####'\|**Imperial Warship *Tomerarenai-fū*, Captain's Quarters|\,**
Penelope was still a little shell-shocked. On a whim, she'd decided three months ago to see if Euryale, creator of the Path, was still alive somewhere. It wasn't a crazy idea; the path could dilate time pretty heavily in some places. The rest of the Fay, however, gave her some funny looks when she mentioned the first part of her plan, though. She wanted to live on a starship. Many starships, as a matter of fact. The way Penelope reckoned it, the best way to find a Fay was to think like that Fay. And the best way to think like Euryale was to hang around cold iron and hard radiation for a few months. Maybe even a few years.
The Fairy outcasts weren't a close-knit group, even for Fairies. Even so, if you were thinking of trapping yourself in a poisonous ship in an alien environment with an anti-magical antidote running through your veins, it was assumed that you'd take precautions first. Such as doing the research, or contacting an outcast. And while she'd stayed at *Finnegan's* for a few weeks, stocking up on radium (she'd also bargained for a pendant (and now owed Finnegan a "favor", Titania help her)) and waiting to find an outcast, Penelope was not a patient Fairy.
Had she been patient, she might have known to look for a better endpoint to the Path. Or known to peek about to make sure the room was clear before exiting the Path. Or perhaps to assume a glamour of invisibility before exiting, just in case there was someone on the other side. Even without research and/or training, Penelope should have known better than to follow a trail that led to a twisting, shuddering endpoint: a clear sign that the Path was in distress, and would quickly shirk the probably highly-ferrous, likely radioactive location. But Penelope was not a patient Fairy, and this was the first trail that she found leading to a starship.
So the (relatively) young Fairy changed into the finest cloth boots and dress she could find (glamours were tricky while using radium), downed one of the vials of radium, and set off. Thus Penelope fluttered from an oxygenated tunnel in a tiny, weightless asteroid into the quarters of an unsuspecting Abh warship Captain. The Path shuddered behind her, the endpoint disappearing in an instant. It obviously wasn't going to come back soon. Even with the radium, a dull ache set in on her wingtips and behind her eyes.
And there was an alien, floating right in front of her! A real, live alien! Sure, there had been aliens at *Finnegan's*, but they didn't count. Penelope twitched her wings a bit, re-orienting herself to get a better look at the creature. She was brown-skinned with long, flowing hair, a long torso, rounded ears, and an almost-pretty face. The alien was wearing a two-piece white garment, nothing like the gauzy dress and wrapped cloth boots Penelope had on. And she was holding a sword.
The alien said something.
Penelope maneuvered herself around the alien, wanting to get a better look at its hair. The alien awkwardly rotated to keep the blade pointed at Penelope. She really didn't understand why it was crouched down like that.
The alien started to say something again. With a sigh, Penelope forced her way through the radium, breaking into a small sweat, and used an audio glamour. The speech was now recognizeable. She did the same with her own speech, noting with dismay that her wings were crumpling at the edges from exertion. Now she had a headache. Something else registered from the Aetherfield - the alien wasn't working all the way. Could be a useful bargaining chip.
"-rom that cursed fifth planet? Are you the face of the demons that we fight? Answer me!" the alien said.
Something clicked in Penelope's head.
"You're an Abh! I've heard about you, but I've never seen one! Your species doesn't walk the Path very often. Hmm. You're much taller in person, you know that?" Penelope said. She took a breath. "Oh-! I'm Penelope. Hello! That's a very nice sword, did you make it? Gosh, how can you stand not having trees? Can I get a room like this? If I do, can I have one with less metal? Maybe put in some wooden tiling. I'll help out, of course. Nothing major, though, just small maintenance things. I've been practicing on some of the ships at *Finnegan's*. And I've gotten really good at making sure things don't implode, too! Oh, I'm not letting you talk, am I? I do that sometimes. Especially when I'm excited, which I guess I am now, because this is my first time in a real-life spaceship!"