Another Way [Pokémon Mystery Dungeon / OC Isekai]

Wow, that was very cathartic. I was a bit wary of reading this chapter due to sue's spiralling in the previous chapter but that may be exactly what she needed to hear. And it was well-put enough (ironically, despite the translation) I'm probably going to think about this particular way of expressing that idea often.
 
Chapter 31: Descent


Chapter 31: Descent



CONTENT WARNING: Discussion of parental emotional neglect​

The walk back to Sundance's dwelling was largely spent in silence, to Sue's relief. She greatly appreciated Daisy's help, the new perspective to chew through her mental murk with, but couldn't deny that having to put so much effort into just making sense of her words was draining. And that's without even mentioning all the digging through her emotions the topic of conversation demanded.

Instead, both of them got to enjoy silence and clean air. The blue rhino didn't linger for long after the yellowish sandstone of Sundance's roof came into view. Instead, she patted Sue's shoulder from behind to catch her attention and spoke, pointing at the tall building, "Sue girl! Here where want go?"

Sue's firm nod was confirmation enough. "Y-yes, that's here. Thank you for talking with me, Daisy."

"Not worry! Glad help. Need walk anyway. Safe be!" Daisy laughed. After patting Sue's back a couple more times—which Sue finally endured without losing her balance—she turned around and headed out, towards where the other builders were working.

As Sue made her way through the last stretch towards and up the stairs to Sundance's home, worries refused to leave her. Everything going on in her head had been merely subdued, far from excised, and she was acutely aware. She knew she'd have to keep talking—or at least, that she should talk to the vixen once she got back—but the thought of that still intimidated her.

And the worst thing was that she didn't know why.

Sundance hadn't been anything but helpful in all their conversations so far, be they about Moonview's history or what might be going on in her head. Sue knew she could trust her, that the vixen was likely the most capable person here for helping her process those feelings, but... that didn't make said feelings any less scary. The opposite, even. They've been perfectly content remaining quiet and digging away at her confidence in silence, and hurt now that any attention had been placed upon them. And that was just from her own surface thoughts! Sundance might not have been the most keen on using flames as a solution to all problems, but boy could she shine a light at all the bile in her head.

Sue wasn't even sure if she could be helped. She felt just about confident enough to try, but doubted said confidence would last long. Either way, that had to wait for a bit longer—she was there. She had to shield her eyes from the late afternoon sun as she made it up the last few steps, about to push on the door before her—

But then; she heard a familiar, if distressing, sound from the inside.

She brought her head to the ajar door, peeking in at what was going on as she listened to Joy's distress. To the best of her ability to make out, everyone else was feeling perfectly alright in both looks and feelings alike. Sundance was still lying on a couple pillows, drawing sketches both on the stone floor and whichever scraps of wood were lying around. Twinkle was happily accompanying her in that, and so was Comet; the latter's excitable scribbles interrupted at Joy's unrest. Spark was comfortably snuggled into her mom, woofing quietly at the metal girl. Joy was a few paces away from all of them, facing them with an uneasy expression as her maw shuddered.

As much as it hurt to see Joy scared, Sue was hesitant to step in—the last thing she wanted to do was startle her further. And yet, it looked like there wasn't another way of handling that, not with the girl only growing more and more upset by the moment. She was tired; she was confused, and more than anything she was scared—and Sundance's words weren't helping, despite the vixen's clear effort. Neither was Spark's help once the kit had tried to slowly approach the girl with concern in her woofs, only prompting louder cries from the toothy tyke.

Once Joy's shudders had turned into scared squeaks and her maw lifted from its idle position behind her, though, the Forest Guardian knew she had to do something, even if the sight and sound of those metal teeth rattling together still intimidated her. Waiting no further, Sue knocked on the door and stepped in, not even having the time to speak up before Joy was already racing towards her, whimpering as she clung to her good leg.

Something bad had clearly happened here, but figuring out what exactly could wait.

C'mere, sweetie.

Pushing through the aching in her leg and horn alike, Sue kneeled and picked up the crying, frightened child into her arms. She held her tight as she walked to the chair she sat in last time, taking her time in case walking closer to others would spook Joy further. Fortunately, it didn't. The girl was much too focused on clinging to her guardian to notice much of her surroundings anymore.

Just a few feet away, all the scary noise and the return of their guardian had pulled Twinkle away from their own drawing. They shuddered in place, confused and withdrawing their tentacles into the confines of their bag. Sue continued to whisper reassurances to Joy as she watched for the little ghost under her care, passing Sundance a concerned look. Seeing the vixen be as uncertain as she was didn't help any, but at least the scene was finally down.

As spooked as Twinkle was, they thankfully only needed a small nudge to scramble to their guardian. With a gentle tap and a quiet whisper from the older vixen in the room, they outstretched their tentacles again and scooted towards Sue, picking up the pace with each little dash. Behind them, Spark followed too, mindful enough to limit herself to laying beside Sue's leg instead of joining the other kids on her lap.

Despite all the tension moments prior, things seemed to be in the clear. Even more so once the bundle of ghost had joined the toothy girl on Sue's lap, pressing into her torso. She knew of no mental magic that could help them calm faster, but steady breaths while being held by someone trustworthy were a foolproof cure for that already. And, especially in Joy's case, there was another thing she could do, unnerving as it still was.

Scared or not, there was a girl to comfort, and the worst of her fear was already behind her. Nothing bad should happen if she'd just—

Sue was anticipating the tip of Joy's maw to grab her hand again, but she certainly didn't expect that to happen before she'd even touched it. It was briefly startling, but the shift in the girl's emotions was immediate, her whimpers ceasing basically instantly.

One toothy tyke clinging to one side—check. One bundle of ghost wrapped tight around her other side—check.

One messy situation she'd walked in on but which was now easing up, check.

With Sue's right hand temporarily immobilized, the left one had to pick up the slack. It moved between all the gathered heads, bags and maws, cooling off a bit of the turbulent emotions with each touch. All that was missing were words, something that Sundance would help immensely with.

"Sundance?" Sue whispered, perking both kids' heads. "Could you—"

The vixen nodded. "Done, worry not. It's good to see you back, Sue. I apologize for such a situation awaiting you."

Joy clung tighter as she heard Sundance's words, the small pang of negative emotion not missed on either psychic. "What happened, though?" the Forest Guardian asked, more stunned than accusatory.

"Joy woke up a few minutes ago and was scared to see you not be here," the vixen explained. "I tried to calm her down afterwards, but I... mishandled it, to say the least. I'm sorry, Joy. I didn't mean to scare you."

The metal girl listened intently to the woofed words, their contents much more understandable now that fright wasn't gripping her mind anymore. As scary as this situation was, if unintentionally, her big friend and guardian was here now, and that's all that mattered.

And said guardian wanted to help, too. "I'm here Joy, I'm here. You got scared bad, didn't you?" Silence filled the room for a few moments as the girl processed the questions, calming down as she responded with a handful of quiet nods. Sue continued, "That bad man from before we got here scared you bad and it hurt, and I'm very sorry."

Judging by Joy's whimper at the mere mention of these events, she might've just nailed it. The sound, compared with the flash of terror, left Comet startled as well. He put down his little drawing before scrambling towards the nearest adult, the worst of the fear not lasting long before Sundance's warmth melted through it. Sue smiled weakly at his antics, and at the confirmation of her hunch.

Still, as much as acknowledging what had happened helped, it wasn't an immediate cure by itself. Sue continued her silent reassurance—that Joy was seen, that her emotions were normal and justified. And, a few moments later, that she was safe. "I'm here for you, Joy. You're safe here, I promise."

"I-I-I... safe," Joy whimpered, more so to herself than to anyone else. Sue had to keep a grip on herself to not startle her with a tight hug, whole body yearning to comfort the girl as much and as fast as it could. Alas, had to take it easy. The progress they've already had was plenty reassuring.

"Yes, you're safe, Joy. And so are you, Twinkle. I'm sorry about what happened earlier. A bad man scared and hurt us, but he's not here anymore. We're safe," Sue continued, spreading some of her affection to the little ghost. She cursed herself quietly for overlooking them until now and only focusing her efforts on Joy, but on a rational level, she knew such slip-ups were expected. Especially since Twinkle's method of expressing fear was quiet withdrawal as opposed to panicked whimpers.

Something, something, forgive myself. Let's stop distracting myself any further with my nonsense.

Addressing the elephant in the room helped, but the reassurance took its time to fully worm itself in. The brief splashes of fear in both kids' psyche at being reminded of the event took Sue aback. For a few long, terrifying moments, she wondered whether she had made a grave mistake by bringing it up, whether she shouldn't have just waited until they forgot it on their own. Thankfully, the distress didn't last long once her words caught up with the kids' memories—even if Joy's little mind wasn't quite done with getting over its recent scare after waking up.

But Sue was here. They were safe with her. She loved them; she was their guardian; she was there for them. She was their—

"I'm sorry for not being here when you woke up, Joy," Sue continued, sensing that lingering thread in her mind. "I was..." she drifted off, torn between wanting to keep them in the loop and not spilling any of her muck onto them. "I was feeling bad too, and I wanted to be alone for a while."

