eyes for the hoof to fall. Rainbow flashed the wicked smile of a beast let out of its cage. “Oh, I guarantee it will be you, buddy. We changelings know our role quite well. Observe.” Within seconds, a barren hill one kilometer to Rainbow’s left disappeared in a collection of fireballs as the Deception unleashed a full broadside. The concussive force of the blasts was so strong that they could be felt by the negotiators. Every sphinx in the area recoiled at the sudden violence, with some dropping out of the air from sheer shock. Their first reaction was to look towards the Crystal Blue, but it was the hanging mass of gunmetal grey steel standing out in stark contrast to the white out of the blizzard. The warship seemed to warp into reality as the very air twisted and squirmed around thanks to the attack destabilizing the cloaking field. The vessel was triple the size of the yacht in front of it, and kept everyone’s gaze fixed upward. The Deception was hanging at a steep tilt, with its top and bottom guns still smoking from the display of firepower. It rolled back over to hover normally and started to descend downward as the Crystal Blue moved out of the way. The warship’s four main batteries aimed towards the ocean with blanks and fired for effect, driving home that the steel monster demanded center stage. Twilight allowed her sister to step to the front of the Equestrians to confront Ventras directly. When her movement grabbed his attention, she made a dramatic display to hold her hoof out towards the diving warship in a halting motion. Much to Ventras’ astonishment, without uttering a word, Rainbow Dash commanded the airship to level off and remain at the Crystal Blue’s side. “Now, we can either do things Twilight and Luna’s way, or we can do it my way.” Rainbow let a large fang filled grin show just how much she was begging for Ventras to give her a reason to do more than flatten hills. “Don’t hit the ling hive, Stocky. You wouldn’t like us when we’re angry.” The moment she finished speaking, half of the Jevruun Vrunningee ignited their flamethrowers and sent off a full ten second stream of fire in front of them to spell out “Queen Rainbow Dash was here” scorched in the earth. Rainbow Dash let the burning oil give the sphinxes some idea on how much a conflict would cost them. Luna suppressed a scowl at Rainbow’s display though most of that ire was directed at the need for it at all. Can’t say I’m a fan of gunboat diplomacy, but sometimes it’s the only way. Twilight Sparkle kept her expression neutral throughout it all. One of her half-puppeted drones allowed her to see the display from onboard the Deception. Rainbow chuckled back. Twilight admonished teasingly. Ventras couldn’t believe what he was seeing from Rainbow Dash. Inconceivable. Whatever these changelings are… they are not prey. It seems I vastly underestimated Slippery Shadow. With the realization that he was operating with false information, Ventras tried to save face with a stoic tone of voice. “I concede the position of strength to you.” He bowed curtly, prompting his majordomo and daughter to do the same. Unlike Ventras, the other two breathed sighs of relief that these beings prefered peace. “Might we retire out of this blizzard and begin talks in earnest?” Thaddaeus and Rasua braced for the response to follow. Rainbow’s iron stare at Ventras ended when she looked backwards at Twilight, seemingly at an unheard request. Without saying a word to the sphinxes, Rainbow Dash backed off to allow Twilight to take her place. The sphinxes were used to body language, but the changelings appeared to take it three steps higher. Unlike her sister, Twilight Sparkle maintained a friendly face with a beaming smile. “I believe that would be an excellent course of action. Understanding breeds camaraderie, and with camaraderie, peace and friendship.” “I agree. It is late, how about we begin over a meal?” Luna piped in with just enough urgency to get things moving, but without sounding too impatient. Hopefully we can avoid such vulgar displays in the future. All the way back in Canterlot, Celestia’s head was pounding from a massive headache as Blue Flare continued giving her a play-by-play recount of first contact with the Federation. A servant dropped some aspirin in her tea before Celestia downed in it one go. “I must say, Blue, your mother has a certain flair for the theatrics I never really expected to see in her.” “In her defense,” Blue Flare said after a polite hoof-covered titter, “it seems to have done the trick. Everypony’s moving on to talk inside the coastal town.” “Be that as it may,” Celestia started, only to be stopped short by a discreet knock on the door. “Yes?” A guard poked his head in. “Princess Celestia, Bean Counter is here to discuss the rearmament of the Night Guard.” Celestia suppressed a sigh, and instead gave the world her best regal gentle smile. “Is it so late already?” She looked outside to find the sun would be setting soon, and that she and her sister had their daily dance to do. “Ambassador, please keep me apprised of any further developments.” “Of course, your highness.” Blue Flare bowed deeply with a warm smile of her own. Like Rolled Scroll, she loved to serve both her queens and the princesses alike. Truth be told, both drones played poker to see who would be the one to have the privilege of keeping Celestia apprised of the situation. With the dismissal, she cantered towards the door right as the guard swung it open. “Barring any emergencies, I’ll have my report ready for you first thing in the morning.” Hiding among the freshly planted saplings, heedless of the bitter cold blasting against its shell, was a changeling drone who had witnessed everything that had just transpired between the Equestrians and Federation. This breed in particular thrived in winter. The scout was not alone, as every single hive had at least one drone always watching the Deception. Normally it was insanely difficult once the warship’s cloak was active, but the arrival of the Crystal Blue made tracking the queens’ movements trival. More than one had been spotted by the warship’s ever vigilant observers, and subsequently killed, but that was why there was always more than one spy. The queen currently puppeting the drone snorted in approval after both parties were retreating to the coast town. You did well to hide your vessel from these newcomers, but it was not difficult at all to follow the pony ship. “If both queens are here along with their warship, then the time to strike has come at last. The frigate is too far away to respond in time.” The queen left the scout’s body with orders to keep watch. I must inform my allies that the Culling has begun. > 4: Meet and Greet > -------------------------------------------------------------------------- Stratholme was a thriving boomtown when Spinning Compass and her husband first discovered it, and by the time Twilight set hoof within its boundaries the city had tripled in size. The prospect of an untamed land with government subsidized sea travel to all colonists coupled with the seclusion a new continent offered caused the city to overflow with people of all walks of life. While the city proceeded to grow well past the ring of hills that served as a natural wall, vast stretches of dock homes and warehouses began to crowd the shallow waters surrounding the natural harbor. Twilight felt waves of powerful magic emanating from three large stone towers located at the far edge of the docks. As to what they were for, she couldn’t tell without a closer inspection. Ventras was already profoundly embarrassed from Rainbow Dash’s display of technological power shaming him into conceding the position of power to the natives. That shame was compounded by the presence of sphinx citizens crowding the streets and air to gaze upon the parade of VIPs along the road and the two strange airships above. As if the echoing thunderclaps didn’t cause enough chaos, word among those who had witnessed the display of power spread like wildfire, and the story of the destroyer sized warship materializing out of thin air was on everyone’s lips. Twilight sat in the Royal Guard drawn carriage with her sister and Luna at her side as Ventras and his escorts guided them towards his Governor’s Manor. The sights and sounds of so many strange new onlookers sent the scholar in her flying into a tizzy as she allowed a filly version of herself to squeal for joy in a private Linkscape. That was the only way she was going to keep from doing the same thing in the real world. Rainbow Dash was just eating up all the attention. Her prismatic mane already set her apart from the rest of the royals, and the rumormill identified her as the one who commanded the steel behemoth in the air thanks to word of mouth. Rainbow even waved at her “adoring” fans, yet showed impressive restraint by not calling out to them for more praise. Finding a tactful way to keep Rainbow Dash from making an ass of herself, Luna poignantly cleared her throat and started speaking in Vespid. Luna wasn’t the best at the language, but she was more than passable at it. “Now that we have their attention and, for the moment, their cooperation. We need to learn as much as possible about these sphinxes.” Rainbow inwardly groaned at having to deal with matters of state, but Twilight was highly enthused. “Right, we need to know if they always value strength over courtesy, and at what times is the opposite true. We need to know body language, slang, what manner of speech to use, the list goes on and on.” Rainbow rolled her eyes. “Yeah, yeah, if we screw any of that up, they’d better realize that it’s out of ignorance. And if they don’t, we’ve got two and half thousand tons of firepower to smooth over any social muck ups.” Twilight arched an eyebrow at her sister and gave an approving hum, while Luna frowned at the idea. “Crude, but in the end, the warship should make treaty negotiations easier.” “At the very least, it will give us time to show we mean no harm,” Twilight added decisively after catching Luna’s tone, “but that we are more than capable of defending ourselves.” Aegis, who had been listening intently, absorbing all of the wisdom she could, had something to add. “Assuming they never find out we only have one frigate and the two gunboats back home.” One of which is still in dry dock for another two weeks. Despite herself, Luna couldn’t help but to give off a light chuckle. “It’s strange how apt the name of your flagship is, Rainbow Dash.” Twilight was glad that Aegis inserted herself into the conversation, and used it as an excuse to speak to her. “Aegis, I have an important mission for you, one that you’re perfectly suited for as a princess.” Aegis stiffened into attention out of old habit and saluted her queen-mother. “Name it, and it’ll be done.” Luna tapped Twilight on the shoulder before she could state Aegis’ objectives. “I should have thought of this earlier. We don’t know how the sphinxes learned Equestrian. It is possible they might be able to pick up a language just by hearing it. You better use your hive mind from here on, no need to speak aloud on my account.” Twilight smiled and nodded. “Thank you, Luna.” The carriages turned a corner to reveal a large manor situated on a hill. Rainbow Dash had been listening in and thought of a few things to add. Twilight scowled at her sister, but Aegis flashed a predatory grin at the prospect. That same grin was seen by every sphinx along the road, and they all knew that grin well. Twilight groaned used her magic to pinch her brow. Rainbow conceded the point with a submissive shrug with Aegis nodding apologetically. Wanting to derail her sister’s irritation, Rainbow Dash hummed aloud. Aegis shook her head at the observation. Twilight allowed with a slight warning tone. Rainbow jumped in excitement at such a deduction. Twilight conceded with a thoughtful rub of her chin. Everyone nodded in agreement, and the order for discretion was passed down throughout the changeling ranks while Rainbow passed the warning on to Princess Luna. A bump in the road returned their attention to the three story tall manor, and only now realized that they were nearly there. The manor was situated on an artificially flattened hill with only a short vine-covered garden fence to denote the edge of the estate. If Twilight had to guess, she would estimate the manor was roughly a third the size of her childhood home: the Sparkle Estate. That places it much larger than the average house, but still… I will have to see if the size is to denote status alone, or if it’s a live in city hall. Aside from a layer of white paint to protect the wood from the elements, there was very little colorful decoration. Could be a sign that these sphinxes can’t make dyes in these lands, and importing them is a low priority. Yet if there was any doubt in her mind about the Federation being poor in the arts, the virtual forest of statues that practically covered the whole city threw such thoughts out the window. Twenty lined the driveway alone, while yet more statues and gargoyles dotted the windows and roof of both the manor and on every street corner and building. I can’t help but think they use them as business signs as well. As the group of royals departed the carriages, Aegis noticed the small dog sized statues along the stairs to the front door were newer than the rest thanks to the slightly richer black paint. Unlike all the other statues, these had an even mix of winged and wingless sphinxes in black priest robes with hoods obscuring their faces. It was only when everyone disembarked from the carriages and started walking up to the front entrance that she saw each priest was holding a gem-capped staff in what looked like a minotaur’s hand in place of their right paw. Hands?! Is that artistic license or for real? Her fixation on the hands abated as her senses touched more heavily on the ingrained magic of the black statues. Those things give me the heebie jeebies. They’re giving off some kind of creepy magic. The eeriness of the statues was not quite enough to make Aegis warn the others of them. Even so, she used her magic to pull her jacket a little tighter around her chest and hurried up inside where Ventras, Thaddeus, and Rasua bowed and swept a foreleg towards the dining room across the main hall. Ventras was still fuming, but was able to hide it with ease. “I greet you and your houses with all the honor and respect that I can give. Let it be known that no sphinx will harm you while under my roof.” Even with the double doors being wide open, the interior was much warmer by far, and did much to take the edge off. Twilight let Luna’s greater and older wisdom in diplomacy take the lead while Rainbow Dash was indifferent unless called upon or if there was a threat of violence. The dark alicorn mirrored the sphinxes’ bow, but did not bow quite so low, prompting the queens to do the same. “We thank you for your hospitality. Shall we move straight onto business, or is there an event we need to participate in first?” Thaddeus couldn’t tell Luna’s tone was sincere or that of warlord patronizing her lessers. I’ll act like it is the former. “It is tradition for our people that those who have the most power during first time negotiations to dictate how negotiations are conducted.” “I see,” Luna replied evenly. She turned to whisper to Twilight in Vespid. They spoke briefly and without emotion, unwittingly putting the sphinxes on edge. They wondered why they didn’t seem to include Rainbow Dash, but to their confusion, Twilight and Rainbow would meet eyes every so often yet no words seemed to be shared. After a minute or so, Luna turned back to Ventras who had recovered from his bow. “While we came here looking for our explorers, we also came to make new friends, not enemies. In the spirit of such cooperation, and the fact that we stand in your house even if the land is still in dispute, we would like to take part in one of your ceremonies to mark the occasion. Provided my explorers are returned to me without delay.” Ventras and all the sphinxes who listened in weren’t sure how to take that. Within their own culture, abdicating the right of ceremony, which was viewed differently than simply choosing not to have one, was a sign of cultural poverty on the level of a barbarian. All the rules go out the window with these foreigners, Rasua mused darkly. They’re playing it smart. They want to know more about us, while at the same time revealing less about themselves. But at the same time, that makes it easier to accidentally insult them. She inwardly scoffed. Father’s too old to adapt quickly enough to keep up with an entirely new set of rules. To his credit, Ventras showed none of the smoldering embarrassment from earlier, and passed himself off as a welcoming host. “If that is what you desire.” He looked all three royals in the eyes to try and sniff out any dissent, anything he could use to gain favor with at least one of them. Finding none, he moved on. “Today marks the darkest hour of the year, and lowest point on the Great Cycle. A few priests of Lerasium were consecrating my house and evening meal when word of your arrival interrupted the event. I know they are eager to continue. As for your explorers…” Ventras turned to one of the ten guards in the room and barked a short command. “The one we captured recently has been unharmed, and proved to be very talkative.” “And what of Spinning Compass, and her husband Trail Mix?” Rainbow suddenly snapped. “They better not have been treated unfairly.” Fearing Ventras would word his response poorly; Thaddeus stepped forward with his head low. “The one calling himself Slippery Shadow resides on the second floor, no doubt aware of your arrival by now. If you mean the two explorers sent here many seasons ago, all we can provide is our deepest apologies.” He hesitated out of respect. “They are dead,” he said apologetically. “If anyone is to blame for it, it is I.” Twilight feared that was the case. Explorers willing to go this far would have been resourceful enough to get word back sooner. She could feel Rainbow’s indignation surging to match Luna’s own, and feared her sister would act before the princess. She watched Rainbow’s indifferently pursed lips quickly shifted to boiling anger as Thaddeus explained the married couple’s fate. She was in the process of surging forward when Twilight stopped her with a hoof. Rainbow shot her a look between disbelief and fury. Twilight knew Rainbow’s argument the moment it came into being. The request wasn’t for mercy, or to hold back for diplomacy’s sake, and for that, some part of Rainbow Dash was grateful. Twilight replied with steel. For her part, Luna was equally angry, but also sad for the loss. “You had better to explain yourself, immediately. I tell you now that every one of my loyal subjects is precious to me.” Ventras knew what his old friend was doing, and as much as he wanted to spare him whatever wrath the royals would demand, he knew that trying to intervene would only dishonor his majordomo and his family name. Rasua, however, was inches from intervening on her oath-brother’s behalf, honor be damned. Thaddeus took a brief moment to choose his words carefully. “My sister and I were talking on the roof of this very house. I pulled over a clump of hillside to,” He trailed off because he hated sounding childish in front of everyone, and the native rulers only made it worse. “To drop on Rasua to pull her away from her hobby for a moment,” he partially lied to protect Rasua from her bout of laziness. “When I crumbled the dirt, one of the ponies dropped right on top of us. I was so stunned I dropped the rest of the dirt on us. The one who fell tried to jump back up the hill where its mate was waiting for her with a rope. Caught unawares, Rasua was struck with something and was momentarily thrown from the roof. I attempted to halt the ponies’ escape by pulling the hill down around them, while doing so I was hit by the male’s weapon that launched this into my gut.” Thaddeus morphed a paw into a hand, much to the Equestrians’ astonishment, Aegis chief among them, and withdrew a small bag from a pocket. Thaddeus then emptied the contents and presented it to the natives. Luna’s suspicions abated when she saw the deformed musket ball, and further confirmed when Thaddeus pulled his jacket and underclothing aside to reveal a large dimple-like scar the size of a bit right below his ribcage. Rainbow Dash’s anger waned a little the sight of it with a chilling thought crossing her mind. Yikes. That’s a musket wound alright. What would I have done if some random new creature had shot me? I haven’t seen a firearm among them at all, so I bet they were freaking out. Thaddeus continued his tale with a stout determined tone. “I was too injured to give chase so I summoned a Chevalier and ordered her to retrieve the fleeing ponies. I was less than clear about how I wanted them retrieved.” “I can understand your confusion,” Luna said at length. As with Rainbow, her anger was slipping as well, but was by no means disappearing entirely. “But you make it seem that the soldier killed my explorers. They were not fighters or warriors, they were scouts. Why did she feel the need to slay them?” Rasua knew Thaddeus too well. That idiot will just give no excuse, and these natives will demand his head! Seeing no alternative, she jumped into the conversation before Thaddeus could throw himself to the wolves. “You must understand, your majesties!” Ventras barked a curt command to shush her for speaking out of turn, but she ignored him. “We come from a land where we are the only masters of logic and reason. My brother was too stunned to clarify his orders, and the Chevalier acted out of ignorance until it was too late.” Out of all of them, Twilight was shocked the most by that. “What?!” She pushed ahead to be just in front of Luna who was far too mired between flabbergasted and doubt to object. “There are changelings, ponies, dragons, zebras, minotaurs, sea serpents, and griffins just to name a few of the intelligent species that inhabit the known world. Do you seriously expect us to believe that your lands gave rise to only one sapient species?” “As weird as it sounds, it’s all true, your highness,” came a voice from the stairwell a few meters away. Everyone looked up to find Slippery Shadow and his guard escort. The thestral looked no worse for wear. So much so that Luna almost thought he had gained a little weight. Shadow flew over to bow before Luna and the other royals. “I’ve had the pleasure of discussing a great many things with my hosts. They were dumbstruck when I told them of all the races of the world.” He leaned in and whispered to Luna. “Much like I was when I arrived at the hive.” Luna had been prepared to demand harsh reprisals in the event of her explorers’ death, yet with Shadow being unharmed, she reevaluated her options. Seeing only one recourse that her morals would agree to, Luna elevated her voice a little. “Both nations of the Equestrian Alliance were founded on the principles of peace and friendship. For that, I believe Spinning Compass and Trail Mix would rather have their deaths prevent further loss of life, instead of being an excuse to end more.” In fear of sounding weak, Luna’s voice took a hard edge. “But I still demand recompense. Two indentured servants, not executions, as payment.” Luna stared directly at Ventras as she spoke. “I have little use for a corpse.” Every sphinx in the room who could rub two brain cells together instantly saw this as a “Des'tai”, a test of character and honor that Luna had challenged their entire civilization with in one deft stroke. Thaddeus’ thoughts mirrored those of his kind. I’d wager my right eye she’d accept anybody, even a couple of street rats as her servants. But what would that tell these Equestrians about the honor of our people? I for one will not see our glorious civilization be seen as dishonorable barbarians by those who have undoubtedly risen above their prey ancestors. Rasua cursed that fateful day when the married explorers found Stratholme, and of what Thaddeus’ honor demanded him to do. I won’t allow them to take my oath-brother. Rasua stepped forward before anyone could speak. “I volunteer to serve you.” “Rasua!” Ventras yelled worriedly, but his daughter pressed on. Even Thaddeus was caught flat footed. “I am a capable warrior and a renowned blacksmith,” Rasua stated firmly at Luna and the queens, momentarily ignoring her father’s protests. “I know that honor requires my brother accept your demands, but I beseech you that he is too important to the colony’s success to leave. For the good of my people, and that of your lost explorers, allow me to go in Thaddeus’ place.” “That is acceptable,” Luna replied evenly. Few were able to catch the glint of respect in her eyes. “It would not do well to disrupt the governance of your city.” Thaddeus glowered at his oath-sister, but couldn’t bring himself to speak. “Even so, you are only one of two that I require.” “There can be only one acceptable choice,” an old thready feminine voice called out from behind the guards to the right. The line of guards parted to reveal two sphinxes, one of each kind, garbed in the same black robes that Aegis noticed on the statues earlier. The aged wingless female of the pair leaned against her ornate staff as she guided her younger winged male counterpart along with her. “The vision I warned all of you about has come to pass. ‘A blasted hill and terrible warmachine will herald the Great Death. The exiled metal-shaper, and one of the cloth must venture into the howling dark, lest we all be swept away.’” Rainbow Dash was as skeptical about such things as her sister, but more so out of stubbornness than the need for scientific evidence. Yet the supposed vision only ranked second on her groan-o-meter. “Just how many of you guys speak Equestrian now!?” Slippery Shadow shrank a little where he stood. “I umm…” He self-consciousnessly clapped his hooves together and sweated at her coming response. “I sort of convinced most of the people in the manor to take the language spell so I would have a bigger audience for my reenactment of Marelet.” What a foalish idiot. Had she been anywhere else, and if Slippery was an actual soldier, Luna might have taken the time to berate him for the next hour. Nevertheless, Luna was nothing if not cunning. A priest? Or at least a seer, and a willing one at that. One of them could tell me all I want to know about the sphinxes ideology and mentality. Luna leaned over to beckon Twilight into a hushed conversation in Vespid. “An interesting proposal. How would you feel about splitting them up and taking Rasua with you?” Twilight found it difficult to keep the exasperation out of her voice. “Personally I find this whole punishment thing rather archaic, but I can’t think of a better one other than imprisonment.” “You know it’s the perfect excuse to learn more about their kind,” Luna retorted as if she was surprised that Twilight wasn’t reading between the lines. “Believe me, I know. If you’re really dead set on this, we’ll go along with it.” Twilight paused a moment as she listened to her sister over the hive mind. “Plus RD thinks we’d be better off gauging the sphinxes’ level of technology if we had the smith anyway.” “Then it’s settled.” Luna returned her attention to Ventras who was caught between fear and pride for his daughter’s foolishness and courage. “The priest will come with me to my capital, and your daughter will go with Queen Twilight Sparkle and Queen Rainbow Dash. But I will tell you this: they are not our slaves, nor our property in any way. Nor will they be treated as such. You have my word that both of them will be treated with all due dignity and respect. Their willingness to accept our demands grants them that much.” I had no intention of treating them otherwise, but let them think the opposite, Luna mused. “For the time being, shall we begin this ceremony of yours before talks begin?” Fear for his daughter coursed through Ventras like lightning. I know she’s a member of the Sestapo, but they never trained her to be a spy. Shaking off his worries for the moment, he nodded at Luna. “If it is my daughter’s wishes, then I agree.” A solitary black carapace drone hid in a tree on the outer edge of Stripped Gear. It’s painstakingly crafted lithe body easily blended into the backdrop of greenery surrounding it. Here in the equatorial jungle, winter’s frozen touch was rarely felt. The edge of Stripped Gear’s caldera loomed upward with the barest trace of the illusion dome rounding it out, making it impossible to spy what lay within. Ever since Cadista gained access to Equestrian magic, it’s been impossible to scry what she’s doing anymore. Attacking her with an army at this point is far too wasteful, but where there’s a will, there’s a way… Scattered out along the edge of the hive were the heads and broken thoraxes of hundreds of drones from almost every other changeling hive. The macabre sight was not there to scare away any would-be spies, due to other queens caring nothing for the life of a few drones. A warning on how prepared she is against infiltration. She’s no fool. She knows a large enough swarm could defeat her, but it would undoubtedly be a pyrrhic victory, one the other queens would capitalize on. So she tightens the noose on spying. Well, I’ll just have to see if they measure up to this latest