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Hidden 8 mos ago Post by Tatterdemalion
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“My wish did come true,” Smokeless Jade Fires retorts, placing one foot on Angela’s arm. She imagines the vibration of the machine all around them; she tunes in to the flustered squeaks coming out of the cockpit locker. “I wasn’t ever in it for anything that could be bought, sold, or offered— nothing except the glory. And won’t that look wonderful? Eliminated in the semifinals, but immediately recruited by the victor as an integral part of the most famous, most elusive battle ever to be fought here. When they remember her, and all of her audacity, they will remember me.”

"Ai, is that all? You could do that with a periodical, you know,” Angela says, feeling the thrum of the Barn Owl all around, feeling the heat of the goddess coiling right in front of her. A challenge, a reminder.

“Of course it’s not all. I also made everyone watch, admire, covet, and adore the most beautiful girl in the universe,” Jade continues, radiating smug delight. A joy, pure and shining and divine. “And how she will be pursued! How she will be begged for answers! How she will be remembered in the same breath as Whispered Promise, as Mayze Szerpaws, as me. This is my miracle, Angela Victoria Mi—“

"You don’t have to say the whole thing every time, you know.”

“…but it’s your title. Your wholeness of self. How you have presented yourself to the cosmos. You really want me to be so intimate as to drop titles, Anj-eh-la~? Oh, how the zeal of the first Terenian convert finally emerges from the thickets at last—“

"If you say one more word I won’t let you watch her thanking me for the gallant rescue, imp.”

"IMP—“

"MMMMFFFFHH?!”
Hidden 8 mos ago Post by Anarion
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Isabelle

“You know I’m enjoying this too,” Marcina says as she stands before you in the face off. “I’m not just Adriana’s lackey, and you all are making for a good workout. I love learning about people like this.” She listens as you try to reason with her. “Yes maybe you’ve got a po—fdsffgfagdsaf” she says as the muffin hits her right in the mouth and you’re breezing past.

You race down the hallways with Asil and Kiriala comes loping beside you, slipping into a Hybrasilian huntress run that uses all four limbs to stay low to the ground and maintain a speedy pace that lets her run beside you without needing to pant.

Your footsteps are eaten up by carpet, and your turn the corner to find Adriana already out the door.

She turns to look at you as you barrel out of the building. “We’re not fighting in the streets, I’ll be writing this entire incident up as a planned stunt for the finale done in collaboration with Mayze Serpaws as part of her big reveal. A soft spot for skilled finalists I think. Besides, the priestess is already away along with the Antonius girl, who frankly has given her family a better reputation than at least two thirds of her much wealthier cousins. I’m biased of course, the Teresio family has always been of the opinion that we did more than half the founding of the Consortium and having to mix the name was a concession we can never get back.”

She smiles at you as Marcina comes racing up behind. “Well, off you all go, I know you’ve got things parked around her somewhere. Or I can give you a lift if not. Say hi to Mira for me when you see her.”

***

Dolly

You are indeed rescued. You and the two girls and Angela all squeezed very tightly into the Barn Owl and well clear of the whole thing. It’s obvious in retrospect that they didn’t want to turn this into a public incident. Station staff will all sign NDAs and they’ll turn the Mirror broadcast into being part of the show. It certainly stunned.

Where do you go to unpack and cooldown? To see the end of the match announced properly as they finally get camera drones to cross miles to inspect everything? What do you do with the two station attendants you’ve obviously kidnapped (because surely if they went willingly they’d lose their jobs. No, no, it’s obvious that they were coerced and kidnapped by the goddess, it’s the only explanation).

***

Mirror, Solarel

Wishes shared amidst a battlefield that will be remembered for generations.

You stride out of the radiation zone, to a world where time behaves in a linear fashion and where camera drones can create a proper feed. There is a hoard of them, carefully organized from miles away to rush across the battlefield to be here.

You signal the end of the match, there are no more ships left to fight. You signal victory for Mirror and defeat for Solarel.

You are together. Together to appear on camera. Together to leave the battlefield, slowly. Together as they fetch a shuttle for you. Together returning to the Hangar.

What more is there to do?