Sue monitored both kids' emotions as she provided her simplified explanation, keeping watch of anything bad creeping into their minds again. So far, so good. "I was feeling bad, but it wasn't because of you, I promise. I love you both, and I want to be here for you as much as I can." Continued success; no fear or self-consciousness yet. That's not to say that her words didn't elicit any emotion in the young listeners, though, taking their guardian aback as the leftovers of their fear turned into a desire to comfort.

Their—their guardian was feeling bad. And they didn't want her to feel bad.

One breath, two breaths, any expression of emotion more intense than a wobbly smile averted—Sue could continue. She was about to do so even—before a quiet, harsh voice caught her attention first. "H-hope good you..." Joy spoke, her words the clearest ones Sue had heard yet.

It sure didn't help with making her smile even wobblier, ha.

"I'm feeling good now, thank you Joy," Sue beamed. With the topic having swung around to something more positive, Sue was keen to get the most out of it, continuing, "There are other people out there that helped me calm down and feel better. Just like there are others that want to help you, too, because I won't always be here," she added.

Both kids reacted by clinging to her that bit closer, each processing their own brief pangs of fear at the reminder that Sue was her own person and, as such, lived her own life. It was unfair! Sue made them feel safe, and they didn't want to feel unsafe. They wanted her to always be there for them. The selfish thought lingered in both their minds, but was weakened soon after by the reassurance that came afterwards.

"I-I know it's scary when I'm not here. But~, there are many people you can trust and that will keep you safe even if I'm not here." Direct as that reassurance was, it could only do so much—even once it was accompanied with an example. "Sundance will look after you when I'm not here. I know she might look a bit scary and unfamiliar, but she's a friend. You can trust her."

"Yeah! Y-you can trust mom! *Ow,*" Spark added happily. The older vixen herself remained quiet at the shout out, holding her chuckles in as she just opted to wave at the pair of kids on Sue's lap. Comet, being Comet, joined in on the waving, underlining the fun gesture with a drawn-out squeak that sent the rest of the room giggling.

Sue kept her hand on the pulse of the two little ones, literal and emotional alike. She'd been keeping them calm enough so far, especially with Spark and Comet's help, but was worrying about how much she'd actually end up accomplishing. Especially since, as her brain murk was eager to point out, their fears were right to an extent. Not about them being unsafe without her specifically, but rather being unsafe whether she was there or not.

Postured as she may about keeping them safe and being there for them, once push came to shove earlier today, once it was just her, them, and someone that wanted to hurt them—what did she even do? Nothing; she just stood there paralyzed, just like Joy. She was supposed to be their guardian, someone they could trust for more than just idle words about being loved and safe, trust that she'd be able to back up her words with actions. But she couldn't.

She was just too weak. She could and should be doing more to protect them, but for that, she had to get stronger. Strong enough to keep them safe from Nightbane; from Solanum; from everyone who'd ever hurt them; from them, the bad people that only wanted to hurt the ones she loved—

No, stop.

Before Sue knew it, it was her heart that was racing the hardest of everyone around. She held the two little ones that bit closer as she calmed down, immensely relieved that neither of them noticed her turn for the worse. Joy was conflicted between wanting to follow Sue's words and trust the big vixen, and still feeling just a bit too spooked to do so. Twinkle, however, seemed to have entirely calmed down. Though with their mind feeling more like a glowing cloud than a single point of light, it was quite hard to tell.

There were a couple more things she could say and do to help them further in feeling better, too. Sliding her free hand under Joy's seat, Sue gently lifted her into her arms, all the while tilting the elbow of her other hand for Twinkle to grab onto to pull themselves closer to her heartbeat. It took a while for the ghost to notice, but once both kids had shifted to a closer position, the effect was almost immediate, if slight.

She wasn't done yet, though.

"I'm proud of you for staying here while I was away," she beamed, feeling Twinkle's spectral embrace loosen a bit. "And even if you got a bit scared, that's all good, too. I'm so, so proud of both of you."

For the first time since she got back, Sue saw a smile creep its way onto Joy's face. Before she even knew it, it had reflected onto her face too, bright and proud as the girl relaxed—and Twinkle concentrated. Moving the hand of the arm that held Joy closer to the lil' ghost, Sue carefully stroked the fabric of their bag, giving them all the time they needed to put their thoughts together. Sundance focused alongside them, soon putting words to Twinkle's ethereal feelings—

"C-c-can stay here?" Joy cut in, oblivious to what was happening less than a foot away from her. Her high-pitched squeaks and growls cut the vixen off and sent Sue giggling—both at the badly timed words and what they implied. She didn't mind Joy sitting on her lap one bit, but having the girl be asking for that while still holding onto her hand with the tip of her very toothy maw was... amusing. Suppose that was just such a natural thing for her, she didn't even realize anyone else could mind.

Adorable.

The best kind of amusing, lighting Sue's face up as she nodded firmly and answered, "Of course! Stay here as long as you want, Joy. We're not rushing anywhere." Obvious as the answer was, Joy appreciated it being stated out loud all the same. She wasn't feeling tired, but wanted to wait some more before trying to engage with the world around her, and neither of the adults around minded.

Neither did the other kids, for that matter. "Yeah! I hope you're feeling better—*ow*—Joy!" Spark woofed out, putting on her brightest smile before withdrawing into her mom's comforting presence. Guess if Joy wouldn't be joining them soon, there was no point to her friend waiting there just in case—especially while still feeling so crummy.

Alas, said crumminess persevered, even with Comet dropping everything he was doing to squeeze all he could reach of the younger vixen, hoping to make her feel better. Mission accomplished, if not the intended way.

While Joy got her bearings in silence, it was time to focus on her fellow little one. Sue resumed her affection of Twinkle's bag as she whispered, "Did you want to say something, Twinkle?"

Being put on the spot made them flinch a bit, especially after Joy had interrupted them moments prior, but a beaming smile and a warm presence did wonders for melting through their hesitation. And so, with the vixen's help, finally came the words: "When I feel bad, I alone too..."

Sue put on a reassuring smile at the translation, lowering Joy down to free the hand that wasn't being held by the girl's maw, before comforting the little ghost with it. Before she could even respond about how that was all okay and that some people want to be alone when scared while others want to be with others, though, Twinkle continued. "N-n-not like..."

Their guardian blinked, taken aback. She thought back to the Nightbane incident again, trying to ignore her fellow Forest Guardian while recalling how Twinkle behaved through it all. It was hard to remember, and she soon realized why—they just didn't do anything. They withdrew all the way into her bag, pressed against her, and just stayed there, silent, without as much as feeling afraid in any way that Sue's senses could pick up.

All of which didn't quite sound like just being afraid. "When you're 'alone' like that," Sue began, lifting the tiny ghost closer to her face, "does everything else grow... more quiet?" It was the best phrasing for dissociation Sue could come up with on the spot, and she dearly hoped they'd understand her intent.

For once, her hopes were fruitful. "Very quiet. Very far away, like before Sue..."

Deep breaths kept the pang of tearful pain at Twinkle's admission from crawling all the way up to Sue's face, letting her maintain composure as she held the small bag close to her chest. The implications of the discussion—and how unpleasant the sensation involved was—were lost on Joy. That didn't mean she'd ever skip on helping someone else out if she felt capable of it, and the little ghost was just about the only being around smaller than herself. She scrambled to her feet on Sue's lap, digging into the Forest Guardian's thighs as she reached up to dispense some of her own affection; what remained of earlier fears was replaced by hopes that they'd feel better.

"I'm so sorry you felt like that, Twinkle. That is a very unpleasant sensation," Sue began, idly stroking the fabric separating her thumb from the ghost's true body. "Me and Sundance are here to help if you feel afraid or bad. It's hard to not hide, but it will feel better when we're here to comfort you."

All this would've been absolutely impossible to explain to any kid even close to their age back on Earth, hah.

Sue wasn't deluding herself that her somewhat vague explanations would induce sudden and permanent change for the better, certainly not in kids this young. At best, it'd nudge them in the right direction, with much of the needed growth ahead being entirely in their court as they got more in control of, and conscious of, their emotions. They'd probably not stop being entirely afraid whenever she was gone anytime soon, but Sue hoped she'd at least be able to nudge them towards seeking comfort in others as opposed to growing terrified or freezing up.

On that note. "Have you been feeling safe here, with Sundance?" Sue asked, briefly moving one hand to pet Joy's maw.

Thankfully, the girl didn't grow self-conscious at the question, merely listening closer as Twinkle answered, "Yes... Warm, nice..." It was just what Sue was wishing for, hoping that seeing the ghost's confidence would inspire some of it in the girl as well. To her surprise, though, Twinkle wasn't done yet, following up with a question of their own: "When you alone, it help...?"

Ack, that was a tricky one. One was taking a walk to clear her thoughts, the other was hollow, fear-gripped dissociation, and she worried about having mixed them up in Twinkle's mind. Then again... it wasn't like the connection was entirely without merit. Her earlier departure was basically a flight response to Twinkle's typical freeze, and it was only by talking through it with Daisy and others that she actually calmed down.

...

Yeah, that's the point.

"Hmm... being alone can help, but talking with others can help even more. When I went on a walk, I didn't feel good until I talked to Daisy and saw what she and others were doing." There, a simple answer that hopefully redirected the ghost where she wanted them to go.

