Many days later
Angela Victoria Miera Antonius
You should not have gotten so drunk at the party. It’s not that there wasn’t time to recover. You had many days to get repairs made to the Barn Owl. But these things have a way of flowing into each other. You woke up late and hungover, feeling Jade’s return with the gift she granted you, but also a little distant in a sense. Her thought patterns are Hybrasilian and though you can make sense of their gods and goddesses and the idea of heavenly realms, the way that Jade pictures them is not quite the way your brain would in her place and so it feels distant to you. Like a fairy realm.
That, in turn, set you into a lazy day the next day. Repairs were being made, and you slept in. But you felt groggy, didn’t eat as well as you should have. Two days turned into a week where you got less done than you’d have liked. Time that you regretted later when you just didn’t have all the time you wanted to review Marcina’s match footage, to compare it against the repaired Barn Owl. To test.
Maybe Ada would have done better? Though she’d have had different resources entirely, and her mecha was probably in even worse shape than yours against the Jormungar. That thing was a monster and Marcina’s piloting had always been absolute precision at close range. You weren’t going to get an ion shot off, but at least you had some ranged weaponry. Ada was all in on melee strength and she wasn’t up to the level the Jormungar was offering.
You run a hand through your hair and down your neck, feeling the stretch in your muscles as they adjust to the neural link fabric. The Barn Owl doesn’t fully move with you, but it’s warming up, syncing together. The feeling of your hand against your skin with the mesh is cool and it makes your hair stand on end. The fiber around your biceps flexes and curls. That all helps too. Every bit of responsiveness is going to be something you need today.
How can you beat her? One of the questions you wish you could answer is whether you even have enough ammo for an effective strategy. If you keep your distance, you think you could avoid most of her attacks. She’s not known for her blazing speed like most of the Hybrasilians, that isn’t what won her prior tournaments. No, the problem is that against the Jormungar, you might well empty the entirety of your autocannon ammunition and find yourself facing only a cosmetically damaged and angry blade. You’d need to hit vulnerable systems and do it far afar, and that’s assuming she even has any and doesn’t manage to block and adjust to your angles.
You have a feeling this match is going to be like trying to bare-handed box a bear. But you’ll have to give it your all. So you step out into the yellowish light of the desert crater where you’re fighting and scan for your opponent. There, on the other side of the crater, beyond the lip. She’s not hiding, just blocking your line of sight without forcing you airborne.
You sigh and begin the fight.
***
Dolly, Jade, and Mirror
Is this what it feels like to stand in the heart of Calipso, the largest urban center of Terenius Prime? You may have seen pictures from the Hybrasilian ambassadors sent home as a sensation. Vaulting skyscrapers that make even a crystal fire drive strain to crest. No plants, no great trees intertwined with the buildings, but all glass and steel. They are like the great stone spires that stand atop the mountains of Ksheytrel, but no natural formations could be this straight, this square.
And that these would be constructed in the arena, built over the past days by nanobots set to make for you a unique battlefield for your match. Perhaps the planners thought that a space so foreign to any Hybrasilians would make things fair? Perhaps they simply thought the winding terrain, frequent cover, and ability to destroy the environment would make for exciting visuals.
Such a vast and empty place feels like the realm of ghosts. Every camera drone could be an ancient spirit or a loyal pet. It offers you calm to begin your match. The sounds that come to you are your own sounds. The hum of the engines, the groan of moving metal as your mechas enter the arena, bounced and reflected in a thousand directions down blind roads and alleys.
You’ve actually been deployed fairly near each other, but in different dead ends so that it’s difficult to scan without bouncing off surfaces. You can talk immediately though, you’re well within range for broad communications signals that will pass right through the glass in all directions.
***
Isabelle
“I’ve fought a lot of Terenians, you know.” There’s the sound of metal creaking through the comms, as though Marna Kerne just flexed her neck so hard that it made some kind of joint pop on her body. Quar hasn’t walked you through Zaldarian biology in that much detail, but it seems reasonably possible.
You’re picking up a lot of data. One of the most powerful uses of your nanobots combined with the Emberlight is the detail and rapid analysis of scan. You’re in space, and the area is full of debris, an orbital ring of satellites and detritus, all through here by the busily working nanobots of the Arena. It’s meant to represent a battleground, various broken weapons and pieces of mechas (or at least good facsimile thereof) fill the space, making it crowded and normally difficult to find your opponent. No crystal fire drives though, nanobots can’t imitate that, it would be creating energy from nothing, only the rare crystals crafted and refined specifically to make a SCIC drive can do that. Because of that, you can see Marna, clear as day. She’s within the debris field, still looking for you. If you go on a hard burst as fast as you can, she’ll pick up the heat, but you might be able to sneak up on her for an opening salvo. Then again, she’s not trying that hard to hide.
“Kinda liked it before we did the arena thing, myself. Fights were exciting. Risky, yeah.” She chuckles. “But that was part of the fun. Did you know my Hold has about a hundred Terenians now? We rescued a few stranded pilots after our raids, brought them back. A few ships crews too, where we took the whole thing, people and all. They’ve been there half a decade now, some had kids, it’s really something. They’re not prisoners anymore either, they joined us in earnest. It’s why I’m talking to you, in fact. I decided that anyone who takes one of these things into space isn’t an outsider. Not to me. We all share this bond, the bond of seeing the stars from a new angle.”