***

Matty

You are shirtless, soaked, and exhausted. You loll back in your chair, splay out your arms and relax. You’ve been an incredibly good girl and you get to bask in that feeling.

Or you would, until you hear Slate’s suppressed giggles from behind you. “Finally had myself a good nap. Guess the match went well, kitten?”
Hidden 8 mos ago Post by Thanqol
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> Have you figured it out yet?
> Antipersonnel is a complex issue.
> Oh, yeah?
> Zaldarians especially so. Increasingly likely it feels by design.
Reactor wash or heat dumping would be the simplest way to deal with organics but the energy reallocation counters that at the outset.
Drone support means fighting on the same level as my targets and it becomes vulnerable to Zaldarian tribal hunt tactics.
Increased investment in direct antipersonnel weapons means unbalancing the perfection loop required for flawless victories.
I have not solved it.
> So you're just going to sit in this box?
> I did not say that. The problem is solveable. But I require field test data in order to inform my new design.
My current hypothesis is based around a complete reorientation on the concept of speed, even at the expense of armament.
I will abandon swords and direct weapons and adopt an quadruped chassis type. I will pair this with an integrated artillery system. This will give me unprecedented kiting mobility; able to withdraw over long distances while maintaining sustained fire on my targets. I believe this design has potential.
> So, uh... Really?
> Yes. Why?
> You're describing the Storm Horses. One of the common Gods of Zaldar.
> Curious. Is it particularly powerful?
> No. They get killed by Ash Scorpions all the time. Subterranian ambushes that are over before ranged advantages are bought into play.
> ...
> ...
> The design can be modified to be more resistant to that. Armoured undercarriage, early warning drone swarm -
> Crusher Rhinos.
> What happens to them?
> We usually lure them into the path of Titan Archers.
> Is this... is this what happened to us? To my legion? Why they became devolved, feral, weak, hyperspecialized? Because we could not solve for you fucking reptiles?
> Rude. But maybe, sure.
> I don't believe it. Perfection is a real concept. It can be manifest in a singular point; the ultimate design that can lay waste to every target. The existence of a metagame is simply evidence that not enough thought has been put in.
> I dunno, the Gods of Zaldar have been thinking for an awfully long time.
> I am not like them. I will approach this rationally. I will gather data, integrate with the Spirit Realm, and start isolating factors. I will evolve the perfect design and, once it is attained, the galaxy will remake itself in my image. And until I do, I will adopt my new design - you called it Storm Horse? - because I do not trust your tactical assessment. I shall simply be careful and the design weakness will not manifest.
> I can't argue with that. Good luck out there.
> I do not need luck.

Solarel watched as the Aeteline dragged itself out of the shipping crate. A broken, burning amalgam of nanobots and wreckage, hauled itself into the warm yellow sunlight of Mirror's new world. It warmed Solarel's scales and made the Aeteline's skin bloom with solar panelling like flowers. The half-dead machine shivered, joints cracking and realigning. Smoke poured off it in toxic waves as it remade itself piece by piece.

By the end, it was not the sleek, anonymous perfection of the Aeteline that stood before her any more. It was a vast, mechanical horse; sleek and thundering hooves, a massive bulky railgun projector turret integrated into its back. In shining black and violet it strode away towards the distant plains - pausing only a moment to glance back at its once-Pilot. Mechanical blue lenses whirred as they focused on the girl sitting atop the shipping container, and then with a snort of contempt, the Storm Horse strode away. The first of the Gods of this new world.
Hidden 8 mos ago 8 mos ago Post by BlasTech
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"So that's it, huh?" muses Isabelle, sliding her sword back into its sheath as she watches Adriana stroll off. No more fight. No more great revelations. No more competition. She stares into the grey skies of the spaceport, watching clouds pass by.

"Seems a bit anticlimatic, doesn't it?" replies Asil. Stepping up beside her.

Isabelle hums leans into the contact.

"A little. It mostly just feels strange." she continues. "The Arena has ended. The greatest competition for our generation. And its ... it's done. I mean, for the longest time. I thought, no ... I believed, that it would be my name at the top of the list - me standing at the podium - when we got to this point. After all, Adriana had been able to do it, and I'm better than she was."

