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#Heck knows he sees twelve impossible things before breakfast
tswwwit · 3 months
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[About the ask where you said that dipper blurted out "I'm pregnant" To bill and his immediate response is panic]
Does this mean that bill has impregnated someone??? Or the other way around??
Bill's never sired or sprouted any offspring, and has no intention of doing so!
Dipper was pulling a prank, and it worked very well - because Bill's been around the block enough to not dismiss the supposedly 'impossible'.
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Ex Choir Kid Beats up Ex Chorus Kids, It Isn't the Swimsuit Edition, Teen Tries to Angst Rudely in front of Rude Friends, Worrying Changes Happening With Your Body and Mind are Completely (un)Natural, Robot Attacks Teens in Zoo
Danny didn’t have anything against chorus kids, heck he was one in middle school, but this was downright ridiculous.  He and Tucker had been in the lab, working on actually building the hoverboard that they had planned on building before The Accident.  Danny had the Gravity Inverter™ already built, and they had just decided on modelling it after surf boards instead of skateboards. “It offers more room to maneuver, and between Sam, Jazz, and Mom last summer, I’ve gotten pretty good at surfing.”
“I am a wonderful teacher, yes.  And in return for those lessons, your parents agreed to help me with converting your lawn from grass to moss."  Sam smirked from where she was doing… something on her laptop - the newest brandname laptop that made Tucker drool even though he could almost certainly build a better one.  
"I know I'm going to regret asking this but: Why?"  A glance up showed that Tucker had the soldering iron in the air just over the circuitry of the board and was staring at Sam.  Danny contemplated telling Tucker to put on gloves or let him realize his mistake as the heat got to him.
"Because moss is a much better oxygenator, it doesn't grow tall enough that any mowing need be done, it can grow easily in the low nutrient soil most yards have, and it looks cool as hell."  Sam paused in her typing and Danny and Tucker blinked slowly at her. “I helped with turning the grass in my lawn to moss.”
“So, like, are you gonna just do our lawn or are you gonna convince the school to do it or something?  Maybe a botony club?”
“That sounds like a great idea, Danny!  But I’ve got other ideas for now.” Sam grinned, looking at Tucker, who still hadn’t noticed his own lack of gloves.  Danny was getting worried about nerve damage now. “How’s the car design going?”
“I’ve been working on it, and I was actually gonna have Danny take a look after we’re done with this.  Still, I think it should be pretty easy to do with the right resources. Still, I think we need to develop better transparent solar panels for it to work.”  Danny reached for another tool, opening his mouth to mention that his family already had those developed and capable of 50% efficiency, and instead groaned when his lungs went icy cold.  Turning to the portal, Danny picked up a new Fenton Rifle™ and took aim. The air near the portal rippled and flashed with green sparks which tore the air asunder into a swirling pane of light.  Twelve ghosts, all singing off key and out of harmony, flew from the portal, and it snapped closed as soon as the last pair were out. Quickly fed up with the noise they were making, Tucker took aim with his Wrist Ray ™ and demanded “QUIET!”
One of the ghosts took exception to that and talons dragged across Tucker’s back, flinging him onto the floor.  Danny snarled and pulled the trigger on the rifle, striking one of the ghosts hard in the chest and burning a hole deep enough that Danny could see a pulsating ball of toxic green.  The ghost stared at him, shocked, and melted into a puddle on the ground. Before Danny could swing the rifle around to take out the rest, a claw slammed into his arm and sent him tumbling into the table.  The ghosts evacuated the lab, fleeing the angry teen and his gun while Tucker slowly stood up. Danny rushed over, hand hovering an inch from Tucker. “Are you ok? That looked like it hurt. It also looks like it’s bleeding.”
“Yeah, it hurt plenty.  Is it deep?”
“No, I think the bleeding is just immediate bu-”
“Sam, can you get the first aid kit?  We can bandage this right?” Tucker tugged on his sweater and Danny phased it off for him.  “You go, we’ll catch up.”
Danny took a deep breath and concentrated, filled and surrounded by void faster than ever before and rising off the ground.  “Call me, I’ll text you where I am when you can catch up.” And off he flew, immaterial and weightless, the world unfolding until all he could see was the brilliant viridian streaked void and those idiots who thought they could get away with hurting his best friend.  The first one he caught up to dodged his rifle fire, another coming up and slamming a brick into his head.  Danny whipped around with a growl and shot that one in the center, not watching as it crumbled into a pile of goo.  “ You’re next!”
Tucker and Sam skateboarded their way to him around halfway through the ghosts, using the thermos to catch them instead of letting Danny tear them apart.  Something he was surely going to appreciate when he wasn’t as furious as he was right now. Unfortunately, upon getting the last pair near a warehouse on the docks of the river, the Trio found yet another rip in the air, an odd shifting thing that refused to stay as one shape for Tucker and Sam to see.  Helpfully, Danny supplied, “It’s a tesseract. That’s fucking amazing to see, it’s so cool.”
And because Danny had the sheer gall to be impressed by geometry the universe punished his nerdiness by shoving a ghost out of the portal, ethereal form twisting between sizes and shapes before cubic chunks of green settled as a blue skinned man in denim overalls.  Bright red eyes blinked out at the teens and they sighed. Sam nearly had time to say hi when the ghost lifted his hands over his head, wiggling his fingers and shouted at them. “BEWARE!”
“Ok,” Tucker said as he fired his ectopistol at the ghost, blasting him back a bit.  Tucker stumbled onto his face when a glowing box smacked him in the back of the head and groaned.  “This is stupid.” Sam fired her own wrist ray and it knocked boxy right into Danny’s line of fire while another box hit her legs and tripped her up.
Danny pressed the barrel of his rifle against the Box ghost’s chest, focusing his anger into the gun and pulled the trigger.  “ B E W A R E .”  Hot ectoplasma tore through the Box Ghost’s chest and burned a hole on the wall behind him.  Danny flew down to his friends to check on them, and sucked on his teeth when he saw the way they were looking at him.  “What?”
“Danny, I dunno how you did that to your voice, but when Halloween comes around you need to be able to do it again.”  Tucker let Sam help him up and pulled out the thermos, aiming it at the mess on the walls. “Seal for delivery.” The green goop flew toward the thermos and soon was gone.  Danny dropped to the ground and flipped onto his back.
“Seal, aquatic mammal in the arctic.  It uh, barks?” Danny looked hopeful. Sam looked less so.
“Sorry brain boy, that is yet another wrong answer.”
“Hey, I’m an Astrophysist, mechanical engineer and artist, not a biologist.”  Danny grumbled. “Speaking of biology, how you doin Tuck?”
Tucker spun the Fenton Thermos ™ on his finger like a basketball.  “I’m feelin a bit sore still but I’ll be way better once we all get home.  There’s still an hour before curfew and that’s all we need to study, right?”  Danny offered a thumbs up and Sam shrugged. 
Then the thermos fell from Tucker’s finger right on the release button and all their hard work filled the warehouse before getting away again.  
“Tucker.”
“Yes, Sam?”
“When you’re feeling better I’m going to hurt you.”
“Right.”
 Considering it took them over two and a half hours to find and catch a third of the ghosts released by Tuck's blunder, everyone got home at around midnight, leaving no study time for Danny.  The Box Ghost, apparently, was stronger than they expected, because he was fully formed as soon as the ectoplasm left the thermos. Running a highly demanding brain and body on only five hours of sleep was Not a fun endeavor.  Danny inhaled his breakfast, and if an upward glance was anything to go by spiked the electric bill with his secondary eating.
Jazz decided to be gratingly cheery anyway, like she always was.  “Mom! I just got the news from Genius magazine!”  Jazz was holding up a cover of said magazine and Danny rolled his eyes.  “You’re gonna be on the cover!”
“Genius Magazine?”  Dad grabbed up the magazine and stared at it for a moment before a low and potentially upset tone carried out, “is it the swimsuit issue?”
“Dad, please ,” Jazz rolled her eyes and narrowed them.  “this magazine is for, by and about women geniuses!”
“Firstly,” Danny said, holding up his spoon.  “Is Dr. Saturday in it?”
“…No.”
“Then they missed a genius.”  Danny felt his face twist up. “Secondly, I’m trying to eat and you bring up Mom being in the swimsuit issue of a falsely named magazine?”
Jazz ripped the magazine from Dad’s hand and groaned in frustration, her page flipping now the slamming of book covers.  “I signed Mom up so that the world can see that she’s a genius and not a ghost hunting freak!” Danny winced, rubbing his neck.  Sounded like Jazz heard as much of it as he did. Unsurprising, kids were assholes.
“They’re not ghost hunting freaks,” Danny said with only a touch of offense in his tone.  “They’re Ectologists, contracted regularly by the government. They’re also right about ghosts being real.”  Jazz opened her mouth to challenge that claim but even groggy and under fueled Danny’s brain was quick.  “Just check the back of the school for proof.” Quick but filterless.
“Well sweetie,” Mom said before Jazz could counter that it was a gas explosion like Tucker had fed to the school, “if I’m going to be on a cover - which you should ask me for permission for before you go doing it - then I want Jack right there with me.”  Mom pulled Dad’s bulk to her, impossibly, in a hug. “We’re a team after all!”
The man in question beamed and pulled out… something.  Danny didn’t have the brain power to analyze tech at the moment.  “That’s right! Together we built the Ghost Gabber™! It translates the odd noises that a ghost makes, dissonant whispering sounds and all, into language that you and I can understand!”
“In what language?”  Danny frowned. “If you’re gonna sell this - which please don’t this is ridiculous - then it should be in like, all languages you’re gonna sell to right?”
“Mandarin, Spanish, English, Hindi and Arabic so far,” Mom supplied.  Danny nodded and slurped down the last of the milk in his bowl. “It’ll work for any language when it’s done!”
Danny stared at the thing and narrowed his eyes.  “Boo.”
“I am a ghost,” the thing rattled off back to him.  Which, well, fuck. That’s what I was thinking at least.
“It’s busted, responded to human speech.  Or you guys have the worst humor and that’s preprogrammed.”  Danny grabbed his lunch and headed to the door.  “Love you byyye!”