infiltrator. The queen puppeteering the drone grinned wickedly, even its fangs were dull so they wouldn’t glint in the bright cloudless day. The prospect of the operation sent a primal thrill through the puppet’s mistress. I couldn’t ask for a better test. With nary a whisper, the drone slinked out of the tree. Negotiating the empty expanse between the tree line and the edge of the caldera was child’s play. The puppet expected there to be guards right behind the illusion dome, but they were not a concern just yet. With the volcano’s edge being a hundred meters high, any guards there would be more concerned about seeing a swarm attack them, than a lone drone. The puppet reached the edge where the illusion shield and the natural rock of the caldera met. The controlling queen wouldn’t dare to use any magic to peer through. I could magically peer through at this range, wards or not, but I have to expect secondary warning spells are in place. Without any other recourse, the puppet stuck its head through to the loud din of an industrial hive. The first thing the puppet noticed was the slight polluted haze that permeated the air. The interior of the wall was actually a steel plated rampart with a few fixed gun emplacements built so they couldn’t be turned in towards the hive in the event of being overrun. If the puppet had a better understanding of such technology, it may have noticed the trap door hatches that might have housed hidden weapon platforms. The overbuilt urban center of the hive sickened the puppet. So much wasted effort on unliving technology. The puppet looked around to find two of Cadista’s drones a few meters to the left who were distracted as they picked apart another hive’s drone with rifle fire further down the wall. The rival spy was cut down with ruthless efficiency, yet that did little to dissuade the puppet’s queen dim view on inorganic technology. With the guards distracted, the puppet pulled itself fully through the shield. My camouflage magic should work even in this urban environment, but I’d better not take any chances. The distance between the edge of the wall and the drop off of the caldera was short but that was no excuse to be sloppy. Over half of all of the queen’s earlier attempts at infiltrating Stripped Gear ended shortly after underestimating the hive’s defenses. The puppet found a couple metal crates of ammunition to duck behind as two more riflelings flew in at a low hover to aid their kin in searching for more spies. Good, they’re going in the wrong direction. I hope my luck holds. Waiting a full hour for things to die down and to gauge the patrol patterns of the guards was a serious pain. The infiltrator’s camouflage was made to be sustainable for weeks, but it destabilized badly while moving. Cadista’s guards were good and the puppet saw no less than three other spies try to breach the shield within half an hour. All of them were cut down almost immediately, if not by those on the walls, then by the flying cavalry that always seemed to be a stone’s throw away. Such attacks were to be expected, and the puppeteering queen didn’t even bat an eyelash at the spectacle. Word has it Cadista’s building something new. For how long I don’t know, but in the end it won’t matter if she’s taken out before she can bring this new weapon to the battlefield. The infiltrator’s musings were cut short when it saw an opening. The wall guards were being relieved and the flying cavalry were momentarily distracted by their replacements. In a flash of movement, the spy raced to get off the wall and used its hooves to cling to the inner side of the caldera wall. In a moment of impatience, the controlling queen wanted to press the advantage and slip further down towards the urban sprawl below, but caution won out and the puppet stayed where it was. The act had been fortuitous as the spy soon discovered more teams of cavalry were watching the interior of the walls like hawks. I should have expected as much. Cadista may be a fool when it comes to having intelligent drones and using technology of machine and metal, but when it comes to security… The controlling queen made sure her grunt of approval came from her real body and not the puppet. That is a long way down to the nearest building. I better leave the puppet here overnight to study the patrol paths. Cadista can wait another day. > 5: Diplomacy > -------------------------------------------------------------------------- Rasua was in her room on the third story of the manor packing her possessions away, everything from undergarments to various odds and ends. Thanks to the Deception, she was allowed to take whatever she wished, provided anything dangerous was declared ahead of time. Rasua didn’t take long since she had little beyond work clothing and an assortment of blacksmithing tools. She always kept her trade secret tools in her chambers when not at work. The runed smithing hammer that she paused to study was her particular favorite. With her room in upheaval, she took the time to shift both forelegs into hands and gently rubbed the expertly crafted handle as one would a lover. I hope I get to continue to shape metal wherever it is they’re taking me. My old master would be spitting curses from the hereafter if he knew his teachings would go to waste. Before she could put it in its travel case, such was the care she had for the tool, Rasua grabbed some mana infused oil to recharge the runes. She was half way done before a knock on the door broke her concentration. “Enter!” A guard popped his head in. “Princess Aegis Altair wishes to speak with you.” “The princess? I thought she’d be busy with the deliberations.” The guard fully opened the door, allowing Aegis to canter inside. “I’m keeping tabs on it,” she answered for the guard. “But all of it is as I expected it to be. Our side is leveraging our ancient claim to the land and ability to enforce it, while your father and… oath-brother, I believe, are countering with the fact that there was no Equestrian presence in the land and how none of us have been using it in the slightest.” Rasua stiffened at her new master’s abrupt entry, and did her best to ignore the invasion of privacy. “I see. Is there something you require of me, Princess?” She couldn’t help but to notice the glint of red-ish metal underneath Aegis’ heavy clothing. “Since you’ll be coming with us to Phoenix's Roost, I thought we should get to know each other better. Perhaps I could even help you pack, if you like.” Rasua was caught flat-footed by the offer and her mouth hung agape for a brief instant before she waved the guard to leave, and spoke once he shut the door. “I am all for expedience.” How is she going to do that without hands? She better not drool on anything. She pointed at a trio of small painted statues. Aegis immediately identified Ventras and Thaddeus were depicted in two of them, but an unknown winged female with a caring face was the third. “Since that ship of yours is so spacious, I’m taking everything except furniture. So if you could wrap them up, it’d save some time.” “Of course.” Aegis saw a stack of silky towels next to the statues. If these are of her family, she must love them a great deal. I wonder why she’d let a stranger do this. With the greatest of care, Aegis proceeded to wrap them up with her telekinesis. Rasua was already familiar with her brother’s own form of telekinesis, so Aegis wielding the same power only produced an inquisitive hum out of Rasua. So that’s how they manage without hands. Does it work with everything or only certain materials like brother’s power? I’ll find out soon enough, and at least I don’t have to worry about drool or skin oil on them. The pair passed into silence long enough for Aegis to finish wrapping one statue and to begin on the second when Rasua asked a question that was bugging her whole family. “So tell me, Princess, why do you changelings look so much alike? Do you dye your fur and hair to signify which queen you champion or something?” Aegis couldn’t help but to giggle behind a hoof at the notion, earning a slightly sour look from Rasua. “No, it has nothing to do with social reasons. Any purple changeling you see from our hive is Twilight Sparkle’s child, while all the blue drones came from Rainbow Dash.” Hive, drone? Rasua stopped packing at the strange ideas Aegis’ comment was giving her. “You mean figuratively, right?” she asked with an edge of fear. Aegis wrapped up the last statue with a sly grin, completely missing the sphinx's fear. “Nope. My queens can lay up to thirteen eggs a day, and I came from one of them.” Her heart went aflutter. Oh, I can’t wait to lay eggs! To feel the love of thousands, no tens of thousands of children would be divine! Aegis stopped swooning over her future to notice Rasua was staring at her wide-eyed. “We may look like mammals, Rasua, but that’s only skin deep. We changelings are actually much closer to insects than anything else. At least that’s how we think of ourselves.” Rasua had noticed the gossamer wings, but between the fur and eyes she hadn’t made the connection. Aegis watched her open and shut her mouth repeatedly, but the words never came. “If you’re wondering why I’m telling all this, it's because my queens feel understanding can defeat ignorance induced fear. It’s worked fairly well with the ponies, so they hope it will with your kind as well.” Vath! As if being technologically superior wasn’t bad enough, now she tells me they’re bugs too? Rasua’s mood sunk rapidly thanks to her entomophobia. She looked away to hide her creeping hyperventilation. J-just don’t focus on that. She’s lying, yeah, just a big joke, that’s all. Her wings ruffled at the thought of maggots, flies, spider webs, and even butterflies. It’s all a lie! she screamed at herself. She has fur, and hair, and, non-bug eyes, and only four limbs, and stuff. She’s a damn mammal, and she’s going to like it! With her mental gymnastics done, she calmed down enough to look back at Aegis who was inspecting how Rasua had folded her clothes and was trying her best to mimic it. The act alone puzzled her. “Say ahh… Do you always fold your own clothes?” “And the laundry, and my own weapons’ maintenance,” Aegis replied plainly while turning to look lovingly at the flamethrower strapped on her back. “Why, aren’t you a princess?” Aegis had made a point to avoid any obvious undergarments, and only looked at Rasua briefly as she spoke between folding. “I was a soldier before I was a princess, with all the trappings that came with it. I wouldn’t have been chosen to become a royal if I was a self-centered prick. Everypo-everyone has to contribute to the welfare of the hive, and sitting on a pedestal all day complaining about trivial things is unacceptable.” Mother would sooner die than allow me or any future royal daughter become like those self-centered rich “noble” girls from Canterlot. “I see.” Rasua finished packing her tools and moved several large pieces of luggage over to stuff her clothes in. She was operating under the assumption that she wouldn’t find any tailors suited for her in the heartland of the Equestrian Alliance. “Well I’ve told you about my people,” Aegis commented as she helped levitate some of Rasua’s larger belongings into a crate. “Could you tell me about yourself and sphinxes in general?” She paused a moment before adding, “like what do you say to distinguish between gender and the possession of wings?” Rasua looked at her funny before remembering that they had been speaking in Equestrian the whole time. It was also a harmless question enough. “Adult males are called toms while females are called janes. Being a winged sphinx I’m called a Grecian while those like my oath-brother and father are Egyptians. That’s a holdover from the original civilizations both races came from, but our two races united early in recorded history due to the actions of the Prophet Felryan. By the time that old religion died out, unification remained entrenched in our general society and mindset.” “Fascinating,” Aegis hummed curiously. “That’s far quicker than ponies unified.” Aegis went into the abridged version of Equestrian history revolving mostly around the Hearth’s Warming Eve story. Rasua took the story as heavily sanitized half-truths, but said nothing to potentially insult the changeling princess. “An interesting tale to be sure,” Rasua focused on how non-bug Aegis acted, which was helped by the fact that she looked mammalian. “Since you told me of your history, it is only fair I do the same. We are a federation of seven nations bound by steel since the last of the Geyser Wars ten years ago. We used to be eight territories within an equal number of empires, but the wars ended up killing off all the royal families in the end, with one province being totally wiped out in the process. After that, the rival army marshals called for a cease fire since it was the ruling caste of the two empires that wanted the war in the first place. Those army marshals ended up becoming the first members of the Council of Seven.” Aegis was stunned long enough for a small crew of movers to come in and take the luggage and crates away. “How did your people unify so quickly?” “It’s… complicated.” Rasua remembered stories about the Old Families. “Let’s just say the people were more than happy to see the old imperials lines finally wither away. They were the only ones who really kept our people so divided. Plus one of the marshals declared this was an extension of Prophet Felryan’s will. He tried and failed to resurrect the old religion, but it helped expedite cooperation.” With the movers and all of her possessions being passed over to a parked shuttle out front, Rasua felt it would be a good idea to get one last look of her new home. “Would you like a brief tour of Stratholme tomorrow? I’ll likely not see it again anytime soon, and there are some sites you might find of interest.” I’d like to see if anything catches her eye so I can use that later. “Sounds cold.” Aegis shivered at the thought of going back outside, and the frozen over window didn’t help at all. “But intriguing nonetheless, I’d like that.” With tomorrow planned, Aegis switched gears. “You said you were a warrior earlier,” she said to pull attention away from the blizzard. “Do you have a weapon of choice?” “Aye, well, two of them.” Rasua brightened considerably at the question, and dearly wished the question had been brought up earlier. “My new love is my smithing hammer: Thul. I’d never swing him in combat, but with that hammer in my hands, I can forge arms for others to fight with. In that way, I fight with not just my hands, but with all of those who I craft for.” “I hadn't thought about that line of reasoning before,” Aegis decided to leave out the hive’s assembly lines for the time being. “And the second?” “The Spark Cannons. Militarily I’d imagine they operate the same way your muskets do, only far too big to carry by hand. They rend the skies with lightning, making flight during combat all but impossible.” She subconsciously rubbed her right foreleg. “I would not be here today were it not for those weapons.” “I can sympathize with that.” Aegis pulled her pride and joy off her back. “This is my flamethrower: Burny. This guy’s saved my skin more times than I care to count.” “Flamethrower?” Rasua commented absently, earning a bemused eyebrow out of Aegis. “My people have always excelled at harnessing lightning ever since we witnessed nature brandish it during storms. Yet aside from the cook, hearth, and forge, we’ve never trusted fire or explosive things. Between this flamethrower, the explosions on the hill, and that explosive powder we found on the first explorers, your people must use it far more extensively than sanely possible.” “I see,” Aegis said at length as Rasua lead them to the kitchens. “So you guys were,” she tried to put it diplomatically, “compelled to concede the position of power to us, due to concerns about our fire based weaponry and having a flying ship?” Rasua nodded with a grimace. “Why didn’t you try to use those cannons on us once we moved into the city to grab power back?” Rasua paused on the stairs and turned to look at her. “Just because we were caught off guard by your ship’s display of power and the fact that it appeared out of thin air, doesn’t mean we couldn’t think.” Aegis almost recoiled a bit at the taste of venom coming out of Rasua. “We tried making airships before a long time ago, but lightning technology was too far advanced by then, and all the early flying ships were destroyed long before they could ever influence the battlefield.” She wasn’t sure if Equestrians had railroads, which ended up killing any future airships had in the Federation, so Rasua left them out. “And those early ships were made from wood and rubber hulls, I could tell even at that distance, your warship is made of metal. Which means you found a way to shrug off lightning from thunderstorms, and if you could do that, our cannons are worthless against you.” What Rasua didn’t want to add was how much destruction the flamethrower armed changelings could cause if they targeted the city instead of the guards. Aegis recalled Gethar’s failed attempts at using lightning against the Deception. “I’m surprised you perceived all that so quickly.” Well, father wanted to lead that ship into the city until I convinced him lightning would be folly. “A huntress must think quickly or she becomes the prey instead.” Aegis wasn’t actually sure anything she could say would be correct, so she opted for silence. The pair started moving towards the kitchens again. “In any event, I wish to have an early evening meal.” It may be the last chance I can get ribs. “You have no need to join me, princess.” “Hey, I get hungry too! And I think it’d be interesting to see what kind of food you guys have.” “I think it’s a fair compromise,” Twilight stated in front of the conference room. “The Alliance is willing to part with sixty thousand square kilometers of land, centered on the logging camp we passed over into Stratholme, and in return, you build a land trade route to Vanhoover in the north, along with guarding and maintaining it for the next decade after completion.” There were other smaller details, like regulations, but she didn’t want to drag it out by speaking of each one. “With that, we can enjoy open borders and trade relations.” Thaddeus had to admit, he couldn’t have asked for better. “And you also desire to send a diplomatic envoy to the Federation homeland, as well as set up an embassy here.” “Correct,” Luna replied with carefully measured grace. “I assume you’ll wish to wait for a formal response and diplomatic team from your homeland to arrive. Just remember the land we trade is more of a gift than an actual bargaining chip. If you desire more, you will have to pay full price for it.” Ventras looked over the two scribes, a sphinx and Slippery Shadow, who were jotting down all the details of the negotiations. “Before we finalize this agreement, I must ask. Why are you not demanding more concessions for so much land? What sort of back dealing are we going to have to put up with?” Twilight gave him an acknowledging smile, and stood up to pace around the square table where they all sat. “While I do not subscribe to most of them, I whole heartily believe in the thirty fifth Rule of Acquisition: peace is good for business. Demanding what we perceive as the full value of this much land would cost you dearly, and may not be what you would find fair.” She reached Ventras’ chair and gently dragged a wing along the back of it. “Were that to happen, all future relations between the Alliance and Federation would be soured by the notion that we bullied you into giving too many concessions. So we’d prefer to start things off where everyone is happy.” She rounded Ventras’ chair and flashed him a winning fang-filled smile. The bigger the smile, the sharper the knife. Ventras studied the purple mare intently, it was only now that he felt he truly saw her. “Your words are gentle, and yet...” He turned to look at the Deception through a window. “They have weight. “Yes... I can see you clearly now, Queen Twilight Sparkle. Your forefathers may have been prey, but you, you are not. I can see it in your eyes, in your stance, in your teeth, you are not prey, you are the prime huntress of your people. For that, you have my respect. “If you have seen fit to have these ponies be your close allies, then they too are undeserving of the moniker of prey. We would be honored to work alongside you.” “Wonderful,” Twilight replied as she settled back down in her seat. Celestia’s training served Twilight well as she took the compliment in stride. “I look forward to a prolonged friendship with both you and the Federation.” While Rainbow Dash was more than happy to remain silent the entire time, Twilight prodded her to add a token voice to the proceedings. “We’ll have the formal papers written up by morning. You can review it to make sure there are no errors before signing it.” Thaddeus clasped his hands together and bowed graciously. “We’ll be doing the same in our language to send back home.” He had to admit, he felt good about how everything turned out. Thank the stars Ventras didn’t try to push for anything outrageous. We need to keep these fire mongers happy. “We should celebrate! Since the weather would make for a poor hunt and we do not yet have any enclosed stadiums, why not join us in a game of strategy and chance?” Ever since becoming an officer in the Wonderbolts, Rainbow Dash had grown to value strategy games. Helps keep the mind sharp when you can’t get any explosions. “I’ll have a go at it.” “As will I.” Twilight mirrored her sister’s enthusiasm but for different reasons. Games are an excellent way to learn about culture. “And afterwards we can play some from my homeland as well.” “An excellent idea,” Ventras agreed, if only so the Equestrians would share some of their culture. “Why don’t we start with the Federation’s most widespread and competitive game?” A fire was lit under Rainbow Dash the instant “competitive” left Ventras’ mouth. “OOoo, sounds fun.” She raised her eyebrows at Twilight and Luna who nodded with a grin and relented with a sigh respectively. “So how do we play?” Ventras turned to the soldier behind him. “Evocati, gather all the rule books and other objects for Vaults and Villains from my quarters.” “Sir!” the soldier replied with a curt salute before leaving. Rainbow’s alarm bells started ringing at the mention of multiple rule books. Poker only needed a single sheet of paper for its rules, but maybe this will be more like Peril, or Apologize. Limited small talk ensued as they all waited for the guard to return. Soon enough, the soldier came back with a stack of five books, a few pieces of elaborately painted folding mahogany wood, a couple of sacks, and a large carrying case full of small figurines. Ventras grinned maniacally as he was given a large collection of papers. “I will tell you now that I am a world renowned Vault Lord. I will give you all time to read the rules while I prepare a starter campaign that I’ve always enjoyed. Thaddeus, why don’t you assist them in this?” “For our new acquaintances, I would do it gladly.” He waved at the three royals to gather closer together as he brought the books over. Rainbow Dash eyed them with intense trepidation, but her time as a WonderBolt’s officer and queen, (along with a helping hand from Twilight’s DNA,) allowed her to keep from rejecting the idea out of hand. Luna couldn’t help but to be curious, even if she was always bored to tears at board games. All in the name of diplomacy. Tia, you owe me big for this. Out of all of them, Twilight was beside herself with glee the moment she cracked open the one inch-thick rule book, and started weaving her translation spell. “Okay, girls, this is going to be so. Much. Fun!” Twilight had Thaddeus move over to her to begin translating the text to speed up the rate at which her language spell could work. Rainbow replied with a thick helping of sarcasm. I hope Aegis is having more fun than I’ll be for the rest of the day. It was only when she was escorted to a lavatory did Rainbow finally let off the massive groan she had been saving for the past five hours. “And so that’s how our race came to be what it is today,” Aegis finished with a flourish of a hoof. Rasua was a poster child for deep thought as she nestled on a bench just outside the manor. The frigid winds helped her think, and calmed her nerves somewhat at the prospect of living inside an insect hive for who knew how long. She calls herself an insect and yet she’s warm blooded! No matter how Aegis described her home, all Rasua could see were beehives, ant hills, whole chambers full of maggot worms writhing in their own mucus, and halls full of chittering clattering insects the size of teenage sphinxes. “Hey, Rasua, you listening?” Blushing furiously, the sphinx nodded hastily. “Yes, of course, Princess.” She quickly racked her brain to catch up to the conversation. “You say your kind used to be thestrals like Slippery Shadow. Why did none of you wish to try and change back?” Aegis had told her briefly about alchemy, but lied about how it could be used on anyone, not just changelings. The last thing she wanted was fear popping up about Rasua potentially getting converted. “I can’t tell you to be honest,” Aegis sat on the bench while trying to mimic Rasua contemplatively rubbing a finger on her chin. “Maybe my ancestors tried and failed, or didn’t think it was possible. I’m sure there could be a way, but nopony’s in a hurry to discover it. At least not anymore, it all happened thousands of years ago after all.” “I see.” Rasua scanned Aegis’ face as non-confrontational as possible. “So what is it you changelings do for entertainment?” The first thing that came to Aegis’ mind was sex. She almost said it too, but she caught herself in time. I’ll never understand why non-changeling species tried to hide that universal fact, buuuut I better not risk being so blunt. “We’ve ahh, taken most of our stuff from Equestria. Hoofball mostly, but we have music, dance, theater all that stuff.” She noticed Rasua’s didn’t look impressed in the slightest. I guess they do that sort of stuff too. “While I haven’t participated in one before, every year we hold a technology fair in the hive, during which teams of engineers, scientists, and independent parties can showcase their inventions and discoveries. It's a chance to introduce new things to the world at large and try and get them out to the general public.” Well, outside of the hive anyway. That got a curious hum out of her feline companion, but it wasn’t enough for Aegis. “In fact, we’re going to be hosting the fair in a few weeks. I’d love to see you there.” “Will metallurgists be there?” Aegis saw the perfect opportunity to bring hands into the conversation. “Oh yeah, we recently finished building a whole lab for them.” She pulled back the sleeve around her left foreleg to reveal her gauntlet fully for the first time since arriving in Stratholme. “This little number wouldn’t have been possible without them. This alone was enough to give our metallurgists a specialized lab of their own.” Now Aegis had Rasua’s full attention again. Even a few of the nearby guards risked lapses in their vigilance to try and get a closer look at Aegis’ armor. “What is this thing? If you don’t mind my asking.” Aegis barely suppressed a squeal as Rasua shifted a paw into a hand to poke at her gauntlet. “This is a prototype meant to give me hands, in a sense.” “Hands? Are there other species out there that inspired you to make this?” Since Aegis had not given any resistance to her gauntlet being prodded, Rasua shifted to sit closer and started to inspect the gauntlet more closely. “These are based off minotaurs, but smaller so it could fit me. I’ll show you some pictures of them later.” “I would like that.” Aegis gently cleared her throat and tugged her gauntlet free so she could extend the fingers. “I have to admit, I’m still trying to get the hang of using fingers.” Her eyes lit up. “Why don’t you teach some pointers and I’ll give you a grand tour of the hive when we get there.” The mention of the hive brought the fact that Rasua would be leaving her home and family right back to the forefront, and into a nation revolving around the love of fire. “As you wish, Princess. If there is nothing else, I would prefer to spend this time with family.” “Oh, sure. Family is a changeling’s whole world, so I don’t mind. Your brother and father are most likely still in the audience chamber.” She wanted to be vague to hide the existence of the hive mind. “Then I should be there.” If only to be at their side a little while longer. “Can you tell me when your ship will depart?” “That’ll depend entirely on my aunt and mother. Although I suspect they will want to stay in port for a while and try to break the ice, as we say, to get both of our people to coexist more easily.” That was a welcome relief. The longer Rasua stayed around, the less time she’d have to spend in a bug hive. Now I just have to conjure a reason to intrude on the deliberations. Maybe pull some fake tradition out of my ass so the Equestrians aren’t offended? They seemed pretty understanding so far. As Rasua went back inside, Aegis scowled at having to wait for her hand lessons. Great, now what am I going to do? A sudden jump in wind speed cut through Aegis like a frozen