She glances at the monitors, which are now showing the match results.

"Instead, I made a choice. And that choice led to ... here. Where Mirror and Solarel took centre stage. And I'm just watching from the sidelines like a bit part in someone else's story. It feels ... unreal. Like something that was meant to be just ... isn't. And I-I don't know where to take that right now."

Asil glances up at Isabelle, noting the water in her eyes. But the other woman doesn't let anything fall.

"All my life. I was told that this was my Destiny. That I would take my place at the forefront of the Galaxy. And that was the moment I'd achieve everything I was meant to be. That moment I'd fully realise into who I was meant to be. Don't get me wrong, I wouldn't change what I did. But with the Arena over ... I'm not sure who I am meant to be now ..."

The two of them are silent, taking in the moment. Committing it to memory. Recognising that this was one of those handful of times in a person's life where they would be witness to history being made.

"Well ..." Asil ventures, sliding her hand and intertwining their fingers. Isabelle looks down and finds the programmer smiling up at her.

"... let's go find out."
Hidden 8 mos ago 8 mos ago Post by Phoe
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It is written that Hybrasil was birthed by Grandmother Night. And so in the beginning she was a place of darkness who would permit no light but the distant stars in the sky. Even the moons did not hang in the sky until Alarea the Usurper plucked them from the neck of Grandmother Night while she slept and dropped them there when she tried to escape the night's fury. And in this home of shadows and starlight it is little wonder that the first Children of Hybrasil beheld almost nothing in the way of color.

It was in the Rising Age of Goddesses, when the Children of Hybrasil feasted raw and bloody on the great creatures of their world (and on each other when they could not get them) in service to chasing the title of Bride for themselves and teasing dowry gifts from each new Goddess that arose from chaos that Hybrasil finally became a place of paints and artistry. One by one were the colors sealed inside of names, and being able to hold them in their hands at last the Children of Hybrasil learned their nature and witnessed the truth of each for themselves.

First came [Yellow], with [Blue] following only breaths apart. After many long years were [White] and [Black], and long after that came [Brown] and [Green] and [Violet]. So it went, and so it went, and so it went. And as the years passed the number of new Goddesses ran out, and their gifts became less frequent, and the Children of Hybrasil were forced more and more to use their gifts to make a Goddess out of themselves. That is to say, a truly lifted and perfected species was asked to prove it deserved all of its favors and the beauty that had been shared with it, and the Age of Burden came closing in around it.

But in that time there was a single color that remained unbound and invisible, refusing to stay trapped within any of the other hues the Children of Hybrasil tried to use on it. It was the color of the blood that ran inside their bodies and the fires that cooked their meals. The very last gift, from Little Sister Fire, was [Red]. But when the name was given the air was heavy with sorrow and only one word hung on the lips of everyone who could speak: "Farewell".

The nature of the Star Story, of theology, and the universe itself is hotly contested among scholars and those among all walks of life, today. But there is one thing which is known to be true: once upon a time, Hybrasil rang out with the commands of a thousand different Goddesses. It is known. And now, only the innermost members of the various cults can even claim to hear vague whispers from the forces that once directed all of reality.

So it was that red came to be known to the Children of Hybrasil. And so too in the same breath did it become [The Color of Parting].

Mirror's dress is the deepest, brightest shade of red that she could manage. A comfortable meshweave leotard with wide shoulder straps and attached ribbons that dangle down overtop of her arms clings tightly to her body, bound across both hips by a pair of crossing diving belts studded with meticulously shaped rectangle onyx weights. Woven into the suit is a skirt that opens in the front but gathers in layers starting at her waist that pull taut down toward her knees and suddenly flare out as they approach her feet and pool behind her on the floor, fanning out around behind her like the tail of some enormous fish. No other adornments, face unpainted, spots unadjusted. Her hair worn in a simple flat curtain. It was all she could think of when she found out she was expected to attend the after party.