 School was as mind numbing as ever, the damage from the ‘gas explosion’ doing nothing to stop classes apparently.  Which meant that Falluca's test on biology was still a go. Yay. Brain sluggish from last night's hunting and lacking on biology knowledge to begin with, Danny was unsurprised yet pissy when he was handed back a D.
Taking their lunches into the library, the Trio ate quickly, everyone still feeling yesterday's activities.  Soon as he was out of food to shovel in his mouth Danny was glaring at his test again. "I can't have a D on a test!  I’m a Fenton!”
“The American Public education system is a relic and fails to accurately quantify intelligence.”  Danny stared blankly at Tucker, who shrugged. “Sam’s activism rubs off when she’s right.”
“If I come home with a D my mom’s gonna put me through martial arts training and have Dad give me lessons on whatever it is I failed on.”  Danny waved his paper aggressively. “My Dad teaching me biology guys, it’s horrible!”
“Well since you need to boost that grade I have an extra credit idea for you,” Sam said at one of the computers.  Danny turned to look at her screen and furrowed his brow.
“A purple backed gorilla?  Why is it’s back purple? That’s not a naturally occurring pigment in mammals.”  Danny turned to Tucker. “Right?”
“While I’m the last person you should defer to for knowledge on organic coding, you’re right.  I can only think of birds and uh butterflies? Those can be purple. Rarely though.”
“Extremely rare, only two males left.  Which is why you’re going to write a report studying it on why it deserves to be set free!”  Sam beamed at him with that smile she used when she wanted something out of him. The air around her shimmered with impressions of green and purple, like a mist that clung just above her skin.  It didn’t seem to be hurting her, so Danny didn’t bother mentioning it beyond pulling out his journal to take a note in.
“I don’t have time for extra credit, or your agendas, Sam.”  Danny groaned. “Gotta find those extra ghosts before they manage to hurt someone.”
“Actually,” Tucker cut in, holding up his PDA.  “You do have time. You just need to manage it better.  Which is why I’ve elected myself to be your time manager.  Least I can do after Sam let all those ghosts out.” Sam glared, that meowing turning to a low growl, and Danny tugged on his jacket.
“I dunno…”  Could Tucker be trusted to manage even his own time, let alone Danny’s?
“It’ll be my job to manage your schedule so that you can do your schoolwork and catch that Box Ghost dumbass that Sam let out.”
“You do remember that I can turn outrun you right?”  Sam’s glare intensified, and Tucker swallowed.  “I can kick your ass faster than you can move it, Foley.”
“Remember what happened when I let you manage the thermos, Tucker?”  Danny arched a brow, crossing his arms.
“I’ve already set a reminder,” the geek held up his PDA which flashed with bright green letters.  “Don’t let Tucker handle the Thermos.”
“What the hell?”  Danny sighed. “I guess we can do a trial run.”
“Sweet!  I’ve also scheduled some time for us to go check out that gorilla once classes are over.”
“Before I even said yes to doing a report on it, yay.  Aren’t you just the best?” Danny jabbed Tucker lightly in the arm and frowned when Tucker winced.  “How’s the shoulder?”
Tucker shrugged.  “It’s getting better.  Told Mom I fell off my skateboard trying to do a trick and she helped me change my bandages.  It should be fine in a couple days.”
Danny sighed, pulling his hood over his head.  “I shouldn’t have opened that portal. Then you guys wouldn’t have gotten hurt like this.”  Danny zipped up his hoodie, shivering. “Stars guys, I’m so sorry .”
“Said the guy who I pressured into the portal,” Sam countered.
“To the guy who coulda said enough is enough and stopped you,” Tucker added, ruining Danny’s angsty bad times.  He had negativity to feel dangit!
“You guys are dumb.”  Danny pulled the two into a tight hug.  “Thanks. I dunno what I’d do without you.”
“Probably finish dying, let’s be real.”  Tucker earned the punch he got from Sam, he really did.
The bell rang, and the Trio sighed.  “Well shit. Time to go back and do all that school stuff.”  Danny pulled away and grabbed up his bag. It was one of the few classes he had without Sam and Tuck next.  “See you guys later.” A few goodbyes later and everyone left to zone out in class and contemplate what that day in the lab had really meant for them.
 While Sam was taking in all the key points of the lesson, she was also noting that she knew this part of history like the back of her hand.  The majority of Sam’s attention was on a comment the blond meathead had made. Just as they got to class, Dash had shoved Danny into some lockers, and when Sam told him off for it he called her a witch girl for hanging out with the ghost freak.  As much it made Sam want to castrate the idiot with a heated rusty knife, it also made her think. If ghosts were real - something she tried not to think too hard about because the realization of how big that was felt like too much to even begin processing - then why not magick?  Tucking away the mental note to do some research on magick later, Sam let her mind wander through all the different things she could probably do for the world with magick.
Once Sam found Tucker and Danny at the exit, she draped her arms over both boys’ shoulders and kept walking.  They caught up to pace quickly enough. “So, the zoo first or looking for Ghostly Chorus first?”
“Ghosts first,” Danny said after a few minutes of contemplation.  “If we catch em right away we can get to the zoo and spend more time fully focused on it.”  It took them a trip home each to grab their scooters, then two hours of searching four different neighborhoods before the group actually found the four remaining Choir Ghosts.  Danny felt a deep rage fill the core of his being when he saw them, the fools that dared to hurt his friends and took aim with his rifle to announce that he’d found them.  A pulled trigger and there were only three ghosts left. One of the ghosts turned to fly at him, swiping a claw that grazed his cheek and knocked him back in the air.  Tucker fired off a shot, missing both the chorus ghost and Danny by just an inch, and being knocked tumbling off his skateboard for his trouble. “ You’re going to regret that . ”
Sam landed a shot on the ghost that knocked Tucker off his board and did a kick flip to avoid one trying to get the drop on her.  The ghosts prioritized Danny as the biggest threat, two of them swinging at him from either side. Danny raised his weapons on either side and was knocked down by the third one into Tucker.  A growl built itself up from Danny’s chest and he turned both his rifle and wrist ray to the sky. One of the ghosts dodged the wrist ray, knocking the other into the path of the rifle shot. Sam took out the one that had dodged Danny just before the last one appeared in front of her.  It dove under the ground and Sam saw green as Tucker’s wrist ray rammed into her shoulder. “SAM!”
Tucker rushed over to Sam and Danny zoomed through the air, driving his fist through the ghost’s chest and grabbing onto that ball of emerald light.  He snarled in it’s face. “Should’ve let him take you out.  It would’ve been less painful.”  The ghost tried to get away, but Danny held firm and squeezed harder and harder until the ball of power, of connection of self of discordant songs and burning wood cracked in his hand and ectoplasm dissolved into a pile of goop on the asphalt.
Turning back to Sam and Tucker, Danny was greeted by horrified faces on his best friends in the world, and immediately lowered himself to the ground.  The void left him, an empty space in his chest as Danny ran over to Sam and Tucker, kneeling to check Sam’s shoulder. “Are you ok?”
Sam took a long moment befor eshe seemed to even hear what he’d said.  “I mean I uh I might need some burn cream and my shoulder isn’t exactly having the best night ever, but I’ll be fine.  It doesn’t exactly hurt as much as it probably hurt the ghosts.”
“Y-yeah, that’s probably it.”  Tucker helped her to her feet and dusted himself off.  “Everybody still feeling up for the zoo? We gotta grab that extra credit.”
Danny stared down at his hand, flexing his fingers and shuddering at the icy chill around them.  He’d taken out minor ghosts before, sure, but never as brutally as he did that one and the Box Ghost.  What happened to me?   “Alright.  The zoo.” Danny slid back into the void, easier at night when he had the stars to look up to and reach for, and rose up off the ground while Tucker and Sam grabbed their boards.  And as they headed to the Zoo, Danny couldn’t help but think to himself. I wouldn’t do that to a person, would I?  All I had to do was catch it in the thermos and it’d have been dealt with.  Stars.   Danny shook his head, trying to force himself away from thoughts of what kind of horror he’d’ve seen on Tucker and Sam’s faces if that had been a human who’d taken a swing at them.
 Sam looked out from the observation deck binoculars at Sampson, taking her turn on gorilla watch.  “He’s so beautiful, so intelligent, so majestic!” Watching the gorilla pace in his cage Sam was sure he would be infinitely happier in the wild.
“What we’ve learned thus far, Sam is that gorillas like to scratch their butts.”  Danny yawned, turning to Tucker. “How long have we taken to learn that?”
“Five hours.”  Tucker yawned, sitting on the floor.
“Time flies when you’re majestically scratching your butt.”
“C’mon guys, we could learn something about Sampson no one else has!”  A thought occurred and Sam turned to Danny. “You should try commun- oh.  Wow.” The boys were on the floor, both clearly conked out from the lack of sleep last night.  And Danny rolled over to cuddle Tucker in his sleep, which Sam felt was sickeningly cute. “Fine, I’ll do it myself… in the meantime…” Sam took a picture of the boys, chuckling.  “To the scrapbook it goes for when these idiots finally get a clue.”
By the time she got to the gorilla enclosure, she heard a loud roar from elsewhere in the zoo.  Presuming it was just a tiger or two waking up, Sam looked into the cage to see Sampson pulling on the bars of the door to his cage.  “You poor creature, stuck in here when you should be in the jungle.” Sampson saw Sam standing there and pulled even harder on the door, howling at her and staring desperately.  “…You want out?”
Sam decided to use her own Dumbass Teenager Action of the month and blame it on her own sleep deprivation.  She also blamed it on the control panel having an easy to get to, easy to use Open Cage button.  If she could get away with it, she was going to have a talk with whoever ran security.
Sampson practically flew out of his cage and Sam followed after him.  She stopped, shock freezing her muscles up as Sampson tackled to the ground a… “Is that a fucking robot?”
The man made of steel and wearing black leather and a shoulder pad kicked Sampson off and Sam found herself caught between rolling her eyes at the Mohawk and goatee made of green fire and backing away from the glowing ghost robot.
Sampson charged again immediately after being thrown, knocking the robot to the ground and rolling onto his back.  Sam felt herself laugh as the robot was tossed around by Sampson’s feet but it all felt so unreal. Is this what my life has come to?
