”Hey, Redana! Whatchu reading?”
Redana jolted, and not just because Mynx had fooled her right up until she opened her (Bella) mouth. The shapeshifter’s grin was wickedly playful, and Redana’s brain went into panic mode. She had a plan! She’d had a plan! All she was going to say was “studying for my Practical” and Bella would hum and then she’d either start asking questions about the battle (because Bella wasn’t allowed to join her for lessons, and always wanted to know more), or she’d remind Dany to get some water and stay hydrated before swish swishing away. But Mynx respected the boundaries of neither god nor princess when she was feeling impish, which made it all the more vital that she not come over and see what Dany was actually reading, hidden in her textbook. All Dany had to do was just tell Mynx she was busy prepping for the practicals. That was all she had to do. Just do that.
“Nothing,” Redana blurted out. “What are YOU doing here?” Inside her heart, she fell over like a toppled statue and imploded on herself.
Mynx hopped up onto the bed, twisted in midair, and hit the mattress so hard that pillows went everywhere, and in the process ended up with her pretty catgirl head bouncing on Dany’s chest as she took a look, and Dany couldn’t awkwardly slam the textbook shut fast enough, particularly because of the book that was inside the book.
“Purrincess,” Mynx said, doing her Silly Bella Voice, “why are you reading A Princess In Scales? Is it informational and edificational? Is it moralistically uplifting? Can you tell me what happens?” She looked up, smushing her ears(?) against Redana and stuck her tongue out in a blep.
“I just... you know, I... there’s some Azura strategies in here, and descriptions of their society, and it’s a lot more vivid than, well...” The block paragraphs were making her eyes glaze over. The graphs were worse. And the adventures of Myran of the Ceronians through Azura space, rescuing princesses and fighting janissaries and foiling the plots of wicked viziers and making love under blue-litten suns (whatever blue-litten meant), was a lot more engaging. In the story, the Azura were understandable: the good ones were all pretty and breathy and schemed against, while the bad ones were sinuous and cruel and condescending and in charge of all those schemes that Myran kept barreling right through, ruining elegant plans by being too honest to tempt and too brave to count the odds and too direct for them to plan for.
“I getcha,” Mynx said, winking. “Don’t worry, I won’t tell Bella.”
“Won’t tell me what?” Bella asked, in the door frame, carrying some new sheets up from the laundry (as a favor to the servitors down there, because Bella was kind, too).
“Mew mew mew! Mew, mewmewmew?”
Bella stared for one moment at Mynx’s outrageous smile, and then (when Mynx took a breath to start again) threw the folded sheets overhand at Mynx (and Redana). Mynx slithered cackling out of the way, and Redana very much did not. Fortunately, they were coming undone by the time they smacked her in the face, drowning out Bella’s gasp of horror at her own impetuous sheet-throwing and Mynx’s hiccuping laughter.
***
New sketchbook. New schematics. New Redana. Sure, she’s tired and wired and grumpy, but all of that is drowned out to a vague irritation as she listens to Iskarot’s tirade. She’s got a plan. She’s got a plan. She’s going to Myran this.
The Plousios in her sketches is a juggernaut, a falling star with radiating vents and engine shunts and thrusting jets, fell-prowed and layered with plating. In design, it is something like a thunderbolt. It is a ship for a princess who never, ever wants to be held back again. Try and get in the way of this. Try to stop it as it is loosed from the bow. Get out of its way or be wrecked in its wake.
So what if she’s gutted the Plover launch bays? So what if the SP launchers are reduced to simple broadsides? One Plover and its royal pilot will be enough. One away team will be enough. This ship, this crew, they can’t and won’t be stopped. They’re going all the way to Gaia, no matter what gets in their way.
Redana raises a hand, because she’s got to know. “Magos,” she says, trying to balance both respect and commandfulness. “On Tellus, our information about the Azura is somewhat limited. Have any elements of the Hermetic Fleet[1] come into possession of, uh[4], new information?”
***
[1]: what a weird thing to say, even after being at ground zero of one of their paracausal weapons. What’s next? Dolce leading a fleet of war-chefs[2]?
[2]: Bella peeling away her cuteness and safety and kindness and leading killer owls to throw her in a miserable hole to stew all the way back home[3]?
[3]: stop stop stop don’t cry stop it you’re at a meeting for Oizys’ sake
[4]: tripped at the finish line. We were this close to greatness!