Joy was listening keenly, too, but for other reasons. 'Daisy' was a name she recognized! She was always nice to her whenever she passed by their daycare. Even gave her a snack when she was clinging to Mrs. Splitleaf after getting scared one time. She liked Daisy, and now that someone else she liked a lot had brought her up, she wanted to hear more. "D-D-Daisy! What she do?"

Sue couldn't remember seeing Joy this excited, her smile threatening to split her head. "Oh, you know Daisy!"

"Y-yes! She nice," Joy answered, tripping over words less and less.

"She cuts stone for the buildings in Moonview, sweetie. I watched her do it and then talked with her about how important it is to forgive yourself when you make a mistake."

"Did it help?" Sundance asked, her woofs pulling Sue's attention from the two tykes on her lap. Sundance was equal parts curious and hopeful, and the words that followed soothed both those emotions.

"Yes, it did. So, so much."

A part of Sue wanted to keep going, to ride that wave of feeling better in order to address the things that still troubled her—but not with the kids in earshot. She figured that them knowing that she felt bad earlier was fair, but any specifics were best avoided.

You'd need to cut them off from the translation—actually, hold on.

Sundance blinked at the sudden swerve in her pupil's thoughts, looking up at her from her laying position as she waited for a follow-up. Before doing anything else, Sue wanted to put a bow on the conversation she was already having. Joy, however, knew what she wanted to see the next chance she got, enthralled by what she understood of Sue's recollection. "Want see Daisy!"

"Awww," Sue swooned. "It's late and I'm tired right now, so we can't go there today. I'm sorry."

"T-tomorrow?" Joy asked without skipping a beat, sparking laughter from both her guardian and the vixen.

"We will see, Joy," Sundance answered.

"Yes, we will! And the last thing—Joy, Copper said he hopes you're doing better."

The name didn't ring a bell in the girl's head right away. Sue wasn't particularly eager to go into charades to describe him, but figured it'd be necessary. "He's pink with wings and—"

*shudder*

Yep, now she knows who I'm talking about.


In spite of Sue's worries, though, Joy didn't react to the news any more intensely than with a bit of shaking. Maybe she took the well-wishes to heart, maybe she just wasn't as afraid of him now in general after their partially forced reconciliation yesterday. Either way, Sue was still proud of her.

"For now... Joy, Twinkle. Me and Sundance will be talking about some adult things, and you won't be able to understand us for a while. And don't worry—you can stay on my lap if you want to." To Sue's relief, her heads-up achieved the desired effect while avoiding stirring any worry. Both the little ones nodded to the best extent their respective anatomies allowed them to, though they weren't eager to move anywhere else.

More than fine by Sue.

Without skipping a beat, Joy and Twinkle felt a squirmy sensation in their heads as the translation was pulled away from them, leaving just the two adults, each with two kids under their watch. Sundance had it arguably easier, between half-asleep Spark not being eager to move much from her comfort and Comet having scooted back to scribbling on a plank of wood with charcoal.

It was time to dig into the murk that went deeper than anything she'd talked about with Daisy. "Now it's just us two, right?" Sue asked.

"^Indeed. I am really glad to see you doing better, Sue,^" Sundance answered, switching to telepathy.

"S-so am I, yeah. The chat with Daisy really helped a lot. She stressed all about how I should forgive myself if I make a mistake, how that's the path to actually getting better and making up for anything bad like that, and more importantly how being harsh on myself only makes it all shameful and awful."

The vixen smiled, absentmindedly ruffling Spark's tummy. "^All very helpful observations, I imagine.^"

"They are, and they helped me feel better after... *sigh*, did I tell you about what happened with Northeast?" Sue asked, deflated at the realization she'd have to run it by the vixen.

"^Hmmm...^" Sundance trailed off, claws tapping against the stone floor. "She never struck me as the sort to engage in personal spats, so I am curious."

"Oh, it's just—I got really angry at her yesterday when she was asking me questions about what happened to you, and at some point I just... snapped and screamed at her and upset her. That was when you were comatose, and just earlier today I spotted her while out with Solstice and had a chance to apologize, but I didn't. Got too self-conscious, felt awful, and kinda just ended up running away and feeling even worse afterwards. I still have to apologize to her, and what I talked about with Daisy will help with that, though."

The vixen listened intently to her pupil's explanations, finding the mental image of the meek Sue yelling at anyone to be... quite comedic, in all honesty. Still, it certainly wasn't funny for either Sue or Northeast when it happened, and so Sundance kept that observation to herself. Instead, she touched on a different point. "^I see. Best of luck with apologizing to her. From your phrasing, however, it seems as if that wasn't the event that left you upset.^"

Sue sighed weakly. "No, no it wasn't, it was... it was thinking about Aurora, and about what Solstice said."

To the once-human's relief, her mentor was still on the same page. "^That does seem the right topic to talk about, indeed. Both you and Solstice grew rather upset before you headed out for Dewdrop. Could you go over what exactly sparked this foul mood? If you feel you can and want to, of course.^"

"No no, don't worry, I—I want to. It's just..." Sue trailed off, looking for something to latch her focus onto. The sunroof above, together with the deities dancing around it, made for a right target. More so because of the latter than the former, though. As pretty as the gradually yellowing light of the outside was, the divinely inspired dolls inspired nothing but spite and contempt in the Forest Guardian, Duck included, sobering her up for just long enough to start talking. "Earlier, when we were all talking about Twinkle's costume, Solstice brought up her kin and their markings after I made a crass joke."

"^I would argue it wasn't crass, but—please continue, Sue,^" Sundance reassured.

"R-right. Then, at the end, she just said—*sigh*, she mentioned how Solanum and Nightbane weren't really deserving of those markings, right? And after that, she added I deserve them more than they do. And—and I know that this was just a small offhand comment, it wasn't her focusing and officially decreeing me worthy of that or whatever, but..." Sue trailed off, the free hand nervously flexing as she desperately searched for the right words to continue with.

Words that her mentor was keen to provide. "^It stuck with you?^"

"Yes, that—that's a valid way of describing that. It stuck with me real bad, and then I—oh? Twinkle?"

The movement on her lap cut Sue's increasingly wobbly recollection off as she watched the bagful of ghost scoot towards Joy. The spectral embrace that followed was abrupt and weak enough to just leave the metal girl confused as she and her guardian watched Twinkle let go of them both and climb down onto the floor. After one last moment of hesitation, they scooted back to where Comet was playing with their drawings, the Martian tyke squeaking in elation at their tiny friend having returned.

Without saying a word, Sundance psychiced over some more wooden scrap for them to draw on, together with another stick of charcoal. She then nudged Comet further away after sensing them wanting to use the little ghost's outfit as more canvas for their doodles, before refocusing on Sue once more. "^Alright. Would you be able to say why it stuck with you as much as it had?^"

The answer was simultaneously already obvious and obscured to her consciousness, veiled by layers upon layers of denying herself what her innermost desires were already clear about. She wrapped her free arm around Joy, holding the girl tighter and sending her into weak giggles as her tiny arms wrapped themselves around Sue's. Some of her wanted to pretend she didn't know, to avoid being direct with what her heart was yearning for, to not have to face something that was so stark inside her, but which hurt like a motherfucker to think about.

Then again, not like it hasn't hurt me plenty today already. Least I can do is get back at it. Take that... me, you piece of shit.

...

...

Something tells me I shouldn't have thought that either.

With that bit of motivation in mind, fueled further by recalling yesterday's lesson with the vixen about being honest about her desires, Sue focused. She thought harder than she ever did, pushing through the pain and actually trying to examine the unsightly wound in her mind, as well as what had fueled it.

And, even more importantly, just what desire that wound was trying to mask.

"So, I... I don't know much about those tattoos, but Solstice said a thing or two about them yesterday," Sue began. "Obviously, they mean a lot to her people, and I know she still really cares about it even if most of her people suck—or at least her relatives, sorry—"

"^You need not apologize, Sue,^" Sundance reassured, trying her hardest to conceal a chuckle at Sue's phrasing.

"Right. So even with all that, the tattoos mean a lot to her, and more importantly, they're a kind of family thing, right? She told me it's the family that's supposed to... unsure what's the word, paint them on you. So then when she mentioned I deserved them more than her actual family, it really got me thinking. A-and—" Sue froze, the pain of having to put those vulnerable desires to words almost stealing her breath whole. It was so, so hard.

And yet, she persevered. "And I want it, the tattoos, that—that connection with her, but I don't know whether Solstice meant it that way. She could've just been joking and now here I am, completely misinterpreting and making a joke out of myself. A-and after all, even if she did, that's still terrifying because what would Aurora think about that!"

Sue observed Sundance's reactions, waiting for a response. To her worry, it kept not coming, the vixen only offering her a gradually creeping eyebrow in response. Guess she had to elaborate on it some more, as much as even thinking about that hurt. "I-I mean, that's really the thing that left me feeling awful. Just the thought of what Aurora would think about me just stepping in here and wanting something—something that Fate took away from her. Just thinking about this is making me feel awful, and it was why I was so off before I left with Solstice, and then that whole mess-up with Northeast happened and it left me feeling ten times worse."