Sampson was blinded by goo and Sam felt it time to act.  She raised her Wrist Ray™ and fired, narrowly missing the ghost robot, who glared in her direction and fired off a shot of his own.  It caught her in the gut, sending Sam backward and the ghost snorted. “Damn wench. You and this gorilla pest are in my way. Thought I’d gotten the last one with me.”  Speaking of, Sampson got the gunk out of his eyes and charged the hunter again, though the ghost dodged out of the way, phasing through a backhanded swing.
“So you’re the one who went around poaching the furs of purple-backed gorillas?  This is your fault? ”  Sam felt her blood boil and fired off another shot with her wrist ray, cracking the shoulder pad of the armor.  “They’re going to go extinct because of you!”
“All the more reason to get the last ones in my home.  Unfortunately, you can put several bullets into something and it can still eat you before it realizes it’s supposed to be dead.”  The robot looked down at his shoulder, which gave off little sparks, and he turned to Sam, raising his arm cannon. “Let’s see how well you can replicate that, shall we?”
Before the ghost could fire his cannon at Sam, Sampson grabbed him up from behind and tossed the ghost hard.  Sam recognized that she wasn’t going to be able to handle this one on her own, and ran to the observation deck to get to Danny and Tucker.  “GUYS, GUYS WAKE UP!” She grabbed onto the ladder and started climbing when an explosion rocked the tower and she nearly lost her grip. The town began to lean and Sam heard herself screaming before she even felt it.  The tower began to tilt her way and Sam looked down to see a hole blown in the base of the tower.
 Danny heard screaming, but it was far away and likely unimportant and he had dreams to have, stars to see and hear and cradle in his hands and wrap his entire self within and around.  There was so much for them to show him, so much to give him and all he need do is reach out and - the ground shook, thunder booming in his sensitive ears and Danny clung tighter to Tucker for a moment, his eyes flying open.  “TUCK Tucker wake up!” Danny shook his friend and reached for that silvery darkness that filled him and wove around him. “Fuck fuck fuck, ok, I have an idea, get up, be ready!”
Danny flew through the glass - either physically or intangibly he didn’t know right now - and turned to look at the tower.  There was… a hole in it. And Sam was on the tower, screaming. And they needed him.  “It worked for Agatha, it can work for me.”  Danny held out his hands and closed his eyes.  He searched within, reaching deeper and deeper for that light, the wispy shadows that surrounded the world and held it in place around her star and kept the universe from falling apart.  He reached and reached and shadows, whips of darkness even he could not fully see were grasped and pulled out of him.  His eyes opened, and Danny wrapped his very self around the tower, gravity’s hold snatched away but for the longest of seconds.  The tower no longer fell for there was no down for it to fall into, merely the void for it to rest within. Nothing, less than nothing, empty space filled the spaces between everything and all was still.
And then he c r a c k e d .
 Tucker caught Danny and Sam looked around the zoo in awe and horror.  Sampson had been blasted back into his cage, the tower was on its side, and Danny looked like he was fading fast.  “Tucker, the thermos!” He pulled it out of his backpack and handed it to Sam. She looked inside and saw the sloshing ectoplasm they’d cleaned off the streets when they tore up the ghosts earlier.  She grabbed onto Danny and held his mouth open, pouring the ectoplasm even as his form flickered between ghost and human.
“Sam, what the hell?”  Sam realized her hand was shaking when she saw the green fluid drip down the sides of Danny’s face and Tucker grabbed the thermos to steady it.  Danny drank down the ectoplasm and his body stabilized in ghost form. Once the thermos was empty, Tucker set it down and they watched as Danny glitched between forms one last time before his back arched and those blindingly bright rings appeared, transforming him back into Danny Fenton.  “What the fuck happened?”
“A ghost robot appeared and tried to kill us.”  Sam stood up and grabbed her board. “Who’s carrying Danny?”
“My hands are steady so I think that’s gonna be me.  Think you can carry my board? I don’t wanna try that while I’ve got him on my back.”  Tucker maneuvered Danny onto his back with arms looped around his shoulders, and stood up slowly and carefully.  Sam grabbed his board and they headed for the exit together and from there to Fenton Works.
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fasengeta · 5 years
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The familiar clatter of shopping carts breaking free from their corral made her flinch inwardly and clutch her bag closer to herself as she walked through the sliding glass doors of her own personal purgatory. The day had yet to begin and with that old bone tired ache drumming a steady beat against her ribcage while financial necessity loped and braided itself around her neck like a hangman’s noose, she knew deep in her soul that today was not going to be a good day. She wanted to go home. Heck, she regretted getting out of bed this morning. Still... it was better for her future to be employed in a job she disliked than to try to get by on what little the state would willingly provide an unemployed student. That being said, the day she finally walked out the front door for that final time, she'd be resisting the urge to moon dance all the way to the parking lot. It would be a long time until that was possible but the distant dream still made a path for the tiny ghost of a genuine smile to cross her lips. Pausing a moment to take a small glance around to judge if today would be busy or not, she was glad to note that it didn’t look like the lines to check-out were overcrowded. The customer service area looked packed, but it was rare to see less than twelve people waiting in line at any given time before 9:00. She started walking once more and smelled a whiff of the faint earthiness from the brightly colored cactus plants that were sold by the anti theft detention system near the greeter’s station. The familiar face of an employee who’s name she couldn’t quite recall… (Greg? Grant?) waved airily at her with all the artificial cheer of a painted clown doll. She waved back, still trying to place his name (the distance between them made it impossible to make out what was displayed on his name tag), the practiced motion having been thoroughly ingrained into her over countless wasted hours devoted to workplace integration videos. The moment of timed obeisance to their company ended and Gabe or Gary(she was fairly certain that it began with a ‘G’) quickly set himself to welcoming the next few people to enter through the doors as she continued on, still idly wondering who it was that manned the door. It probably didn’t matter if his name was Gino or Griff. She wasn’t especially outgoing and the thought of interacting with others made the nervous little butterflies that lived forever in her gut flitter and furl their figurative wings as if pursued by a particularly rambunctious kitten. She had hoped that the time she’d spent completing her training and interacting with others on the job would make that interaction easier but sadly that hadn’t proven the case. Worse still, it had seemed like the gulf between herself and other people had seemed to only widen and she often felt more alone than she had before she’d been hired. A shucked ear of corn slid out of a customer’s overflowing vegtible bag and rolled across her path, causing her to sigh as she bent over to pick it up, and return it to the man. “Thanks.” He’d said, not even bothering to look at her before he’d placed it back with the others in the crate. She frowned and had started to make her way towards the abandoned corn when she’d caught sight of the produce department worker waving her off, pointing to himself then the corn, his unspoken “I got this” was clear as day on his face.  She nodded to indicate her understanding, before she caught sight of the vaguely unnerving gaze of an abandoned plush toy surrounded by a a well-stacked fortress of freshly made marketplace salsa and stone-fired naan chips. One thing that she had become used to seeing while working retail was the various oddities that the customers tended to leave in the most improbable places. At least this time, she thought as she picked up the toy to drop off at the lost and found at customer service, the item left wasn't living. She would never forget how guilty she had felt when she'd discovered one of the store's Betas with the seasonal Valentine's day supplies. The fact that someone had callously abandoned a helpless creature that had never harmed anyone to die among mass produced greeting cards and overpriced chocolates pressed in the form of hearts probably said something mildly phylisophical about people in general but whatever one might have decided called it, she'd taken it as a sign that the fish needed an extra pair of eyes to look after them. The pets area wasn't exactly her section, but checking in on the little guys to make sure they were all present and accounted for was never any trouble. It relieved her to know that they were ok. What would happen to them after she'd finally graduated and left her current job was something she didn't really like to think about so she did her best to put it out of her mind. Shaking the depressing thought from her head as she crossed the double doors that led to the back. Compared to the relative calmness on the sales floor, the receiving area was a flurry of activity as usual, the employees moving crates and pallettes in place as they unloaded the supplies from the food trucks. Without giving much concious thought to the action, her eyes sought out a familiar mop of brown hair. Finding no sight of Amedeus, she purposefully marched up to the card reader next to the computers and swiped her ID. The name 'Marceline' quickly scrolled across the screen and she tapped the 'CLOCK IN' option with more force than what was probably necessary. The system was often finiky and it wouldn't be the first time that it had failed to read a prompt correctly. She’d already sat through the embarrassment of  contacting a salaried manager to help her record the correct hours(she’d tried to take a lunch break and the system had cheerfully alerted her that she couldn’t take a break when she hadn’t yet arrived) and she wasn’t at all eager for an encore performance. The screen informed her that her presence had been noted and she stalked over towards the employees lounge to stow away her perishables in the fridge before beginning her shift. The familiar scent of roasted coffee struck her the minute she entered the room and her face contorted into a sour frown. She hated the sludge her store referred to as coffee but as if eager to worsen her already foul mood, her lack of energy had chosen that moment to smack her in the face and remind her that in order to operate within the required specs of her job, she was going to have to grind up her taste-buds, boil them on the sacrificial pyre of poorly processed coffee seeds, and serve it on a platter of self-castigation. She wasn't particularly picky when it came to coffee, and she could detect  northing in that smell that would indicate that there would be any difference between the brews made in the office and the ones sold in a coffee shop. But,she thought darkly as she picked up one of the small Styrofoam cups, once a person made the mistake of ingesting it, the similarities stopped there. She brought it to her lips and winced, her body seizing up as it tried to process what it was consuming. Marceline had never eaten tobacco products, nor had she ever chosen to smoke, so her thoughts on the matter would be considered anecdotal at best, but that cloyingly bitter smell that wafted out of cheap cigarette butt was the closest analogy she had at her disposal that came to truly describing the abject awfulness that was her store’s coffee. Sadly, while she could openly declare the taste of it to be literally sickening, it didn’t stop her from taking a cup or three when she needed the caffeine. Beggars couldn’t be choosers and free was still free. When the situation called for it, like today, she just had to grin and bear it. The store expected the employees to shroud themselves with a mask of false happiness while working. It made sense that they’d expect the same from them when it came to their coffee too. She tossed the cup in the trash, then rolled her eyes in minor annoyance as the object hit the side of the bin and bounced off, landing a good couple of centimeters away from the intended destination. Secretly glad that no one except the security guard who monitored the cameras could have seen that slightly ego-bruising miss, she pitched it directly in it’s place where it thankfully remained(she might not have considered herself an overly prideful girl, but she did set some standards for herself and tossing cups into cans less than three feet away was one of the more unspoken ones). Having accomplished this, she removed the tarragon chicken salad wraps she’d made for herself and Amadeus for Lunch. Truthfully speaking, it wasn’t exactly a meal worth bragging about, but she‘d been wanting to try the recipe  out since she’d found it in the middle of looking for another meal idea. Inspiration had waited until last night, when her brain knew she would have an exam in the morning to strike and had refused to leave her alone until the wraps were finished. On the plus side, she’d been able to sleep after that. On the other, well... it had been 4 am and after a week of poor sleeping habits, it was difficult to tell the pink of her Iris from the tiny red veins that zigzagged across her sclera. She had liked the results well enough when she’d eaten some of what had remained after she’d made their wraps for breakfast, and with any luck Amadeus would enjoy them too. She hoped he would anyway. With the luck she’d been having lately he might have an allergic reaction to it and she’d be forever apologizing to the kindest person she knew for accidentally poisoning him in her ignorance. Having safely deposited the food she’d kept in her bag in the fridge, marked with a name and a date on the side to inform the maintenance workers who were tasked with cleaning the fridge not to touch it(and supposedly deter thieves), she made her way to the locker room to put her bag inside her little padlocked hidey-hole. It was, like her lockers in both high school, and middle school before it, ordered chaos in physical form. The only thing that differentiated the three was the three was the complexity of the course material they contained but not much else. She still had little doodles on the side of some notes and a series of body parts she’d spent time practicing on another, even a little comic she’d created featuring a tiny stick figure that was carrying a box labeled microeconomics coursework. The box gradually increased in size as the panels went on, weighing down her sweaty and exhausted little character as it tried it’s best to carry it’s progressively cumbersome burden. This continued until it reached the final panel, where all that could be seen of her mini dramatis persona was it’s legs and arms, pinned in place by the massive box it had collapsed beneath after it had gotten too big for her abused person to bear.
