[b]LIV [i]Terminator[/i][/b] "Good, so you're not a pampered leader like the rest of our own who has never actually seen combat. What you're about to see won't traumatize you at all." Kuuyi felt bad for not telling the Fleetmaster about the test, but had she known the truth could be shrouded. Her eyes began to glow purple, and her piercing stare was set on the Fleetmaster. A sharp pain began to pulse on and off inside the Fleetmaster's head, then the memories came. Brutal battles, fought with equally brutal weapons, armies charging fanatically at each other with no mercy for those slaughtered. This was something you would never find in the official history texts. As time went on, the weapons in the hallucinations became more and more advanced, until an image of jet aircraft and propeller aircraft dogfighting above seas of ground soldiers and vehicles, all circled around a primitive rocket bearing an ancient symbol the memory identified as Försa Sekläria. Before the outcome of the battle could be seen, the scene suddenly switched. It showed a great fleet comprised of thousands of vessels laying waste to a planet below. They were marked with symbols, but they kept changing. One moment it was the flag of Lakfakalle, the next Sylve's banner. Sometimes there would be multiple symbols, sometimes only one. Symbols of nations that did not yet exist, symbols more ancient than the galaxy itself. Finally, the ships vanished and the memories receded. "I am sorry I could not tell you, Fleetmaster. It would have compromised the test. You have passed, we apologize for the damages that were caused by our weapons. You may investigate the wreckage and use our shipyard facilities for repairs if you wish. You must tell none outside the Delphan Collective of what you have just seen, that knowledge that has just been given to you is something reserved only for Delphans and those they deem worthy. If you begin to have inexplicable déjà vu that is not shared with those surrounding you, return to this system as quickly as possible. Neglecting to do so will result in loss of mental stability."