knife. Preferably going someplace warm. Plus I think I got plenty of scent samples off of Rasua anyway, so I think I need to move on to some of the stallions, er I mean toms. She pinged the hive mind to gather some information. Hey! Intel’s squad is off rotation since the cats proved cooperative. Maybe I can catch her and the rest of Squad One at the pub before they go back to the ship to sleep! I can hang with them and get plenty of scents while I’m there, it’s a win-win. With her mind made up, Aegis raced off to the pub two city blocks away. She took note that two sphinx guards tailed her at a discrete distance, but made no action against them. If Boss Cat’s enthusiastic game fanaticism is any sign, I doubt those guards will try to screw with me. Much to her surprise, only a scant handful of drones were at the pub. They directed Aegis to the stables on the east side of town. With everyone either staying indoors to escape the blizzard, or looking up at the two airships, there were only a handful of sphinxes that noticed Aegis moving along the streets. Some of the growing criminal underbelly may have considered attempting to kidnap her for ransom were it not for the two burly guards tailing her already. The hive mind’s chart of Stratholme was still sketchy. Even with the observers on the Deception attempting to build a map, the dense snowfall coupled with the completely unknown function of most of the buildings made locating anything difficult. Nevertheless, a few sphinxes were trudging through the blizzard. Strange visitors or not, life must go on. All Aegis needed to do was ask a question or two, and she found her way to the stables within an hour of leaving the manor. The stables themselves were situated along a major avenue with one covered, heavily burdened wagon being pulled into the marshalling yard within. Aegis was about to enter the door underneath the sign-statue when she saw Intel and her squad through the closing gates as the wagon entered. There they are. I should have known Intel would have kept the squad sober until we return to the hive. With the stables’ roof in the way, flying in was out. So Aegis had to go through the reception area, and was admitted inside to join her kin. She passed through the small office to find Intel’s squad gathered around one of the beasts of burden in its stable, along with a Grecian tom who Aegis assumed was a salesman. Or would that be salestom? He was dressed in a finely tailored suit, and seemed to be trying to calm two Egyptians and one Grecian who looked angrier than Rainbow Dash after Pinkie drank all the cider. It didn’t help that the three belligerents were both armed and armored for battle. Intel was at the front of her squad with Ferrum and Counterspell flanking her. While the changelings were armed, they looked vulnerable with only cold weather uniforms, and no armor of their own. “You may be high and mighty with your ship above our heads, but down here, I wager I could take all four of you,” the lone Grecian tom jeered. Aegis saw Intel was keeping a cool head, but Ferrum and Counterspell were on edge. “Until our queens say otherwise, we have no reason to fight you. Why don’t you wait your turn to talk to the salestom?” Aegis started marching over as one of the Egyptian janes heavily slammed the head of her warhammer on the ground beside her. The tell-tale crack of electricity resounded throughout the chamber. “This is our city, prey. Get out of our way.” Not one to shy away from a fight, Aegis barked at the group once she was within earshot. “Anypo- anyone want to explain to me what’s going on?” Thus far, Thunderfury, the fourth member rounding out Squad One, had been staying out of the confrontation by studying the multi-horned blue beast of burden, but the moment he heard Aegis’ voice he raced over to in a prismatic flash to interpose himself between her and the armed assailants. The level of tension shot up to papable levels among the rest of the changelings, causing them to adopt a defensive posture, yet refrained from drawing their weapons quite yet. The leading sphinx glanced in disgust as the salesman slipped away. None of the antagonistic sphinxes had seen any of the royals up close on their way to Ventras’ manor, and didn’t know what a changeling princess looked like, but from the squad’s reaction they knew Aegis was of importance. “Yeah we got a problem. Your kind barge into our territory like you own the place!” The jane with the hammer stepped with an equally foul sneer. “You ain’t got the right!” “Funny,” Aegis replied derisively. “This land belongs to the Equestrian Alliance until the treaty is signed. And our right is floating above your heads with its cannons pointed down.” She saw the rebuke coming before it left their lips. “And I would just love to see you try using lightning to bring it down.” That stopped the two janes from speaking further, but they still scowled in defiance. The tom wasn’t so easily cowed. “You really think this colony represents the might of the Federation military?!” He scoffed harshly. “The legion alone numbers in the millions, and once the council hears of today, they’ll bring the hammer down on you all.” He stepped forward to glare Aegis down, trying to force his prey to reveal any weakness. “You can act like predators all you want, but your little fire show can’t fight the fact that all of you are prey to the core.” Aegis nonchalantly brushed some snow off her jacket. “I think the steak I ate for lunch would disagree." Thunderfury cautioned as he crouched low, ready to spring. Thunderfury’s warning made Aegis scan the rest of Intel’s squad. Each of them had their kinesis gripping their weapons and were slowly pulling them from their holsters. Counterspell was already flooding his staff with mana to enable highly empowered spells. Thunderfury however made no attempt at subtlety, and summoned his two Quadrinix alloy tech-shields, and had them hovering at his sides, which made the two janes shoulder their weapons as well. The shields themselves were teardrop shaped and flared out to cover him in a full 270° arc. They also had the tell-tale shimmer of artificial Arcane Wing magic, but Aegis was unfamiliar as to what configuration was active. Shouldn’t those guards be telling these guys to back off by now? She didn’t want to turn to look for them out of concern that the sphinxes would use that as an excuse to attack. As it turned out, they didn’t need any further provocation and the tom took to the air so his forelimbs were free to reshape into hands and grabbed his Chu-ko-nu repeating crossbow. “I refuse to allow prey to act as equals!” Spittle flew along with his rage. “Kill the-” A rainbow blur and the sickening crunch of breaking bones on metal resounded through the stables. Thunderfury’s left shield slammed into the tom’s jaw, fracturing it and knocking several teeth free. The shimmering surface of the shield remolded slightly around the impact area, and added a second kinetic push that sent the tom to the dirt and out cold. Thunderfury raced back over to stand guard over Aegis. “No one threatens the princess!” “That will be quite enough,” a feminine voice called out from the office door. Everyone turned to see Aegis’ sphinx guards stroll up to both parties with cold malice. Both janes forgot their Grecian leader and started backing away from the newcomers. “The Sestapo’s here?!” “Cheese it!” The two Egyptians tried to make a break for the side fire exit behind the stables. The thus far silent Sestapo agent sighed. “They always try to run.” Pulling out a Chu-ko-nu of his own, he fired two quick shots at the fleeing sphinxes, hitting both in the rump. Trailing wires from the crossbow bolts allowed him to channel electricity through them. The two janes dropped within seconds, prompting his partner to fly over and restrain them. Eying the changelings with an oily grin, the agent holstered his weapon. “I must thank the lot of you. Baby Face Callion has been a stain upon the Legion for too long. Assaulting a recognized dignitary is the perfect excuse to… discharge him.” “Is this sort of behavior normal for your citizens?” Intel inquired with as much tact as possible. The agent’s oily grin vanished and was replaced by a lopsided frown. “We are a very proud people, changelings. Your warship’s stunt stepped on a lot of toes, although personally I find the backlash will be far too amusing to feel insulted myself.” The comment made Aegis look at the criminals who were being restrained as several normal police officers entered through the office to take them into custody. “That may be so. But I find it difficult to believe any of you would have seen us as anything other than prey had we taken a softer approach.” The agent laughed wholeheartedly for a good half-minute, long enough for his partner to return. “You may not have realized it, Princess Aegis, but politically, you did the correct thing in asserting your influence. No matter how much my people will squirm about it. That above all else is why I’m greatly looking forward to the coming years.” His partner interposed herself as the officers gathered up the disgruntled sphinxes behind her. “Come, we have processing to take care of.” “Yes, your right. Callion has a lot of friends that need,” he paused as if remembering the changelings were still there, “a deft hand.” He turned again towards Aegis. “It has been a pleasure, Princess. But I suggest you return to the governor’s manor when your business here is done. At least for the time being,” he added with a sly wink. With a slight bow, the two agents excused themselves and departed, but not before running into the salesman within the office. “So that’s where you ran off to. I trust you’ll accept any worthy offering of trade and report back to us immediately.” Despite the blistering cold weather, the salesman sweated in his suit. “Y-yes of course.” “Good man,” the lead agent replied with a winning smile and a hand clap on the salesman’s withers before both Sestapo operatives departed to chase after the police. With everyone gone, Aegis turned to her protectors. “Well that was fun. What brought all of you out here anyway?” Intel jabbed a hoof at Thunderfury who was in the process of unfolding a long finely tailored weapon teleportation scroll to send his shields back to the ship. “Fury here wanted to see if we could buy a few breeding pairs of the talbuks. That’s what the Feds call those blue beasts in the stables.” Ferrum giggled at his squadmate. “I told him it’s a bit big to be a pet. Not to mention we could barely fit one in the cargo hold, let alone two.” All eyes turned to Thunderfury who was muttering to himself while a small abacus click-clacked in front of him. A few moments of silence led Counterspell to groan. “You should really leave the math stuff to good mathematicians.” “Sush, I can figure it out!” Aegis glanced at the salesman reentering the stables out of the corner of her eye. “Figure what out? We have no use for anything like these…” “Talbuks,” Intel provided. “Right, talbuks back at the hive. We have trolleys and rail carts for transit.” Thunderfury’s ears shot up and he hastily looked away from his abacus. “It’s not for us though.” He flew into a low hover so he could gesture with his forelegs, his abacus clicking constantly with his movements. “Think of rural Equestria, especially places without a railroad. These talbuks are stronger than even earth ponies, and their wide round feet allow them to walk on Stratholme’s cobblestone roads without damaging them. Since Aunt Applejack already has a small ranch for sheep, pigs, and cows, they could expand that to talbuks and sell them as beasts of burden. I’m sure they would make farm work easier at the very least.” Counterspell and Aegis had to pause and think on that. Intel caught on right away. “Hey, that’s not a bad idea. Rural Equestria doesn’t have the infrastructure in place to support railroads in every village, but even a small community could tend to a few of these guys if they can graze on grass or hay.” The salesman was feeling extremely uncomfortable eavesdropping on a conversation in Vespid. “H-have you come to a decision, Mistress Intel ‘La Gence?” “Huh? Oh, right.” Intel looked to Aegis. “Well I guess since you’re here, it’s your call, Princess.” Intel’s response was to whistle and look away with an insanely innocent look. Sighing, Aegis looked to Thunderfury who hugged his abacus out of hope for his idea’s acceptance. She pinged her mother to see if she could spare a moment. Aegis couldn’t help but sense intense amusement and a touch of a competitive edge in her mother’s tone. Aegis relayed Thunderfury’s plan in its entirety. she added with disdain. Aegis flew over to look the beast up close, and saw nothing but the eyes of a dim-witted animal slowly chew on cud. She waved a hoof over its eyes and only got a slow blink and a lazy chew on some feed. Twilight paused for several seconds as she spoke briefly to Rainbow Dash. Twilight replied warmly. For the time being, she would operate under the assumption that the talbuk was as animalistic as the sphinxes claimed. As Aegis set events in motion to buy the animals, Twilight refocused on the game when Rasua returned and immediately asked to join in. Thaddeus had provided the three royal Equestrians with premade character to jumpstart the Vaults and Villains game. What had surprised Twilight most was the stack of papers outlining a hundred premades to choose from. The three of them played along for different reasons. The interest of diplomacy on Luna’s part, while Twilight had to trade away three days of laying to Rainbow Dash to get her to give more than token involvement. I don’t mind, Twilight mused with a wry grin. I had a few years of laying before she got a chance, so this will help even out the population just the tiniest bit. Twilight however was more intrigued by the game than any of them. She spoke as she tried to settle on the three best looking character sheets. “I must ask how a game of this nature became a national sport.” She looked up to Ventras for an answer. “We have something remotely similar, but it hasn’t garnered much public spotlight outside of being a hobby.” Rasua couldn’t help but chuckle inwardly at the impossible idea that something similar to Villains and Vaults could be anything except wildly popular while her father tried to remain diplomatic. “We sphinxes have a long tradition of hunting to prove one’s worth as a predator. We have… less bloody sports to test one’s teamwork and physical prowess. We even have some games that challenge strategic thinking as well.” He started speaking extremely dramatically to the point of embarrassment on Rasua’s part. “But Vaults and Villains is a test of everyone’s creativity and cultural richness. It is the Vault Lord’s job, nay, privilege to present and direct a riveting tale, while it is the players’ task to bring fresh ideas and plot twists to life.” He tapped his chin before grinning at the Equestrians. “Something I’m sure the three of you will offer in spades.” Time melted away for Twilight Sparkle as the campaign Ventras picked out cast everyone’s characters into a pitched battle right from the start and didn’t let up for hours. Thaddeus and Rasua’s characters were teamed up with the Equestrians as the gathered party tore through goblins, gnolls, the undead(Rainbow’s particular favorite), and beasts of questionable nature. Everyone tried to keep things simple for the Equestrians by only playing Egyptian sphinx characters. The campaign lasted for hours, and at the end of a long slog through a virtual sea of monsters and hostile soldiers, the group arrived at the warlord: Warchief Guth the Butcher of Fangly Harbor, who rode upon a large fire breathing winged serpent. Luna took a moment to notice quite a crowd had gathered around the room. At least three dozen guards and servants watched on from the sidelines or up in the rafters. With a manic grin, Rainbow Dash jabbed a hoof at Ventras after winning the roll of the dice to go first. “I, the masked monk Tiburón Perdido, charge in for a tackle!” Ventras gave her a set of dice for Rainbow to roll. A hoof pump heralded the results. “Eighteen!” “Alright,” Ventras started as he formulated what happened next. “You latched onto the rear section of the winged serpent a meter behind the saddle.” He rolled some damage dice before turning to Luna. “I guess I’ll go ahead and preemptively start casting a healing spell for her.” Everyone else joined the battle with far more caution. The battle ended up going poorly thanks to some bad rolls and the overall difficulty of the campaign. Through sheer luck, Rasua’s character managed to rip the Warchief’s halberd away, leaving him with only a shield and his winged serpent. It had been a winning move the last time Rasua had played this, but her father’s eyes glinted in predatory malice. He propped himself up on the table and bellowed in his best intimidating baritone voice. “Foolish mongrels! You think disarming me will save you? Serpent! Fly above these worms and incinerate them from above!” Breaking character, Ventras also added, “Since Guth still has his shield, he casts Omni-Reflect, protecting him and his mount from spells for twenty turns.” He looked upon the horrified faces of the audience and players. “Queen Rainbow Dash, I’ll give you a chance to let go before the mount flies too high.” Thaddeus and Rasua slouched back in their chairs in defeat as their melee characters were rendered useless, while Luna and Twilight tried to comb the spellbook for a way to break the reflect barrier. Thaddeus was about to announce his intent to duck for cover and look for a discarded crossbow when Rainbow Dash slammed a hoof on the table. “Screw that, I roll to pin.” The room went dead silent. Even the blizzard outside seemed to give pause. Fearing Ventras would null the action as impossible, Rainbow clarified. “I move to grapple the serpent’s wings together so he can’t fly.” Everyone looks at Ventras. He worked his jaw as an internal war debated on whether or not to accept the action. After a long pause he nods. “Roll it.” Everyone scrambled over each other to watch Rainbow toss the dice into the center of the table. The whole room followed the dice as they bounced on the table and came to a stop at the center. A collective gasp resounded throughout the chamber while a fang-filled toothy grin cleaved Rainbow’s muzzle. “Natural twenty, baby! Wooo!” Cheering erupted from the crowd, buying time for the flabbergasted Ventras to recover from the shock. Only a tenth of any fresh party groups ever survive this campaign. Laughing at himself, Ventras made a large sweeping gesture to silence the crowd. “You succeed in grappling the serpent’s wings.” He rolled the dice twice. “And the warchief fails to dislodge you. All three of you plummet to the ground, snapping the winged serpent’s neck and throwing both you and the warchief to the dirt. Roll for fall damage.” As it turned out, Rainbow’s character was knocked out with several broken bones, but the warchief was still able to shakily climb to his feet, only to find Thaddeus and Rasua waiting to finish him off. Luna weaved a spell to mend Rainbow’s character while Twilight lifted her sister’s foreleg and cheered to the crowd as if she was a sports announcer at Cloudsdale. “And the winner issss Tiburrrrrrrrón Perdidoooooo!” Ventras closed his campaign book, signaling the end to the game. The whole room thundered in applause, and money changed hands as bookies doled out gamblers’ winnings. Most of the sphinxes were quickly shooed out of the room by the guards within a few minutes after the game was over. Ventras couldn’t help but to feel uplifted by how well the game went, and how enthusiastic the two changelings had gotten halfway through. He gathered up the rule books and several other paraphernalia and put them in their case before walking over and presenting the package to the two queens. “Seeing how you two have taken to the game so strongly, I would like to present to you, all you need to learn the greater depth of Vaults and Villains. Perhaps in the future, one of you can host a campaign of your own design.” Luna was more than happy to miss such a present while Rainbow Dash took the case in her kinesis. “I gotta say, Venny, a game like that is like living through a Daring Do book, crazy fun stuff.” “I’ll take your word for it,” Ventras replied having no idea what a Daring Do was, “The cooks should be done preparing our evening meal.” Both queens had noticed the delectable aroma of smoked ribs and steak leaking in through the western doors. Twilight tried to hide her growling gut. “Well if the smell is anything to go by, I’m sure it will be excellent.” As the night continued on into early morning, both the Equestrians and sphinxes enjoyed a much warmer atmosphere since the game broke what little ice was left after the treaty negotiations were finished. The rumors spreading out from the servant staff about a respectable treaty and the highlights of the game lifted many fears and concerns, allowing its denizens a moderately restful night-early day sleep. Ultimately however, it would not be the actions of leaders who would see peace in their time, but the will of the people. Only time could answer the hundreds of questions that danced in the minds of every citizen of the Sphinx Federation and Equestrian Alliance. > 6: Of Spies and Farewells > -------------------------------------------------------------------------- It took two days for the changeling puppet to carefully slip down into the Stripped Gear proper. Out of sheer luck, the infiltrator ended up next to a bakery. The security was fairly lax this far into the city, allowing the puppet to steal several loaves of bread and a bucket of filtered tap water. It originally tried to use collected rainwater from the building's gutters, but the filth in the runoff looked dangerous, even for the infiltrator’s expected short life. Of course, laxer security was relative. Every drone between the infiltrator and their queen was a deadly threat. It didn’t matter if they were soldiers or non-combatants, any one of them could alert the whole hive to the spy’s existence. And that would cause Cadista to move to a locked down area until this puppet’s corpse is found. The puppet was currently stuffing it’s face with stale bread in between two recently emptied dumpsters. Even with a hive mind’s efficiency, there were still a handful of discarded crates that the controlling queen cobbled together into a makeshift shelter and more importantly, a place to drop the massively calorie-burning camouflage. This shelter won’t last more than an hour at most before someone gets suspicious. The queen used other drones surrounding Stripped Gear to monitor the weather. So far, the skies were clear. Rain would make stealth all but impossible. There was one other problem that the queen had not accounted for: air pollution. While the shield dome kept the thin layer of smog from leaving the caldera, that did little for anyone in the heart of the hive itself. Out along the walls, it had been tolerable, but now the pollution was a security risk. The queen could suppress the puppet’s need to cough, but the body was starting to suffer. Damn all this soot. This body’s growing weaker with every breath. The controlling queen recalled the drone’s memories as it descended the walls. The grey tint of the pollution was denser the closer to the shield dome, but only by a marginal amount. The puppeteering queen clapped her hooves. Bravo, Cadista, Bravo. You made it so the shield is actively drawing in the soot by a slight amount. Making it nigh impossible for this body to survive very long where your personal chambers would be. No doubt your entire brood is immune to this poison. The puppet scrapped a hoof along the blackened wall of the bakery, picking up a large lump of carbon. It must be taxing to keep those steam engines of hers clean enough to function. A proverbial light went on in the queen’s head. While she had little interest in the technology itself, she was familiar enough with it to know a hive of this size required vast amounts of power. Wait a second… Where is she getting all the power necessary to drive so many machines? I can’t believe that pitiful amount of coal she pulls in from Equestria is sufficient. And, from what I remember from eavesdropping on a of few of her love collectors, Cadista doesn’t use mana to drive much either. The puppet looked at the ground beneath its hooves, and noticed it was volcanic rock. Yeeees, this is a volcano! Cadista is practically sitting on a time bomb! Her enthusiasm faded a little. Or at least it used to be. This volcano hasn’t blown its top since I’ve walked this planet, so this is either a dead end, Cadista’s keeping the mountain stable, or it’s only active enough to be a source of energy. A scowl of deep thought appeared on the queen’s muzzle. The last time I abducted one of Cadista’s drones, I remember it saying something about a crystal factory down in the heated depths. Too bad the smart drone managed to wrestle enough control to kill itself before I could learn more. In any case, she might have some sort of device in place to keep the volcano dormant, and she wouldn’t have built a hive here if it wasn’t sturdy. A wicked grin cleaved the queen’s maw. However… If I can cause a big enough of a disturbance, I might be able to temporarily force her to leave the hive as a precaution. And if she does that, I can rid myself of her once and for all. I better tell my allies to get into position. There’s no telling how much longer Twilight will be distracted by those cat-things in the west. Eager to flee the poisoned air, the puppet recalled a sewer access it passed earlier and retreated for it to slink deeper into the hive in search for the underground crystal factory. Cadista was standing on the observation platform situated on the left side of the covered hanger deep within Stripped Gear. A new vessel laid before her, while nowhere near as massive as the Ashes of the Phoenix that came before it, it was a marvel of engineering to behold. The vessel itself was long and flat and measured out to nearly one hundred and sixty meters from bow to stern, and had a beam of just barely twenty meters across. It had no weapons to speak of except for small close range flak cannons ventral mounted on the port and starboard sides. This could be my most powerful far reaching weapon to date, and it isn’t even the ship itself that’s the true threat. The voice of Brass Excursor was heralded by a high priority ping. Cadista’s mood darkened. The heavy weight of concern in Brass’ voice intensified Cadista’s worry. Cadista ended communications, to refocus on her radically new ship. Things are coming to a head. The next war will begin soon, and if my spies are right, it will all begin here. I didn’t think Polybia had the brass to start it though. Cadista cast her consciousness far to the north, past Equestria, and deep into the heart of the Chaos Lands where no one roamed except wild things. Out into the now totally abandoned city of Rookhaven, where even the stubborn pride of the old imperials was not enough to eke out a decent living compared to migrating to Alliance territory. One particular area had been flattened out and turned into a proper testing ground so far out of the way that none of the other hives even knew it existed. There, another new kind of airship was in development, one that was much faster and smaller than any other before it. Cadista scowled at the lengths she had to go to in order to keep her new weapon a secret. Finally having an outdoor airfield’s been a serious boon now that we can test full sized aircraft, but the sheer distance makes it a logistical nightmare. Returning her attention to the hangar, Cadista ground her teeth in exasperation. For two hundred years I’ve pursued a way to project my power over vast distances and in a timely manner. Warships like the Deception simply aren’t fast enough. Yet with this ship, I’ll finally have the might necessary to finally secure Twilight’s bloodline. A cruel sneer marred her face. Between Twilight, Rainbow Dash, and now Aegis bearing royal blood, our legacy is secure behind the shield of Equestria, Yumia. We finally fulfilled our purpose. A cold fury enveloped her, yet it was tempered into loathing indignation. Still, one thing remains that may yet jeopardize my daughters. The only queen who’d dare to take Equestria head on, and she needs to die. Cadista passed her awareness across the construction crews. Everyone was performing the tenth recheck of all onboard systems with the boilers and engines idling. The only real thing left to do at this point, was the installation of the cloaking crystals. That’s still going to take another week to finish perfecting the crystals, but debugging the ship’s engines will take longer than that anyway. She waited a moment to give her children time to react. A chorus of affirmatives resounded through the local hive mind as drones rushed to obey, and the vessel would be free of its moorings by the day’s evening. The main audience chamber of Ventras’ manor was silent save for the scribbling of quills on parchment. The mid afternoon sun shined through several windows now that the blizzard had passed. Twilight Sparkle and the other Equestrian leaders sat on one end of a rectangular table as each in turn signed away, while