To the Forest Guardian's relief, the vixen was finally satisfied, putting together words as her pupil leaned back into her seat. Sue shook harder than she ever did, perking up Joy and making her check up on her guardian. Her smile was shaky, and the moment of stillness she disguised her anxiety with was fleeting, but it was just enough to keep the metal girl from growing worried.

The last thing she needs is to be concerned about someone like me.

Sundance was taking her time coming up with a response, leaving Sue uneasy. Was that loathing voice actually true, and her mentor was trying her hardest to look for something feeble to contradict it with? That'd be funny.

...

No, it would not be funny, it would be fucking dreadful; the mere thought enough to send Sue's heart rate spiking—

*squeeeeak!*

The high-pitched noise came through just in time to drag Sue away from the precipice of a deep, deep hole, pulling her attention towards a much more adorable sight. She remembered just how rattled Twinkle got when Comet pulled them into a sudden hug yesterday. They still weren't perfectly calm this time, but they pushed on and scooted towards Sundance for comfort instead of withdrawing again—and the lil' Moon Child gladly followed, always eager for some warmth from what was basically his aunt.

And that extra bit of comfort finally made Sundance's response come together, delivered once she was done ruffling Comet's hair. "^How much do you know about Aurora, Sue?^"

Sue expected several questions, but not this one. It felt like she was about to be asked about assorted trivia, about things that Aurora would've known as a real Forest Guardian, but which she, a pretender, could never hope to experience. It would be wildly out of character for Sundance to do, too. The thought provided enough of a life raft for the once-human to not panic there and then as she answered, "V-very little. All I really know is that she was Solstice's daughter; she tragically died when the plague hit Moonview, and... th-that's it, really."

It was an entirely honest answer—and one that Sundance immediately pounced on. "^Why would you think she would be displeased if Solstice were to adopt you and give you the Pale Lady's blessings, then?^" Seeing her pupil's eyes immediately going wide, she added, "^I really want you to focus on that question Sue, as much as it'll be likely to hurt.^"

Hurt... wasn't on Sue's mind once she followed her mentor's instructions. More than anything, she was taken aback by the vixen's frank phrasing, making her feel like she'd been flashbanged. Trying to put that moment to good use, Sue gave the task an honest attempt, putting herself in the dead Forest Guardian's shoes and really trying to imagine how it'd be like if, say, the roles were reversed. If it was her observing the scene from beyond, watching her human mom adopt a daughter a few years after she'd passed away.

She wanted to be angry, wanted to answer Sundance's question that way, but she just... couldn't. No matter how hard she tried to get mad at her hypothetical mom and the hypothetical daughter said mom was to adopt, she just couldn't do it. Her mom would be heartbroken after that had happened to her, but she wouldn't have used another kid as a replacement; she wasn't that shallow and selfish. A-and even if she somehow had, it'd only be her that Sue would be mad about, and not the poor orphan given a second chance at life.

But this isn't about my mom and me, though, it's not comparable in that way. It's not some random orphan replacing me, it's me replacing Aurora. It's so much worse.

Whatever progress Sue might've made, the stray thought undid them all in an instant. It almost made her double over as she whispered, "Wh-why wouldn't she be angry with me?"

Sundance... laughed.

It took Sue aback just at how unexpected her response was. Fortunately, words followed the canine sound up before her shock could turn into more hurt. "^Well, I could tell you about how Aurora didn't have an envious bone in her body. I could tell you about how she just kept asking Solstice and Jasper for a younger sister ever since she evolved. But... hah, we both know that isn't what all this is truly about, is it?^"

"Wh-why wouldn't it be?" Sue answered, dumbfounded.

"^Because you don't know Aurora, Sue. I don't mean that as an accusation, but in how you're entirely working off assumptions about how she'd behave towards you. And, yes—that is how all social interaction works, to an extent. Each of us has assumptions about how the other will respond whenever we interact with them, built from our biases, our experience, our hopes, and so on and so on. With Aurora, however... you're basing your assumptions off nothing concrete, merely off her being Solstice's daughter.^"

Sue half-sighed, half-groaned, not appreciating what sounded like a massive tangent towards some random semantics. She almost wanted to refuse this thread of discussion out of spite, to rudely ask what the point was—but in the end, a part of her wanted to see where the vixen was going with this. "Sure, I suppose."

"^Good!^" the vixen beamed. "^Now, the big question is as such: where do these assumptions come from? You aren't basing them off on any knowledge about Aurora, but they come from somewhere. And that somewhere is likely deep in your mind. You'll have to dig to find out where they're coming from—and that process will hurt. And it is even more important because it will hurt.^"

Again, a silly tangent. The answer was... not immediately apparent, but obvious once it had emerged from the recesses of her mind. "I mean... I just wouldn't be a good daughter. That's—that's all there is to it."

Sue didn't even notice how much harder she had to fight to keep her expression steady after that thought.

At the opposite end of the room, the vixen lifted an eyebrow once more. "^Why so? Why wouldn't you be a good daughter? Why wouldn't you, the whole of you, be enough?^" Sundance asked, each question stabbing again and again at a mental wound Sue didn't even know was there. "^Aurora wasn't some magically perfect person, and Solstice definitely isn't either. They both had flaws and shortcomings, as do all of us—why would you be any different? Why would you be 'not good enough' for them?^"

Sue tried to maintain whatever cool she had left as the questions hit her like a series of blows, each hurting more and more. Her expression had turned into a strained grimace, her gaze jumped to anywhere but the vixen; she was only barely keeping the hand Joy was holding with her maw from clenching tight. Deep down, there was only one true answer to that question, one that Sue ended up whispering before she could think of something to cover it up with.

"Because I've never been."​

*sq-squeak-growl?*

The sound of Joy's untranslated speech made Sue freeze, unable to simultaneously process Sundance's words and respond to the girl. The vixen had her back, calmly responding to the toothy girl, "^Sue is busy right now. Yes, you can come over here, don't worry.^" Joy nodded intently, hopping off Sue's lap and onto the stone floor before breaking into a quick dash—

And forgetting to let go of Sue's hand with her maw before she did so.

As startling as the sudden yank was, the Forest Guardian was more thankful than anything. She hastily put on a smile for Joy before leaning back into her seat, dropping anything that remained of her pretense of being okay the moment the girl joined the other kids with their drawings. She wanted to laugh at the mishap, to let it take the pressure off for just a moment—but the relief kept not coming.

She was in too deep, so close to the wound at the bottom of her mind that any wrong move threatened to make her implode. At least, that's what it felt like as she sat in the wooden chair, hands shaking and tears rolling down her cheeks without her having any idea when she'd even started crying. There was only one way to go from here.

Down, down, down.

"^If it's okay for me to continue—how was your relationship with your parents, Sue?^" Sundance asked, noticeably more hesitant.

Contrary to the vixen's woes, that was a topic that Sue had more of a grasp on—at least the 'bad' parts of it. "D-did Solstice tell you about... about what happened when I ran into her at the cemetery?"

"^Only in the broadest of strokes. If you feel you can handle it, I'd appreciate hearing it from you.^"

Oh, this was perfect. Sue's been through this before, and while it hurt like a motherfucker, she felt at least somewhat in control of the traumatic memory. Without skipping a beat, she gave Sundance the rundown, avoiding lingering on any point for too long. "When I was six, which is a bit younger than Spark is right now—I-I think—my mom died in a tragic accident. A-and I saw it happen."

"^I'm very sorry for your loss, Sue.^" Sundance answered quietly, pulling the almost-asleep Spark into a gentle hug.

There, perfect delivery. Sue didn't linger, didn't think, didn't break down. Only went over the parts that matter, and none of the—

But then, to her horror, Sundance continued: "^What happened afterwards?^"

Sue felt her entire body stiffen. This wasn't supposed to have been the important part; the rest of her childhood was normal. Why was she being asked about this? "Uh, n-nothing really..." she tried to deflect.

And was instantly seen through. "^I would still want to hear about it. It affected you just as much as the accident itself.^"

But there wasn't anything wrong with it!

The Forest Guardian tried to catch her breath, to recenter herself and continue the tale without losing her cool—and felt unable to. And yet, she had to, letting the tears flow as she put effort into keeping her voice from wobbling too much. "D-dad never remarried and raised me on his own. We weren't well off or anything, but we w-weren't poor either and we made it work. A-a-and before you ask," Sue subconsciously raised her tone, "he—he wasn't ever abusive towards me! He did the best he could with what he had; he wasn't a bad dad!"

Not an assertion Sundance was about to dispute. It wasn't the point, anyway. "^How did he process your mom's loss?^" she asked.

Sue flinched, the memories much foggier than she would've wanted. "W-well, he was really sad about it, a-and cried most days for a while. I mean, I—I did too. I don't blame him; that's just how you go through stuff like that, you know."

"^Did he talk to you about the accident?^"

"Oh no, o-of course not; why would he? It'd just be more pain for both of us; we already knew what had happened all too well and just had to keep on living, you know. After a while he stopped crying mostly, a-and then I stopped seeing him be sad about it, so I tried to stop being sad too. He spent a lot of his time at work anyway, really had to work hard to make ends meet. It was 2008 and—" Sue cut herself off, trying and failing to figure out a way of conveying the year's significance to Sundance. "Those were bad times a-and he had to work really hard. He was a bit absent in hindsight, b-b-but I DON'T BLAME HIM OR ANYTHING!" Sue shouted, teeth halfway bared.