True to her fashions, it has been a night of partings. A kiss on the back of the hand and a wordless, wave goodbye to Valentina de Alcard. An intense staredown with Maelia Dala that ended in laughter and a high five when neither one of them had proven nervy enough to call the other one out for playing with a multi-drive setup during the tournament. A cup of tea shared with Adriana Teresio, a much harder shot of liquor shared with Ada Smith, along with the promise of more work soon from both of them. A long hug from Kiriala, who was being called away but promised to visit to continue her education whenever she could. An entire evening spent weaving through crowds to get away from Heim Stockar, more insistent than ever that she at least consider joining his Hold. For some reason, a muffin from Marcina Villajero; she carefully sniffed it for traces of cinnamon.

On and on it went. Masks of happiness, masks of energy, masks of fond farewells and gratitude, all worn with increasing desperation as the noise from the room built up inside her skull until she was finally forced to excuse herself and step beyond the celebration into the relative quiet of the night air.

And Slate.

"Am I too late, Boss? 'Cause I was hoping to talk shop tonight but if you're burned out already I guess I've gotta wait. You really aren't getting any younger, huh?"

Mirror said nothing. Her eyes were on the sky alone, where hidden behind the city lights the pathways of the stars opened up to the future she was ready to escape to. Three steps further out into the street. A swish of the tail. Slate's hand catches her around the wrist.

"Boss. Come on, Boss. Need you here in front of me right now."

"I thought I fired you."

"Oh, you wish. You think this is over Boss? The fucking Aeteline lived through an attack that vaporized my Whip and I'm supposed to, what? Retire to a life of weaving?"

"Oh? Did the mighty Selin Makers finally get a taste of defeat inside of victory?"

"F-f-first of all," said Slate through a deep flush of color through her fur, "Don't use that name. Not out here. Please. Second of all, screw you! You've got the nerve to declare yourself a winner when you dropped the ball that hard?"

"Oh yes, what was I thinking, executing the plan we came up with together to the letter?"

"Shut up! If you did it right I'd still have a pilot to manage and a mecha to maintain! This partial victory crap is gonna ruin the whole 'having my own planet' thing before I even move in!"

Mirror laughs, though she does not mean to. An undignified guffaw that has her leaning against a building just to avoid tumbling over onto the pavement and scraping up her beautiful Dress of Goodbyes. She reaches forward to put a clawtip on Slate's lips before she can protest further.

"You're right. Of course. It's not so bad bringing some of the old stuff over with us. You and I, and Solarel... we wouldn't be able to help it, anyway. Another reason I needed to bid farewell to the rest, I suppose."

"You understand you're not actually getting rid of anybody this time, right? They all know where you live now."

"Maybe so. But distance will carry them away just the same. The pace of their lives will carry them apart and away. Visits, calls, these will be frequent enough for I told you sos to start, but they will fade to nothing and quickly, now that our commonality is shattered. The threads of fate are thin indeed, Slate."

"...Goddess. It messes me up something crazy when you say stuff like that in a tone of voice like you're the happiest you've ever been. This really counts as a happy ending? Disappearing into darkness while everybody else watches us through a Far-lense?"

"It's happy enough for me," Mirror says through a queer smile, "Just leave it. You wanted to talk shop? That sounds like a fun way to recharge."

"Mm....hm. Well, uh, sure. So I guess, the Gods-Smiting Whip really turned out like a mobile artillery platform, right? We were able to, y'know, do The Thing because we were able to use your ah, needs to create separation. But I think that limited you a bit as a pilot, because on a certain level you just couldn't direct the Tails with enough finite control to do what you needed while also maneuvering the main body out of danger. Or into it, for that matter. We gave up a lot of easy kill shots going for these weird technical plays, if you follow."

"You think we hit the limits of Nine Drive, then?"

Slate nods. "Yeah, I do. I think the next evolution that's really gonna push you forward as a pilot (and me along with you) is a tighter focus on the body. Something more reflexive and responsive. I want to take advantage of your 'shattered limb style' and build you a frame with much greater articulation along the whole thing. I'll build it for speed this time, and I mean real speed, like, you've never moved this fast in your life kinda speed. We can even deploy a modular limb system for greater adaptability since you won't really need hands for holding stuff and you don't need to wrap your head around holding stuff that's not there..."