The Lightning Rail is a brawler, and a fast one. It’s all spikes and power, not just its knuckles either, and it uses nets. You’ve had your share of brawlers so far, though maybe none quite this speedy. But between Ada and Kiriala you’ve got some lessons in both power and speed.
How do you approach the fight?
***
Solarel
You are back at the Arena. Where you have to be. The only place you can go to eventually face Mirror. Nothing else could keep you from your return, not storms nor any of the vastness of Roevg.
But it is not Mirror who stands before you, though it might be the closest other pilot that the Hybrasilians could offer. Maelia Dala pilots the Supernova, not the Gods-Smiting Whip. But it’s had a lot of modification done to it. She’s got her own custom laser weaponry mounted on the shoulders, customized shield generators at the wrists, and her patented spear. She placed in the semifinals in the previous tournament on behalf of Hybrasil, which is why they pulled her back here yet again despite her research being halfway across the galaxy.
Of course, all that information is what could be found about her from before, her previous matches in a previous tournament. She hasn’t yet fought in this one, which is always the danger of being seeded. And you also can’t see her, as she, like nearly all Hybrasilians, has begun the match in stealth. The pounce is, after all, both their oldest and most beloved trick.
You find yourself in one of the idyllic forests that have been dotting the arena as the nanobots have worked for both beauty and useful combat. It is a forest of young trees and lush vines, but not so young that you eclipse them. The forest is about the same height as the Aeteline and the Supernova. A few stories, the roof lightly eclipsed with broad leaves. Enough to cast shadows, but not to blot out the sun properly. Above is open sky and ease of movement, in exchange for vulnerability.
“Did you know that you’re a demon?” Maelia asks over the comms. She doesn’t wait for an answer, not from you. “I think it’s kind of exciting! When Hybrasilian pilots first started meeting you, we actually thought you were a new life-form found within the ringed nebula. What if we had intruded on its territory? Or offended it somehow with our equipment and experimentation? Maybe we just needed to placate it. It took until your day-long match with Whispered Promise for us to get good enough data to link you with the Zaldarian attackers. A one-mecha war, that was you.”
She smiles. You know that she smiles because you have spent so much time around Mirror and when Hybrasilians talk like that, in that tone, it is with a smile that is at once friendly and indicates that they’d like to eat you if they could.
Her spear is already coming for your back, her first pounce. How do you respond?
Angela Victoria Miera Antonius
You should not have gotten so drunk at the party. It’s not that there wasn’t time to recover. You had many days to get repairs made to the Barn Owl. But these things have a way of flowing into each other. You woke up late and hungover, feeling Jade’s return with the gift she granted you, but also a little distant in a sense. Her thought patterns are Hybrasilian and though you can make sense of their gods and goddesses and the idea of heavenly realms, the way that Jade pictures them is not quite the way your brain would in her place and so it feels distant to you. Like a fairy realm.
That, in turn, set you into a lazy day the next day. Repairs were being made, and you slept in. But you felt groggy, didn’t eat as well as you should have. Two days turned into a week where you got less done than you’d have liked. Time that you regretted later when you just didn’t have all the time you wanted to review Marcina’s match footage, to compare it against the repaired Barn Owl. To test.
Maybe Ada would have done better? Though she’d have had different resources entirely, and her mecha was probably in even worse shape than yours against the Jormungar. That thing was a monster and Marcina’s piloting had always been absolute precision at close range. You weren’t going to get an ion shot off, but at least you had some ranged weaponry. Ada was all in on melee strength and she wasn’t up to the level the Jormungar was offering.
You run a hand through your hair and down your neck, feeling the stretch in your muscles as they adjust to the neural link fabric. The Barn Owl doesn’t fully move with you, but it’s warming up, syncing together. The feeling of your hand against your skin with the mesh is cool and it makes your hair stand on end. The fiber around your biceps flexes and curls. That all helps too. Every bit of responsiveness is going to be something you need today.
How can you beat her? One of the questions you wish you could answer is whether you even have enough ammo for an effective strategy. If you keep your distance, you think you could avoid most of her attacks. She’s not known for her blazing speed like most of the Hybrasilians, that isn’t what won her prior tournaments. No, the problem is that against the Jormungar, you might well empty the entirety of your autocannon ammunition and find yourself facing only a cosmetically damaged and angry blade. You’d need to hit vulnerable systems and do it far afar, and that’s assuming she even has any and doesn’t manage to block and adjust to your angles.
You have a feeling this match is going to be like trying to bare-handed box a bear. But you’ll have to give it your all. So you step out into the yellowish light of the desert crater where you’re fighting and scan for your opponent. There, on the other side of the crater, beyond the lip. She’s not hiding, just blocking your line of sight without forcing you airborne.
You sigh and begin the fight.