Ventras and Thaddeus prepared to do the same on the other side. Well over two dozen sphinxes and changelings bore witness to the signing of the Treaty of Stratholme. Eventually, both language versions of the treaty were passed out to ten sphinxes of rank, and to ten other equestrians, five from Equestria and five from the hive to mark them as official witnesses. When all was said and done, Luna gave the signatures one last cursory glance before handing over the sphinx language treaty in exchange for the one in Equestrian. “Very good.” She nodded politely to Ventras and Thaddeus. “With everything in order, my colleagues and I wish to return to our respective capitals. We have much to do back home to ensure the comradery this treaty has created will flourish.” “My thoughts exactly,” Ventras agreed. He bowed out of respect. “You are welcome at my hearth whenever you choose to visit.” He glanced over at Rasua who was doing an admirable job keeping her swimming emotions in check. Twilight Sparkle didn’t need her empathy to know what he was thinking. “Do not fear, Ventras, as one parent to another, I will make it a point that she is treated with the respect she has earned.” It wasn’t a guarantee of protection, fortunately, because that would have insulted his pride as a father. “I… Thank you, Queen Twilight Sparkle. May your house stand for a thousand years.” Hopefully longer than that, Rainbow mused as Twilight finished exchanging pleasantries. I can’t wait to get back to the hive and whip up a huge VnV campaign. I hear Counterspell has aspirations for writing, maybe he can write the first one. Eager to remove both ships from Federation territory due to the fear the Deception’s painfully visible weapons had caused, everyone loaded up into their respective vessels. Rasua put her curiosity about the warship aside and asked Aegis to guide her to one of the underbelly observation blisters she saw on the way up. From there, Rasua plastered herself to the glass and gazed out across her home. All the sweat, blood, and tears that went into the first landing upon these shores, and building Stratholme from the ground up surged in her mind. Rasua couldn’t stop a few tears from falling, even with Aegis watching the city by her side. Rasua spoke with slightly fluttery speech as the warship lazily turned to the east. “It’s such a powerful experience. Building a city from scratch.” She spied Aegis nodding in the corner of her eye, as if a princess would know of such trials. Shoving a surge of indignation to the side, Rasua pointed to the center of the docks. “I still remember Thaddeus and I being the first ones off the landing boats. Once the homeland government received word of the fertile land we found, our colony became a rallying cry for people from all territories to immigrate to.” At least that’s what Rasua wished to believe. But in her heart, she knew being reassigned to the colonization effort had been tantamount to banishment from the Sestapo. The fact that her father and oath-brother had already set out to lead the expedition had been the perfect excuse for her superiors. I won’t fail the Federation again. I swear it. “You mean as a point to further solidify and tighten the new unity your people share?” Aegis asked after Rasua fell quiet for too long. The sphinx blinked at her with a vacant expression. “Oh, yes. That’s right,” Rasua blurted out to recover. She coughed to buy time to recompose herself. Yet as the Deception started to steam away, Rasua couldn’t help but to feel as if she was being separated from her child. Almost every building there stands because of the nails, screws, and tools I made! Why in all the seven seas did I have to do this!? Why couldn’t someone else have stepped up? Why didn’t that monumental idiot Chevalier not go to this bug hive instead!? Why did she have to kill those two explorers? More and more ‘what ifs’ and ‘why nots’ questions swirled around in Rasua’s mind. The more that sprang up, the further her composure slipped until she was on the verge of a panic attack. Aegis was only willing to stand by for so long before placing a firm hoof Rasua’s withers. “Hey, hey!” Rasua stopped hyperventilating for a brief moment. “Look, I know this is going to be a rough time. Building a new home, only to have to leave it like this can’t be easy.” She took a softer tone. “You’re a strong person, Rasua. Whether it was calculated or impulsive, you chose to take responsibility and demonstrate the honor of your people.” Rasua seemed to tense the longer Aegis kept her hoof on her, so she removed it. “I don’t know about your people, but with us, the display of real emotion is encouraged. It is how the strong can heal.” “I… see.” Rasua’s gaze returned to the shrinking city as the ship neared the outskirts. “I ask forgiveness on that. It is a sign of weakness for such a display to anyone other than close family.” It was about as polite of a dismissal request as Rasua could voice, and Aegis took the hint. “I can understand that. The griffins and minotaurs are a lot like that. I need to go train anyway.” She started heading for the door. “There will be a guard outside if you need anything. We’ll find out how to best use your talents once we reach Phoenix’s Roost.” “Good,” Rasua said a moment before Aegis could shut the door behind her, “I want to be useful.” If only to keep myself from going mad. Aegis simply nodded and shut the door, leaving Rasua to mourn the loss of her second home in a single lifetime. For the next hour, her eyes remained glued to Stratholme, and only turned away when the last vestiges of sphinx civilization were obscured by distance and trees. But even as the forest and sky shrouded the colony, a massive gout of lightning danced in the sky, drawing all eyes towards it. Rasua’s heart fluttered at the send away, and she fell flat on her rump. The Spark Cannons. This is your doing, isn’t it father? The light show was a traditional farewell to a hero of the state. To further hammer the point home that this was indeed a message for her, seven long twisting streaks of stark orange lightning pierced the heavens to form a stylized anvil. Rasua’s tears returned in earnest as she pulled out the necklace bearing her badge of apprenticeship blacksmithing, with its primary rich orange finish in the shape of an anvil. She squeezed the badge tightly in her hand as her love and pride for her family surged. “I promise you father,” she spoke aloud so her ancestors could hear, “I will bring honor to the Federation and our house. By my soul it shall be.” With her resolve given strength, Rasua turned to the east to await what new horizons were in store her. A deep rooted fear started to creep up from the depths of her mind, darkening the eastern horizon. Both queens and Princess Luna watched the lightning show from the observation deck of the Crystal Blue with a mix of emotions ranging from being impressed, to concern. Yet before anyone could voice that concern, the sphinx acolyte, named Pax Diomedes, hummed in approval. “That’s quite a show of respect. I can only hope Metal-Shaper Rasua was able to witness that. There are few greater honors a governor can bestow upon another.” Twilight visibly calmed at the explanation, thankful they were not being attacked or threatened. One can never be too sure about new civilizations. “Last I heard, she was watching the city fade into the distance, so I’m sure she saw it.” The priest dipped his head towards the west and kissed his thumb before making a circle gesture on his forehead. “The maiden of the great cycle will be pleased.” Diomedes meditated silently for a minute while the royals returned to their chairs at the port side of the deck, save for Rainbow Dash who hovered around him. When he returned to the present, Diomedes turned towards the sound of Twilight and Luna chatting only to find a face full of Rainbow Dash at eye level. He backed up, exuding surprise that Rainbow was finally able to pick up on with her empathy, but just barely. “So what’s your deal? You some kind of holy guy?” Twilight picked up on her sister’s less than diplomatic tone and mannerism, but decided to let Rainbow have her way. No sense in reigning her in all the time, she’ll never learn tact that way. The priest gave a slightly insulted faux smile. “I’m not sure what you mean by ‘holy’. I am an acolyte of the Great Cycle. A paragon and upholder of the maiden’s laws and morality.” Rainbow gave him a sardonic look. “Uh huh, sounds like a holy guy to me.” She pulled back to stand to her full height, which made her tower over him. “Something’s been bugging me ever since we got to Stratholme. What were those three towers out by the docks for? They were pumping some mad magic over the whole region.” “Oh, is that all?” His posture relaxed significantly as he started rummaging around his robes. Now that they were in the warm confines of the Crystal Blue everyone had shed their winter clothing for something looser. The Equestrians had disrobed completely, much to the dismay of the priest. “They are psionic dampeners designed to, as I’m sure you can surmise from the name, suppress psionic abilities. Not only from being used, but also from manifesting in the first place.” Twilight suddenly lost most of her interest in her conversation with Luna, and quickly asked Rainbow to relay whatever she heard. For her part, Rainbow was equally chilled by the comment, and wasn’t quite able to hide her discomfort. “So you guys don’t like mind readers or something?” Diomedes visibly shuddered at the mere mention of it. “I don’t know about your kind, your highness, but psychic ability is an uncommon trait among us, and it is the most reviled. They steal thoughts, rip the mind to tatters, and can even pull the blood from your marrow. I tell you now, your highness, such powers are beyond dangerous, and must be stamped out for good.” He caught himself after seeing spittle fly from his mouth. He cleared his throat and tensely brushed the book he found in his pockets. “My apologies. My order makes it a point to seek out those who willingly use such abilities and cleanse them from the Earth.” At this point, Twilight excused herself from Luna to canter over and join Rainbow’s conversation while the blue queen replied in a less than thrilled tone. “So you just use the towers to protect yourselves?” “Quite right,” he replied with a curt nod. “A loyal citizen of the Federation, and tenant of the Seven Virtues cannot help it if genetics cursed them with the unlawful ability, and too many dormant users have proven steadfast paragons of righteousness. So the towers keep psychic ability from manifesting in the first place. Partly to save them from the angry mobs, Sestapo, and my order, but also to protect the citizens at large from the profligates who would try to harm them with the abilities as well.” “Sounds dangerous,” Twilight commented carefully, revealing nothing of her mounting worry that the sphinx might try to flee back to the colony or harm her hive. “How do you differentiate between magic and psychic power?” I wonder if her words means these Equestrians are familiar with such abilities. This does not bodes well if they do not see the danger of such uncontrollable power. “It’s simple really. Magic uses mana, while psychic powers use a wholly different form of energy we call mutons. I have my ways of detecting such abilities, but you needn’t worry,” he added with a reassuring smile. “Every initiate in my order is tested for dormant abilities, and I have none. Your thoughts are safe from me, your highnesses.” Rainbow griped. Her instinctive use of the Link rose the hairs on the back of both queens’ necks, but if the priest had detected the hive speak, he made no indication. “Well I’ve got to ah… powder my nose. Have fun with Princess Luna.” Twilight’s fur was starting to discolor from the heavy sweating on her forehead. Oh this is just great! Now we have to tiphoof around Rasua or she’ll never trust anypony in the hive before she gets to know us! Giving her best fake smile, Twilight tried to look at regally neutral as possible. “I have matters to tend to aboard my ship. Affairs of state and what not. I trust you’ll get along just fine with Princess Luna.” With that, she turned about face and speed trotted out of the room, leaving a very baffled priest behind. As soon as she was out of the room, Twilight teleported back to her quarters on the Deception. I wonder what that was all about, he mused with a cocked head. Perhaps even talking about such things troubles them greatly. In any case, I better ingratiate myself with the Princess so as to make things easier for myself. Twilight popped into existence inside her quarters only to find Rainbow Dash struggling to dislodge herself from the tangled pillows and sheets on Twilight’s bed. “I see your teleporting skills still need work, but at least your aim is getting better.” Rainbow managed to free her head out from the blankets. “I was trying to port into my room. But we’ve got bigger problems.” She rolled off the bed, still prying the sheets off. “There’s no way in Tartarus that we’re going to be able to hide the hive mind for long. Even if that priest, monk, whatever he is, is going to Equestria, we still have Rasua to deal with.” Deciding to save her sister from any more struggles, Twilight used her magic to peel away the rest of her sheets. “That will be a problem for sure. If our abilities were limited to just the hive mind, I think we could get away with it, in their eyes, but we royals have psychokinesis, along with others things. Although outside of the hive mind most of our psychic abilities overlap with common spells. Sadly, I doubt they’ll care about technicalities.” Rainbow buzzed her wings to quickly stand up. “I don’t think anyone in the Federation will trust us if they all share that kind of hatred towards it.” Twilight’s ears wilted a little at the prospect of facing more distrust and possible prejudice. But memories of Equestria gave her renewed hope. “We faced such issues with the Equestrian public in the face of Chrysalis’ invasion and fear of our disguises. Now, most ponies in the world at the very least, see our hive as friends if not true allies. The sphinxes will be no different, save the fears we must overcome.” “I hope so,” Rainbow replied with more than a little concern. “I guess the first step is getting Rasua and that monk to trust us on some level. If she can trust us, then I bet she can convince her brother and father.” “And it can snowball from there. An excellent idea, Rainbow.” Twilight had hoped her sister would come to that conclusion, and would have continued the conversation along that line if Aegis hadn’t pinged her mind requesting entry. Twilight broadcasted to both Aegis and Rainbow Dash. The princess in question entered with a deep seed of concern that nearly everyone in the hive shared after the mass warning about the sphinx’s view of psychics. Aegis managed to walk in on her back legs with only moderate wobbling. “I get that the fear thing is an issue, but we have something else too. Rasua might be able to reverse engineer some of our technology. The only reason they didn’t do anything with Trail Mix’s musket is because they distrust fire.” “Really?” both queens replied in perfect unison, with Twilight continuing. “I guess we’re mostly okay then. Judging by the equipment of their guards, their steelwork is at least on par with our own, and I think their body armor is more advanced than Equestria’s.” Rainbow smirked as she thought about it. “Yeah, and since most of our weapons are based around gunpowder, I think we’re mostly in the clear. Even our steam engines might give them pause.” “I figured as much when she told me,” Aegis commented with concern still etched in her brow. “But subtle things, like our new Quadrinix alloys. Rasua is a blacksmith after all, she’s gotta have extensive metallurgical knowledge. There’s no telling how rich her homeland is with the stuff, or if they even use it at present.” “Good point,” Rainbow conceded with a slight scowl. “Guess our best bet is to earn her friendship and then go from there. If we start restricting her movements, that’ll backfire quicker than I can fly.” “I agree,” Twilight felt more than a little pride in her sister at choosing diplomacy over hardliner security. “We’ll play it by ear and adapt. It’s what our kind are best known for,” she added with a wink and a smile. Feeling some pride in her linage, Aegis smiled in return. “I’ll let the hive know about the plan.” Aegis turned about face, and nearly fell in the process. “And in the meantime, I’m going to get hand lessons from our esteemed guest. Hopefully I’ll be able to hold a rifle again by the time we get back to the Roost.” “Before you go, Aegis”, Twilight called out with a raised hoof. The princess stopped at the door and turned back to listen. “I just want to say how proud I am of you, for your actions in Stratholme. Not just gathering the necessary scents for disguises, but in your handling of Rasua and the troublemakers in the stables.” Aegis swelled with pride at the paise while Rainbow joined in. “That was good thinking too. These sphinxes are kinda sorta like griffins. They will only befriend people who have the strength to stand up for themselves and speak their mind. You’re going to end up being a better queen than me one day,” Rainbow added with a sidelong smile. A massive grin split Aegis’ muzzle. “Thanks, Momma, Aunty.” She rushed over to hug and nuzzle them both. Being told she had brought honor to her royal blood was the sort of praise Aegis yearned for above all others. It wasn’t enough for her to believe in herself. Aegis needed to know others thought she had the makings of a good queen. The hug lasted barely a minute before an idea that had been lurking in the back of Aegis’ mind came to the surface, causing her to jump back a bit. “Ooo, I just remembered!” The queens looked at her expectantly. “Now, I’ve been thinking, let’s say I do prove the worth of my strain.” Aegis waved down to her bipedal stance for clarification. “It’s still going to take a really long time for me to rework alchemy to make up for it. Plus,” she said while focusing primarily on Rainbow Dash, “Stripped Gear, Equestria, and our hive work, or had worked, really really well with two queens. So I was thinking that maybe you could have a royal daughter to be my counterpart.” Rainbow hummed in contemplation, looking up to think, only to have Twilight begin nuzzling her affectionately. “I know my rule feels so much more complete with you here, Rainbow. I think Aegis has the right idea.” For her part, Rainbow Dash leaned into her sister, eager to return the affection and love. “Yeah…” Her tone shifted from contemplative to self-assured. “Yeah! I know I’d never be able to run a hive all by myself.” She took on a mock southern accent. “We’re like two halves of an apple pie!” Both queens stood up straight to look each other in the eyes. A spark passed between them as they spoke in perfect unison. “And together, we are more than the sum of our parts.” They nodded before facing a bemused Aegis, and continued speaking in unison. “It’s a good plan, Aegis/my daughter, we’ll figure out the best way to implement it later.” “Great!” Aegis cheered and buzzed into the air out of excitement. “Well I better leave you two to Link Meditate, I have to get hand lessons from Rasua, bye!” Aegis made haste to leave while Rainbow gave her sister a smug look. “And I’ll be making some eggs,” Rainbow announced with a manic grin as Aegis left the room. She lightly poked Twilight with a hoof. “You owe me three days of eggs, and I’m cashing in now.” Twilight shot her sister a sarcastic raised eyebrow as Rainbow concentrated to begin production. “Are you sure? There’s still a week’s supply of royal jelly cider in the ship’s hold with your name on it.” Rainbow grinned widely as she lovingly rubbed her abdomen. “The jelly tea’s almost as good. Besides, thirty nine more awesome eggs are worth the wait.” She looked back up to her sister who still had an amused look. “Plus, we’ll be escorting Luna’s Crystal Blue Back to Canterlot airspace for the next week or so to make sure some of those rival changelings doesn’t try to foalnap her or something. There’s plenty of time to guzzle that cider.” “Fair enough,” Twilight giggled. “I’ll give the order to have the ship’s hatchery be brought online.” The changeling spy within Stripped Gear was cooking in its own chitin. The sewers were becoming swelteringly hot the closer it got to the bowels of Stripped Gear. The stench alone was almost enough to make the puppeting queen abandon the quest entirely. In all my years, I have rarely found anything that could curl my nose quite like an omnivore’s sewer. For the hundredth time, the spy came to an intersection in the pipes. Security had been almost completely absent, save for steel grates that kept the small denizens of the jungle from reaching sensitive areas. There was only one time she saw a drone down here, and he was too busy repairing a steam pipe to notice the spy creeping by. The infiltrator was in front of one such grate, testing its encrusted edges to find any weakness when one of the queen’s other spies sent word. Damn, the Deception left that cat-thing town sooner than I expected. Thanks to that cursed cloaking device, there’s no telling if Twilight is escorting the pony airship back, or if she’s sprinting back to Phoenix’s Roost. If I’m going to do something, I better do it within the next twenty four hours. Suspecting the sewer grate didn’t lead further down towards the geothermal plant, the spy left it alone to follow the steam pipes, and seek out a means to bring about Stripped Gear’s end. > Bonus: Magical Engineering > -------------------------------------------------------------------------- Cargo Bay Two was typically very clean, very orderly, and very exact despite the regular visits from the crew to take or store supplies. Just like the prideful Quartermaster Darktail liked it. This fine morning however, the lavender drone walked into her normally pristine cargo bay to find it crowded by four large blue animals, and a mixture of hay and straw completely covering the ordinarily shiny floors. The reek of cow pies and a smell not unlike wet dog drowning out the once pleasant lemon pine scent augmented with a delightful hint of oily lubricant. To top it all off, the deep belly, yet nonaggressive, growls and moans from the spiky animals rivaled the Deception’s normally endearing engine hum. Darktail stood at the entrance to her once immaculate cargo bay, a paragon of order, with a ghastly scowl fixated on the blue drone with a brow so furrowed it might cause scarring. The object of her fury was hovering next to one of the beasts. The growling mare caught Blitz’s attention as she was cantering by on her way back from breakfast. She took one look at the cargo bay and promptly fell off the ceiling laughing her head off. “Damn Darktail, I thought you were a neat freak.” “I am, and proud of it.” she bit back through clenched teeth. Thunderfury replied at length before returning his attention to the bull talbuk. A clipboard, an inkpot and quill, along with his trusty abacus were all held aloft in his magic as he looked deeply into the animal’s unfocused eyes. Darktail spouted more obscenities at Thunderfury, but he was too focused on his work to notice. Blitz however perked her ears up at the rather inspired tirade, and took mental notes to remember some of the verbal barbs. Both mares entered the cargo bay, one out of indignation with the other out of curiosity. The lone stallion in the bay registered neither of them. “Intelligence Test number twelve…” He said while simultaneously writing it down and clicking a bead on his abacus to the other side. “Okay mister male talbuk… note to self: ask Rasua for talbuk terminology. For now, using cow terms.” He looked up in contemplation while tapping the quill on his chin before he began writing again. “Addendum: find out why cow and minotaur terms are the same thing. Connotation of similar evolutionary path?” “Would you stop that, and actually promise me you’ll clean up this mess!?” Darktail blustered once she finally reached earshot. “I have a very tight schedule to keep, and that doesn’t involve spiny blue dung factories!” She turned away with more green than lavender in her face. “I think the smell is going to make me puke.” “You gotta admit, TF, this whole place is going to need to be aired out for like a week when we get back.” Having nothing smaller in her satchel, Blitz grabbed a vice and squeezed her nose shut. Thunderfury bit his lower lip. He had been thankfully ignoring the smell by throwing himself into his work, and the reminder only made the stench return in full force. “Come on, girls, it’s the dead of winter, and the cargo bay’s barely above freezing. All the dirt and grime in their coat helps keep them warm. You know we can’t heat the entire ship. Just the living quarters and mess hall.” He started petting the bull’s head with calming strokes, eliciting a gentle rumble from the beast. “Besides, if these guys pass their intelligence test, then they’re entitled to just as much creature comforts as the rest of us.” Blitz didn’t really care either way and just shrugged from her hovering position. Darktail’s glowering face and wrathful aura finally made him remember that she had been giving him a demand the whole time. He looked at her with one ear half hanging to one side with the other rigidly straight. “Yes, I promise to help clean up.” Darktail’s scowl started to abate at his unwitting charm as both mares melted at his completely natural sad puppy dog face. “You’re lucky you ended up being so cute as a boy.” Darktail pulled him into a rough longing kiss, joyfully feeding off his spicy electric love which had grown more intense since he had become a stallion. “See you tonight? Your bunk?” “Ahhh…” Thunderfury rummaged around his tool belt to pull out a small booklet and flipped to a middle page. “Sorry, Counterspell already scheduled for tonight.” He gave her an apologetic look. “You know how he hates threesomes, even if we didn’t have small bunks.” Blitz prodded Darktail in the withers. “And you can forget tomorrow night too. Aegis and I got him then,” she said with anticipation in her eyes. “Gah!” Darktail angrily kicked some straw around. “The Queen-Mothers should make threesomes mandatory. Gotta share, gotta care am I right?” She huffed and her mood wasn’t helped by his helpless shrug and Blitz’s lopsided grin. “I can tell Resta to wait until Saturday’s regular checkup. If I go last that day, it shouldn’t interfere with her job.” His tone became moderately pleading. “You know how she is. Between overworking herself and creating salve all day, she needs more love than anypony around… well royals notwithstanding,” he added with a helpless shrug. “Yeah, fine, point made.” Darktail eyed the talbuk lazily chewing on his cud. “I guess that’d make up for trashing my cargo bay. A bit.” “It’s for a good cause,” Thunderfury whined with sad puppy dog eyes. Darktail refused to be suckered in by them and averted her gaze, causing Blitz to giggle madly. Seeing that he bought some time, Thunderfury’s gaze returned to his clipboard and then scooched his stool to be closer to the bull’s face. “Anyway, if you’re only here to yell at me, could you reschedule that too, so it doesn’t rile up the talbuks? The stablemaster only gave me enough sedative so they wouldn’t mind travel aboard ship.” Darktail had to think on it for a minute as Thunderfury closely examined the animal’s eyes. Eventually she groaned and cantered back to the exit. “Fine, have fun with your spiky friends. I have to reorganize cargo bay one after somepony decided to shove all my perfectly organized crates around to make a hoofball court!” Blitz twirled a lock of her prismatic mane with a hoof. “I can help,” she directed at Thunderfury. “Work’s pretty light right now, and Aegis is busy getting hand lessons from Rasua, so there’s not that much for me to do until we get back home.” Without looking away from the talbuk, Thunderfury levitated his clipboard over. “Awesome. Write down my findings would you, please?” “Alrighty.” Blitz replied cheerfully while taking the clipboard and other items into her magic. There’s no way I’m landing. I might end up with crap on, or worse, in my leg holes. She skimmed the densely packed words already written on several pages. “It seems like these guys don’t have much more than a blip on the ol intelligence chart.” When the talbuk failed to show any interest in the assortment of colorful basic shapes Thunderfury held in front of the bull’s eyes, he sighed a reply. “No, it doesn’t look like it. The sedatives are only there to keep them calm enough to travel. I can try again once we get them out into open pastures, but I’m not holding out much hope.” “Well then it looks like the sphinxes were selling them as advertised: big ol dumb beasts of burden.” The bull snorted loudly and moved towards one of the three females. Both drones winced as the bull started getting amorous, with Blitz giving her brother a bemused look. “I thought you said they were sedated.” “They are,” he deadpanned with an arched eyebrow at the bull. “I think something like this was mentioned in the manual the stablemaster sold me.” Thunderfury gathering his things and taking to the air. “How about we collate my finding over some