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starboundfic · 5 years
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Chapter 5
Paladin Training 101
Chapter 4 - Chapter 6
It was at the eighth time he found himself staring up at the moss-green ceiling that Koji had to stifle an irritated groan; that was probably as much sleep as he was going to get for that night. Then again, he wasn’t typically asleep at that time to begin with.
At least, that’s what it felt like, since he wasn’t sure how Arus-time matched up to Alwas-time. Or even Earth-time, for that matter. The symbols on the clock weren’t anything Koji could make sense of either, so he didn’t even know if it was still nighttime or not.
It was morning—and that thought/confirmation was so out-of-nowhere that the technician physically jumped a bit, garnering a chorus of chirps from the purloined security drone that was floating in the room’s corner that sounded almost questioning.
The fact that the same apparent-source of the confirmation was now vaguely conveying amusement cemented what it was. Koji wasn’t even near the Green Lion, so how was it (she) still communicating with him like that? After thinking it over while getting dressed, he mentally shrugged and decided to ask—and got a mental shrug in response. Or at least what felt like one?
“Okay, then…what are you?” he asked aloud.
At that, the Green Lion seemed to hesitate, like she was mulling it over, but when she finally did answer, it was in a nonsensical jumble of concepts and vague impressions that only succeeded in making Koji feel momentarily nauseous.
The Lion pulled back at noticing that, apologetic—whatever the answer was, it wasn’t something that translated into anything a human mind could understand. Figures it’s something right out of a fantasy book, Koji thought, wincing.
Whether or not it came from not getting enough sleep, or from trying to make sense of what the Lion was trying to convey, he now felt like he’d been hit in the head by a wrench.
So it only made a perfect amount of sense that an alarm started going off then, eliciting three startled screams from the adjacent rooms.
Stan was already in the hallway, looking like he’d gotten about as much sleep that Koji had. Molly and Jordan were both out there as well not even a minute later, both clearly having just thrown whatever clothes were grabbed first on. “What the heck’s going on?” the latter asked, wide-eyed.
“I don’t know!” Koji replied, starting to feel panicked, before they all started toward the bridge at a run. Unexpectedly, Shiro was there already, as were the Alteans, one of whom looked distinctively annoyed upon seeing the rest of them filing into the room.
“I’m guessing this isn’t an actual attack,” Shiro was saying.
“And it’s a good thing it wasn’t,” was Allura’s icy-toned response as the alarm cut off. “Because it took you—Coran?”
“Seventy-five degrees!”
There was complete silence for about three seconds before a flat “Huh?” from Molly broke it. To the side, both Jordan and Stan had expressions of confused exasperation. The upside was that Allura looked about as baffled as Koji himself was feeling.
Coran himself seemed to notice something, glancing at the handheld device again, before looking appropriately sheepish. “Oh wait, sorry, this is a meat thermometer.”
There was a short, irritated sigh before the princess went on from where she left off: “However long it took, it was too long. Coran and I have been up for vargas now, working on repairs to the castle, and we had to test the alarm systems. We decided to test you while we were at it.” The scowl deepened. “Guess which one failed.”
“We were sleeping!” Molly countered irritably. “A little warning would’ve been nice!”
“You think Zarkon is going to give us a warning when he launches another attack? Only Shiro is in uniform—the rest of you don’t even have your bayards!
“Judging by the amount of distress beacons the castle has picked up over the last ten-thousand years, it’s safe to assume that Zarkon is in control of most of the known universe,” Allura went on. “It’s very likely that the only reason your galaxy is still relatively safe from the Galra is because of the Avatar’s presence there!”
“Sure as hell didn’t stop them from wrecking everything on Alwas,” Stan said, tone sour, crossing his arms. “Isn’t preventing that kind of stuff his job?”
“Not necessarily,” Coran said. “From what we know, the Avatar is more of a neutral presence than anything else, and—”
“And you five should be getting started on your training,” Allura interrupted, eyes narrow.
Today was going to be one of those days, apparently. And that was the other thing that had been bothering Koji since yesterday. No one had said anything outright yet, but what Shiro had said before they’d dealt with Sendak’s ship had an implication he didn’t like at all.
“Wha’—we just woke up!” Jordan shouted irately.
“Consider it practice for when we’re under attack in the middle of a sleep-cycle, then. Now get to your Lions!”
Jordan grumbled something under his breath, though he went quiet when Shiro gave him a sharp look. “We’ll start with some basic flying drills, and then come back in for breakfast in about thirty minutes,” the space-pilot said. “Sound fair?”
There was some muttered assent after a short pause, and they turned to start down the hall, but a light flicker of something that wasn’t exactly a physical sensation coming from Green’s presence stopped Koji mid-step, and he turned to look at the narrow doorways set throughout the room.
At the same time, Coran said “You could make use of the lifts here on the bridge, unless you’d prefer to get suited up first.”
He really didn't feel like walking all the way to the Green Lion’s hangar right now anyways. There was some hesitation before the others—barring Shiro who once again had the unique one, and including Koji himself—each went to a specific door.
Koji paused to look back at the drone, which was still following him, and made a point of telling it to stay put. Which it did, thankfully. Part of him offhandedly wondered if he’d be able to program a better AI for it.
The lift went down quickly, taking roughly ten seconds to reach the bottom of the shaft, and then it just stopped. The passageway was highlighted green, not bright enough to be overly painful, but still enough to make his eyes sting a bit, and there didn't seem to be any second platform or anything on the floor. Then he noticed the handle set into a rail on the ceiling. It was a zip-line.
A zip-line.
It took a few attempts for him get a hold onto the pulley, which started moving immediately. While Koji had better reflexes than most people tended to expect, he was exactly as strong as most people assumed, on top of him still being sore from yesterday.
In other words, it wasn’t long until he lost his grip on the handle and ended up tumbling down the remainder of the slope head-over-heels. He stayed on the floor for a few seconds, stunned, before picking himself up and walking the short distance to…what seemed to be at least a twelve-foot drop.
At this rate, he’d be lucky if the headache went away by itself.
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
“Should someone go in to check on him?” Jordan asked.
“Give him another minute or two,” Stan replied. He had an idea on why Koji was taking so long—Stan himself was just wondering who thought a zip-line was a good shortcut, even though it technically was a quick one, and was admittedly kind of fun.
As it turned out, it didn’t take another minute, as the Green Lion emerged from its tower moments later. “Lemme guess, the zip-line?”
“Who even designed that system?” was the frustrated-sounding response.
Shiro sighed near-inaudibly over the comm. “All right—Molly, I know you were the Arrow’s pilot for part of the competition on Alwas, but have you taken any lessons before that?”
“No,” was her initial response, and her face faltered over the monitor screen before she added, “I mean, Rick taught me a few things, but that was during the race.”
That was one of the things that had made it hard to sleep. Yeah, Stan did not care for how Don tended to treat them (Molly and Jordan specifically, though Molly in particular had often been at odds with him) on Alwas, but at the same time he couldn’t help but feel worried for both him and Rick.
Stan jolted when there was the mental equivalent of a hard poke from the Yellow Lion, and he barely managed to catch the end of what Shiro was saying. He looked at the Lion’s steering handles for a few seconds before replying with, “Well, I did test-fly the Arrow I, but it was only in a straight line for a few meters.”
“Okay—Jordan?” The silence that followed Shiro’s abridged question was an awkward one. “Right…well, let’s start with flying in formation.”
“Which one?” Jordan asked resignedly.
It wasn’t Shiro that replied. Rather, it was the Lions themselves providing an answer by lining themselves up on the stone bridge where they’d been waiting—Yellow was on one end, with the others to the right in the order of Green, Black, Red, and Blue. “This one, I guess,” Shiro said after a bit, with a shrug in his voice. “Jordan, just hold the controls steady. Alright?”
“Got it.” He sounded nervous, and honestly, Stan was feeling nervous too; Yellow sent over a feeling that could be described as chiding.