The tears were flowing freely at that point, and it was only thanks to Sundance's active intervention that the entire room wasn't growing alarmed. All the little ones but Spark were separated by a faint, shimmering barrier, not noticed by Sue in her turmoil. She hurt, the pain downright radiating from her—but they weren't done yet. They were close, though. The vixen could feel it. "^What happened then?^"

Sue breathed as deeply as she could, with her entire body hurting this much. This was a much more innocuous question, and after all, nothing was wrong. She just had to answer it. "I-I mean, it kinda stayed like that. He spent a lot of time at work. I mostly just stayed at home after school. Spent a lot of time on the inter—that won't make any sense and I don't think I can explain it right now. J-just, stuff I could do on my own. Dad—dad didn't have much time to take me places, so I stopped asking. I mean, he was already having to support us both and raise me by himself, so I don't—don't blame him. He really tried his best, a-and never hurt me or anything."

"^Did you two do much together?^"

The once-human weaved her fingers together as half her body shuddered in nervous tics, hurt from wounds long past rattling her body. She kept trying to focus. Nothing was wrong. Nothing was wrong. Nothing was ever wrong.

Can this FUCKING body stop crying already!?

"I mean... n-no, not really. He kept trying to take me places for a while, like we used to before, but... it just never felt right without mom. We kept trying and then we just eventually stopped. B-b-but again, that's normal! He was busy with work and worked his ass off and just didn't have the time! Besides, I was a little shit sometimes. I would've been a challenge for any parents, let alone a single father! He was doing his best; he loved me and I loved him! It's not his fault!"

Sundance nodded slowly in response. Sue hoped beyond hope she was convincing her that there was nothing else to find down this dark path of her memories, because NOTHING WAS WRONG. HER DAD DID NOTHING WRONG AND SHE WASN'T BLAMING HIM FOR ANYTHING. She didn't want to think about this, and judging by all the cold wetness flowing down her neck, neither did her body.

And yet, she had to.

"^I see. If you couldn't go places together, did you talk together often?^" the vixen continued.

Finally, something simple and reassuring. "O-of course! We talked every day after I got back from school a-and he from work, over dinner."

And yet, the questions wouldn't stop coming. "^What did you talk about on these occasions?^"

"Y-y'know, just normal stuff," Sue answered offhandedly. "H-how was my school, how was his work, dinner, the weather and such. Sometimes I'd ask him if he was planning to take us places, but he never did because we always had to save money. A-and again I DON'T blame him, we had to save money for college and just in case! And he didn't have much to save in the first place, so we just couldn't do much, but he was trying his best."

"^What about talking about things important to you?^"

Sue opened her mouth as if to speak, but no words came out. She tried a few more times, churning through the murk of her memory to find something, anything to bring up on that front, anything that wasn't the end of his life or that one ANNOYING memory that kept popping up. It was bad, whatever, not something she should've been dwelling on; there had to be something else, ANYTHING else!

Please let there be something else.

"We-we didn't do that much either. I..." she drifted off. Tried as she did, there was nothing—nothing she wanted to bring up, at least. That annoying memory wasn't the only one of its sort, but it was the starkest. Sue hoped that if she'd just go through it, just get it over with while replacing the term 'flash game' for something Sundance would understand better, then she'd be able to redirect the conversation where it should've gone to begin with.

"There was one time when I was... ten or eleven or so. I really got into a—a small game, you could say. It was just a small dumb thing, a toy basically, nothing—nothing actually important. It was dumb, b-but I liked playing it and got quite invested into it, more than I should've been. I was just a dumb kid like that. Got invested, e-even a bit excited, a-and I wanted to tell dad about it. He had a long day, he was already quite annoyed, and I just didn't notice and he was nice enough to not speak up or anything. I just began rambling about it, about all the characters I liked and so on and he listened and nodded. A-and after a while he asked if I could talk about books with him some other time since he was busy, a-a-and I realized he hadn't even been listening and—"

IT HURTS IT HURTS IT HURTS IT HURTS IT HURTS MAKE IT STOP

Sue tried to see, but her eyes were too blurry from all the tears. She wanted to breathe, to continue, but her sobs wouldn't let her. Her hands were clenched together, her expression was twisted in pain, and she couldn't stop crying. It hurt too much to stop—but it shouldn't have! She shouldn't be hurting; nothing had gone wrong! It was just a dumb memory of her being a dumb kid; there was nothing there to actually hurt her! Nothing like with Mom, at least!

And yet, it kept hurting, and Sue kept crying.

Despite Sundance's best efforts, Comet eventually noticed the excess despair, letting out a quiet whimper as he tried to look over his shoulder. The vixen intervened fast enough to distract him back and prevent the two other tykes from noticing, keeping tabs on Sue's mental state while at it. Immense pain, but... nothing unexpected, sadly. There was only one way this could've gone from the very start.

Spark might've not been attuned to Sue's emotions, and wasn't feeling as well—or as awake—as she would've liked, but she could still hear Sue's sobs. The sound stirred her back to awareness as she climbed out of her mom's comfort and onto her own four legs, gasping at the state her friend was in. Before her mom could ask her to wait, the kit was already dashing towards her tall friend, nudging her leg with her wet snout.

Sue jerked back at the sensation, pried her eyes wide open as the lil' fox jumped onto her lap and began dispensing affection—and doubled over once more, holding Spark as close as she could with her shaking arms. Seconds turned to minutes as the sound of weeping filled the room, the burning pain deep inside Sue leaving her one sob at a time. It couldn't last forever, but it sure felt like it would, like she'd be stuck here, unable to move on by herself—

She wasn't alone, though.

"^Sue, how are you feeling?^" Sundance asked, concern clear in her voice.

Having a question to respond to hastened Sue's efforts to get in control of herself again. Her success was partial at best, but it far beat the opposite, making her cling to it—and the warm kit in her arms—for all she could. Eventually, words flowed again, staggered and delivered in a constantly cracking voice. "I-I don't know why it hurts so much. H-he was just doing his best, i-it's not his fault. He, *sniff*, he had so much o-on his plate, I had no idea how bad it was u-until he died a couple years ago—"

"^But it still hurts, doesn't it?^"

"I-it SHOULDN'T!"

"^But it does! Your feelings aren't a matter of 'should' or 'should not'. If it hurts, then it means you were hurt—^"

"BUT HE WAS TRYING HIS BEST A-AND HE LOVED ME!"

"^And yet, you were hurt all the same. Over, and over.^"

Sue wanted to snap back, to shout back at her for daring to imply that her dad had hurt her. Yes all this hurt and yes she wished he'd done more things with her and took her places and talked to her more and took her to Mom's grave and read her books to bed and played games with her and did everything she'd heard of other kids doing with their parents but he still loved her and he'd been trying his best! She didn't want to, couldn't blame him for this, not when it was someone she loved so much.

Not when he was the only person she had left.

The vixen had been hesitant to use her telepathy for this beyond finding the right questions to ask, but it would be hard to avoid it this time. "^Sue, this isn't about blame. I don't doubt you at all when you say that your dad loved you and that he was trying his best. I genuinely believe that he had been, just like you. But his actions still hurt you, didn't they?^"

They shouldn't have...

...

...

But they did.

"I-it hurt, yes..." Sue whimpered. "B-but—"

"^But it hurt,^" Sundance cut her off, keeping her mental voice as gentle as she could manage. "^That's all there is to be said—you were hurt. It doesn't make your dad evil; it doesn't mean he didn't love you. All that means is that his actions, or lack thereof, had hurt you. Those we love can still deeply hurt us, even if they're genuinely trying their best.^"

The truth was staring Sue in the face, but she still couldn't face it. She had to keep running, to bring something up that would obscure this ten thousand foot tall mountain of pain and grief staring her in the eye, anything to delay it just that bit longer. Facing it wasn't an option, couldn't have ever been an option.

Because it meant that him never finding the time for her wasn't her fault.

Because it meant that them growing distant wasn't because she was an awful daughter.

Because it meant that she really had done nothing wrong and still ended up like this.

"^You were a child, Sue. You loved your dad, and trusted him to not hurt you. But he did, and that fact alone hurt so much more than what he'd done. It's awful when that happens, especially when we're young enough to not know any better, or worse yet, that we assume it's our fault—but it does happen. Those we love, those we trust wholeheartedly to look after us when we're little... they're just people, too. They make mistakes and can hurt others; they can hurt us. If we don't accept that, if we just keep running away from our emotions after we're hurt like this, then they'll never loosen their grip on us, and we'll be forever stuck at that moment our little hearts broke, unable to move on.^"

It was such a simple truth, so blatantly obvious and excruciating at the same time. Sue tried to go along with Sundance's mental image, to imagine herself as that little girl, how she must've been in that memory, trying her hardest not to show her little broken heart to anyone else.