tea? A few of our siblings promised to watch over the animals for the day and should be here any second now.” Logically, Blitz felt rather odd how the instinctual actions of a couple of animals made her ill-at-ease, and yet walking in on her siblings doing the same acts wouldn’t faze her in the least. I can ponder the mysteries of double standards later. “Sounds good, but you better shower first.” A particularly bad smell wafted over her nose. Ugh, I think I need a shower just from being here. Blitz zipped away, leaving Thunderfury to sniff and recoil at his hooves. As it turned out, pouring over data about a field of study you not only have zero experience, and only a cursory interest in, proved to be a laborious task that tea only barely assisted with. Never the less, Blitz plowed through it, if only to have an excuse to remain close to Thunderfury. It really sucks our clutch all ended up going different paths. We really only get to see each other every other weekend. “The cows scored really well on following the commands the stable master told us about, but they don’t seem to respond at all to anything else,” Thunderfury said out of the blue. Blitz looked up from her notes to see Thunderfury was scratching his chin, looking for all intents and purposes to have not a care in the world. “Maybe Aunty Applejack would be better at finding any spark of intelligence,” Blitz suggested while sending a link request to the mess hall’s galley staff for more tea. “Assuming there’s one to be found at all.” Thunderfury nodded silently, letting the conversation fade away. The mess hall itself was busy with well over two dozen drones chatting away in both the physical plane and via the Link. The furniture consisted of bolted down round tables and mass produced metal chairs with worn down cushions barely a pancake thick. The ever present thrum of the engines and the hiss of steam felt like a small piece of the hive, giving both Blitz and Thunderfury a longing to return home. When Thunderfury didn’t answer right away, Blitz let him be. She smiled in delight when a fresh pot of tea arrived and quickly thanked the overworked waitress. Pouring, Blitz refilled both of their cups and started nursing her own. Idly, she let her mind wander the hive mind and thought she’d check in on one of the very few persistent linkscapes across the hive mind. The Deception’s mess hall faded away as Blitz’s consciousness was thrust into a massive forum with information kiosks evenly spread out for half a kilometer. The ground beneath her hooves was grated metal, below which a maze of gears and pistons churned away. The kiosks were completely covered in post-it notes of all the latest developments and announcements. Only the queens were capable of hive-wide verbal announcements. To get around that limitation, everyone else came here. Hundreds of lavender, sky blue, and grey drones came and went, each reading various tidbits of information. Some stopped to chat with friends or discuss issues. It didn’t matter which kiosk Blitz went to, as all of the posted notes were identical between them. The strain of keeping this information center running at all hours was a taxing effort, so a cadre of specially tailored drones was bred for fabricating and holding persistent Linkscapes together so the queens were free to focus on other events. Blitz appeared near the crowded ceiling. The whole room was well lit, but aside from a few dim lamps, there was no discernable light source. I don’t know who will really care, but I might as well post our findings on the talbuks. Finding the closest kiosk, Blitz flew over and reached for one of the blocks of notes and grabbed one to start writing down. A quill manifested into reality at her whim and she labeled the note appropriately before it expanded and continued to do so the longer she wrote. She got half way done when Gentle Touch appeared in the center kiosk and grabbed a microphone to, in effect, cheat her way into making a mass vocal announcement across the archives. “Attention all factory workers and engineers of Phoenix’s Roost. Starting next week, all factories and work equipment will be limited to biannual upgrades only. The budget can’t handle constant equipment replacement every time an incremental improvement is discovered. Upgrades from here on will be staggered. See Directive 8B-0531 for further details. That is all.” Bummer, Blitz mused morosely. There go my plans to implement my latest version of Aegis’ finger design. Buuut I guess that means I have more time to further refine it. Blitz put the finishing touches on her talbuk findings and discarded the quill after signing her name to the document. She gave it to the drone manning the kiosk. “Don’t copy it all just yet. My clutchmate Thunderfury should be here soon to add more to it.” The grey secretary nodded and tucked the document below her seat. “I’ll be sure he’s sent here when he arrives at the archive.” As if on cue, Thunderfury appeared by her side. “There you are! Oh cool, you already started posting the data, thanks!” Identifying him immediately, the secretary retrieved Blitz’s post-it note and gave it to Thunderfury who started adding to it right away. Blitz grinned sheepishly and brushed a lock of red and orange hair out of her eyes. “Just trying to help.” Thunderfury engrossed himself in copying down all that he had learned, along with drawing a little doodle of the talbuks with exaggerated smiley faces and horns a bit longer than normal. There was something to be said about drones who were less than five years of age. The grey secretary noticed, but did not react to Blitz’s dreamy eyes, and Thunderfury being wholly ignorant of it. I swear, these love-drones are the weirdest bunch of loonies I’ve ever seen. A few minutes later Thunderfury gave the document back to the secretary and she gave an unamused hum at the doodle. Mother, what have you wrought by mixing ponies with us changelings? Blitz couldn’t hide her huge grin once Thunderfury looked back at her. “So what do you wanna do now?” “Hmm. I should probably tune up my tech-shields. That sphinx’s jaw I plowed through must have been denser than I thought, because the arcane wing emitters have been spotty ever since.” “Ha!” Blitz cheered with a competitive smirk and pointed at herself. “Momma hasn’t had a better engineer than me yet! I’d love to see what I can do for you. Why don’t you bring the shields to my workshop?” Thunderfury’s face lit up like the sun. “Really?! You’d do that for me?” “Of course, silly. What are siblings for, right?” Blitz shot him a winning smile. Sure I was supposed to be reviewing Aegis’ spare gauntlets, but I’m sure she won’t mind. The pair downed their tea and pinged the waitress before leaving. Blitz all but blasted her way into her workshop while shuffling for the light. The workshop was the same calculated level of order as she left it the night previously. As expected, since no one had been in the workshop since Blitz’s last visit. It helped that this particular machine shop was not the primary engineering bay for fixing and repair work aboard the warship, so it only saw light use outside of battle. Okay, I’ve got like five minutes before TF gets back from the armory. She raced over to her primary tool chest and pulled out several large heavy drawers. Within each were racks upon racks of carefully calibrated tools of the trade. Sadly, her fairly young age meant that she was only truly proficient in less than a quarter of them. Both queen-mothers were under the belief that every drone had to strike a balance between Link gifted knowledge and real working experience, hence why Blitz was so specialized in one field. I hope I can actually do something to help. She scratched behind her ear. Well, besides just repairing the thing. She cringed at the thought of being in over her head as she sifted through her tools, making doubly sure she knew where everything was. What if I can’t even repair it!? I’m good at robotics and Aegis’ armor, not tech-shields. I’d never even heard of a tech shield until Thunder told me about it! What if it’s totally beyond me that not even a brain dump could help me!? Blitz was about to ping the hive mind to get that very information, but she stopped herself and started nervously biting her hooves. I can’t do that! What if Thunder hears my request and finds out I don’t know anything about his shields? Then he’ll go somewhere else to get them fixed, and my chances will be ruined! “Hey, Blitz.” “Ahhh!” Blitz jumped out of her skin and into the air before she turned around to find Thunderfury at the door with his shields. He looked at her with bemusement. “Should… I come back later, maybe?” “No no no no,” Blitz gushed as she flashed what she hoped was a composed smile, but it only served to make her look a little loony. “I was just making sure everything is good to go for you and your shield!” It was only now that Blitz finally registered the two items held in the stallion’s rich cerise colored magic. She'd never seen them before, but they didn't seem too different compared to most things she was used to working on. That allowed her to calm down a little. Thunderfury played it off as if he didn’t notice her sweating profusely. I’m sure she’ll do fine… or at least not damage my babies. Plus, she might do better if I wasn’t watching. Sis gets all weird when we’re alone… aside from mattress gymnastics anyway. “I’d love to watch you work, but the guys down at the cargo bay’ve been telling me the talbuks have been getting rowdy, so I need to try and help calm them down.” He sheepishly rubbed the back of his neck as Blitz’s mood visibly deflated. “Sides, I know how to wield them, but repairing work like my shields is above me.” “Oh…” Blitz’s ears and face wilted, then she realized what good fortune his absence was. That means I can ping for the shield’s inventor without him noticing! “Ah, well, that’s okay. I should have your shields all fixed up before too long then.” Thunderfury carefully placed his tech-shields on the nearest clear workbench. “Great, see ya soon.” He slid past Blitz, but not before planting a loving kiss on her cheek. “love ya, sis.” “Love you too.” Although Thunderfury didn’t see it as he left, Blitz placed a hoof on the cheek, and swooned. Blitz had been kissed plenty of times before, and her libido rivaled that of even Aegis herself, but this was from her, admittedly, favorite clutchmate. As if logic needed even more reasons to shake its head at her, she had been with Thunderfury more times than she could count in this year alone. Even in a society where love was plentiful and free, she still treasured Thunderfury’s the most by far. Blitz felt a warm smile grace her features. He trusts me with his weapons. If Aegis is anything to go by, warriors love their weapons almost as much as the queen-mothers themselves. A great weight of responsibility and duty fell on her shoulders, but now she felt the drive and will to bear it. She turned to the shields with that same grin shifting to smugness. “Right, as if I’d let him down. Let’s do this!” She looked around for paper and a quill. Okay, as second-momma Twilight always says: checklists are the key to organized success. “Let’s see,” she thought aloud as she started scribbling. “First up, get info from the designer. I’m sure Uncle Ratchet knows. Second, find the break, third fix the break, fourth, profit!” Her grin faded as she reviewed her list. “…Maybe I need more detail than that. Well, I still need to talk to the designer first either way.” Clearing her mind, and failing, Blitz focused her mind’s eye on Ratchet. The grey stallion hissed as the boiler he was working on suddenly blew a gasket and started rattling horribly with steam beginning to rupture out of several pipes. “Somepony shut it down, do it now!” He and three other engineers raced to use enough ice magic to cool the boiler down before it exploded or the scalding high-pressure steam could obscure the whole factory. The boiler banged and clattered deafeningly as the titanic forces within stressed the metalwork to its limits. A drone by the control board sweated profusely as she looked at the dials. “The fire’s out… And… the pressure build up is slowing. It’s stable!” Once the machine was safe, Ratchet groaned irately. “Damn it all! Okay, boys and girls, take it apart and find out what went wrong; three pints to the one who finds it, a keg if you can correct it by sundown.” He pulled an oily rag and wiped up some of the sweat and grime from his face, only now realizing someone had been pinging him incessantly. The fact that it was such a formal ping, finally grabbed his attention. Blitz – Scion of Rainbow Dash – Engineer 5th class – robotics division. Formal pings were considered by most to be a better form of ‘hello’ than that word alone. Both sending and reading the pings was taught during nymphhood as a training method for sharpening the mind. For one of Ratchet’s age, reading a formal ping took less than a second. Uh oh, he only gets like that when things explode. Blitz did her best to keep a business tone. Ratchet was stopped short on giving his next orders to his crew. Thunderfury? He’s part of First Squad for the Jevruun Vrunningee. , he said while going from irritated to stoic. Blitz sighed in relief, her elation evident in her tone. He started barking orders to the clean-up team to make sure they didn’t damage anything, and effectively dismissed Blitz. Not that she noticed as her mind was already back in the archives and obtained the document within half an hour. Once her consciousness returned to the workshop, Blitz finally looked at the shields on the bench. They were lying face up on the mana-inert resin bench. They bore a slight concave with an overall teardrop shape. Blitz noticed there was a stylized bird, a phoenix she assumed, on the bottom with its burning wings flared to form the edges of the lower half. Arcing lightning was painted along the top of an otherwise navy blue shield. She looked at the other shield to find the same pattern. No doubt to keep enemies from guessing that each shield has a different purpose. I wonder how often Thunderfury has to repaint this between sparring practice. To the untrained eye, there was no visible evidence of the hardened and thin machine within the shield’s contours. Now that Blitz had knowledge straight from the designer’s notes, she knew the tracing lines were more like minute channels that ran along the entire length of the shields in jagged harsh angles. They still possessed a strange beauty about them, though. Yes… these are the amplification channels. These help enhance the force of the arcane wing at the expense of costing more mana to maintain. The notes said the emitters were along the back though. Blitz attempted to turn the shield over, but found her telekinesis slipped all around the shield, but failed to grab hold of it. “What the? Is it supposed to do that?” She browsed deeper into the notes, only to find a single line on the issue. As per protocol RD – info-sec – 0192, the weapons have been attuned to react only to the royals linked to the commissioner, Queen Rainbow Dash, and the owner. “Oh that’s just great!” Blitz growled. “Well there's a practical use for Aegis' hands.” As every other changeling before her, save her mother, Blitz was spoiled by telekinesis and had difficulty flipping the shield over so she could see the underside. There she found several prongs with the tell-tale reddish hue of Quadrinix alloys. The prongs themselves were arrayed in a grid pattern and were barely an inch high. Obviously not meant to be held with a hoof… or hands for that matter. “Well the emitters are embedded within the shield, so I’ll need a mana probe to find the problem,” she thought aloud while rifling through the proper drawer. Despite its simple name, each mana probe was calibrated to possess an identifying carrier wave when a changeling used it. In effect, the shield would only reveal its secrets to Twilight’s bloodline of hybrid changelings wielding this mass produced tool. Blitz felt her magical senses pass through the probe and into the depths of the shield. Hmmm… let’s see. According to the notes, the emitters should hold steady at 10 joules from the probe’s current setting. Starting from the top to the bottom, Blitz moved methodically across the shield until she found what she was looking for. Two emitters just shy of the center area were reading at 9.2 joules. Pleased with herself so far, Blitz continued along the rest of the shield to make sure the rest of the emitters were functioning. Okay, now according to the notes, this means there could be other problems causing the emitters to underperform. I better follow the guidelines by the numbers. Over an hour passed before her scanning was complete. Her own thoroughness and excitement kept her enamored with the shield’s exquisite construction. With a gentle grin, Blitz rubbed her chin as she contemplated a way to fix the error without going into the notes again. Can’t challenge myself if I keep looking at someone else’s notes. So the problem was that the emitter had improperly mixed alloy, which made it too brittle to smash into a sphinx skull. Far too weak for a shield in any situation. She smirked as an idea sparked in her head. “I bet my grey aunts and uncles would say the whole weapon is a wash, but they don’t know Quadrinix like I do.” After working on Aegis’ armor for as long as she did, Blitz always kept a stock of carbonated water and acid batteries in the workshop. It might damage the paint, but I think TF can forgive me this once… I hope. Pulling out the same large container she had worked on Aegis’ armor in, Blitz started pouring in the carbonated water, and set up the batteries to electrify the water. Once that was done, she crunched the data in her mind and on several pieces of paper. So, there’s too much iron and not enough carbon in the emitter. So I need a mana tunneler to keep from damaging the healthy metal. Blitz used her magic to grab two clamps to place on the shield’s prongs and carefully dropped it into the water. From there, she unlocked the swing arm bearing the two meters square mana tunneler. Missing lunch entirely, it took her two and a half hours after that to calibrate the tunneler to her exacting specifications, and another hour just to make sure her calculations were absolutely correct. Blitz held her twenty page long checklist, the last page consisting of ‘recheck the checklist’, as she finally reached the last page’s first check. “Correct the error.” Taking a deep calming breath, Blitz connected the circuit to electrify the water and channeled her magic into the tunneler. The various instruments she had set up started measuring the metal composition, its structure, and a timer set to cut off the tunneler with more precision than Blitz could do alone. By the time the clock cut the tunneler off, Blitz was tired, sweaty, and felt drained to the point of collapse. But it was done. Breathlessly, Blitz cut the electricity and took the shield out using the clamps. She levitated it back over to the workbench and used an electro-void stone to quickly pull all remaining traces of mana out before it could become detrimental to the metal. Once the shield was dried off, Blitz frowned sadly at the ruined paint. The phoenix and lightning was reduced to a thick morass that was slowly trying to fall off the sides of the shield. “Yeaaaa… mana tunneling saves the surrounding metal, but doesn’t do much for salve-resin based paint.” Before she could even think of what to do about it, there was a knock on the door, accompanied by Thunderfury’s ping over the hive mind. Blitz nearly freaked the instant Thunderfury’s smiling face barged its way into her workshop. “Heyya, Blitz, sorry I was gone for so long. The guys wanted me to watch the animals for the entire afternoon shift cause of a favor I owed them.” Blitz buzzed into a low hover in front of the shields. “Oh that’s no problem. I actually, um, just finished fixing the problem…” Thunderfury caught onto her saddening expression, and tried to counter it with joviality. “Wow, all in one day? I thought you’d have to tear it apart or tell me to live with the defect.” He fully entered the room carting a take-out box of steaming food. “I brought you some of the meatloaf they were serving since no pony had seen you around.” A thundering growl from Blitz’s stomach made her blush furiously enough to land and cover her belly with a foreleg. “Thanks, I guess I got carried away.” The act revealed the shields behind her. Thunderfury’s excitement shot up and he quickly levitated the food to rest on the side of the bench. “But you’re finished right?” he asked as he flew over to inspect her work, only to quietly whine at the state of the shield’s paint job. Blitz started biting her hooves as Thunderfury cradled the shield in his forelegs. What used to be a beautiful work of art had been reduced to a befuddled mess of colors. “It’s practically destroyed.” Blitz whimpered at him while he took the shield full into his magic to test it out. Thunderfury’s scowl slowly turned into a sullen expression as he tested multiple styles of Arcane Wing on the shield. “Well, the paint’s trashed, but the shield feels as good as new.” He turned to Blitz after putting the shield down and squashed her into a massive hug. Despite his grave displeasure at the ruined paintwork, the shield itself was worth far more. “Thanks for all your work, sis. I’m sure it wasn’t easy.” Relief flooded Blitz and she sunk into the loving embrace, even if it was tinted with the bitter spice of irritation. Some of her snarkiness forced its way to the surface. “No, it wasn’t. I still haven’t had a chance to clean up the mess.” He looked around to find the basin of water that sloshed gently to the sway of the ship along the air currents. The mana tunneler still hung low over their heads while electrical wires were wrapped tightly around the basin. His indignation at the melted paint waned as Blitz telekinetically removed the wires from the batteries and placed the glass covers back onto the leads. He could tell just by her weaker love stream that his sister was heavily fatigued. “So it seems.” He detached himself to look at his shield again. “I’m no artist, but I can always have Fresca repaint it. She already agreed to fix it whenever the paint got too mucked up.” Whew, that’s a load off. With the most potentially dangerous items stored away, Blitz tore into the meatloaf while Thunderfury tested the mana weight of the restored item. He took both shields into his mana and move over to a mildly open corner of the machine shop and started practicing various defensive stances. Blitz watched his lithe movements with a smile masked by the heavily salted food she stuffed into her maw. Thunderfury chafed at how little room he had to work with. He was constantly having to curtail his movements to avoid bumping into things, but the smoothness of how his mana flowed through the repaired shield excited him to no end. “It’s a lot more responsive now. I love it!” Gushing with pride, Blitz watched her brother give the best form of flattery her line of work could produce: a client happy with her work. As she ate, a thought occurred to her. I wonder if I’ll have the time to get more in-depth knowledge of embedded mana emitters. I could improve Aegis’ armor like that one day. Such thoughts sailed to the back of her mind as food and her brother’s martial exercises resumed the forefront. Getting tired of the cramped space, and not wanting to accidentally hit something fragile, Thunderfury stopped practicing. “Why don’t we go to the cargo bay? I can show you some of my moves while also keeping an eye on the talbuks.” The idea of being near those stinky animals made Bitz wrinkle her nose, but the prospect of seeing her brother’s lithe movements with the shields was greatly enticing. “I’d love to, right after I finish cleaning up around here.” It was not long before the clutchmates were in the cargo bay again. One enjoying his repaired tools of war, while Blitz was happy just to see him happy. The show lasted until sleep finally beckoned them for the night. At least that’s how it happened with Thunderfury. Before Blitz could bed down for the night, Rainbow Dash’s voice bounced in her head. Blitz gave Ferrum and his cot a forlorn look. She leaned down to whisper to him so she wouldn’t bother the hundred other drones in the crew quarters. “Sorry Ferrum, I’ll be back later, mother wants me.” He nodded and pulled out a spell book from under the bed. “That’s cool, I’ll wait for you.” “Thanks.” With that, Blitz hurried through the ship as the night shift took over. It wasn’t long before she found herself in front of Rainbow’s quarters, the two Queens’ Guards nodded to her and let her pass. Despite her history in the Wonderbolts, Rainbow Dash was even more informal than Twilight Sparkle, outside of military action at least. Even so, Blitz entered the queen’s quarters and stood at rigid attention near the door as it closed behind her. Rainbow’s quarters were covered in maps of the Jungle and all the surrounding lands around Alliance territory. Several books of military tactics and logistic strategy were piled everywhere with a few trashy romance novels hidden within a few Daring Do books. The blue queen herself was shamelessly guzzling royal tea straight from the pot. She wiped her muzzle dry and faced Blitz with a sly grin. “Come on, is that any way to greet me?” Blitz’s stoic posture melted to bubbling giddiness and she flew over to glomp her mother into a bear hug. Missing an hour or so of sleep was well worth the cost of Rainbow’s intoxicating love. Rainbow squashed her daughter right back for a minute before letting go. “Alright, Squirt, I called you up here because I didn’t want you freaking out and pissing off the other drones.” Blitz grew heavily concerned and fell into a hover so she’d be slightly below eye level with her queen-mother. That concern shifted into confusion as she spoke. “Freak out about what?” “Well it’s like this,” Rainbow started with a steady tone so she betrayed nothing. “Twilight and I’ve been thinking about a bunch of stuff, namingly Aegis and her future hive.” Rainbow fixed Blitz with a knowing smirk. “I gotta say first though, this is not an order, nor is it a request. I am simply giving you an offer.” Rainbow purposely trailed off to leave Blitz hanging in suspense. “How would you like to enter the running to be my first royal daughter and counterpart to Aegis?” Now back to your regularly(HA!) scheduled plot chapters. > 7: Double O Ling > -------------------------------------------------------------------------- The world around Blitz narrowed to a single point, her mother’s reptilian eyes. It took her half a minute to process the question. “…You want me to be a royal daughter?” she asked with reserved confusion. Rainbow gave her, her signature snarky snort and nod. “W-what makes you think I’d be any good at that? I’m just a fifth level engineer, there’s got to be better picks.” “Pah,” Rainbow huffed dismissively as she returned to her pot of royal jelly tea. “If I did everything that looked good on paper, I’d be some lame-o back in Cloudsdale with some desk job.” Her brain decided to remind her that quite a few of her drones had such ‘lame-o’ jobs. Well, whatever. They're my kids so their natural awesomeness makes up for it ten times over. “Look, Blitz, I think you’d make a good queen.” Rainbow’s smirk soured a little at the drone’s panicky expression. “Really.” Rainbow’s horn lit up and she pulled a folder off her desk and started reading. “As strange as it may sound, I’m not looking for an athlete or capable warrior here. You practically aced your Ldog test, Ratchet personally vouched for you since it was you who came up with the more efficient thumb design for Aegis’ gauntlets,” Rainbow was going to continue, but an excited gasp escaped Blitz. “R-Ratchet actually vouched for me!?” “Damn right he did,” Rainbow chuckled as if it should have been expected. “He doesn’t like to show excessive pride to his underlings, but he was crazy impressed.” Blitz had to take a moment to squeal in delight and spin in circled while dancing on her hoof tips. “Yes, yes, yes, yeeeeess!” Rainbow Dash allowed her daughter to enjoy the moment for a little bit before speaking again. “Twi, Aegis, Ratchet, and I have all drawn up a list of my kids who we think would make good queens, and you were the first.” “Why ask Aegis?” Blitz replied with slight confusion while spinning back around to face her mother. “I sorta thought older people should decide that.” There’s that brain of hers. Rainbow nodded with approval. “Normally, yeah. But since this decision directly affects her…” She trailed off to let Blitz come to her own conclusion. When understanding dawned on her daughter, Rainbow continued. “But the biggest thing, is that you have that…” Rainbow tried her best to think of the proper wording. Years ago, she might have been poorly equipped for such a task, but her time as an officer in the Wonderbolts, and Twilight’s assistance later in life, helped Rainbow formulate a half decent pep talk that wasn’t directed at soldiers. “You’re smart, competent, and you have a good strong heart, but more importantly, you have that rare unnamable quality that my old CO, Spitfire, saw in me.” Blitz listened in rapt attention as Rainbow scrunched her muzzle in miffed