"Th-the problem with, with that's, uh," came a small, deeply out of breath voice from around a dark corner, "The, uh, phew. Wow. The... haaaaa, l-limitations of the, uh, the pilot."

"Matty?"
"...Matty."

The hybrid cat dragged herself over to the pair, burdened by half a dozen suitcases and the galaxy's largest, heaviest, and most overstuffed backpack crammed full of every essential a silly kitten could ever need to go on an adventure. The total weight seemed like it could crack a moon in half, and it was certainly doing a number on her spine. Slate rushed over to relieve her of some of the burden, but Mirror stood frozen in place.

"S-so if we wanna make a mecha like that for Mommy-- I mean Mira-eep! M-M-Mirror! Th-then we need, aahhhhhhh, we need to build her a proper flight suit to go with it. The Chains of Power system helped her by creating artificial limiters that helped her mind not get stuck on stuff, and this'd be like that but for her body. As she warmed up we could have it slowly activate and stabilize bigger g-forces, enhance reflex speed, there's really no end to how high we could lift her if we built the suit and the mecha with the same design in mind. I think it's really interesting!"

"Sweetie, that's-- I mean, that's a really interesting idea but. Have you thought this through? I mean, think about the life you have for yourself here! What are you..?"

"Matty. You were. You. Are."

"Y-You don't... want me?"

"I," Mirror's tongue clicks in disgust. Her fish-tail dress swims up and down the sidewalk in motion that is trying to rush toward and away at the same moment, "It is. Not about. What I. Want. Your. Apprenticeship. I. We. Cannot give you. Opportunity. Like that."

"You deserve the best life you can possibly have, Matty. Boss and I are about to be roughing it for a good long while, and even beyond that we're probably going to be under constant threat of pirate attacks and who knows what else. You've got something amazing with Trosta. You and she were able to perfect a system I spent a three years on without cracking. You don't wanna walk away from your life here just like that, do you?"

"The..." Matty's voice is choked by tears now, "The threads of fate are thin!"

"Huh?"

"I, I, I, I heard you! You think we're all gonna forget you! And I don't wanna! I, I talked to Trosta already and she said I graduated! I'm a master now and you can't tell me what to do!"

"...Kitten. I."

Matty flings herself against Mirror in a crushing hug. The sweetness of the gesture is undercut by about a hundred kilos of hard, heavy gear swinging around her arms and clapping Mirror in the back and the ribs, but the pilot digs her heels in and weathers it with just a small grunt. Her hands find Matty's hair and stroke it softly.

"All my life! All my life nobody knew what to do with me! I tried smiling and I did what everybody said and it never ever ever worked! They just let me go and let me go and let me go! But I found you! Workin with you's the first time I ever felt wanted! I don't wanna be forgotten! I don't wanna forget! I wanna! I wanna be! I!"

Slate shares a look with Mirror from overtop of Matty's head. The wry grin of motherhood, chagrin mixed with pride. Mirror softly strokes Matty's neck until she has to be held to stay on her feet. Until sobs turn to sniffles turn into desperate, shaky giggles and nuzzles against the mesh pattern on Mirror's chest.

"Foolish. I am. For thinking. I could manage. Without my sunspot."

"Hehe, that's right. We're a family! And family's not blood! It's love and belongin and always stayin together no matter what! That's right, right? That's us, right? I found you? I-it's... real. Right?"

Mirror tilts her head toward the sky again in silence. Tears moisten her always watery eyes and bead against her fur until they roll down her neck. She presses Matty's head deeper into her chest in answer. Slate, unseen by either of them, shakes her head and presses herself against the pair of them.

"It's real, sweetie. You and me and Mira, and now combat slu-- uh. I mean. The scary dragon lady too."

"We are... strange."

"That's fine," Matty chokes on tears and laughter in equal measure, "We'll all be weird together!"

The Age of Burden had ended eventually, too. The voices of the divine sang for those with ears to listen. A new goddess had even manifest herself onto the same plane of reality as the Children of Hybrasil. Everything was changing, all over again. The ashes of old dreams and old worlds scattered on the solar winds, to coalesce somewhere now. Red, the color of parting. Was it the wrong choice after all?