And, for the first time she could remember, she didn't run. She sat still, watching the ten-year-old that would one day be her try her hardest to blame her dad's avoidance on anything, anyone but him. On herself, only on herself, more eager to gouge her eyes out than to face the facts. She leaned closer, as close as she could get to this child, this scar at the bottom of her mind—

And touched her.​


For a while afterwards, all Sue could hear was her strained breathing. Her heart raced, her eyes sobbed until they had no more tears left within them, her throat grew dry. It couldn't have taken more than a few minutes; the sun was only a bit further ahead in its downward journey—but she felt utterly exhausted. She was of half a mind to fall asleep then and there and let someone else deal with the consequences. But she couldn't, and she didn't.

There were a couple of little people in here with her, looking up to her. She didn't want to hurt them, to accidentally pass on the pain she was only now coming to terms with.

She was still not done processing all the aching, even if it had dulled enough to let her think about something other than itself.

And last—she was hungry, and this chair wasn't that comfortable.

The very final pair of reasons finally made her twitch as she sat back up, shaking hand stroking Spark's back. She was still so, so very lost, no less so because the pain was still there. It had eased up a bit; it no longer threatened to crush her in an instant, but it still surrounded her. What was she to do now?

...

...

She didn't know, but someone in the room did. "S-S-Sundance?" she whimpered.

The vixen turned to face her, a weak smile cutting through the earlier concern. "^Yes, Sue?^"

"It—it still hurts..."

"^It'll keep hurting for a while, I'm afraid. However... there is something we can do to help with it, I reckon.^"

Sue looked up at her mentor, away from Spark's diligent attempts to cheer her up by nuzzling her stomach. "Wh-what do you have in mind?"

"^How much mourning have you done after your dad passed?^"

Such a simple question.

Such a painful answer.

"N-not much, I-I don't think..."

"^Then maybe we should try just that.^"



If you're confused about the species of the characters and want them spoiled, I've set up a page listing the species of all the featured characters in each chapter!

If you want to discuss the story, I've set up a Discord server for it! (and my other writings)

Also check out my other story, From the Vast, my series of shorts, The Alarm Goes Off at Six, and a one-off short, Victory Lap!

I also have a Patreon now if you're feeling kind!​
 
Chapter 32: Purgation


Chapter 32: Purgation



"^Then maybe we should try just that.^"

Sundance's words echoed in Sue's head as she recovered from the blinding pain she'd spent her entire adult life trying to keep hidden. It took a while until her surroundings had turned from an indistinct blur, only dotted by her sixth sense pointing people out to her, back to the vixen's dwelling. And, of course, all the little people present in it. The edges sharpened, and the colors saturated by the moment, until Sue finally felt normal enough to consider Sundance's idea in earnest.

Grieving was something she never cared much for, even when it was just her mom who had tragically left her life. She may have prayed a lot for her to come back, shed mute tears at glimpsing her in the photos around the house before dad took them down, but she never sat down to just... let herself cry over the loss. There was always something else she could do, or that dad wanted her to do, something more active and yet more hopeless. Anything but truly acknowledging what happened.

Because the one person she had left to look up to never truly acknowledged it, either.

It was an awful thing, it happened, and then normalcy resumed, even more pretend than before. On one hand, Sue had a hard time rationally imagining why her dad never did anything like that. Why he never made peace with his wife's loss, why he never noticed that it was eroding the family he still had left, why he never noticed that it was tearing him apart, too. On the other... Sue already knew why. Because she was no better.

Because it hurt so much. Because running away from that pain hurt less in the moment than confronting it, even if not that much less. Because that momentary agony felt so much more imposing than an incomparably larger plateau of suffering, built one distraction at a time. The world could never wait for them, could never wait for her dad. And so, avoiding it became a survival tactic. If it was the only way to keep their family afloat, then it was what had to be done.

And with each passing day, the wound they tried to run away from only festered.

Sue shuddered as she clenched her fist tight, and gritted her teeth at feeling a wave of anger crash against her mind. Anger for what her dad's actions had taken away from her, for every unseen scrape his neglect had left on her psyche until it had accumulated into a goring wound. She wanted to punch and shriek, to scream in fury about all the ways in which he had hurt her, for nobody to understand. For everything he had done,

And which she had inevitably ended up repeating.

The bitter reality delivered another gut punch to Sue's brittle psyche, forcing a stifled cry out of her as tears resumed irrigating her cheeks. They had ended up so much alike, in good and bad. And with that insight, the awareness of how badly all this hurt her inevitably cooled her emotions towards him, too. Worse yet, he didn't even have anyone to help him with it all. Didn't have anyone to step in and give him a hand before all the anguish could metastasize into shame at itself, at one's coping mechanisms becoming so painful it was impossible to even examine them, let alone the wound they obfuscated. Sue looked up at Sundance through blurry vision, smiling weakly as she wordlessly thanked anyone who'd listen for having her around to listen to her...

...

...

I wanted to say 'nonsense' again, didn't I? Is this just another way I've been burying all this for so long?

The split-second realization sobered Sue up just enough to let her wipe the excess tears off her face, and give calming down another attempt. Ultimately, the very thing she'd been running away from for so long had come to pass.

All this hurt! Like an absolute motherfucker! And yet, beyond wanting to lash out at the pain, beyond the subconscious desire to shield her wounds from all sight even as they festered, she felt this pain would be good for her. It wouldn't be pleasant—for anyone—but at last it'd help in closing that entire chapter of her life. Sue could only hope for that, of course. For once, however, doing so was... almost surprisingly easy. She had swum down to the very bottom of her mind, after all.

Nowhere to go but up.

With that realization to comfort her, Sue closed her eyes and breathed deeply, putting herself together enough to resume the unpleasant chat without breaking down again. Before long, though, she felt something touch her arm, some kind of rough fabric—a pillow. A plain canvas pillow, neither the softest nor the most comfortable in the world, but at least something to hold. Something to cry into. Something the vixen on the other end of the room didn't really need three of underneath her and could spare one for her pupil.

As one hand administered pets to Spark and the other wiped her tears with the pillow, Sue craned her head to check up on how the little ones were doing; what kind of drawn masterpieces were they working on? She saw little of the latter. Hard to, with their wooden canvas being obscured by their bodies. To her momentary regret, however, she saw some of the former—and vice versa. Joy's effortless glance over her shoulder left the girl worried, making her drop the stick of charcoal she was holding and waddle over to her guardian.

Her untranslated words sounded concerned, leaving Sue worried about her troubles rubbing off on others. With a few deep breaths, though, she overlooked said worries for long enough to let herself actually address them. She leaned forward, making sure to not accidentally poke the curled-up Spark with her horn, before holding Joy's hand as the girl hugged her uninjured leg.

"I'm here Joy, I'm here," she whispered, shooting the girl a soft, if tired, smile. "I'm crying a bit, yes, but I'm doing well. Sundance is looking out for me, and everything is going to be okay." Of course, the lacking translation was an issue in the other direction too, but Sue didn't hesitate to ask for help. Restoring the translation between her and the kids was best avoided for now—they weren't quite done talking with Sundance, after all—but Joy deserved an explanation. "Sundance, c-could you pass on to her what I just said?"

Sue sighed as the fox responded with a wide smile and a slow, understanding nod. She watched Joy perk up and turn towards the vixen as the words were soundlessly passed onto her, all the while opening the girl to some more affection on her maw. And this time, she'd even figured out how to keep it gentle enough to not startle her.

I really wonder what her skeleton looks like, though.

With the last of the affection received and her guardian's leg held tight one last time, Joy turned around and returned to the play area, catching Twinkle's attention with her sudden return. Or rather, making the ghost realize she had even left to begin with. They turned towards her, and she didn't hesitate to send a wave their way. To her relief, they seemed satisfied with that sight alone, especially when accompanied by Joy saying something to them in her rough, growly, cute voice. They didn't understand it, of course, but their... friend was calm. And that's all that mattered.

And Sue was calm, too. Enough so to finally tackle the heavy topic ahead of them again. "Okay. I-I think I can continue now," she said, petting Spark's back while the lil' fox tried her hardest to huddle even closer to her midriff.

"^Excellent. I hope this conversation has been providing some reprieve, however painful,^" Sundance answered, looking up from the little one's drawings.

"Oh, it's definitely painful; lemme tell you that much," Sue chuckled dryly. "But... yeah, it's still some reprieve, at least. It's easier to understand why I feel this way now. And even though I still do feel that awful way a bit, it's much weaker now. It feels like something I can face now, and not just something I'll have to run away from forever, like—"

Sue blinked at the tangent, thinking back to moments earlier with her thoughts about her dad. She sighed, and continued—"Like he's done in the past, and like I've been doing, too."

"^It gets tiring, doesn't it?^"

The Forest Guardian considered Sundance's question, slowly tilting her head to the sides. "Kiiinda. I suppose moment to moment it does hurt and tire you, but it's also hard to notice it doing that until it gets really strong. Just sits there in the corner, being a vampire and sucking a little bit of our strength at a time."

Sue put on a confident-ish smile at her point, glad to have finally made a decent comparison herself. Or, at least, a decent comparison to a potential audience who knew what the folklore creature she had referred to even was. "^...forgive me for the tangent, but—are there really creatures in your world that feed by sucking others' blood?^"

Oh, Neptune.