confusion. “Something you’d think all of my unaltered kids would have, but whatever.” She affixed her gaze on Blitz, exuding calm motherly warmth. “Apparently having an awesome possum mom isn’t enough for somepony to have the right clay to be shaped into a ruler. I think you have right stuff, and if you want, we can see if I’m right together.” Blitz sat flat on her rump with her mind going a million miles an hour. Truth be told, Blitz was quite happy with her lot in life as a drone and engineer. A contentedness Aegis seemed to be born without. Sure I planned to one day be chief of the robotics division, if not the whole Engineers’ Corps, but to be remade into a royal!? This isn’t just some job promotion. She’s offering me a chance to be a queen-mother. I don’t think I can do that. I don’t even know how mom does it! Rainbow Dash sensed her daughter’s mounting panic as the drone’s thoughts threatened to drive her into an anxiety attack. She spoke slightly louder than normal to cut through to Blitz. “Why don’t you give it some thought? Sleep on it, give it a week while I spread the word to the other candidates, and then come back to me on it.” “Thank you, my queen. I will.” Blitz saw the kind dismissive nod from Rainbow and turned to leave. Blitz opened the door only for Rainbow to speak up, giving the drone pause. “Before you go,” Blitz turned back to face her mother and saw wisdom in her eyes that Rainbow lacked in her early years. “Just remember one thing: you never know what you’re capable of unless you try. Spitfire and Twilight taught me that, and I’d like to pass that on to all my kids, you included.” Something sparked in Blitz’s mind. Whether it was a flash of her mother’s own brashness or a lapse in judgment, potentially both, Blitz looked her mother dead in the eye with a determined half-smile. “Yeah, okay. I’ll do it! Aegis won’t have nothing on me!” Rainbow snorted with a wide approving grin. “Good to hear. We’ll start the competition once we return to the hive. I’ll have spread the word to the other candidates by then. For now, get some sleep, you’ll need it.” “Yes, my queen.” Blitz bowed her head, an act she scolded herself for forgetting when she entered the room in the first place. Ignoring her embarrassment, she departed for Ferrum’s bunk. With the matter closed and Blitz leaving, Rainbow turned to her gallon sized stein of royal jelly tea. Now, back to feeding those hungry hungry eggs of mine, she mused while eagerly latching onto the drink. Blitz was riding high on her mother’s intense pride until halfway to the crew quarters when what she had agreed to finally sunk in and her irises shrunk to pinpricks. “Lingbeans, what have I done!?” The following morning, Blitz sat at the end of one mess hall table surrounded by her fellow drones, yet she was lost in her own thoughts. She barely got any sleep that night between her romp with Ferrum and being lost in her thoughts about a possible royal rebirth. Blitz’s tired gaze was centered on the bowl of cold cereal she was idly stirring. Every so often she would take a small bite. What am I going to do now? I had the perfect life of an engineer all set for me. Impressed the royalty with my work on the princess’ armor, might have even gotten a chance to be a full on apprentice to Ratchet, maybe even be chief engineer one day. The spoon clattered out of her magic and into the milk, splashing a little bit around the bowl, but no one else noticed that nor the growing panic in the young drones’ face. Now they think I’m good enough to be a royal?! How can that be? I’m just a fifth level engineer! What if they DO select me and I fail horribly? It wouldn’t just be a machine or two that would act up, I would doom a whole hive! What if my failure is so bad both mothers decide to abandon elevating drones to royals? Blitz started to hyperventilate. What if they only catch my failure after I’m turned into a royal? They’d have to turn me back into a drone, but that would mean losing all my memories! I like my memories! I don’t wanna become a cautionary taaaale! she wailed helplessly, just barely stopping herself from collapsing onto the table. A few of her siblings were about to ask what’s wrong, but were interrupted by a newcomer. “Mind if I sit here?” a voice called out just loud enough to break through Blitz’s out of control train of thoughts. The blue engineer looked up with half-mad eyes to see Aegis standing beside her with a warm smile. The princess was standing on her hindlegs with enough stability to look comfortable. Oddly enough, Aegis had no idea what to do with her forelegs, or arms as she liked to call them now, when she wasn’t holding something or on all fours. As a result she opted to just cross them in front of her chest. Aegis still kept her food tray aloft in her magic because she wasn’t too keen on testing her balance with food in hand, though she kept that to herself. Blitz fumbled to reply after shaking her head. “A-ah- sure,” she waved at the empty seat in front of her, “be my guest.” While the long bench that serviced the table were built to allow a changeling to rest on their bellies, the design didn’t hamper a biped’s sitting posture. As a result, Aegis took the opportunity to practice sitting like a minotaur. The act caused her to appear much taller than anyone else at the table, only causing Blitz’s panic to rise as she saw the princess as a monument which she had little chance of living up to. Aegis on the other hand, was a model of giddiness at being able to talk to Blitz away from the machine shop, and spoke while stuffing her maw with jam toast. Stupid bug! Why couldn’t you keep your mouth shut and just tell momma you’re not cut out for this? Wait, I got it. If I ask the princess why they chose me, then I can debunk them so they’ll spend more time on better candidates! She had to suppress the urge to clap her hooves in victory. By the time Blitz looked up to Aegis, the princess was giving her an amused look. “You alright there?” “I… don’t know.” Blitz started wringing her hooves under the table. “Why did you pick me of all people to be your partner? It’s not because I made your gauntlets is it?” Aegis paused to look at the spoon in her metallic fingers. Her grip was badly flawed and it forced too much wrist movement to get the food to her mouth, but it was there. “I’d be lying if I said that had nothing to do with it.” Aegis took a more relaxed posture and tone. “But the biggest part is two things: I think we mesh well together, and you’re crazy smart. Like, momma smart.” And I’m just crazy, she added with no small amount of good humor. “But that’s like saying I’m the reddest apple in the tree,” Blitz countered. “There’s plenty of super smart drones other than me.” Aegis’ smile started to falter. “Well, yeah, but you had the presence of mind to customize the bonding process between my legs and the gauntlets to allow for greater neural activity. Uncle Ratchet didn’t even think of that. He just assumed attaching my nerves to the boots would have been enough.” Blitz’s frown wavered a little. “That was just an accident. I didn’t really plan that.” Aegis shrugged while swallowing a bite. “That just means I’ll have to add mad good luck to your resume.” Blitz just rolled her eyes at the smirking princess. “Besides, I’m a soldier, through and through. I need a civilian minded partner to make my future hive more efficient, and you’re perfect for it. Our mommas want to follow Celestia and Luna’s diarchy example of rule, and I gotta agree. Splitting the work is better than a solo job. Not to mention that our hive can grow twice as fast with two queens instead of one.” Aegis continued with a quick switch to the hive mind as she took the last bite of her toast. Blitz leaned back with a sour scowl. “And so the other shoe drops.” Aegis replied with a lopsided grin. That earned Aegis a harmless scowl. Aegis resumed eating to give Blitz a few moments to think about it all. “The love flavor’s just a bonus.” After hearing all of that straight from her possible royal counterpart, Blitz felt her spirits lifted, if only just. She looked up from her cereal and deeply into Aegis’ slitted eyes. “You really want me to be your partner, and your shield?” By now, most of the crowd around them had drifted off to their duty stations, leaving the pair alone. Aegis flew around the end of the table and squashed Blitz in a hug. “If it came down to the wire, there’s no pony I’d rather have than you to be my life long partner.” Moved to tears, Blitz returned the hug as hard as she could. “Okay, Aegis. I’ll give it my best shot. I, ah, kind of owe you since I forgot to give you the anesthetics when bonding you to your gauntlets.” Rather than spoil the moment, Aegis let the comment slide. Damn right you do. Much later that day, the changeling spy within Stripped Gear slunk through the narrow confining passageways to the underground crystal factory. The main access point was too crowded to risk, and the cargo tunnel had been magnetically sealed and warded. The maintenance tunnel the spy crawled through had exposed pipes and gearworks everywhere along the poorly lit walls and floor. The spy’s abnormally soft hooves allowed it to slink quietly along the metal grated floor. After creeping along at a snail’s pace, the spy at last came upon a door, presumably leading into the factory itself. Unfortunately, there was a drone standing in front, so the spy crouched behind a bend in the passageway. A simple charm spell would allow me to bypass him, but do I risk getting him to open the door for me? The controlling queen’s magic was subtle enough to gently scan the door for wards, and found two right away. One was to detect forced entry, while the other for detecting telekinetic manipulation. Cadista’s no fool. Those wards are painfully obvious to even a novice spellweaver, it’s a trap. She’s got to have secondary, maybe even tertiary wards to detect anyone tampering with the door or the obvious wards. The puppet cast its eyes towards the repair drone again. He had several tools at his side while his attention was fixated on a crankshaft he was servicing. A cursory scan revealed he possessed a few mental screens, but the controlling queen had recently taken one of Cadista’s drones, and knew how to pick apart each ward, save the one that kept the spy from totally dominating the intelligent drones. Deactivating that last one without killing the drone is next to impossible. I’ll have to settle for dismantling the others. Without anyone else coming into the tunnel, and the mechanic’s single-mindedness, prying apart each of his protective spells went on uninterrupted. Once she was done, the puppet slipped forward with its horn aglow and moved close enough to whisper in the mechanic’s ear. “I am very tired and forgetful.” The drone slowly stopped working and his eyes became vacant. “Sssooo tired.” The puppet weaved a spell to make sure the mechanic vocalized his thoughts. “I can’t seem to remember how to open the door.” “Can’t remember…” The mechanic droned. The controlling queen loosened her grip on his mind just a bare smidgen. “Oh right… I have to press the button on the ground there,” he pointed at a discreet raised plate of steel. “Then pull the lever by the wall so it doesn’t lockdown.” The queen was about to release the drone when he absently commented to himself. “I hate that door. The Link always goes silent.” The puppet froze in shock. None of my captives ever spoke of Link silencing doors. No wonder all my other infiltrations past the wall failed. I always thought my puppets were getting picked off by some hidden guard or possible mechanical defense weapon. She refocused on the pliable drone. “I can’t remember, is it the whole factory that cuts off the Link or not.” The engineer’s eyes slowly blinked separately. “No… only the doors do when both are closed. But long enough to screw up any of those idiotic rival queens.” The mechanic had a superior grin. “As if dumb drones were better than us.” He spat on the ground in disgust. The act also proved to strengthen his will, loosening the puppeting queen’s charm over him. Fearing that she might trip the dead-switch ward on the mechanic’s mind, the queen gave him one last minor suggestion. “I think you forgot to finish up further back. You better check on it to be sure.” “Hey, that’s right.” The drone said with mild worry. “If I had reconnected this shaft without section 58-b in working order, the resulting damage would take all week to fix.” The puppet side stepped to allow the mechanic to gather his tools and depart. The problem with intelligent minds is that they tend to ramble on and volunteer information when put under the correct charm. A snide grin crossed the queen’s muzzle. The most you can ever truly get from a normal drone is their alchemical secrets. I warned Cadista that these intelligent drones would be the death of her. Turning her attention to the door, the queen contemplated how she was going to circumvent a momentary breakage in the Link. It’s been a while since I’ve had to implant a series of commands and let a drone act independent of normal instinct. The controlling queen smirked and popped a few joints at the challenge. I better hurry before that drone returns. It did not take long before the puppet was programmed with a number of actions. The queen released it, allowing the drone to press the correct buttons, and walked inside the doorway, which led straight into a very small room with a second door on the other side. The instant the first set of doors closed the queen’s connection with the spy cut off abruptly. For a being who counted her lifetime in centuries instead of years, the delay felt entirely too long. My allies are in position, the pawns are in place, but none of it will matter if Cadista isn’t distracted. Her toys of machine and steel are pitiful on offense, but defensively? Any victory would be a hollow one. And she knows it. The queen’s attention was partially drawn to a battle going on to Stripped Gear’s northern territory next to the road between the hive and its railroad outpost. …Polybia. So she’s on the move as well? Or is it just a probing attack? I don’t think she’s ever attacked Cadista with so many drones before. The various eyes and ears the queen had in the field showed just how quick the two gunships in the area annihilated the contingent of drones. The queen was unmoved by the two hundred dying drones, their lives were cheap in the Jungle. Even so, the queen was rather disappointed in Polybia as the raiding party was cut down to the last drone. Still, such a paltry amount of information is not worth the cost she paid. One of her closer scouts was near enough to the carnage to be within spitting distance of the broken changeling corpses. Something about the spilled blood tickled her scout’s magical senses in a disturbing way, but the reappearance of the infiltrator upon the hive mind pulled her attention away. The queen immediately resumed complete control over her puppet. The infiltrator was standing on a catwalk just inside the crystal factory itself. The very air churned and roiled from the immense heat wafting from the dozens of large water and steam pipes. The largest pipes sank into a hole in the center of the football field sized chamber where an orange hot glow emanated from the lava chamber below. The room had machinery everywhere, from turbines, heat exchangers, and most intriguingly, the crystal farm. Ten huge vats of Borosilicate heat resistant glass filled with dense semi-opaque brown liquid held the growing future cloaking crystals within. The infiltrator counted twenty two workers who tended the various machinery. No guards, as expected. Time to get to work. Spotting the first isolated worker, the spy moved in for the kill. Cadista bore a humorless grin as the titanic hangar doors groaned open upon massive hinges. The brand new flat decked ship was pulled out by a smaller tugboat. The grey queen stood above the hangar doors along the edge so she could watch from above as her latest weapon of war was birthed into the violent world of the changeling jungle. Those dark thoughts weighed heavily on Cadista. Twilight, I’m glad you did not try to settle your hive here in the jungle. You and your progeny will lead our species along a better path. Of that I am certain. But that will only happen so long as you outlive the old guard, and every day that I hold the other queens here, the better your odds. By now, the warship had been fully removed from the air dry-dock with the tugboat uncoupling itself from the vessel. The warship was so new, so radically different than anything she had masterminded before, Cadista had been at a loss as to what to classify it as, let alone name it. Cadista furrowed her brow in mild irritation at the thought. Gah, I’ve been using Equestrian naval classes for so long I didn’t really think that I’d ever have to come up with a new one. She watched the vessel start to lazily orbit the palace, more to live test the onboard systems than anything else, but the ship still drew many eyes towards it. Cadista didn’t care if any spies managed to sneak a peek at the warship now. It was something new. Something strange and unknown, and that made queens hesitant. “Even with their disdain for my technology, they’re not stupid enough to underestimate it. Not since the incident. They’ll spend months if not years figuring out if this is a new weapon or some odd looking freighter. That should buy more than enough time to work out the remaining errors and install the cloak crystals. "The only thing it needs at the moment is a name and classification.” Thus far, Cadista had been thinking aloud mostly for her own benefit, but also for the two Queen’s Guard at her side. Unlike Twilight and Rainbow’s guards, Cadista’s were bred to be paranoid. They suspected everyone and everything, including their siblings to be spies unless they could speak to them over the hive mind. Watchful Eye, her Guard Captain and the drone to Cadista’s right side, hummed while sweeping his gaze for incoming threats. “It’s supposed to carry smaller aircraft into battle right? Those mini-airships?” He received an affirmative grunt from his queen. “Why not classify it as a carrier?” This time, Cadista actually turned to face him, causing Watchful to shrug. “Keep it simple, stupid. That’s what I always say, er, no offense, my queen.” Cadista received no response from the other guard, making her scowl. “I was thinking of ‘long range power projection platform’, but… I suppose carrier is easier to say in conversation.” “It’ll save on ink and page space, that’s for sure,” the thus far silent guard chirped in. Heaving an exasperated sigh, Cadista conceded. “Very well. Any future ships of this type shall be henceforth known as carriers. Now, to think of a proper name.” Their brainstorming session didn’t last long before a highly agitated foreman barely waited for Cadista to register his ping before speaking. The hair stood up on the back of Cadista’s neck at the warning. She hastily scanned the hive mind for those who were on shift down there, and quickly discovered none of their voices were present. Damn, Polybia’s forces must have been a distraction! The timing is too perfect. Despite the gravity of the situation, the dispatcher was calm and collected. A short pause elapsed. Watchful Eye and his counterpart shared in their queen’s agitation. “What’s wrong, my queen?” Cadista began giving out rapid fire commands to the various overseers and foremen. “A spy or even a team of them have somehow broken into the crystal factory. If they damage the wrong pipes, they could cause a wildcat steam buildup that could cause ruptures all over the hive!” Watchful buzzed into a low hover. “We should evacuate immediately! There’s no way a spy got their way down there without knowing how much damage they could do.” Cadista’s face was marred with hate. “I’ve lived here for thousands of years, over more lifetimes than I know. I will not abandon it now!” She saw the fearful gaze of her drones, only making her angrier. “Besides, we have contingencies in place if the magma chamber ever got out of our control. Even if the damage is done, the mountain won’t erupt for months.” “But, my queen, if Chrysalis is on the move, all she has to do is besiege us and wait for the volcano to blow. If we try to evacuate immediately, it might throw her timetable off.” “Or maybe they want us to panic,” piped up Watchful’s counterpart. “I say we tighten the airship cordon around the hive, prepare to evacuate, and wait to see what the response team finds. If worst comes to worse, we can always relocate to Phoenix’s Roost.” “As much as I hate imposing on my daughters, it is sound advice.” Everything is secondary to safeguarding Twilight and Rainbow Dash, even my pride. A few minutes ago, the last surviving drone within the crystal factory had been so absorbed in the read outs of his console that he completely missed the silencing of his coworkers due to the background white noise of the rest of the hive mind. In fact, he didn’t even notice anything out of the ordinary until he felt like something bit him in the back of the neck and a foreleg wrapped around his neck, pulling him away from his work and into the cold embrace of the changeling spy’s poisonous fangs. Within the space of a few seconds, the spy’s toxin cut off the hive mind, effectively blocking any chance the worker could raise an alarm and ended his life a moment later. With no further need for subtlety, the spy released its camouflage and studied the maze of machines and steam pipes. That’s the problem with cold metal technology. When the drones die, there’s no one left to protect so much vulnerable equipment. The spy remembered the biggest console it had come across during its elimination of the workers and flew over to it. The mass of dials, levers, readouts, knobs, and switches might have baffled the controlling queen if she cared at all to try and decipher it. I know nothing of these things, but I do know steam can be quite destructive. While I took the time to splash some acid on the smaller turn wheels I came across, these look even more important. If the puppeting queen could put her pride aside, she’d admit she knew nothing of the machine in front of her; however, she knew that everything could break. These red zones along the knobs and levers look dangerous. How careless of me to pull them all. I think it's time to signal my allies to attack. The spy started pulling levers, twisting knobs, and moving any control to whatever maximum value it possessed. With startling rapidity, the dials and readouts started redlining and the pipes started banging so loud it forced the spy to cover its ears. A callous grin marred the controlling queen. “Such is the folly of metal technology.” “Alert! Magma dampening field compromised,” boomed a synthetic feminine voice across the chamber, drawing the puppet’s gaze along the ceiling in an effort to locate the source. “Steam pressure exceeding safety limits. Lockdown protocols in progress.” The spy witnessed several robotic arms folding out from the floor with large orange crystals at the ends. It didn’t take the puppeting queen long to detect the charging frost magic within each of them. Before any of them could reach their intended position, the infiltrator rushed over to the closest one and spat vicus green globs of acid at the biggest looking piston. The queen had the presence of mind to back off, saving the puppet from the blast of pressurized steam when the acid ate through the piston, causing the arm to collapse and fracturing the delicate crystal in the process. The spy repeated the process to each arm. “Warning, automated failsafe protocol inoperable. Steam production exceeding normal levels. Manual secession of water supply required to prevent cascade failure. Please enact emergency venting and shutdown procedures without delay.” What the spy couldn’t know was that same warnings were being broadcast all over the hive. Within the crystal factory itself, the white lighting was joined by strobing red warning lights. Yet most alarmingly was the large black crystal appearing from an opening in the center of the room. It started glowing an angry dark purple before flooding the room in the same twisting mana. “Intruder alert,” began repeating itself constantly, though the banging and hissing pipes threatened to drown it out. The puppet’s horn was in agony as the crystal’s magic burned the spy’s stored mana. The controlling queen severed her sensation of pain from the puppet so she wouldn’t be burdened by it. So you found a way for the machine to defend itself, Cadista? What a shame you didn’t have it react to the possibility of sabotage earlier. The muffled clank of metal announced the doors opening with pounding hooves and buzzing wings heralding the arrival of two squads of guards from the cargo and main entrances with rifles at the ready. The spy barely had time to notice the protective helmets covering the soldiers’ horns, keeping the mana-burning crystal from affecting them. “It looks like I’ve worn out my welcome.” The spy turned around and started bucking the control console, smashing it to pieces by the time the fastest soldiers got within weapon's range, and fired upon the spy. The puppet managed to slide away with a quick green-fire portal spell. Though successful, the feedback from the crystal exploded the puppet’s horn, leaving its vision swimming and awash with blood. The controlling queen had placed the spy at the second largest control board it had seen and started spitting up large globules of highly acidic salve that dripped in between the levers and knobs, ruining the control mechanisms. The teleport spell was hardly inconspicuous, and the soldiers saw the destination. The spy barely managed to spit up three globs of acid before two riflelings sprinted the distance and peppered the puppet with five bullets, finally ending its life. Blood and acid dripped from the corpse, causing further damage to the machinery below. Cadista watched through the eyes of the last soldier to enter the factory. She switched perspective to the engineers moving in behind the soldiers, and fully took control of one. Time was too critical to leave in the hooves of anyone else. “Repair the damage, and bring the power plant back under control!” she commanded to the other drones as the group stormed into the hellish heat that was wafting up from the magma chamber and the warning klaxons only adding to the chaos. Cadista’s ire mounted as she started getting warning pings from drones all over the hive with one voice giving her serious pause. Another voice only compounded her fear. It was a sad truth. With the upcoming war, there were mounting concerns that the constant high pressure on the pipes hive-wide would eventually give out. Now with the geothermal plant dumping far too much steam into the rest of the pipes, blow outs were inevitable. If we blow the release valves, it’ll take hours to bring power back to the turrets along the walls, and days to restore everything, assuming the damage to the plant is minimal. Still standing upon her perch above the airship dry-dock, Cadista heard metal bangs coming from the pipework beneath her hooves when she heard news from the geothermal engineers. All of which spurned her own puppet on to hurry. Yet all it took was a single look at the smoking and half slagged primary control board to see there was no hope there. Fuming with rage, Cadista’s consciousness invaded the drone who was just arriving at the secondary board only to find all but one dial to be non-functional. “Damn her!” she raged louder than the banging steam pipes. “Both primary control boards have been ruined, it’ll take days, weeks to repair this! “There’s no other choice,” she growled grimly once she learned of the broken status of the stabilization crystals. Cadista left the engineer’s body to allow him to follow her orders as her consciousness returned to her body. Her escorts looked upon the hive in horror as steam started to fill the air. Within an hour, the hive would be totally obscured in a dense fog of steam. Watchful Eye’s fearful gaze shifted up to the shield tower and the masking dome above. The constant din of the tower’s machines, a symbol of the hive’s power as old and venerated as Cadista herself shuddered to a halt. Cracks spread rapidly all throughout the orange dome above before it shattered in one massive crack of escaping mana. Both escorts looked to Cadista with terror gripping their hearts. “My queen, with the steam pipes vented, we won’t be able to lift any of our artillery and wall mounted weapons into firing position! All we have are small arms and the gunships!” Cadista gritted her teeth and tried to calm herself to think rationally on how to fix everything. A scouts’ report coming in did nothing to help her. The informant was suddenly silenced by one of the invaders’ advance scouts. Fear and panic started spreading rapidly throughout Stripped Gear with equally worried communications coming in from Phoenix’s Roost, Twilight and Rainbow Dash chief among them. Her daughters’ voices gave Cadista exactly what she needed most: support. Cadista barked just harshly enough to get her daughter to listen. Rainbow Dash shared her sister’s rising worry. Cadista turned westward to face the general direction of the oncoming swarms and sat on her haunches. The setting sun baked the sky a dark