Now that it was more of a casual situation, Stan was able to better assess the currently-impossible-to-ignore feeling that was the secondary presence in his head. Yellow was…warm, in a sense that was like a direct ray of sunlight, or sand that had been out in the sun all day, but not overly so.
It was also pushing the idea of trusting his teammates. Well, I’m on the opposite side anyways.
So commenced a time of just flying in a straight line with occasional curves to turn—and to Stan’s surprise, it wasn’t nearly as terrible as Jordan’s attempt at flying the Arrow had been. The Blue Lion only wobbled now and then, although the detail of the Lions being thought-driven to a degree probably had something to do with it.
Either way, he also saw that Molly was giving the Blue Lion plenty of room.
A flash of light to one side broke him out of his thoughts, and he saw that the castle’s particle-barrier (which was another thing he wanted to take a look at eventually) was active.
“Wait, why’s the barrier up?” Molly asked uncertainly.
“I have to run a diagnostic tests on the castle’s defenses,” Allura replied; a monitor appeared, showing her facing an arc of holoscreens to the side on the bridge.
Several seconds later, the ground in front of the Yellow Lion was blasted apart by a cyan-hued laser, which Stan just barely managed to get out of the way of it in time. “Allura, what are you doing?!”
“Running a diagnostic.” Her tone was unnervingly cheery. “And I’m inspiring you in the meantime!”
“Inspiring us for what?!” Jordan shouted, panicked. Ahead, the Blue Lion swerved to one side, just barely avoiding the Black Lion, if only because Shiro had her jump out of the way.
“Your predecessors first formed Voltron in the heat of battle, which you five are going to have to learn how to do if we’re to have any hope of freeing other planets from Zarkon’s control. This should help!”
Over the screen, Stan saw Allura tap a key on one of the holoscreens, and the computer then intoned “Auto lock-on engaged.” And then she walked away.
Was she trying to kill them?
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
After what felt like a few hours had gone by, Stan was really starting to think yes. At that point there were several different alarms blaring in the Yellow Lion, and multiple monitors were blinking red.
Which meant now the Lions were going to need to get some repairs, too—which was just wonderful, because he had no idea on how he’d even start on that.
He pulled back on the handles, and Yellow pivoted in place, but not fast enough for him to avoid getting clipped; he was promptly sent careening into the Red Lion, sending the smaller craft tumbling to the side.
“Stan, watch where you’re going!” Molly snapped.
It took every bit of remaining willpower Stan had to not snap back at her, seeing as he was equally stressed-out at this point. Just when he was starting to think that would be a losing battle, the lasers stopped, and the castle’s barrier flickered before vanishing.
“What just happened?” Jordan asked.
“I don’t know, but I’m not waiting for it to come back!” Molly replied, with the Red Lion turning sharply toward the castle. The rest of them followed quickly.
No sooner was the Yellow Lion back in his designated hangar did Stan notice that the blinking monitors had actually stopped blinking, having returned to their usual gold hue. He looked over the monitors—not that it really helped, because he couldn’t read any of the information on them, but the displays alone were giving an impression that was a baffling prospect to consider.
“It’s almost like you’re fixing yourself,” he mused aloud. The Lion then pulled off an air of being amused. No way. “Are you fixing yourself?”
The amusement turned into a smug feeling, and that had him sitting down again and staying there for a minute. Sentient, telepathic, thought-piloted, and self-repairing. What next, being able to materialize things out of nowhere?
…that the smug feeling just got more noticeable had an implication that Stan decided could be thought about later.
He found Molly, Jordan, and Koji in the same room that Coran had them wait in yesterday after they’d first met. Sitting on a center table were a few plates of that synthetic stuff they’d had for dinner the night before.
The others glanced up at noticing him, but aside from that, it was quiet for a short time, save for the lime-colored substance gradually vanishing. At least, until Jordan said, “Well that was horrible.”
“Understatement,” Molly agreed in a low tone.
Koji nodded. “At least we don’t have to worry about fixing the Lions,” he muttered, and Jordan fervently nodded in agreement.
“You saw that too?” Stan asked—he thought he’d seen the eyes of both the Green and Blue Lions flickering, and he knew he’d seen both of them take a few hits earlier.
“Uh-huh.”
Stan waited for a few seconds, but Koji stayed quiet. He definitely hadn’t slept much either last night—both of them were typically up all night and then crashed around noon for a few hours.
After a few minutes had gone by, Stan was pretty sure that all of them (himself included) were more than halfway to dozing before the sound of the door opening brought them all back to attention.
“Has the fifth power condenser finished charging yet?” Allura was asking Coran.
“No, it’s still at eighty-four percent,” he replied, and they both paused when they saw the four of them.
Allura looked confused in an angry sense moments later. “How in the world did you get inside?” she demanded.
“The barrier went down, so we flew back in,” Molly replied, a huff audible in her voice.
“What.”
And with that, Stan was beginning to suspect that they were still going to have to deal with an overbearing manager of a sort.
Coran coughed forcibly, looking sheepish. “Uh, right. Sorry, princess—testing the fire suppressers in the aft guest wing caused the defenses to shut down. That, uh, never had the chance to be fixed.”
Footsteps from the other end of the room preceded Shiro entering the room. “What’re you guys doing in here? We’re not taking a break.”
Jordan fixed him with a betrayed look before saying “Et tu, Shiro?”
Stan hissed out a breath. Now we have two overbearing managers. Great.
“Not taking a—“ Molly sputtered a bit before exclaiming “We barely got any sleep last night, and we just got shot at for—for hours!”
Allura was glowering at her at this point, but Coran cut in before she could say anything. “Perhaps we should move onto something easier. You’re not going to be in the Lions all the time, after all.”
“What do you mean by that?” Stan asked, wary, while Molly resorted to seething quietly.
“You’ll need to be functional as a real team to have any chance of forming Voltron and going up against Zarkon,” the Altean man specified calmly. “Best place to work on that would be the training deck.”
“What training deck?” Jordan asked suspiciously.
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
Coran chivvied them down to the so-called training deck after having the four of them (barring Shiro, who had his on to begin with) get their flight-suits on and make sure their bayards were stored in the uniforms. Jordan had to admit that the outfits were actually pretty comfortable, but the other three looked awkward for the first few minutes. “Testing, testing,” the Altean said over the comm. “You all hear me, yes?”
“We hear you,” Shiro replied.
“Right then!” Coran’s tone brightened considerably—he probably expected it to have been not working. “Now, if the five of you could arrange yourself in the center of the room so we could get started…” After they did as such, his tone turned more business-like. “The Paladin Code demands that you put the safety of your teammates above your own, and this exercise will test that. Now, a swarm of drones is about to attack, and your objective is to do whatever you can to protect each other!”
As if prompted by the words, a number of small white robots emerged from gaps that opened up in the walls, simultaneous with everyone’s left gauntlets producing a translucent blue shield that, despite appearing unwieldy, weighed absolutely nothing.
Jordan was forced to stop wondering about it when the drones started firing with plasma rounds that he was hoping were set to non-lethal.
It went well for about ten seconds, before Jordan felt something hit him in the back that produced a static-y feeling, which was followed by the floor promptly opened up under him. It was a two-foot drop onto a different floor that, despite being padded, still smarted and knocked the breath out of him.
Five seconds later, Molly was down there too, landing flat on her back. She stared at the ceiling for a few seconds, before groaning, putting her hands to her face.
“Uh, what just happened?” Jordan asked.
“I ducked,” was the muttered response. Which was probably why they were both down there—they’d both been hit.
“Hey, don’t worry about it. I probably would’ve done the same thing.”
Molly didn’t reply, instead sitting up and looking around. “Where’s the way out of here?”
Jordan copied her action, and soon picked out a door on one wall. It refused to open for another minute or so, but when it did, it revealed a stairway (two, actually; one went further up) that opened out onto the main deck. Shiro, Stan, and Koji all looked winded, though Stan was quick to ask if they were both okay.
“Yeah,” Jordan replied. “It wasn’t a big fall.”
Molly wasted no time in glaring up at the observation deck where Coran was. “How was that supposed to be easy?”
“Er…well, perhaps I could’ve given you more of an in-depth explanation. Either way, this next one should be a breeze! Koji, you stay down there—the rest of you, come up here.” Koji looked uncertain, but stayed put while the rest of them headed up the second stairway, which led up to the observation deck.
Molly took the opportunity to aim a more pointed glare at Coran, who cleared his throat in an awkward-sounding way before turning to press a few keys on a holoscreen.
Below, translucent walls flickered into existence, before vanishing. The suddenness of it made Koji jump a bit. “This one here is one of my favorites,” Coran started, and then added with a flourish, “The invisible maze! If the five of you are to form Voltron, you’ll need to have complete trust in each other. We can see the layout of the maze from up here, but whoever’s on the floor can’t. A word of caution: touching the walls will give you a slight shock!”
“So who’s giving me directions?” Koji asked. In response, Coran motioned to Stan, who stepped up to look at the monitor, and Jordan let himself relax. Those two were the epitome of teamwork already.
“Alright, so turn left and take three steps forward, turn right, and then take two steps that way,” Stan said after studying the screen for a few seconds.
Below, Koji did as such, and promptly stumbled back, simultaneously with a blue flash of light and a sharp crackling sound. He stared at where he’d tried walking for a bit, before whirling around to look up at them. “Stan, what was that for?”
Stan visibly tensed, and took a deep breath before saying “I meant my left.”
Below, Koji stepped left, only to get shocked again. “Stan!”
“No, it’s behind you now—Koji, you’re not listening!”
“And you’re not being specific enough!”
No way… Jordan stared in dismayed incredulity at the spectacle that was the team’s mechanics, who’d never even had a disagreement as far as he knew, going at each other in what was rapidly devolving into a full-blown argument revolving around how well the other listened.
To the side, Shiro made a face when Koji started throwing in words that Jordan didn’t understand—and if the expression Stan had then was any indicator, things were close to getting ugly.
Thankfully Coran intervened, pushing Stan away from the console and hitting a key on the screen, which was followed by a buzzing sound from the deck below.
“Okay, okay!” the Altean blurted, looking back and forth between them. Both had broken off mid-word and were more than a little red-faced, glaring at each another. “Let’s…let’s try something else with the Lions now, shall we?”