At least this question had a straightforward answer. Key word 'had', as the instant Sue thought about it, she realized that just answering with 'no' would commit the worst sin known to man, mutant or god—be technically incorrect. "Yes, but the 'vampires' I offhandedly brought up don't exist. They're—they're a folklore thing. It's only like mosquitoes and leeches that feed on blood like that, I think."

"^Ahhh, lesser beings, then. Either way, I see your intent now, and your comparison is accurate.^"

The phrase 'lesser beings' sounded very unlike what Sue expected Sundance to ever say, and a part of her really wanted to inquire about just what she meant by that. Alas, said part was summarily overruled by all the other neurons, eager to keep up their streak of tackling uncomfortable topics and get into the next step of the process. "I'm glad. So, this mourning. Is there anything specific you mean by that, or just... crying about the dead for a while until the tears stop?"

"^Your description is broadly correct. However, it ideally is much more than just crying,^" Sundance clarified. "^Beyond just expressing sadness, it's supposed to be a time for us to come to terms with all our feelings about those we lost, and let them out. Further still, even that description is incomplete, as it is just one kind of mourning.^"

Sue raised her eyebrow. "What do you mean, 'one kind'? What other kinds of mourning are there, then?"

The smirk on her mentor's expression grew two sizes at her words—seems she had inadvertently walked right into the point the vixen had wanted her to. "^The other one that I feel is relevant here is mourning for what wasn't. If you feel you're capable of it, think of what else you've lost with your parents' passing, beyond simply them as people.^"

The once-human wasn't yet convinced this wasn't a point made entirely out of pedantry, but she played along. "You mean like, their house, or...?"

"^Your future with them.^"

Sue leaned back at the straightforward clarification—and remained somewhat confused. Because... yeah, that kinda went without saying, didn't it? She lost her parents, which by definition also meant losing the future she could've had with them. "Riiiight. That feels kinda obvious," she muttered, uncertain.

"^Oh, I am not saying that it isn't obvious—but that, obvious as it is, we still need to mourn for it. Mourn for the future we never had, memories we could never remember, achievements we could never cherish. All the things we could never be, the different paths our lives might have taken, but didn't because of reasons outside of our control.^"

The clarification helped. To Sue's surprise, even it was enough to stir some emotion within her, catching her by surprise as she thought back to the times when she remembered hurting for that stolen future. "I-I used to daydream a lot about my mom turning out to have survived, or having suddenly showed up when everyone thought she was dead, and our life magically returning to how it was before. Is... is it something like that?" Sue asked, wiping her face of the tears that had sneaked up on her as she went over her childhood hopes.

"^Exactly. They... they are sweet. I know full well just how alluring it can be, that pretense that things hadn't gone wrong. And maybe, in some other time, some other world, things would indeed have not gone wrong. But they did in our world, and at some point we have to make peace with that. To look at everything we've lost, all the paths through our lives that had been stolen from us by cruel Fate or someone else's actions, and accept that they're gone without lingering on them.^" Sue was about to respond with an immediate point, before the vixen put a bow on her idea, taking her pupil aback. "^And to accept ourselves as we are, on the path we had either stumbled upon or been forced into.^"

Sue shifted nervously in her seat, one pointed fingertip repeatedly tapping on the pillow in her grasp. She didn't mind the broad outlines of Sundance's point, but didn't feel comfortable with all the implications. "What if the 'things that had gone wrong' were awful and preventable, though? I-I guess it's one thing if it's just entirely bad luck, but what if the thing that went wrong was something that can be stopped? Shouldn't we use the events that happened as motivation to ensure they won't happen again?"

Sundance nodded firmly. "^We should, you're correct!^"

...

"I feel like I'm missing something," Sue admitted, petting Spark's back.

"^Sounds likely, yes. To elaborate on my point—making peace with the tragedies that have happened is not the same as not finding them atrocious. It's not the same as not fighting to make sure nobody else suffers the same fate, either. More than anything else, it is accepting that they have happened and that their awful consequences are here to stay, without denial or fury. As with everything else—you cannot move on if you're unwilling to acknowledge where you stand.^"

Sue stewed on her thoughts before responding, chuckling under her breath at how tied together everything she'd discussed with Daisy and Sundance over the past couple of days had been. The topic differed each time, of course—guidance on facing one's desires wouldn't ever be identical to a pep talk about how to learn to move on from mistakes—but the core thrust remained the same.

It all starts by facing oneself in the mirror, and coming to terms with what one finds there.

The realization calmed Sue down more than she expected it to. Maybe because it was another hint that she was on the right track, maybe because she'd walked this general trail enough times by now to make the rest of this trek easier than what came before. That didn't mean she didn't have any objections, or any doubts about some finer points—but this entire neighborhood of her mind was one that only ever grew more familiar with each passing day. Once terrifying, once disgusting, and now?

Now, it's just in need of some professional cleaning. Doubt these chats with Sundance count as more than a broom and a dustpan, but they still beat nothing.

"R-right. If there's anything else I've learned so far, it's that, heh. I still have more questions if it's alright."

The vixen smiled. "^It always is, worry not Sue.^"

"About being at peace and accepting ourselves with how we are now. Won't that lead to complacency? None of us are perfect, and I've always felt like I should strive to be a better person, even if my execution has sometimes been... yeah. B-but, if we get too comfortable with ourselves as we are right now, won't that lead to us just falling into complacency and resting on our laurels, so to say?"

Sundance's eyes danced around the room as her blunt claws tapped rhythmically on the stone floor. Of all the responses Sue expected from her mentor, a cheeky chuckle wasn't one of them—especially not one accompanied by such a sharp point. "^That sounds like it would only be a serious issue if you think that you as you are right now isn't enough and that you need improving.^"

Sue froze at the piercing remark, mentally scrambling to find a response. Try as she might to deny it because of it being reaching, though, the vixen's point struck true the actual motivation behind Sue's point, leaving her hunching over in her seat. Guess for all her progress, she still had a lot left to do. It was a realization that would've been crippling to face just a few days ago, and now...

She felt just about strong enough to keep moving on.

Just because her mentor was right, it didn't mean she had nothing to say in response. A response that never came, however, as the vixen out-sped her once more, continuing her point. "^If you genuinely believe you ought to improve something about yourself, then no—it is not an excuse for that. It has to come from your desires, however, from you looking at who you truly are and only then deciding on what, if anything, you ought to change. It is much too easy to look at all the people you could have been and exclaim that those are who you should be, however possible that feat even is.^"

'Coulda' and 'shoulda', my old, beloathed friends.

"^I cannot claim to know what person you truly wish to become, Sue, so I ask you—what is the one trait you wish you had more in abundance?^"

Sue nodded absentmindedly, calming her fidgeting hands by holding the pillow closer as she thought through the question. The answer was 'many different things on many different occasions', but from them all, there was one thread that was clearer to see than others. "I suppose I could stand to be more courageous—w-with the Northeast matter and all."

"^That is what you discussed with Daisy earlier today, if my memory holds?^" the vixen asked. Her pupil nodded firmly, making her continue—"^In that case, some other area would be preferable. Not to diminish what her chat with you had accomplished or the relief it provided, but I believe an older, much older example might illustrate my point better.^"

It was time to dive into the mental murk of memories again, and Sue... dreaded it less than she thought it would. It was still unpleasant, obviously, but shifting her focus from the events of the past couple days lessened shame's grip significantly. And since Sundance asked her for something 'much older', Sue guessed she meant an occasion from before she had become one of Duck's own chosen. "Before I ended up here, I wasn't very social. In college—think like an advanced school for adults—I was always too scared of people to talk much, so I stayed this eternal outsider. It didn't feel good then, and it doesn't feel good thinking back to it now, heh..."

"^That is a great start. What does thinking about that situation make you feel?^"

"Just kinda embarrassed. Not terrible or anything, but I continuously flunked my one good chance to meet people. I already had a year of it taken away because of the pandemic we had at the time, so the remaining time was even more important. It felt like I should've, had to take that opportunity because once it ended, meeting any other friends would be impossible. Which... I now realize is something that is quite hard to believe considering how social Moonview is," Sue chuckled, gaze sweeping nervously around the floor.

"^Well—yes,^" Sundance admitted, looking at her pupil in disbelief, "^but that isn't the point. The point is about how that self-perceived failure made you feel.^"

"Disappointed, mostly. It was something simple I knew I could do, I knew I should do, but which I never did, and eventually just seeing the cafeteria was a big downer in itself and so I stopped—oh."

The vixen tried—and failed—to hold in a chuckle. "^Ha. I will spare you another conversation about how shame ties into it all, because you already have a decent grip on it. Instead, let me ask you this—why do you think you didn't rise to your expectations?^"

That was something much simpler to answer. "Because I was scared of people. S-still kinda am, even. And everyone already had their cliques, and I was worried I'd come off weird if I just sat down with someone, and... piles upon piles of other reasons. Most of them probably silly."

"^Not silly if your mind takes them seriously enough to act on them. Misguided, incorrect, sure—'silly' is not the right adjective for them, since those impulses aren't stupid. They're not fooling around, they're not pranking you into coming short of your goals, they're doing what they can based on what you've been through,^" Sundance clarified.

Her pupil rolled her eyes. "Sure, incorrect then, nitpicking."