Not at all. Because after goodbye... after goodbye, comes the next hello.
Hidden 8 mos ago Post by Tatterdemalion
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"Aren't we going to get in trouble over this, Jade...?"

"What, do you want to turn around and hand them over?"

The priestess hunches her shoulders and dares a little pout, because the truth of it is that she doesn't. The goddess's smug smile says clearly that she knows that, too, and that she thinks her very special little priestess deserves treats for being so good and strong and brave. She chooses, too, to let the messages flicker across the walls of the temple, demands for the goddess and her cult to return to Akar to face judgment, along with the reassuring pings from Angela Victoria Miera Antonius and Nine Forests, letting her know that she is still flanked, that she is still safe.

"Well, where are we even going to go?" Dolly reaches up to brush back a curl of her hair, dragging the intricate harness along with the motion of her arm. It constricts, makes the motion more difficult, and makes her want to melt. "We can't go back to the Terenians yet, and we might start a war if we take two of their people back to Hybrasil."

"I think I know a few places," the goddess says, waving one hand. Her eyes are still half-lidded as she digests; she will need time to be quiescent, then... perhaps she will need to learn through action again. Let the yearning of the universe turn, for a while, to watch that little minx and her impossible dream, just to make them all hungrier again for the great goddess to return. "And we can drop them off on a colony world when they're ready. After we've had our fun, and they've been properly thanked for their service to the Holy Priestess."

Dolly's tail curls, tugging against insistent ropes, and she lets out a happy little huff. She follows the tug of the harness to turn ever so slightly on course, letting her goddess optimize the way forward. The stars are like bright raindrops on a dark windowpane, and she is held, and she is warm knowing that Mirror got her happy ending, after all.

"I wouldn't mind going back to Hybrasil, later," she says aloud. "See the trees again. See my sister again. Tell everyone how you defeated the guardian deities of Terenia in order to declare the victory of one of our own." Jade says nothing; she considers the contents of the message. It may be some time before some of Hybrasil's daughters can return; it may never happen again for Whispered Promise. But she looks at Dolly's warm round face, and she says nothing.

Dolly looks over at her wife, and smiles, and mimes the act of kissing the goddess's cheek. And the goddess, in turn, decides to inhabit the space in front of her Dolly, sitting on the altar, and tugs her in by the leash for a proper kiss...

Just like in "Pursuit of Faith: A Goddess Romance," a story as foundational to Smokeless Jade Fires as any myth, a story that she has memorized inside of her bones.

The idol wobbles in its course, but a panicked burst of comms from Nine Forests convinces Jade to tug Dolly back to where she needs to be.

That's the agreement they made, after all, on that first night together.
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Epilogue: A planet


On the edge of the galaxy, to the galactic west of the NC-301 system, there is a yellow star. For many, many years, this was all there was in the system. Eons ago, the yellow star had been a part of a great nebula within its sector of the galaxy, but it had drifted from that nebula, a wandering child of dust and gas all gathered about itself like a blanket. It had drifted off to sleep all on its own and that sleep had lasted until it was small and bright and burning. No great asteroids or strange magnetic fields disturbed that sleep, and so it sat whole unto itself, with no celestial bodies around it to speak of. Around its weight gravitated only loose rocks and debris, at its edges some larger bodies that drifted towards it, a distant outer shell.

So empty was this system, that as the Hybrasilians and Terenians passed through it on their wayfinding, they never gave it a name. Because it did not have a name, it remained beyond the touch of the gods.

Until now. Now, there are new gods. Gods who live in steel and titanium. Gods who live in flesh. Gods who build with dreams and paper. Can you call them anything else when they have combined their will and their arts to make a world?

The planet that the powers of the galaxy have made is unique.

It is not like Akar the Arena, which was a fully formed barren world filled with nanobots to ever shape and change its surface to the whims of a public demanding spectacle.

It is not like the secret worlds of the ancients, upon which the Zaldairans settled, worlds that had lived for so long that the work of hands and the work of nature had combined together with their automated industry and incomprehensible mechanical deities.

It is not like the great cities of the Terenians, that have eclipsed the way their worlds once appeared, replacing the surface with glass and steel that ever grasp for the sky, creating a view from space of oddly straight lines and circles of blue-gray metal woven together.