“They can argue with each other?” Molly whispered, stunned.
“I guess so,” he whispered back, feeling unsettled. Either way, Stan and Koji refused to even look at each other before they’d all split off in the direction of the Lions’ hangars.
Shiro stopped both Jordan and Molly before they could get too far. He seemed to hesitate before asking, “Does that happen often, or…?”
“No,” Molly answered. “We’ve never seen those two fight over anything before.”
“I mean, they look more worn-out than when they had to put the Arrow back together after it got cut in half, so that might have to do with it,” Jordan put in, before quickly adding, “And I don’t think leaving them alone would be a good idea right now.” Shiro looked troubled for a moment, before nodding in agreement.
Jordan still found himself feeling momentarily panicked when the Blue Lion’s display monitors came up, but Blue herself was a calming presence just at the edge of his awareness before he could really start freaking out.
Blue was going to be handling the flying until further notice, though. Yeah, sure, Jordan had done…a bit of steering earlier, which had felt awesome, but still.
The Lion looked a lot more complicated than the Arrow, but it was almost like he had some kind of instinctive vague idea about her controls worked. Alien tech it might be, it was actually useful.
The Lions all flew out of their hangars, arcing upwards for some time before they levelled out, which suggested that maybe Yellow and Green had agreed on the detail of their pilots (still a weird thing to consider) needing some space from each other right now.
Jordan had no idea how high up they were, but if the fact that he could only make out sparse details about the ground below was anything to go on, it might have been standard airplane height. It also looked like it was late-afternoon now, which meant breakfast was more like lunch.
With the blue sky and white clouds, Arus looked almost like both of the other planets they’d already been on, save for the sun here being more orange in color, and the grass having a teal hue to it.
“An important part of being a Paladin is having complete trust in your Lion,” Coran said over the comm. Again with the “trust” thing.
“I think that’s a given at this point,” Koji remarked snippily.
It was obvious that the statement had been referring to Jordan himself, but he settled for biting his tongue instead of returning fire. Not after that spectacle on the training deck.
“Perfect!” was the cheery response from Coran, apparently having missed the real intent of the words. “You should all be able to pull this off with little issue, then. Now put your Lions into a nosedive!”
Blue seemed puzzled as she did as such, and Jordan felt a prick of anxiety for himself when the ground started slowly becoming more detailed. “So uh, what’s this one supposed to be?” he asked.
“Trigel’s Dive,” was the response, and Blue’s confusion immediately turned into alarmed disbelief. “It’s—well, it’s actually an advanced technique that really none of you should be attempting until you’ve had a few years of Lion-flying experience, but we’re in a bit of a rush here.”
Advanced? Oh no, Jordan did not like the sound of that at all.
“Really? This doesn’t seem so bad,” Molly remarked over the comm. Then everything went dark, and there were panicked exclamations from her and the others. “Uh, I take that back—why can’t I see anything?!”
“The goal is to see through your Lion’s eyes,” Coran replied. “And pull up at the last second!”
Jordan gave himself a few seconds to make sure he didn’t mishear that—and the thought that went through his head when it hit him that Coran wasn’t joking was Well screw that! 
He tensed, getting ready to pull back on the handles (that was pulling up, right?) but a mental prod from Blue stopped him before he could.
Blue was flying, Jordan was shooting.
That was a pretty big trust thing, now that he was thinking about it, so…maybe he could at least try.
“C’mon Jordan,” he muttered to himself, tightening his hold on the handles. “S-So what if it’s a weird alien thing?” He was flying a magic space lion! This kind of stuff should be a breeze!
…emphasis on should, because it sounded like even Molly was borderline panicking about this, and that alone was making Jordan want to panic right along with her.
Blue gave him another psychic poke. Right, trust the Lion. Deep breaths. Shiro sounds calm.
Blue’s little metaphorical camping spot was usually something like a patch of frost on the back of his head, in a weird sort of way, unless he actually focused on her. Then she was more like a whole, icy ocean that was somehow intimidating and reassuring at the same time.
For one brief, extremely surreal moment, Jordan could have sworn he saw the ground below flicker back into view, but a loud crashing sound followed by a startled cry from Molly spooked him into yanking the handles back. Blue’s thrusters fired off instantly, whereas Red slammed heavily into the ground.
“Molly, Jordan, you both nearly had it there.” Coran’s tone was an encouraging one, and the words were followed by Jordan’s visor going back to normal. “We’ll have to give it another go some other time.”
Blue was hovering just above the ground, pulling off an impression that Jordan was hesitantly translating as agreeing with Coran, and Red was on the ground, just standing up now.
Both Yellow and Green were stuck halfway in the ground in front of them, which was more than likely where the crashing sounds came from.
From the mesa they were on, Jordan could see the Black Lion weaving between rock spires in the valley below, like Shiro could actually see where he’s going. He sighed subconsciously at seeing that. Figures.
Then again, Shiro was the guy that had smashed every single record the Garrison as a whole had to offer in terms of piloting, so it did make sense that he’d get the advanced flying technique right away…which Jordan himself may or may not have come close to also getting along with Molly…
Speaking of Molly. “You guys okay?” he asked, and three monitors came up. Molly looked dazed, nodding jerkily. Stan and Koji looked somewhere between irritable and mortified while their Lions pried themselves out of the ground.
Stan was muttering something darkly, and though Koji stayed quiet, the scowl on his face was enough of an answer in itself. Maybe they were trying to prove a point to each other or something.
Seeing those two angry at each other was kind of scary.
“Okay, this next one is going to be more relaxing,” Coran was saying now. Jordan wasn’t really trusting him right now, even if he was starting to sound as weary as Jordan was feeling. “Meet me back on the training deck.”
“I’ll believe that when I see it,” Molly muttered over the comm as the Lions turned toward the castle.
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
The first impression Jordan got of the next thing, once they were all there and sitting in a loose circle, was stiff plastic headset which was mildly uncomfortable to have on.
“This technique will be essential in forming Voltron,” Coran said over the comm. “The five of you have to learn to lower your barriers, and keep them down. Focus on your Lion, and nothing else!”
That actually did sound easy. But of course, Jordan jinxed himself yet again with that thought, because something sidetracked him almost as soon as that it was through his head.
Beyond Blue’s chill, there was…something else. Three of them, actually, all being a jumbled swirl of ideas and emotions held at a distance, only partially-glimpsed like a silhouette behind an opaque curtain.
Across from him, Jordan saw one of Stan’s eyes twitch, before he growled “Mind your own business, Koji.” Jordan started when there was a prick of frustration from one of those other presences, coinciding with the low-toned words.
“I’m not doing anything!” was the immediate retort, and a flare of annoyance from a second point coincided with that, too. There was also an indistinct sensation that was borderline unpleasant there too, like a headache.
“Knock it off, you two,” Shiro said sharply, a stern feeling coming across from the third one as he gave the mechanics a look that Jordan had seen his uncle pull on his cousins a few times—and that was when it hit Jordan.
Holy shit, he was being literal. Coran had called this a “mind-meld” exercise, and Jordan was now pretty sure that those other three are Shiro, Stan, and Koji…but shouldn’t there be four?
Jordan glanced sideways at where Molly was sitting. She had her eyes shut tight, and looked like she was trying to focus—on the Red Lion, probably. Now that he had his attention on her, he was barely aware of a fourth other presence, almost completely in the background: it was a small, prickly-seeming spark of heat, and he could just pick up a creeping unease from her.
Moments later, Molly opened one eye slightly and glanced back at him, and the unease became more noticeable. “Focus, everyone!” Coran reminded, startling all five of them. 
Blue, Jordan told himself firmly in his head, brow furrowing in concentration. Think of Blue. He saw a small hologram of the Blue Lion appear a few inches away from his forehead. “That’s it. Now, bring your Lions together!”
“Is this really necessary?” Koji asked. The small hologram of the Green Lion halfway to the center of the room stopped, flickering, and the sense of foreign irritation was a lot more noticeable now.
“Yes, it is,” Coran affirmed. “You have to be able to coordinate your thoughts, and there can’t be any walls or secrets between you.” 
The unease dropped into a sort of numb shock, and Molly’s face went slack, coinciding with Red’s barely-there hologram winking out of existence entirely.
To the side, Jordan saw Shiro frown, and the Black Lion’s hologram paused where it was floating. “Molly, is something—?”
He stopped mid-word, simultaneously with Jordan feeling the mental equivalent to having a window being slammed shut on his fingers. Judging by the others’ breathing hitching, they all had felt it too.
It corresponded with Molly ripping the headset off, throwing it across the room, and bolting out. “Wha’—Molly?!” Jordan scrambled to his feet and moved to start after her, but before he could make it to the door Allura came into the room from the opposite door, face stormy.
“And where do you think you’re going?” she asked icily. Jordan’s eyes narrowed in response. “Clearly, you’re all worse off than I initially thought. Coran, ready the Gladiator!”
Gladiator?
“Uh, yes Princess. Everyone, put the headsets aside, and have your bayards ready. In order to defeat the Gladiator, five Paladins must fight as one…or, well, four works too, I suppose.” His voice quieted toward the end, and he sounded hesitant for the entire explanation.
“I’ve got a bad feeling about this,” Jordan heard Stan mutter as they left the headsets on a stand to one side of the room, which was retracted into the wall. Allura had gone up to the observation deck in the meantime.
The four of them meandered over to the center of the room, bayards soon in hand for the three the direction applied to, and Jordan looked around. I don’t see anything…
He stiffened when he heard a thud behind him, and he turned around in time to see Koji get sent sprawling, the green bayard spiraling across the floor. Jordan’s military intuition had been correct—it was a combat simulator, by means of a training robot.
It was also apparent not even three seconds later that, even when they were pissed at each other, one rule always applied between the team’s mechanics: hurting one in front of the other resulted in all safeties going off.
Stan forwent his bayard entirely, rushing at the robot, but that didn’t end well for him, with the robot swinging its staff around and hitting in the side of the head. Them having their helmets made a lot of sense now.
A low-pitched droning sound preceded Shiro’s prosthetic lighting up, and the robot turned to charge at him…and then Shiro froze.