***
Redana jolted, and not just because Mynx had fooled her right up until she opened her (Bella) mouth. The shapeshifter’s grin was wickedly playful, and Redana’s brain went into panic mode. She had a plan! She’d had a plan! All she was going to say was “studying for my Practical” and Bella would hum and then she’d either start asking questions about the battle (because Bella wasn’t allowed to join her for lessons, and always wanted to know more), or she’d remind Dany to get some water and stay hydrated before swish swishing away. But Mynx respected the boundaries of neither god nor princess when she was feeling impish, which made it all the more vital that she not come over and see what Dany was actually reading, hidden in her textbook. All Dany had to do was just tell Mynx she was busy prepping for the practicals. That was all she had to do. Just do that.
“Nothing,” Redana blurted out. “What are YOU doing here?” Inside her heart, she fell over like a toppled statue and imploded on herself.
Mynx hopped up onto the bed, twisted in midair, and hit the mattress so hard that pillows went everywhere, and in the process ended up with her pretty catgirl head bouncing on Dany’s chest as she took a look, and Dany couldn’t awkwardly slam the textbook shut fast enough, particularly because of the book that was inside the book.
“Purrincess,” Mynx said, doing her Silly Bella Voice, “why are you reading A Princess In Scales? Is it informational and edificational? Is it moralistically uplifting? Can you tell me what happens?” She looked up, smushing her ears(?) against Redana and stuck her tongue out in a blep.
“I just... you know, I... there’s some Azura strategies in here, and descriptions of their society, and it’s a lot more vivid than, well...” The block paragraphs were making her eyes glaze over. The graphs were worse. And the adventures of Myran of the Ceronians through Azura space, rescuing princesses and fighting janissaries and foiling the plots of wicked viziers and making love under blue-litten suns (whatever blue-litten meant), was a lot more engaging. In the story, the Azura were understandable: the good ones were all pretty and breathy and schemed against, while the bad ones were sinuous and cruel and condescending and in charge of all those schemes that Myran kept barreling right through, ruining elegant plans by being too honest to tempt and too brave to count the odds and too direct for them to plan for.
“I getcha,” Mynx said, winking. “Don’t worry, I won’t tell Bella.”
“Won’t tell me what?” Bella asked, in the door frame, carrying some new sheets up from the laundry (as a favor to the servitors down there, because Bella was kind, too).
“Mew mew mew! Mew, mewmewmew?”
Bella stared for one moment at Mynx’s outrageous smile, and then (when Mynx took a breath to start again) threw the folded sheets overhand at Mynx (and Redana). Mynx slithered cackling out of the way, and Redana very much did not. Fortunately, they were coming undone by the time they smacked her in the face, drowning out Bella’s gasp of horror at her own impetuous sheet-throwing and Mynx’s hiccuping laughter.
***
New sketchbook. New schematics. New Redana. Sure, she’s tired and wired and grumpy, but all of that is drowned out to a vague irritation as she listens to Iskarot’s tirade. She’s got a plan. She’s got a plan. She’s going to Myran this.
The Plousios in her sketches is a juggernaut, a falling star with radiating vents and engine shunts and thrusting jets, fell-prowed and layered with plating. In design, it is something like a thunderbolt. It is a ship for a princess who never, ever wants to be held back again. Try and get in the way of this. Try to stop it as it is loosed from the bow. Get out of its way or be wrecked in its wake.
So what if she’s gutted the Plover launch bays? So what if the SP launchers are reduced to simple broadsides? One Plover and its royal pilot will be enough. One away team will be enough. This ship, this crew, they can’t and won’t be stopped. They’re going all the way to Gaia, no matter what gets in their way.
Redana raises a hand, because she’s got to know. “Magos,” she says, trying to balance both respect and commandfulness. “On Tellus, our information about the Azura is somewhat limited. Have any elements of the Hermetic Fleet[1] come into possession of, uh[4], new information?”
***
[1]: what a weird thing to say, even after being at ground zero of one of their paracausal weapons. What’s next? Dolce leading a fleet of war-chefs[2]?
[2]: Bella peeling away her cuteness and safety and kindness and leading killer owls to throw her in a miserable hole to stew all the way back home[3]?
[3]: stop stop stop don’t cry stop it you’re at a meeting for Oizys’ sake
[4]: tripped at the finish line. We were this close to greatness!
***