red as it slipped below the horizon, giving the invading army some measure of cover in the coming darkness. Twilight and Rainbow knew full well from experience that meditating like that made you nearly deaf to the world and unable to act, save to end the meditation. Cadista prepared herself to open herself fully to the hive mind as she sent word to her various ambassadors to the allied hives. Twilight’s demanding tone was laced with profound worry and love. Cadista replied sagely even as she sent off commands to her drones to prepare for battle. Cadista’s thoughts and tone darkened. The conversation faded as time forced everyone to act. Panic was sweeping through her hive with terror hot on the heels of news on the invading swarms. Thousands of souls looked to her for guidance and hope. If there was one thing that Twilight had instilled into Cadista through the years, was the power of music. Pulling upon old memories of a time when Yumia still lit up her life, Cadista expanded herself to every single grey drone, and sang an old song Yumia used to sing to her when times were bleak. Cadista sang now it now to give her children the strength to weather the coming storm. > 8: Muster for Battle > -------------------------------------------------------------------------- Aboard the Deception within her guest cabin, Rasua was kneeling at the foot of her bed. It was close to nightfall and she was wearing a simple white nightgown, praying with her hands clasped and head bowed to the north (courtesy of the compass she brought with her). The simplistic circular device was a gift from a priest in her childhood as a tool that would guide her in the physical world just as the Maiden of the Great Cycle guided her morality. The blacksmith was eternally grateful for the strictly electric, if harsh, lighting the ship possessed. Rasua made it a point to introduce the changelings to the concept of lampshades. With the overabundance of fire-based technology, Rasua feared the changelings resorted to candle and torchlight alone. After clearing her mind, Rasua took the compass into her hands and prayed. There was no set principles of communion with the sphinx patron deity, as dogma was extremely sparse. Not even the compass had any real connection, save for what Rasua set for herself. The deity’s only purpose was twofold: to watch over and protect the Eternal Cycle of the universe, and to guide the morality of all. Everything else from the workings of nature to the afterlife was left to mortals to figure out entirely on their own. In accordance to her family’s tradition, Rasua had two pungent sticks of incense burning at either side of her. The lack of a visible flame was enough to placate the species-wide pyrophobia that the sphinxes suffered from. Whether that fear was part of their racial psyche, or a product of their culture would leave Twilight in scholarly delight for years, if she had the time. Rasua would have preferred her old phonograph to fill the air with chanting monks, but she had to settle for the rhythmic (and admittedly calming) churning of gears and steam. It was reminiscent of her blacksmithing apprenticeship. Blessed and eternal Cyrkle. This daughter of the skies beseeches you for the strength to endure and flow with the waxing of this new cycle upon which I am bound to, the courage to face its inevitable waning, and the wisdom to never stray from the Great Cycle. Rasua would have continued for several minutes were it not for heavy urgent knocking on her door. The fire conscious sphinx extinguished her incense with a finger and thumb before speaking out, the sound of scuffing metal instantly told her who was at the door. “Yes, Princess Aegis?” The royal all but burst through the door with the look of a soldier with troubling news, and looking unsteady on two legs. “Pack your things, you need to move to the Crystal Blue for the rest of the voyage into Alliance territory.” She would have had others assist, but the cabin was so small that having more people would have made things clumsy. The hasty worried look upon Aegis’ face got the sphinx to bolt up onto all fours to face her fully. “Why, did I incur some form of insult?” Aegis waved her off. “No, but we just received word from an ally of ours to the south that her hive is under siege,” Aegis blurted out with just enough self-control to keep the words from running into each other. Her tone grew even heavier. “We’re heading to war.” Rasua’s face grew dark. “The Deception’ll be moving off at full steam as soon as you're relocated. The Crystal Blue will take you to Canterlot and Princess Luna will arrange transit from there to Phoenix’s Roost for you.” A number of things ran through Rasua’s mind, with personal pride chief among them. War? That must be why they only brought a single warship to Stratholme. The rest must be on deployment. This will be the perfect chance to see these changelings in real combat and get a measure of their strengths and weaknesses. Her mind made up, Rasua affixed Aegis with a determined gaze. “I may be a smith, but I am a daughter of the Federation, and a decent warrior in my own right. I made an oath to serve you, and I won’t-” Aegis cut her off with a quick swipe of a hoof and an impatient buzz of her wings. “You don’t understand. This isn’t just some skirmish, this is going to be a full on war with armies in the hundreds of thousands, and this ship is going right into the middle of it.” Rasua was just barely too young to have participated in the war that ended up forging the Federation ten years prior, and it chafed her badly to have missed such a chance to win honor and prestige for her family and nation. “In the off chance you forgot our earlier conversation, my people are no strangers to war.” That put a damper on Aegis’ argument, causing her to give a scrunched frown. Sensing she had taken the initiative, Rasua pressed on. “If I may be so bold, you act to protect me out of ignorance about my people’s customs and history. For the moment, I am a servant to your house, and it would a grievous dishonor to my name and my family’s honor to simply sit out of a conflict when I am fit and able to serve.” It wasn’t the whole truth, but there was enough of it there to make it sound convincing. Even then, Aegis was dubious. “Look, this fight’s just been us changelings. We don’t even want to get Equestria involved in this if we can help it. Besides, what do you think your father and country would say if you died in our war?” Rasua gave a harmless yet determined scowl. “He would hope I died with distinction and that I proved to this new world that a sphinx’s word is honorable. My service to your house was not given lightly, nor do I wish it to be taken lightly either. To do otherwise would be insulting to us both.” As much as Aegis wished she could pass the buck to either queen-mother, Twilight had given her full discretion on how to handle Rasua for the foreseeable future. While it was not stated directly, Aegis knew it was just one more test her mother presented her on her road to becoming queen. Aegis gave her a hard look, but eventually gave an approving snort and slight grin. “Alright, have it your way. I suggest writing your father to let him know. We’re not too far from Stratholme, so mother can get it delivered.” “Thank you. You’ll have my letter within the hour.” Giving a curt nod, Aegis left Rasua to her thoughts. Most of those centered on her family and the stories of war that were still fresh in the minds of the entire Federation. As those thoughts turned to the prospect of battle, Rasua moved to her chest of drawers. She pulled it open to reveal a long gold inlaid box that took up the entire length of the drawer. Sphinx calligraphy covered its surface in a way that it looked like a painting instead of inscription. She popped the simple latch to reveal a collection of spherical cut gems that would have left Spike salivating. To even someone as magically talented as Twilight Sparkle, anyone would have seen only that. Yet to a sphinx, they were so much more. I was hoping I wouldn’t have to use these while I remained in service to these bugs. But it looks like I have little option. Father would kill me for not taking every precaution against an unknown enemy. Luna was taking advantage of a rare thing aboard luxury yachts, especially those of Equestrian make, a workout room. The dark mare loved chocolate as much as her sister loved cake, and as a result, she had to hit the weights to keep her slim figure. At the moment however, Luna was enjoying one of the overlooked inventions to come out of Phoenix’s Roost: the treadmill; or more accurately, a powered treadmill designed solely for personal exercise. At present, Luna was running at a comfortable gallop while several guards joined in on their daily workout routine. The Lunar Guard captain was not about to let a milk run back to Canterlot be an excuse for slouching. As such, a full squad of both Equestrian and former imperial thestrals were working out alongside their princess. Luna had been greatly honored by how many imperials who wished to join her personal guard. Unfortunately, the number of requests was so great she had to turn most of them away. Slippery Shadow stood beside Luna’s treadmill bearing a water bottle on his back and two towels hanging on his outstretched wings. “While I’m honored that both you and the queens came all this way to rescue me, isn’t there somepony else who could do this?” Luna gave him a humored toothy smile. The timer on the treadmill started ringing, signaling her to slow down to cool off. “Perhaps, *huff* but the servants are quite busy, *puff* Plus you're a scout and spy. *huff* There’s not much you can do with *puff* your skill set until you can be properly *huff* debriefed at the castle.” His ears wilted while trying carefully to stay on Luna’s amused side. He offered her the bottle which was gladly taken. “I’m a world renowned storyteller… This is what I get for filling the sphinxes’ heads with my homeland’s epic tales. Isn’t it?” A couple of the guards within earshot gave Slippery the stink eye, while Luna made an effort to be less than miffed. “I probably learned more about the Moonlit Empire's folklore in Stratholme than even exists on paper. I had to spend twelve hours with Thaddeus correcting all the misinformation between the Empire and Equestria that might have caused issues later on.” Slippery shrugged and gave an innocent lopsided grin. “Well, I thought it was a good idea.” “Don’t misunderstand,” Luna reassured after guzzling half the water and trading the bottle for the towel. She took a few moments to get her breathing under control. “It was smart of you, and most likely saved your life, but it still gave me a migraine. So you get to be my workout assistant.” She let him sulk a little before continuing with a sly grin, “and then get a pay-grade increase once we get back to the castle.” The prospect of more money causes his ears to perk straight up and smoothed away much of Slippery’s irritation, giving way to a self-satisfied grin. His dreams of what he could do with more bits fell away when a bright lavender-orange flash heralded Twilight Sparkle’s arrival via teleport. The queen was beset with a badly worried expression with a curious distracted look. “Princess Luna, Stripped Gear’s under siege by the other queens. The fighting will start in less than half an hour.” The room’s atmosphere heated up in an instant with Luna forgetting her workout. “Do you know who it is, is it Chrysalis’ doing?” “It’s possible, but mother’s not jumping to conclusions just yet,” Twilight replied with a head shake. Luna turned to the Guard captain who was standing at attention between her and the queen. “Sure Aim, gather everypony except squad three and prepare to be teleported over to the Deception. Don’t bother equipping everything, just pile it up to be teleported all at once. You’ve got five minutes.” Snapping a curt salute, Aim barked a reply. “Yes, ma’am!” He did not need to order the rest of the guards to move as they repeated his salute before everyone stormed out to the passenger quarters. Slippery Shadow put the bottle down with shaky nerves. His lackluster brave front failed to hide the stress he still felt at being surrounded by prideful predators for a week, where one wrong move could have ended his life over a cooking fire. “What do you require of me, your majesty?” “Stay here and guard our feline guest with the rest of the Lunar Guard. The Crystal Blue will still be headed back to Canterlot, but I’m sure there are some rival changelings who might attack the yacht. No doubt they expect the Deception to break off shortly.” “My thoughts exactly,” Twilight piped in. “I’ve already sent word to Celestia via my ambassadors, and sent a letter to Spike in case Chrysalis tries another assassination to stir up more trouble.” “Good thinking,” Luna replied with an approving nod. “I had hoped this would not have happened while I was away from Canterlot, but I brought my arms and armor to be safe. Allow me to retrieve them before your warship breaks off.” “Of course,” Twilight said with thinly veiled worry, “I’ll get RD to teleport the guards over.” I’m pretty sure she can manage that if she aims for the wide open space of the cargo bay. Being reminded of the cargo bay also brought the talbuks to the forefront of her mind. The prospect of bringing animals into a warzone didn’t sit well with her in the slightest. she barked, just barely waiting long enough for him to respond. Reluctant understanding and painful woe at the loss of his pet project tinted the bodyguard’s tone. Returning to the here and now, Twilight gave Luna a gracious smile. “Thank you for helping. I don’t know how much my ship will be able to accomplish though. Even at full steam we’re more than two days away from my mother’s hive.” Luna’s form dispersed into an inky starry mist the moved rapidly through the ship to her quarters. She arrived in time to witness Twilight teleport into the adjacent hallway and walk inside. “We’ll only know that when we get there, Twilight Sparkle.” Luna removed a large chest from her closet and started peeling off the wards so it could be safely teleported. “I’m sure you will do what you can over the hive mind. I only hope that will give us a chance to arrive in time to lend military aid.” It was a prospect that Twilight quietly fumed over, but could do little about save to order the warship to proceed with all due haste. However, she was filled with hope that Luna jumped to her aid without a second thought. “I know we’re allies on paper, and that most ponies are still iffy about us changelings,” Twilight began yet was interrupted by Luna raising a hoof for silence. “I know where you’re going with this Twilight Sparkle, and the holier-than-thou games the nobility and media play are of no concern to me when a good friend is involved.” She would have paused to give Twilight a reassuring look, but time was of the essence. “You saved me from the Nightmare and granted a priceless boon to my theserals. I don’t need a treaty to come to your aid.” Twilight’s heart swelled with hope and pride for the ironclad friendship between them. For longer than she wanted to admit, there had always been a thin thread of fear that Celestia and Luna might share the hesitation of the aristocracy if only to placate them. As Luna gathered her equipment, Twilight filled her in on the dire situation unfolding over Cadista’s ancient home. The overcast night skies just west of Stripped Gear rumbled and buzzed as an aging gunship chugged through the air, blasting its way towards the hive. Its side mounted flak cannons were firing behind it at the wall of drones scarcely twenty meters behind it. A sickly green shield powered by the horde deflected nearly everything the gunship threw at them. Individual stormtroopers pushed out from behind the moving shield wall, only to get cut down from flak shrapnel. The shipmaster grimaced at the sheer mass of the enemy trying to envelop his gunship in the shield so the hostile drones could tear the ship apart with impunity. The gunship’s very limited supply of void stone laced rounds had been depleted all too rapidly, leaving the shield free to protect its casters. Cadista’s hive meditation pounded in the back of the crews’ heads, honing their reflexes and surging their courage to face the countless mass. More often than not, it caused a mad touch of mania. “Come on you mindless bunch of savages!” The two gunners on either side of the cabin cackled manically as their guns chugged away. The throng of shield drones couldn’t keep a perfect shield-front with the mad twists and jinks the gunship forced them to follow. The airship banked left as hard as its engines could muster, causing a break in formation. With their mother’s efforts surging their response time, both gunners barely took a moment to adjust to the thinned shield as the formation attempted to adapt. Knowing this moment was coming, the gunners switched modes and fired all four barrels of their flak canons at once, busting through the shield and mauling dozens of drones each. “Die, die, die!!” the gunners howled with hive meditation induced bloodlust. The swarm reformed with all the speed that a unified mind allowed, sealing the breaches as fast as they formed, repelling the gunship’s firepower once more. Rainbow Dash’s voice resounded in his mind. the shipmaster replied with a savage grin. “You heard the queen, turbines to full!” The helmsman put the gunship into a steep dive. The forward view of the bridge was lit up by the burning farmlands below as more drones continued to skirmish on the ground. All to buy Twilight as much time as possible to repair the hive’s defenses. Rifle fire and streaming flamethrowers were met by the organic living war machine of the enemy. Manic induced bloodlust faced up against savage fang and spell blow, causing the battlefield to be awash with fire, blood, and mana so thick it evaporated as a glowing blue mist in the full moon night. There were no clean front lines here. Tunnels between the fields and Stripped Gear allowed commandos to appear deep behind enemies lines to bury them in burning oil and musket fire. Yet the enemy cared nothing for psychological warfare that would have turned the other races. Even as they were being perforated by rifle fire and burned alive as oil seeped in through the cracks of their chitin, the hostile drones carved a bloody swath across the countryside. For every ten savage blood soaked drones the hostile queens threw at the military might of Stripped Gear, higher magi drones, wielded directly by the queens themselves, churned the earth and sky. Tunnel networks were destroyed as the very soil itself burst forth, exposing the tunnelers to their would be victims. Small tornados made fortified positions all but impossible to hold. Only the combined efforts of Cadista’s own magi or the passage of an airship’s artificial pegasi magic calmed the skies. “We’re not making a dent in that shield so long as we’re going straight.” The shipmaster grumbled as they passed through one such tornado before it could properly form. Both flak cannons turned and started raking the ground with lead, tearing away at even the toughest shock troopers embattled below. However, as the gunship started to level off, the drones giving chase behind them stopped casting the shield and switched to firing hundreds of kinetic bolts. A virtual hailstorm of acidic green bolts of mana tore at the gunship, shattering glass, and denting armor to the breaking point. Before the gunners could return fire, one of the engines was torn from its mounting, sending the gunship down in flames. It crashed into a grain silo, prompting most of the chasing drones to face the second gunship that had arrived too late. Some of those drones fired off a few small fireballs, just enough to ignite the powdered grain. The resulting explosion killed the remaining crew, and flattened most of the nearby combatants. However, the second gunship had longer range than the swarm anticipated and it rained flak down on them from afar, decimating the attackers before they could reform their shield. Each time the drones attempted to get close enough to reform the collective shield, the gunship would fire on them, dropping broken bodies and chunks to the dirt. With the situation untenable, the controlling queen dispersed the survivors to flee into the foothills to reform later. Damn it! Rainbow cursed from within the Deception at the gunship’s loss. With the lowlands around Stripped Gear’s south and western lands lost, the defenders performed an organized retreat under Rainbow’s direction. As small groups pulled back, the assaulting ground troops attempted to push the advantage, only to run into the waiting guns, flamethrowers, and clockwerks hiding in ambush. Once the first group set up a new ambush, the second group fell back. It took the assaulting queen three ambushes before finally pulling most of her forces back to switch to long range spell casting. Ultimately though, the ground forces and the swarming clouds of drones giving her gunships a run for their money was not the biggest of Rainbow’s worries. Thrashing about just inside the battlespace were three gigantic burrowing behemoth drones that nearly reached a fourth the size of Stripped Gear alone. The lava chambers and heated rock kept them from burrowing any closer to Stripped Gear. Even so, thousands of enemy drones blanketed the chittering and crawling town sized drones as more constantly poured out from within the leviathans. From the dozens of aerial scouts serving as Rainbow’s eyes, she saw that for every inch of ground Cadista’s drones gave up to the enemy, hundreds of worker drones were crawling over the dead. Each worker picked up the broken bodies of the dead and flew back to the closest leviathan. I don’t get it, why are they taking the bodies back? They can’t rebirth the dead, right? There was a lull in the battle thanks to the invaders holding back their forces. As Rainbow took stock of the battlefield, she discovered there were four points where the enemy was within a kilometer of the caldera. The swarms of shield drones were gathering in those areas. Rainbow Dash watched closely as the gunboat moved in and started shelling the region. As she expected, the thousand drones cast their massed shields before the gunboat reached optimal firing position. The shelling rippled across the combined magical might of the drones, forming cracks every time the high explosive shells hit their mark. Yet with so many drones powering the barrier, the cracks were repaired before the cannons could be reloaded. A new swarm poured out of the nearest leviathan, and charged straight at the gunship. Unlike her sister, who was able to sit still while communing with so many drones at once, Rainbow Dash was pacing around the bridge of the Deception. While Captain Rourke was able to keep the bridge crew focused on their duties, she couldn’t help but to share in their uneasiness at the battle to come. I don’t get it. Everything Granny Caddy said about typical Ling tactics is that they swarm en masse to quickly overwhelm the opponent. So why are they using different strategies? Rainbow briefly thought to ask Cadista for advice. That won’t work, she’s still doing Hive Med. Her next instinct was to ask her sister. Rainbow sent Twilight a brief recap of the situation. The former unicorn was brainstorming ways to speed up the activation of the coal power plant and any way to get the heavy guns out of their enclosures. As such, she couldn’t give Rainbow any more than a few moments. Twilight reluctantly left Rainbow to her own council. She came to a halt and started hovering in place. Fast and bloody. Well it’s already bloody, but since they’re bunkering down into a siege, they’re expecting this to be a long fight. If things go like it did at the Battle for Razor Gorge, the besiegers lost almost no pony while the defenders were completely wiped out. Wait… That’s gotta be it! They don’t think this is going to be a short war. Granny has allies, and I bet the guys attacking us have even more enemies. They must be saving their drones for future battles…or… Luna barged into the bridge with a series of rolled up maps she had taken from Rainbow’s chambers. “I thought you might need these if we plan on flying straight into the jungle.” Even though she didn’t have as much practice with high level multitasking, Rainbow gave Luna all the attention she could spare. “Thanks. I’ll need your help figuring out the enemy’s battle strategy.” Three of Luna’s thestral aides came in behind the princess and set up a fold out table, allowing Luna to unfurl the most relevant map detailing the terrain around Stripped Gear. Rainbow sent orders to her infantry to fall back to the walls with some staying behind to wait in ambush or to set up teleport beacons. Numerous small field artillery was being set up along the ramparts and were already firing on the unshielded targets, hoping to intercept anyone before reaching the shields. Rainbow moved over to the map and took several offered green and red flags from an aide. “The enemy has taken up positions along the west and southern farmlands. Granny’s been stockpiling ammo ever since my first Summit pow-wow, so I’m not worried about running out.” Rainbow marked the the road between the hive proper and the rail outpost to the north. “The new ship Cadista just built is being escorted out by two gunships and should be clear of the battlefield shortly. It looks like the attackers don’t care about it enough to pursue.” Luna tried to wrap her head around the alien form of warfare. She was used to Equestrian, minotaur, and Griffin technology and tactics, but the stark differences between the technophilic changelings, and the living weapons of the other queens left her with little useful advice to give. With a menacing frown, Rainbow planted three flags around the skirmish with Polybia’s force earlier, which was uncomfortably close to that same northerly road. “That nut Polybia used the blood of her own kids to act as a portal. I had to station granny’s only corvette-destroyer, the Dagger to plug the hole.” While she had poor abilities with teleportation, portal magic was something of a hobby for Luna. “Blood magic or not, using rock salt and ground mandrake root will destabilize any portal.” “Really?” Rainbow replied with confusion that was mirrored by Rourke. “Granny should have some at hive. I’ll get a team to deliver it.” “It takes time however, and would have been more effective if the materials were already present, but it’ll work.” “I’ll take what I can get,” Rainbow snorted with approval. “Hopefully they can get it done with one of the corvettes Cadista still has.” Luna’s eyes followed the red flags and long wooden blocks showing trooper positions as Rainbow took the time to finish placing the rest. The situation looked grim, but unfortunately, the flags and wooden colored blocks only painted half the picture. “What about troop strength? How big of a force are we facing?” “Granny’s advisors are telling me we’re looking at three maybe four hives worth of drones. Though I’m going to assume five just to be safe.” The ordinarily boisterous mare was beset by heavy worry lines and more than a little nervous sweat. “There’s no telling who or how many might be waiting in reserve.” “That could be well over half a million drones,” Luna gasped with true fear. The armies of old and even modern times rarely numbered over one hundred thousand at any one battlefield. The prospect of half a million bearing down on Stripped Gear was all too telling. “Yeah,” Rainbow commented irritability. “So I’m trying to wear them down to a more manageable level.” She momentarily closed her eyes to focus more intently on directing Stripped Gear’s defenses. “At least it’s pretty obvious who's fighting us. Since Granny ID’d Polybia as the one who created the blood portal, its gotta be Chrysalis and her cronies.” Luna was lost in thought while Captain Rourke fly over to hover above the map. The shipmaster used a baton to point at the northeastern portion of the map with just enough noise to rouse both royals. “What about around here? Are they intentionally leaving an escape route?” Rainbow took several seconds to respond as she tried to bring herself to the present. “No idea. The few scouts I have in the area haven’t reported anything so far, but we’re stretched thin. I’ve have the majority of Granny’s assets facing the enemy.” Rainbow took a small airship figurine and slid it across the map in a curved line through the empty section. “That’s where I’m going to have the Deception move in to slide up to those big bloated drones under cloak and take them down. I bet if we trash them, the other queens will bug out.” Rainbow Dash slipped back to her command while Luna studied the map, with a changeling occasionally moving flags around so Rainbow could focus. However, the more Luna tried to read the battlefield, the darker her thoughts became. She waited for Rainbow Dash to be more aware of the present before speaking in a grim tone. “What if flying in to Cadista’s rescue is a mistake?” Just about everybody within earshot did a double take. Were it not for their friendship, Rainbow might have slugged Luna for even saying that. “What do you mean a mistake?” she growled. “We can’t just abandon Granny!” Luna gave her a critically contemplative