***
Dolly, Jade, and Mirror
Is this what it feels like to stand in the heart of Calipso, the largest urban center of Terenius Prime? You may have seen pictures from the Hybrasilian ambassadors sent home as a sensation. Vaulting skyscrapers that make even a crystal fire drive strain to crest. No plants, no great trees intertwined with the buildings, but all glass and steel. They are like the great stone spires that stand atop the mountains of Ksheytrel, but no natural formations could be this straight, this square.
And that these would be constructed in the arena, built over the past days by nanobots set to make for you a unique battlefield for your match. Perhaps the planners thought that a space so foreign to any Hybrasilians would make things fair? Perhaps they simply thought the winding terrain, frequent cover, and ability to destroy the environment would make for exciting visuals.
Such a vast and empty place feels like the realm of ghosts. Every camera drone could be an ancient spirit or a loyal pet. It offers you calm to begin your match. The sounds that come to you are your own sounds. The hum of the engines, the groan of moving metal as your mechas enter the arena, bounced and reflected in a thousand directions down blind roads and alleys.
You’ve actually been deployed fairly near each other, but in different dead ends so that it’s difficult to scan without bouncing off surfaces. You can talk immediately though, you’re well within range for broad communications signals that will pass right through the glass in all directions.
***
Isabelle
“I’ve fought a lot of Terenians, you know.” There’s the sound of metal creaking through the comms, as though Marna Kerne just flexed her neck so hard that it made some kind of joint pop on her body. Quar hasn’t walked you through Zaldarian biology in that much detail, but it seems reasonably possible.
You’re picking up a lot of data. One of the most powerful uses of your nanobots combined with the Emberlight is the detail and rapid analysis of scan. You’re in space, and the area is full of debris, an orbital ring of satellites and detritus, all through here by the busily working nanobots of the Arena. It’s meant to represent a battleground, various broken weapons and pieces of mechas (or at least good facsimile thereof) fill the space, making it crowded and normally difficult to find your opponent. No crystal fire drives though, nanobots can’t imitate that, it would be creating energy from nothing, only the rare crystals crafted and refined specifically to make a SCIC drive can do that. Because of that, you can see Marna, clear as day. She’s within the debris field, still looking for you. If you go on a hard burst as fast as you can, she’ll pick up the heat, but you might be able to sneak up on her for an opening salvo. Then again, she’s not trying that hard to hide.
“Kinda liked it before we did the arena thing, myself. Fights were exciting. Risky, yeah.” She chuckles. “But that was part of the fun. Did you know my Hold has about a hundred Terenians now? We rescued a few stranded pilots after our raids, brought them back. A few ships crews too, where we took the whole thing, people and all. They’ve been there half a decade now, some had kids, it’s really something. They’re not prisoners anymore either, they joined us in earnest. It’s why I’m talking to you, in fact. I decided that anyone who takes one of these things into space isn’t an outsider. Not to me. We all share this bond, the bond of seeing the stars from a new angle.”
The Lightning Rail is a brawler, and a fast one. It’s all spikes and power, not just its knuckles either, and it uses nets. You’ve had your share of brawlers so far, though maybe none quite this speedy. But between Ada and Kiriala you’ve got some lessons in both power and speed.
How do you approach the fight?
***
Solarel
You are back at the Arena. Where you have to be. The only place you can go to eventually face Mirror. Nothing else could keep you from your return, not storms nor any of the vastness of Roevg.
But it is not Mirror who stands before you, though it might be the closest other pilot that the Hybrasilians could offer. Maelia Dala pilots the Supernova, not the Gods-Smiting Whip. But it’s had a lot of modification done to it. She’s got her own custom laser weaponry mounted on the shoulders, customized shield generators at the wrists, and her patented spear. She placed in the semifinals in the previous tournament on behalf of Hybrasil, which is why they pulled her back here yet again despite her research being halfway across the galaxy.
Of course, all that information is what could be found about her from before, her previous matches in a previous tournament. She hasn’t yet fought in this one, which is always the danger of being seeded. And you also can’t see her, as she, like nearly all Hybrasilians, has begun the match in stealth. The pounce is, after all, both their oldest and most beloved trick.
You find yourself in one of the idyllic forests that have been dotting the arena as the nanobots have worked for both beauty and useful combat. It is a forest of young trees and lush vines, but not so young that you eclipse them. The forest is about the same height as the Aeteline and the Supernova. A few stories, the roof lightly eclipsed with broad leaves. Enough to cast shadows, but not to blot out the sun properly. Above is open sky and ease of movement, in exchange for vulnerability.
“Did you know that you’re a demon?” Maelia asks over the comms. She doesn’t wait for an answer, not from you. “I think it’s kind of exciting! When Hybrasilian pilots first started meeting you, we actually thought you were a new life-form found within the ringed nebula. What if we had intruded on its territory? Or offended it somehow with our equipment and experimentation? Maybe we just needed to placate it. It took until your day-long match with Whispered Promise for us to get good enough data to link you with the Zaldarian attackers. A one-mecha war, that was you.”
She smiles. You know that she smiles because you have spent so much time around Mirror and when Hybrasilians talk like that, in that tone, it is with a smile that is at once friendly and indicates that they’d like to eat you if they could.
Her spear is already coming for your back, her first pounce. How do you respond?