Jordan quickly intercepted it by firing on it with his bayard (the laser rounds were cerulean instead of the standard yellow of standard firearm from Earth) and while that did get its attention, it deflected every single round with its staff, and Jordan found his feet being swept out from under him seconds later.
He was promptly sent flying into Shiro, who hadn’t moved—he’d gone wide-eyed and pale-faced the moment the Gladiator had started toward him.
Thankfully, the robot’s cyan highlights dimmed in a way that signified it was done, what with them all being on the floor.
Allura, on the other hand, was far from done: “What was that?” she hissed, marching over to them.
“That was you trying to kill us,” Stan replied angrily, picking himself up off the floor and returning the glare.
“That simulator was set at a level fit for a child! And where did Molly run off to, anyways? She’s not exempt from this!”
“Beats me,” Jordan muttered. “She’ll come back when she wants to.” He wasn’t going to admit it out loud right now, but he was wondering that too.
Coran cleared his throat, having followed Allura down. “Perhaps we should call it a day, princess? It is only day-one, after all.”
Jordan was slightly appeased to know that they weren’t the only ones who would ever be on the receiving end of Allura’s ire. The look she was giving Coran was implying that she was considering ripping the mustache right off his face, but he didn’t even flinch.
It was a stalemate for a few long moments, until she sighed, grumbling “I suppose you’re right,” before turning and leaving the room. Coran still had some points of merit left thanks to that; he went after her, but to what ends, Jordan had no idea.
He heard the door on the opposite side of the room open and close, and looked over his shoulder to see that both Stan had left the room as well. Koji was also heading that way, muttering something under his breath about going to take a nap. A smaller detail of the weirdness the headsets had brought came back to Jordan; maybe Koji really did have a headache. That might why he snapped at Stan so fast earlier.
Shiro sighed next to him, putting a hand up to his face, before seeming to think of something. “You wouldn’t happen to know why Molly ran out like that, would you?”
“No,” Jordan replied curtly, and paused. “Are you okay?” Something about the way Shiro had frozen like that there didn’t sit right with him.
Shiro hesitated for just a moment before smiling a bit. “Don’t worry about me. Why don’t you go relax for a while?”
In most cases like this, Jordan would have let go of it then and there—he was just beat right now—and if Shiro said he was okay, he probably was.
This time, though, he had a nagging feeling that right now wasn’t the time for that choice, and Blue rumbled her assent in the back of his head. “I think we should go try to find her.” Before Shiro could say anything else, Jordan added, “Bad stuff usually happens when she runs off.”
Grooor’s tantrum in the tavern, the near-disaster that was the race against Ceres, and the actual disaster that was the race against the Nourasian were all good examples of that.
Truthfully, Jordan wasn’t sure Molly had completely forgiven him for that last one yet, or Stan and Koji considering their part in it; when Don had tried getting them to convince her to come out of her room, she'd thrown various hard objects at them as soon as the door had opened.
“Alright,” Shiro conceded after a moment. “Where should we start?”
“Uh…good question.”
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
Stan was quickly faced with the reminder that, unless there was some equipment lying around somewhere that would work with the Arrow, they had no way of even looking at the full extent of the damage taken that night on Alwas. Maybe I’ll ask Coran later, he thought, before glancing over his shoulder at one of the shuttles.
They weren’t too different from Earth ships, apparently—but they were still made from alien tech that was leagues ahead of anything they had back home. It was worth trying to at least look at it.
Granted, it took a while to even get the panel open, considering that he had to go look for the right tool to open it up with.
The shuttle was definitely…different than what he was used to looking at, having an assortment of wires connected to several rhombus-shaped blue-glowing crystals. He could make out one larger crystal further in, but Stan could not for the life of him see anything that even remotely looked like a fuel tank.
What does this thing run on then, sunlight? It wasn’t likely, since he couldn’t see anything resembling solar panels either. The Yellow Lion’s presence was starting to feel like something between amused and exasperated, giving an impression of the word guess when Stan tried asking him.
The sound of the door opening got him to glance over his shoulder. Koji stopped when he noticed, and there was three seconds’ worth of awkward silence before he ducked his head and walked over to the Arrow.
During that hour, it had occurred to Stan that the headache-like feeling he’d had while they’d all had those headsets on might’ve been one of the others actually having a headache—and with everything else that had been going on, he hadn’t noticed the telltale signs that it was the case with Koji earlier.
So he’d started feeling pretty guilty about ten minutes ago. Better to get it over with now, he thought, before saying “Sorry for snapping at you earlier.”
There was no response for roughly half a minute. Just as Stan was beginning to think it was too soon, he heard Koji reply quietly with “I’m the one that should be saying that. You were right—I wasn’t listening.”
“I still shouldn’t have gone off on you like that. You feeling okay now?”
Koji nodded, before wincing. “That was kind of my own fault, I think. I tried asking the Green Lion something earlier, and…well…”
“Asking her what?”
“Just—what they were.” Koji shrugged his shoulders a bit before adding “Whatever the answer is, I guess it’s not something a human brain can translate.”
Stan snorted a bit. “Of course not.” Then he noticed the drone. “And we should name that thing or something.”
Koji looked back at it too. “I guess you have a point. Got any ideas?”
How did one name a robot? It was silver in color, but that would be too plain of a name.
Cultural references would just get Jordan to tease them both about it if he recognized it, and he recognized practically everything. Even the stuff from the early 2000’s would be connected to a name after a few minutes.
Stan gave up after mulling it over for a few minutes. “I don’t know, Rover?”
“Well, that’s better than nothing,” Koji agreed. “I’m wondering if I could program some new functions onto it.” A pause. “After we fix what we can on the Arrow, anyways.”
“Yeah…”
Fix what they could, with only a wrench and a screwdriver for equipment. Yeah, right.
The door sounded again, followed by a “So this is where you two went!” from Coran, who jogged over to them. “Working on your ship?” The Altean paused, taking note of the open panel on the shuttle, and took on a dubious tone. “Or on one of the shuttles?”
“We can’t actually fix anything right now,” Koji replied to the first question, adjusting his glasses.
“I was just looking at this thing.” Stan gestured to the shuttle. “Where’s the fuel tank on it?”
“There isn’t one.” Coran made a show of pointing out the larger crystal further in. “That there is the power source.”
“The crystal?” Stan didn’t need to look at Koji to guess what his current expression was. “How does that work?”
“The crystals are infused with a fair amount of quintessence,” was the response given. “One crystal can keep a shuttle going for decaphoebs, hence why they’re still operable to begin with!”
While Stan still wasn’t entirely sure what the word decaphoeb meant, the context Coran used it with, along with Allura’s usage of the word the day before, implied that it might be the Altean equivalent of a year. He wasn’t sure what “quintessence” was either—some kind of power source probably.
Coran’s attention wandered to the Arrow. “Now, this is the first Earth ship I’ve seen. Do they all look like this?”
“It’s what a star-racer usually looks like,” Stan replied guardedly.
“Aha, so it’s a specialized ship, then!” Coran nodded like he’s just had something confirmed. “How does it work?”
Stan made use of the crate that was left form this morning to get onto the left reactor. “The short version is that she’s got two magnetic-field generators, one for each reactor. Most vehicles on Earth have at least one, and really old ones don’t have any.”
Coran looked both intrigued and skeptical, but not lost. “Magnetism, eh? Well, that definitely wouldn’t work very well on Ekkunar…but I know there’s a repair-drone lying around here somewhere that should have some tools that’ll work on your, ah, star-racer.” He chuckled before adding “This brings me back to the time Queen Melenor dragged us all out to the interplanetary racing competition in the Valentia Quadrant—now that was some cutthroat competition! Of course, it was right after some loopholes in the rules became known but hadn’t gotten around to being written out, so all the teams were running around procuring all sorts of upgrades for their ships…”
Upgrades. Suddenly, a few half-forgotten plans came racing back to mind. “Koji, the upgrade plans!”
Koji looked lost for a few seconds. “The upgrade plans? What about the—oh!”
They hadn’t had the time to even think about the upgrade plans on Alwas, but now they did have time; why just repair the Arrow when they could also improve her at the same time?
Coran paused, tilting his head slightly to one side in a manner that indicated they’d lost him, but before Stan could say anything the door sounded for the third time, this time preceding both Jordan and Shiro coming in. “So this is where the hangar is,” the former muttered.
The latter caught sight of them first. “Have any of you seen Molly?”
“No,” Koji replied, enthusiasm fading into concern. “Why?”
“I think we might’ve just gone through maybe half of this place trying to find her,” Jordan replied, brow furrowed. Then he asked “Hey, uh, is her rocket-seat in the Arrow?”
Stan looked over the remains of the cockpit’s glass covering (that had to get replaced too) before answering “No, it’s not. So she’s probably not even in here.”
“Coran, do these suits have any sort of tracking beacon?” Shiro asked.
“They do, but I’m not sure if the castle’s functional enough to make use of them. A full system reboot can take up to twenty vargas, barring any hiccups. We’ll have to go check.” He glanced back at Stan and Koji. “Good conversation boys, and I’m glad to see you’ve settled your dispute. You’ll have to tell me more about your Earth ships some other time!”
Both he and Shiro were gone from the hangar shortly after, leaving the three others standing there quietly for a short time. “He seems okay,” Stan said finally, scratching at the back of his head. Koji nodded, whereas Jordan made a neutral sound.
“He’s better than Miss High-and-Mighty, at least,” the gunner mumbled. Chances were that he was referring to Allura.
Koji looked sideways at him. “You know she and Coran woke up from a stasis yesterday to find out that their whole planet got destroyed a long time ago, right?”
Jordan looked back at him, and then at the floor. For a few seconds, one of his eyebrows twitched a bit, before he hissed in a breath and blurted “Well I guess anyone would act like a jerk after that.”
Koji really did have a point in saying that, now that Stan was thinking about it too. Jordan looked between the two of them then uncertainly, before asking, “You guys okay now?”
“Yeah,” Stan replied, after glancing down at Koji. “Just an off-day, I guess.” Koji muttered something that Stan didn’t catch completely, but it sounded like an agreement.