look and fully turned to face the fretful queen. “Think about it, Rainbow Dash. The three of us are all in one ship, and Cadista is isolated in a siege. This situation rings too strongly with how Sombra attempted to eliminate both Celestia, myself, and half of our army at the last battle of Red Snow. His forces had General Star Field completely surrounded with the Equestrian army’s backs against a canyon. Celestia and I planned to run ahead of our reinforcing army to create a light bridge for Star Field to cross. “The canyon looked completely empty until we created the bridge.” Rainbow wished she could cut the story short, but Twilight was able to get a few of the heavier guns into position, allowing Rainbow’s forces to open fire on the artillery positions outside. The concentration to coordinate that effort mean Rainbow could only continue to listen to Luna. “As soon as the majority of Star Field’s troops were on the bridge, Sombra sprung his trap. He had three dozen gargoyles attack us, ripping our personal guards apart, and tearing my sister and I from the sky. The bridge collapsed without us to keep it intact, and every non-pegasus fell to their deaths. Between the fall and the gargoyles, my sister sustained wounds that would have killed a lesser pony, and I wasn’t much better. “We would have died there were it not for the pegasi throwing themselves at the gargoyles and bodily intercepting Sombra’s spell to give their companions time to grab us and flee.” Luna stepped around the table to be face to face with an irate Rainbow Dash, while giving a stern yet respectful expression of her own. “We go into that warzone, we could most assuredly cause massive damage, but we’d be walking straight into a trap.” Rainbow Dash was silent for a full minute. Luna assumed she was warring between her steadfast loyalty, an attribute Luna respected greatly, and the military mind that Rainbow had been gifted with by the Wonderbolts and queenhood. Strategically, Luna saw little hope against such numbers arrayed against Stripped Gear, made even worse with the hive’s crippled defenses. What Luna couldn’t know, is that that Rainbow’s internal conflict lasted all of two seconds. She spent that minute devising a plan so bold that few sound minded people would even contemplate. “…Yes. It is a trap.” She turned her gaze from the map up to Luna. “It’s a honeypot trap. If anything they’ll expect us to do one of two things: reveal ourselves early along here,” she pointed at the empty northwestern section. “Or that we’ll decloak right above those three big crawling drones.” A predatory smirk marred Rainbow’s muzzle as she stamped the ship figurine right on top of the two closest land crawlers. “Let them spring their trap! We’ll strike them with such shock and awe that even those miserable queens will give pause. Even if we can’t save the hive, we can still save Granny along with my aunts and uncles.” “With nothing but this ship and its crew?” Luna cautioned with a deep frown. “You don’t have enough ammunition!” Rainbow Dash moved around to Luna’s side of the table and brought over a baton that had been sitting unused on the side of the table. A calculating mischievous sneer creased her muzzle. “We don’t need a victory to win.” “And what may I ask, could give you that idea?” Luna replied with a grim tone. Her concern mounted when Rainbow’s gaze glanced at the horizon, but Luna thought Rainbow’s gaze was fixed on the bright full moon. “You know full well Tia and I have forbidden ourselves to use the sun or moon for any purpose outside of maintaining the day and night. Even if we hadn't, it is a slippery slope I dare not follow twice.” Rainbow Dash only scoffed in reply, entirely missing Luna’s rapidly dropping mood at the bad memories. “The only thing I want the sun and moon to do-,” Rainbow paused as her plan took shape in her mind. Her personally redesigned wings buzzing with power and excitement enough to cause a heavy draft in the darkened bridge. “-is to watch.” > 9: Sword of the Skies > -------------------------------------------------------------------------- Cargo bay two was dark save for deep red lights across the walls. Two rows of Jevruun Vrunningee tensed for the battle they’d spent the last fifty hours preparing for. Luna’s Royal Guard remained hidden within the ship as a reserve for the time being. Thunderfury, Ferrum, and Rasua stood in contemplative silence directly in front of the large bay doors, waiting for them to open. The thrum of the great propeller engines would have been almost overpowering this close to the edge were it not for the protective earmuffs everyone possessed. The ship rocked against some turbulence, sending a thrill of nerves across the thirty gathered warriors. The rest of the infantry waited with Intel in cargo bay one on the other side of the ship. The queens had been too busy for anyone to inquire on the state of their grandmother’s hive, so the soldiers sat in pensive anticipation. The only thing they could pick up was constant chatter from their aunts and uncles, oddly distorted by some unknown force on the battlefield. Many double checked their weapons and armor. Most of it was a light aluminum alloy scale weave that still allowed flight over heavier steel. It was one thing both Twilight and Rainbow had all but demanded after the massive casualties in Rookhaven. Thunderfury was checking over Aegis’ twin spare fuel canisters while silently wishing she would stay out of the fighting. Aegis has got to remember she’s a princess now. She’s too valuable to be out in front anymore. But it’s a bit late to try and talk her out of it now. Ignorant of Thunderfury’s mounting worry, Rasua stood by the others in tight quarters, yet still felt very much apart from them. Not that she dwelled on it very much since she was busy with her own preparations and fearful musings. I don’t know if Queen Rainbow Dash is crazy or a genius. I give her the short list of spells I can replicate, and she jumps on three of them. A massive weight of responsibility and fear pressed down on her. Now she’s basing the whole attack on me of all people. Just because the other changeling nations would never expect sphinx magic, let alone know how to counter it. Casting such thoughts aside, Rasua held four out of twelve precious stone orbs in her hands, and spoke words of power that were lost to the winds for most. “With my serenade, I call upon your aid.” Those who were not otherwise distracted watched the lone sphinx with curiosity as she breathed a gentle green mist onto the four orbs, which started glowing the same color. Ultimately the changelings forewent asking her about it due to the ear protection. Rasua deposited the glowing gems in a tightly fastened satchel and locked each orb in place with a socket. She took another set of spherical gems into her hands. “Censored, silenced, rebuked, denied.” This time, Rasua’s breath took on a bluish purple, as did the jewels shortly after. She repeated the process with the second set before pulling out the last of her gems. This time, the words of power left an oily, dark touch on all nearby, making their skin crawl. “Demons of shadow, hate, and death, I bring your terror upon my breath.” An inky black miasma heaved its way out of Rasua’s mouth and greedily sank into the four awaiting gems. An extremely unwanted side effect of the spell was horrid breath that could curdle milk. Some of the unnerved changelings might have asked why Rasua was apparently wielding dark magic, were they not under strict orders from Rainbow Dash to leave the sphinx to her spells. Aegis gritted her teeth at the prospect of working side by side with a dark magic user. I know Aunty closely examined Rasua’s list of spells and asked for that one specifically. So why did she ask for dark magic of all things? Any investigation was cut short when the cargo bay doors clanged loudly before yawning open into the skies beyond. Everyone moved to look down at the burning battlefield almost two kilometers below. It was just past midnight so the raging firestorms charring the once bountiful farmlands below lit up the whole area around the caldera in harsh orange and reds. The hive itself was also ablaze in many places. The great shield tower, which had stood since long before Cadista’s current incarnation, was completely gone. Only a wreck of steel remained of it. Sporadic fires across multiple other sections of the hive burned within heavy, blue, mana-rich mists. Seven large globs of blue mana lurched up and over the caldera wall to hit the hive within. Large orange shields were brought up, and intercepted all of them, though the massive magical artillery shot on the far west side busted through the shield, yet destabilized in the process, spilling caustic mana below. The skies above Stripped Gear itself were awash with small black clouds and tracer rounds as the hive’s anti-air defenses focused on the latest assault trying to run the gauntlet. The hive’s own artillery still thundered in answer, but were far too few for Aegis’ liking who still remembered walking along Stripped Gear’s walls which once bristled with more guns than she could count. As the Deception slinked its way through the skies, what was left of the south and eastern face of the caldera came into view. Fury and lust for revenge surged after the gathered soldiers saw how whole sections of Stripped Gear were in ruins and a huge area of the walls had been demolished all the way down to the forest floor. Even the corvette-destroyer, Dagger, had been brought down, and crashed near the palace. Yet the ship’s single dorsal turret was still active, and adding its voice to the remaining defenses. The only thing that gave Aegis and her soldiers any sense of satisfaction was the virtual carpet of chitin bound corpses that covered the battlefield both in and out of the caldera. A humorless smirk marred Aegis’ muzzle at how the number of grey bodies were by far the vast minority of the dead. The bombardment against the wall had been so heavy that the whole area was almost fully obscured by dense clouds of loose blue mana, a hallmark to the titanic magical forces levied against Stripped Gear. From what little I was able to pick up from momma’s filtering of grandma’s defense chatter, those giant crawlers double as biological artillery platforms. A snaking green shield wormed its way from the farmlands to the breach in the wall, protecting the mass drone assault all the way up to the last few seconds before reaching the remaining infantry along the walls and inner courtyard. Principal among the defenders were flamethrowers, which, while effective at keeping the enemy back, could do nothing about the shield beyond due to their short range. Spears of burning mana bolts spilled forth from behind the shield, answering the defender’s rifle fire. Aegis had to clamp down on all four legs to keep the wind from sucking her out of the doors. The propellers were louder than ever, but even they couldn’t drown out all of the sounds of battle below. Rainbow Dash’s voice cut through the shock of such a battlefield. Aegis stepped aside to let five sky blue drones perch at the lip of the bay doors. Their wings unfurled, revealing they actually had four, with the second pair of wings behind the first. None of the Queens’ Guard had paid much attention to Rainbow Dash’s pet wing project, only knowing that these five drones had opted to be rebirthed to have them. Thunderfury cocked his head in curiosity at his unique brothers and sisters. They had two sets of wings. The front pair looked like normal changeling wings, while the second pair was angled backwards and more akin to a dragonfly. As the group waited for Rainbow’s command, the four wings were held very close together, far too close to flap without hitting each other. Thunderfury had seen this strain in action before only once, and knew full well those wings were the strangest in the world for one reason: they didn’t flap. Momma’s secret weapon, he mused with dark anticipation, and to think Aunty Twilight said bringing them for first contact was overkill. His eyes wandered down their lean frames to see there were no holes in their legs, wings, or anywhere else. A humorless smirk crossed their faces as each of their wings started glowing bright cerise. Their wings didn’t buzz at all, they simply stayed rigid as they pulled in more mana. A blast of magic from the gap between their wings sent the drones behind them reeling as the Boom Team blasted out of the cargo bay. Aegis and the others barely had time to recover when Rainbow spoke again. Aegis shoved her way towards Rasua. Knowing she’d never be able to hear her, Aegis opted to use simplistic sign language to get Rasua ready to go. The sphinx held her shield close to her chest. It was the only item in the changeling armory she was moderately proficient with, or dared to use. Up on the bridge, Rainbow Dash used what was left of her scouts in the field to identify the best targets. Twilight assures me Cadista’s crew can hold the walls for at least another hour. So I can focus on the big meaty targets. You take out the logistics, you kill the army; warfare 101. The three big crawler drones were much closer to the walls now. A dense acid green shield blanketed each one as they inched ever closer to the hive walls. “Captain, I think our targets have already marked themselves.” She gave a toothy smirk at the prospect of revenge for her fallen aunts and uncles. “You may fire when ready.” Captain Rourke adjusted the naval hat of her predecessor as she made sure void stone shells were loaded. Several more seconds later, all main gunners reported they finished zeroing in. With the Deception tilted at an angle, the four main deck turrets lined up at a single crawler. The first salvo of void stone shells roared, disrupting the cloaking field. Poor luck saw only three of them striking home. Even so, the green shield collapsed almost instantly with most of the casters either dead or soon to be. The thunderclap of fire and detonation focused a million eyes upon the flagship of Phoenix’s Roost hanging above the western wall of the hive below. No one had a chance to respond before the next salvo cracked the sky, and implanted themselves in the nearest crawler. The massive drone peeled off an unholy screech of incomparable pain before it exploded in a mountain of blood and broken bodies. As one, the massive throng of changelings that had been waiting for Twilight Sparkle to reveal herself answered back with a deafening unsettling howl before surging through the air. Yet the Deception’s gunners were faster. They quickly cycled targets and destroyed the second crawling behemoth before most of the enemy could get off the ground. Each one of the hostile drones answered by bringing up a blackish purple shield around them, giving the impression that the very earth itself was awash with black magic and was rising to greet the warship. Through her eyes within Stripped Gear, Twilight was too paralyzed in awe and terror to stop her ship’s gunners from loading the next round of void shells. Rainbow Dash only huffed at the sight. “They’re making this too easy.” The four deck guns spoke, launching shells so fast the waiting infantry in the cargo bays could see the contrails. The shells exploded several meters short of the target area, throwing void powder in all directions. The Deception’s crew watched, eagerly awaiting the mass to plummet back down. However, not a single hostile drone even flinched, and sped right past the void stone. Only the smaller AA cannons inflicted mild casualties due to the shield. Rainbow’s jaw gaped in stunned silence as the black magic shields kept closing in. With the voice of a hundred thousand drones, the controlling queen behind them jeered. “As predictable as ever, Queen Rainbow Dash. You should have stayed in Equestria!” Rausa freaked at the same voice coming out of tens of thousands of mouths at once, and scurried closer to Aegis. “Wait… that sounded like Silandrus! Why is she here?” Rainbow Dash growled. And to think my original plan was to bombard Sticky Spit’s hive. Twilight barked to the gunners and her sister. Rainbow Dash cursed, but wasted no time. The gunners had already been on the move since Twilight’s warning. Rainbow Dash angrily kicked the railing around the bridge’s windows. “You think you know me, Silandrus? Think you read my file do you?” Gotta buy time for my gunners to get the void stones out. Raptor stood up on the small tuft of black cloud with a malicious smirk as he warmed up his wings. Charging headlong into the carpet of hostile drones, Raptor and his four squadmates dove down from above the warship, blitzing past it as Aegis’ troopers started to blanket the frigate. Rainbow Dash saw them pass, yet her pride was crushed by the weight of the enemy ahead of them. Raptor saw the black cloud rushing towards him with such speed that he howled at the thrill of it. The all encompassing Weave of the World started to warp around him. Yet his strength alone was not enough, which is why his squad formed up around him in wedge formation to combine their efforts. By now, the rival drones saw them, and saw the radical build up in mana pressure. Silandrus had a number of the closest drones drop their shields to launch spells, but they barely got a shot off before it was too late. Raptor’s squad broke the mana-barrier barely ten meters in front of the enemy. A massive conical shock wave cracked near the center of the enemy formation, plowing through the swarm like a scythe through so much wheat. The collective shield collapsed almost in its entirety as the rippling wave of mana swept through the battlefield, giving pause to the battle on the ground and rocking the Deception. The glass on the frigate’s bridge shuddered within its frame, but held firm. Rainbow’s two personal bodyguards stood closer to her, wary of the glass breaking as it did in Rookhaven. “Have a little more faith in my refit, guys.” Rainbow relished the familiar magical tidal wave that had earned her cutie mark all those years ago. Yet she only gave herself an instant of satisfaction before giving the order. Knowing Raptor’s team had fled the kill zone, the gunners let loose with a storm of lead rain. From her perch near the cargo bay doors, Rasua watched in fascinated horror as distant drones fell by the dozens, then the hundreds. Even the smaller, close in, anti-air guns started chattering, barely bothering to aim at any target along the port side because it was nearly impossible to miss, such was the number of their enemy. Every casualty took two more with them as the injured struck their kin on the way down. The lone sphinx fully expected the forces arrayed against them to flee in the face of such fury. They have no airships of their own, no weapons that can reach us, or they’d have used it already. No one would throw themselves against such an imbalance of force. It is folly. Aegis suffered no such misconception, and tightened her grip on Burny. Now’s the time. She turned to Rasua and motioned for her to remove her earmuffs. <“All hands,”> she yelled both vocally and over the hive mind, <“Spread out along the surface deck, and stay out of the heavy cannons’ way!"> Both Aegis and Intel’s platoons flew out to blanket the Deception. Intel’s solely changeling platoon latched themselves to the ventral section of the ship, staying clear of the propellers. Aegis took her troops along with Rasua to the dorsal side. After settling into her position, Aegis watched the living cloud get torn to pieces and yet none of it riled her like the others nearby. Stop toying with us, Silandrus. Show your true strength. As if answering Aegis’ challenge, dozens of dense tendrils of black smoke jabbed up from the broken remains of the crawlers and sped through the mass of dying changelings. The heavy firepower from both the warship and the remaining anti-air artillery from Stripped Gear below switched focus onto the frighteningly fast spires of smoke, but they took much more damage to bring down. Even the few that were blow from the sky were quickly replaced by more screaming out of the pulped crawlers. Aegis lit her horn fully expecting Twilight’s next order. “Oorah!” the infantry cheered back. From within a specially modified spell augmentation room, Twilight Sparkle leveraged her pony lineage to bring forth a bright orange-tinted purple shield, springing to life barely two meters away from the hull, forcing Aegis to remain on all fours. Well over a dozen drones added their strength to the queen’s spell. Scant second later, the shadowy tendrils collided with the barrier to reveal hissing furnaces of primordial rage. Furnaces of rage that were packed inside the shells of bulky muscle bound drones bearing slitted eyes. Even as the drones started flying around the shield to evade the platoon's defensive fire, their chitin bulked up and hardened, allow them to take several rounds before finally being felled. One of them impacted almost in front of Rasua, causing her to stumble backwards at the sight of it. These black chitin clad chittering insects were exactly what Rasua feared most in coming here, causing her to shuffle backwards. Only her pride as a predator kept Rasua on her feet. Aegis watched as the smoky drones started encircling the warship, completely blanketing it in an inky black cloud making it impossible to see beyond the shield. Twilight shouted after several tried futile to shoot the drones. Thanks to her gauntlets leaving the bottom of her hooves free, Aegis used her wall-walking to keep standing as the warship under her hooves banked to move north. The shield itself started flickering as hostile changelings started to ram it. Gunfire and flamethrowers joined the mounted batteries, hoping to hit something. Rasua shuffled to the side of the smaller mounted AA gun that was chattering as fast as it could be reloaded. This is madness! What kind of enemy just throws themselves against such power? The shield impacts were happening faster and faster as more hostile drones reached the blinded warship. Aegis had to stop channeling the shield before her grip on Burny failed entirely. “I will not die here! I still have a hive to make!” She screamed in rage while adjusting Burny to a wide spray and charring a dozen drones in seconds. “For every one you kill, ten more will take its place,” Silandrus scoffed almost patronizingly. “Cadista has failed to teach you discretion, Twilight Sparkle. A shame my lesson will not be have time to be taken to heart.” Rasua saw more and more of Aegis’ squad begin to give out on the shield and the impacts were only increasing. I hope this works on changeling magic. I don’t have enough spell-gems to test it earlier. Focusing on four of her imbued orbs, Rasua lifted a hand to the sky and a chorus of ghostly sphinx ancestors materialized at her side. “With our song of heavenly aid, none of you shall be afraid!” The chorus of Rasua’s ancestors sang a divine hymn that pierced the din of war like butter, bringing pause to everyone who heard it. Loose mana from the Weave itself was pulled in by the chorus with Rasua’s outstretched hand being the focus. Two of the linked orbs dimmed and shattered into dust as Rasua directed that mana to Twilight and the friendly changelings, bolstering their spent energies. Aegis snorted approvingly, and started lending her renewed strength to the shield while pouring on more ribbons of fire from Burny. Her actions spurred the others to do the same, yet their progress was still hampered by the deep black smokescreen. The shield itself reformed completely with Twilight’s full might backed by the seemingly depthless well of mana the serenade offered. It almost looked like the shield would hold forever, yet as fast as the wellspring of magic appeared, it vanished once the last of Rasua’s orbs blackened and fractured. The ghostly sphinxes disappeared as quickly as they came, taking their bounty of mana with them. “A fascinating spell,” Silandrus bellowed from thousands of voices. “I’ll have to take you alive to learn how it works.” Silandrus’ gloating was cut short by the blast wave of a second pseudo-rainboom tearing through the gathered mass of changelings once more. The magical nature of the shockwave cleared the smokescreen and obliterated half of the shadowy drones along with them. Rainbow Dash cheered loudly. “Did you forget about them already, you old hag!” Raptor and the others struggled to change course, and all but careened through the dazed enemy to crash back into the cargo bay close to death’s door from mana exhaustion. Their magic was spent, having been too far away to benefit from Rasua’s spell. Rainbow ordered the medics to tend to them after getting her bearings. Her pride for the Boom team was without measure for the sacrifice they fully volunteered for. Good thing the medics know to put them on life support after making a rainboom. The battle forced Rainbow Dash to pull her thoughts away from her children. So we made it over the northern face of SG. I hope we were enough of a distraction for Granny to evacuate. Twilight Sparkle all but barged into her sister’s mind. Rainbow paused to think of a plan. Twilight grimaced at the odds of success. She felt there was little purpose stating their poor chances. She switched over to Aegis. Rainbow Dash leaned on the railing with mounting anticipation as the ship’s ventral weapons as they turned their might upon the shielded ground forces. Silandrus saw the blunder when the firepower against her was cut in half. Seems my allies have forced Rainbow’s hoof. Now to break that shield and end Cadista’s bloodline! Lifting up the battered remnants of her air force, Silandrus still had nearly fifty thousand drones on the battlefield. Since Rainbow Dash was kind enough to eliminate the rest of my outdated drones, it’s time to reveal the fruits of my research. Scattered among the remaining air force, hundreds of Silandrus’ dedicated spellweavers cast an enchantment all across the rest of her army. Once the enchantment took hold, the long range shelling from the Deception and scant few remaining AA batteries from Stripped Gear found nothing but ethereal targets. It didn’t matter if it was explosive or magical; none of the shells or flak touched Silandrus’ air force. The mass sped through the air as fast as their wings could take them in a giant spear formation. Rainbow Dash and Aegis stared as the living weapons charged headlong, completely unaffected by their defensive firepower. Despite the heavy modifications to the ancient enchantment, Twilight knew what it was the instant the warship’s firepower proved useless. Thinking quickly, she altered the shield, giving it a pale yellow light. Thank the First Mother for Celestia’s tutelage. Rasua and all the others on top of the Deception flinched the moment the spear of ethereal drones collided with the shield. Silandrus had fully expected to pass right through, but recovered from the failure all too quickly. “Clever, Queen Twilight Sparkle, but I still expected more from you.” Aegis’ infantry resumed their attacks, only to find their bullets passed right through the ethereal swarm eating away at the shield. Only the flamethrowers managed to bring them down, but even Burny took several seconds to bring down a single drone. It wasn’t long before Silandrus’ brood fully blanketed the barrier, and started draining the shield via their horns. To make matters worse, they used the stolen mana to repair their bodies, making the flamethrowers even less effective. “It’s a shame really. I saw so much potential in your bloodline, and you threw it all away to protect an outdated queen. Such soft Equestrian values have gotten you killed.” “Says the queen with cobwebs in her holes!” Rainbow Dash growled at the insult. If there’s one thing I hate it’s being ignored! “Don’t act like I’m not here you old hag!” she yelled at the nearest puppeted drone, but got no response. That’ll change reeeal quick! Rainbow Dash dug her hooves into the wooden deck of the bridge right as Twilight spoke from within her chambers. Twilight’s tone grew frightfully worried. Ending the conversation, Rainbow Dash jumped out of the bridge’s hatch and started spreading her royal pheromones, using her wings to push them towards the drones. Rainbow Dash hoped the pheromones would work on a being able to pass through bullets, but for several agonizing seconds it seemed that would not be the case. Right before Rainbow Dash was about to give up the pheromones in lieu of brute psychic invasion, the four closest puppets began to lose their slitted eyes as Silandrus' grip on them loosened. “Gotcha!” I bet sis would kill to figure out how my personal perfume worked on these guys. Rainbow Dash sneered as she spun back around to face her victims, and made sure her side of the hive mind was heavily filtered. Acting quickly, she pointed her horn at the nearest one and forced her psychic will upon the drone. Being so close to the drone who was already being compromised by Rainbow’s pheromones, it was almost trivial to break into Silandrus’ hive mind. What awaited her on the other side, however, was nigh horrifying. Instead of the welcoming subtle forum of Rainbow’s native hive mind, Silandrus’ Link was completely monotone. There was no deviation in the hundred thousand voices echoing the singular dominating voice which Rainbow Dash immediately assumed was Silandrus herself.