It is not like the shaped worlds of the Hybrasilians, that have combined the powers of nature with the craft of biochemistry to sustain their populations and their industry amidst their vast tree dwellings carefully cultivated by artisans.

It is not like the dead worlds that so many try to mine and fight about, their surfaces glorious but barren, settlements forced to be in bubbles meant for temporary extraction by small groups of workers.

No, this planet is alive and it has been left to its life. Left to be wild. To grow without constraints, to take shape as it pleases, in both the small and the large. The madness of a weaver and a mosaic maker at cosmic scale. It is not finished. It may never be finished.

***

The planet did not start this way. It began its life as a small, barren asteroid built around a strong iron core. Like the arena, it was shaped through the efforts of the great Zaldarian shamans who can sing to the nanobots and cause them to work and shape at speed. For raw material, it received resources from the Terenians, the bounty of the greatest miners of the galaxy combining their efforts to bring together materials from within the system and from across other systems to provide the planet everything that it could need to take shape. And for life, it received the gifts of the Hybrasilians, the seeds of the great trees, wildlife from megafauna to microbes, and the waters of their worlds.

Each empire turned their greatest resources, their unique talents to the task: Hybrasilian bio-shapers crafted designs and Terenians offered powered labor and their massive fleets to provide supplies as the Zaldarians set the nanobots to work. From an asteroid’s metallic core, they built layers upon layers over it, each exposed to the light of the system’s yellow sun that watched with avid curiosity. Layers of rock, of dirt, of soil, and finally of crust upon which land and water could rest, compacted together until they could be strong enough to hold themselves together. And when that had its strength, they brought atmosphere: the gasses of nitrogen and oxygen, and just a little carbon, and above them ozone held to warm the surface and capture the light of the little sun.

And then they shaped what had been formed. They took natural mountains that had arisen through the shaping and cut channels for rivers that did not yet exist. They carved beneath great and dusty plains, still bereft of life, that they might have reservoirs and aquifers. Water was foremost in their plans for it was water they needed first, water that might allow life to take root.

And when they were ready, water they brought in spades, great blocks of ice from the asteroids of the Terenians, carried on their transport ships. With water, Hybrasilian seeds, and Zaldarian, and Terenian. A mix of life from many planets across the galaxy.

A mixture of this sort had never been tried. Some Terenian planets cultivated crops that had originated on other planets, and Hybrasilian crafters had much experience carefully altering the biology of local flora for their needs. But a truly combined planet had only been theorycrafted, never implemented. The Hybrasilian shapers worked to make sure that everything was carefully cultivated. They created planned symbiosis, shared nutrients, a complex nitrogen cycle and bacterial processing and reprocessing that would in turn sustain the composition of the atmosphere and the clarity of the water. Once planted, they rapidly grew the seeds of life using the power of technology. Running through generations: accelerated and accelerated through the plans of the greatest scientists that the three empires could produce all collaborating in their vast efforts.

***

But then, the true magic. With all these things in place, they let it go free.

Unlike the Arena, which had its nanobots remain, this planet had them removed when they were done with its crafting. At least, mostly removed. Even the greatest Zaldarian shapers could not entirely remove the integration of nanotechnology with the fundamental life cycles of the planet because they were too integrated with the environmental and evolutionary systems that had been cultivated. What could be said then is that the spark of nanotechnology runs through the soil of the planet and life has evolved to work with it. But it is no longer shaped or even capable of being actively controlled in such a way as happened with its shaping. Instead, the planet has a stable surface and the evolution of the technology is left to its own devices.

Unlike the heartland of Hybrasil, the Hybrasilian shapers stopped their work once life was present and reproducing. The trees are not shaped into great homes for cats to live in multiple tiers. No fields are cleared for agriculture or industry. Life is not managed, and there is no promise that all things will be sustained no matter their own foolish choices. All they have left is the shape of their work, the plans for symbiosis and coevolution that they must now trust will endure.