Stan looked back at the empty cockpit. Maybe we should just put a new steering column in while we’re at it. One with an adjustable seat. And now that his thoughts were more on Molly, Stan found himself wondering just what made her run off like that, too.
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
“Princess?” Coran’s voice broke Allura out of her focus on the castle’s systems; she started slightly before turning to face him. “I was wondering if the castle can get a read on Molly’s location.”
“She’s not inside?”
“Not from what Jordan and I could find, no,” Shiro replied; he’d been standing a ways behind Coran, so Allura hadn’t noticed him until he’d spoken up.
Frowning, she turned to the display screens, bringing up the necessary one. “It looks like she’s on the nearby shoreline. There’s a path down the cliff leading to it, so you shouldn’t need the Black Lion.” He picked up on the silent request, nodding and turning to leave.
For a few doboshes after that, the only sounds heard were those from the consoles, before Coran cleared his throat quietly. “While we’re on the subject of the paladins, princess—I think Shiro and Jordan might be the only ones who understand the situation at least halfway.”
Allura looked at him again for a few long ticks, and then back at the screens. The various progress bars were moving at an infuriatingly-slow pace. “You think I was too harsh on them today.”
“Well, I wouldn’t say harsh, but, uh…maybe a little.”
She sighed, glancing over her shoulder at him again. “Coran, Zarkon’s had ten-thousand decaphoebs to prepare for us. We can’t afford to go easy on them. They still haven’t managed to form Voltron!” Even with just the one battlecruiser, it was worryingly obvious how far the Galra had advanced in terms of technology.
They just didn’t have the time to go easy on them.
Coran winced slightly. “You’re not entirely wrong about that…” “But?” Allura could sense that word hanging unsaid.
“But they aren’t the paladins of old,” the adviser reminded gently. “Their predecessors had years of experience before the Lions were even built. These five don’t.”
Allura bit her lip. Coran was right—Shiro must have had some experience, with how he’d handled the prior quintant’s situation, but the rest of them had just been following his orders. “What are we supposed to do, then?”
“I’m sure we’ll all work something out along the way,” Coran said optimistically. “Like my pop-pop always said, there’s more than one way to convince a duflax to fly!” Despite the tension, Allura heard herself chuckle at that.
She knew Jordan’s primary issue already—he was terrified of piloting the Blue Lion. True, he’d gotten into the cockpit somewhat willingly that morning, but he had a long road ahead of him.
It was clear at first glance that Koji wasn’t one for physical exertion, given his slim build, but it was also apparent that he had both a keen mind and an aptitude for learning new things. The Green Lion had stepped in and sheepishly excused his disappearance earlier in the day with some guilt on her end, with a question having an answer no one but the Lions themselves could understand. (Allura vaguely recalled her father having attempted to ask that same question to the Lions, earning a similar result.)
Stan, she couldn’t be too sure of yet. He seemed almost laidback in how he was accepting the changes, though there seemed to be some level of belligerence present.
The Yellow Lion was very much the same way at the time, at least in relation to Allura. From what she could tell with the rudimentary link she had to him, he was still doing something not unlike testing the waters, and that left her feeling uneasy. Training would get absolutely nowhere if a bond with the Lion wasn’t present.
And Molly…from what Allura had seen of her so far, she was an amazing pilot, even at her young age—and her age was still a sore subject. King Alfor had been centuries older, and he hadn’t been able to stand against Zarkon, so how could a child?
She felt a hand on her shoulder, before Coran said “Things will work out in the end, princess. Just have faith in the new paladins. They’ll get there eventually.”
Allura nodded slowly. “I’ll…I’ll try. Thank you, Coran.”
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
Either the day seemed to have passed faster than they usually did, or Arusian days were just shorter. Either way, the sky was bright orange by the time he made it to the end of the crude road that had been hewn along the bluff that the castle was set on, leading all the way down to the shoreline.
The rock hadn’t even fully transitioned to sand before he was able to hear music, more likely from Molly’s discman. She didn’t seem to notice him approaching, so he stopped a few feet away and waited for the song to end. Surprisingly, the mice were with her—three of them were sitting on the sand looking up at her, while the fourth one was on her shoulder.
The sound faded out after a bit, with Molly moving to hit a button on the device before asking “Did you guys like it?” A series of squeaks came in response that Shiro vaguely interpreted as agreements. Then Molly looked up a bit more, and started fiercely. “Shiro? Wh-What are you doing out here?”
“Looking for you,” he replied calmly, before frowning a bit. “Jordan was worried about you.”
“I…oh.” She looked confused for a few seconds, as though she’d expected a harsher response, before standing up. “Wait, how long was I out here?”
“At least an hour. We should probably get back to the castle.”
Molly didn’t say anything, instead starting toward the path after picking up the other three mice. The walk was silent, at least until roughly the halfway point; Shiro decided to take a shot in the dark, asking “Is everything alright?”
She paused mid-step. “I’m fine. I just needed some space.”
Evasiveness at its finest, and Shiro momentarily found himself thinking of Keith. I wonder how he’s doing.
Probably not well, if the Kerberos Mission had been reported as a complete failure with the entire team being lost, and that thought sent an unpleasant feeling through Shiro. (No, Keith would not have taken that well at all.)
Either way, it was likely that Molly wouldn’t talk about it until she was ready to. Shiro just hoped they had the time necessary.
The others were already in the dining hall when they got there, after making a detour to the hangar so Molly could leave the rocket-seat by the Arrow, and Jordan stood up when he noticed them. “Molly, uh—about earlier…”
She tensed, and he stopped at noticing that, instead opting for sitting down again. Stan and Koji remained quiet, although they exchanged a quick glance. Overlooking the dispute of earlier, the mechanics worked fantastically well together, and Molly and Jordan appeared to be fairly familiar with one another.
But aside from that? Shiro hadn’t seen much even in terms of interaction outside of that divide, which indicated that Coran’s insistence on team-bonding exercises, as unorthodox as they were, might be sorely needed.
Coran himself had observed the exchange quietly from where he’d been sitting, and once dinner was over with, he ushered them all up to the bridge. Allura glanced over her shoulder at them from where she was working on something before turning to face them fully, clearing her throat, standing up straighter and holding her arms firmly at her sides.
“I owe you all an apology,” she started, voice even. “I was overly harsh on the five of you today. The Lions may have chosen you all to be their Paladins, but you’ve also had a lot thrust upon you in a very short amount of time, and have found yourselves very, very far from home.”
“I think all of us understand that, Princess,” Shiro said, glancing sideways at the others. Stan and Koji turned their attention to the floor, and Molly mumbled something under her breath. Jordan remained stubbornly silent, glaring to the side.
“But you must understand the severity of our situation,” Allura went on, and the starmap flickered into view as the windows blacked out. Judging by the amounts of swirled and elliptical shapes Shiro could see, it was the entire thing.
She hit another key, and a vast majority of the map changed in color from blue to an orange-red color.
The change of atmosphere in the room was instant. “Those the distress signals you were talking about this morning?” Stan asked uneasily.
“I’m afraid so,” Allura confirmed solemnly. Jordan cursed quietly, face slackening in dismay, and Koji paled. Shiro felt a prick of subdued anger from Black in the back of his mind. “Our goal is to free all of those planets and systems from Zarkon’s control—which means we have a lot of work ahead of us.”
Coran cleared his throat to get their attention, and offered a small, silver medicinal capsule to each of them. “You all looked ready to fall asleep on your feet earlier, so I’m going to assume last night wasn’t very restful,” he said upon seeing their bemused looks. “Just don’t take them until you’re fully prepared to go to sleep, because you’ll be out faster than an angry eakhyst can sprint!”
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
It was almost too much of a relief to finally flop down onto the bed, because today had been exhausting in more ways than one. Physically, it was because she’d woken up so many times the night before she had lost count, and then had to fight through the gauntlet that was today.
Mentally, it was a different story altogether. It hadn’t seemed like anyone had picked up on anything important earlier, which was a huge relief.
Them having to figure out how to “coordinate their thoughts” had an alarming implication to begin with—but it wasn’t just an implication. The whole “mind-meld” thing was a constant affliction, and that was right up there with Eva not knowing what happened to her dad or to Rick, if not higher than that.
Never mind the fact that there were maybe at least a thousand lightyears between them now. She bit her lip, pushing the thought from her mind. So us being a family again has to wait a while longer. That—I can deal with that. I dealt with ten years already.
Then there was what Allura had showed them. Something about seeing most of the map light up orange like that had been frightening, somehow, but Eva wasn’t exactly sure why.
At the same time, the fact that all that orange represented which parts of space were inhabited by extremely-hostile aliens that might even have the Crogs outgunned might’ve been part of it.
She wasn’t sure how long she ended up staring at the ceiling, but she was brought back to the present by a mental poke from Red—and the next thing she knew, she was reliving something. Specifically, when she had first made use of her “Molly” alias.
Which she had not told Red about.
“H-Hey, I never said you could pick through my head!” Eva protested aloud, glaring at the ceiling now, even though it was really aimed at the Lion. Red replied with a wearily-exasperated feeling.
It made an unfortunate amount of sense that it would be next to impossible to keep something secret from a sentient robotic lion that was sharing headspace with her, and Eva stifled a groan when that hit her.
Red then threw a few rapid-fire images at her: Jordan, Stan, Koji, Shiro, Allura, Coran, and the view of the castle they’d had when returning to Arus after getting the Yellow Lion. It was followed by another disconcertingly-realistic flashback.
“The name’s Ev—it’s Molly, got it Gunner Boy?”
Eva sat up. “What’re you trying to say?” She actually did have an idea on what the Lion was getting at, but she didn’t like it one bit.
Red psychically rolled his nonexistent eyes, before the first two-and-a-half words were repeated, followed by Coran’s words of  “There can’t be any secrets between you.”
Eva’s following act of defiance was to down the capsule Coran had provided them each with, because Red couldn’t bother her about this if she was asleep. The spike of annoyance from the Lion when he realized what she did was all too noticeable.
The first thing she noted about it was that it had a flavoring akin to a bizarre cross between peaches and overcooked spinach.
The second thing was that an angry eakhyst was extremely fast.
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