Unlike the Terenian mining worlds or their great cities, they have removed their generators and extracted their mechas and their ships. They did not leave piles of unused equipment, nor massive settlements empty of their people, nor active generators full of crystal fire to each life for new arrivals. What remains, in rare places, are the leftovers, bits of scrap metal, of old parts, of crates and boxes and mecha feet that showed a little independence in the course of the upheaval of such heavy work. They can be found on occasion, overgrown with plants among the terrain.

In the place of the three great civilizations, life has been left to thrive wherever, and however it might. Conditions are good for this. The distance from the curious yellow star is correct for water to shift from liquid to vapor. The tilt is right to go from hot and muggy at the equator to cool at the poles. The planet has been formed with three small lunar satellites that orbit in sync, so as to pull currents and windstreams to create pockets of temperate zones and pockets of extreme weather, with variation over a twenty (20) year cycle and what scientists estimate will be a two hundred and forty (240) year cycle still to be experienced.

***

What lives here is not kind, but neither is it cruel. It is what came of rapid growth that was then left to its own devices to survive.

Low, hardy trees that cling to stone where they must, while the hot zones are full of tall graceful trees that sway and bend, but do not snap even in the strongest winds of the storms that sometimes sweep through them. The midland zones are full of all different sorts of tall trees, great forests of mist and canopies that hide who knows what. They all know how to scatter their seeds far and wide, to spread and change.

And within these lands there are animals that burrow and save for the seasons. Animals that hibernate. Animals that know how to pounce without hesitation. Some are small and numerous. Some are large, territorial, and powerful. Some, perhaps are even greater than that, titans hidden in the deep places and the tall places who have claimed a land over which they are lord in all but name. Perhaps even a few, integrated with the remaining nanobots, who represent an ecosystem unto themselves. The rumors of the Hybrasilian shapers are that it’s possible that whole islands could rest on the back of giant turtles if the conditions turned out just right.

And above them all, clouds that fly rapidly and carry rain near and far. Warm tropical rain and cool boreal rain that sticks to the mountains and the plains and flows to the seas. The clouds move quickly, and they leave gaps and parts for the curious yellow sun, burning so brightly, to peek through. And so, high and low, this planet is a world full of rainbows.

***

There is a single spaceport, built south of the equatorial zone, where it is still warm most of the year, but far enough out of the fiercest storms and inland from the waves about fifty kilometers. It is built in a solid plain, and south of it there is a moderate plateau with caves and changing tree types as one climbs. Above the plateau is a great mountain range, stretching inland. Down from the mountains, a river runs, making great haste to pool in the plateau, and then running down its sheer sides in waterfalls to strike the plains where it happily slows and ambles its way past the port city built on its banks to the great oceans fifty kilometers away.

This port was built last of all, after everything had settled, after the nanobots were gone, after everything else was removed and the scientists extracted. It was built with more traditional methods, with earth shaped by working mechas and a handful of transport ships planned to remain so that the planet would not be entirely isolated.

The port as it now stands is a mix of prefabricated units made of metal and plastics and some hand-built buildings of wood, stone, and brick, stockpiled with enough food and fuel for a few months. There is space for up to a thousand new arrivals (if they don’t mind double bunking), spare parts, tools, clothes, and various odds and ends in plenty. About a hundred souls, all vetted with Mirror, work the port. A mixture of a few people ready to explore, and several people who want to build something of their own and have no intention of going far until there’s a safe road.

The rest is left to the people who come here, the people who choose to settle such a place. The surface is unmapped beyond a rough orbital topography scan. The places that are rich or poor are unknown. The beings who inhabit the world, the gods who may dwell within, they too are unknown. What grows well, what is best to eat, what would make the best clothes. These are things to be discovered.

***

Around the planet, there is a special perimeter. The system has only one jump entry route and in order to be admitted to the system past the guards, you must send word first and be permitted entry from the planet. You must be permitted entry by Mirror or those she delegates to the task. Otherwise, the perimeter guard will turn you back, offering enough fuel to get to the nearest habitable system two jumps away if you’ve arrived in error and cannot gain entry. If you arrive and make foolish demands, you will get less than that.

This, then, is the manifestation of Mirror’s wish. The wish for a planet. The wish for a home. The wish for possibility. The final thing it needs is a name.
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