"^I disagree with it being nitpicking, but—not the point. Now, why do you think all those misguided impulses had their hooks in you?^"

This was where the conversation stepped into painful territory. Nowhere near as blindingly excruciating as it would've been mere hours ago, but still unpleasant. "Probably from how I grew up with my parents, right? I wasn't a very social kid even before... even before I lost my mom, and after, it got even worse and I basically became a shut-in growing up. Never as bad as some people on the internet—I still showered and didn't become a violent misanthrope—but it wasn't pretty. Guess that was enough to just make social interaction too scary by the time college came."

"^Are you surprised, then, that you failed to reach the expectations you had set at that point?^"

"Surprised? No, obviously," Sue chuckled, sighing in defeat. "It was quite the predictable outcome. I still felt disappointed, though."

"^Why, though? If you acknowledge it was predictable, then why feel disappointed with it?^" Sundance kept pressing the point—much to Sue's confusion.

"Because I could've done better! Yes, it was unlikely, but it was still possible."

"^That 'better' word you used there is quite indicative. That's not what I want to focus on, however. More so on the assertion that you 'could' have done better.^"

Sue blinked. What in the world did Sundance mean by that? Obviously she could've done much better; she had free will. It wasn't some magically impossible task for her. "Is there... something wrong with that assertion? Of course I could've done better."

Without skipping a beat, her mentor doubled down—"^Could you? From the explanation you just provided for why you think you fell short of your expectations, it certainly sounds like the odds of you accomplishing them were vanishing, if even that.^"

"It wasn't likely, no, but it was still possible," Sue insisted, growing slightly annoyed. "It wasn't a problem for almost anyone else there. Yes, I grew up as a shut-in, but there was no other way for me to get to where I wanted to be but to keep trying, even if it hurt."

"^Was it where you wanted to be, or where others insisted you should be?^"

The line between these two was a blurry one. Even in her terseness, Sue wasn't naïve enough to think that her desires were pure and untainted by her surroundings. The influence was there; the pressure was there; but in the end, they only acted on a yearning that has been there all along. "Where I wanted to be, yes."

Sundance waited for a few moments, looking over Sue with a raised eyebrow. In not too long, she was satisfied with what she saw and sensed, though—Sue had really meant it. "^Good! So, you wanted to talk to people more, wanted to become that more social Sue, right?^"

"An odd way to phrase it, but yes."

"^Was that more social Sue someone you could have become, considering what you told me about your experiences with your parents?^"

Sue was getting an idea of where Sundance was trying to lead this entire discussion towards, and she wasn't sure whether she liked it or not. "Yes, of course I could—actually, lemme just ask that head-on. Are you trying to imply that it was impossible for me to become more social?"

"^From what you've described so far, yes—barring any external influence outside of your control.^"

"So I... shouldn't have even tried to get better?" Sue asked, disbelieving.

"^That is not what I said~. Striving to become better is admirable, yes, but refusing to acknowledge one's circumstances in that striving only leads to further misery. Because of reasons outside of your control, you went through years of not receiving the attention you needed. You grew up lonely and weren't as good at socializing as you wished you were, on top of eventually losing your dad, too. These are not setbacks we can just brute force our way through, they require help from others.^"

It might not have been the bad-faith interpretation Sue had brought up earlier, but she still wasn't entirely convinced. "So what was I supposed to do instead if I was so doomed? There's nothing I could've done about what happened to my parents."

"^Yes, exactly!^" Sundance replied, making her pupil's heart skip a beat. "^Nothing you could've done there, nothing you could've done to prevent yourself from ending up in that miserable spot you ended up in. And from there, is there any wonder you failed to pull yourself out of that dark pit alone?^"

"No, but—" Sue began, cutting herself off right as she noticed the vixen perking up, as if about to stop her herself. She waited for long enough for her mentor to come to rest again, receiving nothing but an amused smirk in return. "I'm still not sure where you are going with all this, in all honesty."

The vixen nodded, taking a moment to gather words before replying, her voice creeping towards seriousness again. "^Let me be as direct as I can, then. It's not about not trying to be better, it's not about thinking you're a perfect being that needs no changes. It is, above everything else, accepting ourselves as we are, together with our shortcomings brought onto us by forces beyond our control, without shame. It's about not using 'what could've been' as a cudgel to beat 'what is' with. It's about realizing where our limitations lay, and reaching outwards for help with overcoming them if we feel we need to do so.^"

Now that was something more concrete—but also, which left a detail unaddressed. "But what if that help never comes?" Sue asked. "Or what if we keep reaching out for it, doing our best to change ourselves and reaching for others, only for all of them to ignore or blow us off? What if we fail?"

"^Then that... *sigh*, is a sad outcome,^" Sundance whispered, memory venturing towards all the people in her past who didn't succeed despite their best efforts. "^That is an important point as well. Not blaming ourselves in such a situation is one thing—we did our best—but it is not the crux of the issue now, is it? Ultimately, it's an argument and encouragement to help those you can; for us all to help one another. Sometimes, a nudge is all a person needs. Sometimes, it's just having someone, anyone by their side to ease the load of their anguish.^"

All wonderful messages—but still incomplete. "So, if you're unlucky enough to not have anyone to help when you need it, you just... fail? Die?" Sue knew the answer to that question already. Earth had already beaten it into her plenty. She still hoped that her mentor would have some out, just to let her avoid that cruel reality for a bit longer.

"^It is possible to make no mistakes and still lose, yes. Pretending we're in complete control of our Destiny is a blanket of falsehood that lets us avoid acknowledging that grim fact. Avoid facing our successes not being entirely our own, and avoid facing others' failures not being theirs. Comforting as it may be at times, it is still a lie. One as harmful to us as it is to others.^"

Sue nodded idly as she took the wisdom in, shaking in her seat despite Spark's warmth. She wasn't ever particularly religious, not even when both her parents were still alive and regularly took her to church, but the comfort of preordained Destiny wasn't lost to her. The prayer that doesn't ask for a different, more just world, but one that claims the world is already just as is. Where everything happens for a reason, where those who succeed are saints and those who fail sinners, where everything is its own justification.

Where there is no Capricious, Fateful Chaos—merely a Just, Destined Order.

A very cold, cruel world.

Even if she knew better than to assume that everything that happened to others was their own fault, it was exceedingly hard to pull all the hooks that line of thinking had left in her mind. Despite being reassured again and again, ad nauseam and then some, she had a hard time seeing her being unable to make those changes she wanted to, not being able to apologize to Northeast when she had that chance, as only a personal failure. As only her own sin.

Sue was trying her best to pull them away, at least temporarily, and it was just barely possible now that she was consciously aware of them. She didn't know how long such a state would last, though. Had to make it count. "H-how do I just... accept myself, both back then and now? How do I look over all my flaws, all the things I did wrong, all of it?"

"^You do not look over them,^" Sundance replied, keeping her voice calm at seeing the tension shoot through her pupil's body. "^You accept them, too. Pretending your flaws don't exist doesn't bring freedom—it merely gives them more power over us, lets them bind us all the more effectively. No, you need to embrace them, just as you embrace your strengths. Make peace with yourself as you are, woeful and flawed, burdened by grief and shame and a thousand different scars that make up our minds—and yet, beautiful all the same. As are we all.^"

Spark's quiet whimpers went unheard as Sue tried to focus, closing her eyes and gripping the pillow tight. Her mentor continued; "^Don't let those echoes of paths untaken, of things that could've been, of the people you could've become, browbeat you into misery over not being who you could never be. I don't think they would like that, anyway—to know they're used in malice, as a mallet for your mind to inflict harm onto you with.^"

Sue tried to focus on herself in the way the vixen had described, tried to encompass all of who she was as a person and bring it into her arms to embrace—but couldn't. She could try to make peace with some of it, with not fulfilling some of her dreams, but many parts of her psyche were still just too raw to touch. If she was to grow more comfortable accepting her mistakes, this sounded like a good one to take on—not being ready for the worst of that introspection.

Doesn't mean I can't do anything else, though.

Instead, she clasped her hands and clenched her eyes even tighter, shifting gears towards the kind of mourning she was more familiar with but one she'd still not done as much as she probably ought to. Sue thought back to her parents, trying to put together a vague prayer in her mind based on the little she could still recall from church. She doubted anything she'd come up with would comply with what her local priest's teachings, but neither she nor they cared for that. The latter, not least, thanks to no longer sharing a universe with her.

She had to start somewhere. And of the two people she'd lost, one was much more recent, and the wound left in their wake much larger.

Dad?

Her mental whisper into the void went unanswered, but she was too focused to care.

I-I hope you're happy, Dad, wherever you are. It's been hard to really process it all, everything that happened to both of us after Mom died. I'm only now realizing just what kind of impact it left on me, and it's scary to think about. I don't want to be angry at you. You were just as stuck in that position as I was, after all—weren't you?

Sue's expression scrunched, tears remaining in their ducts thanks to sheer willpower alone.

Just like I ended up in a spot where I couldn't grow more social by myself, you... you weren't able to come to terms with it all, were you? It's so obvious in hindsight, good god. We were both so destroyed by it all, maybe you even more than me. It's little wonder we ended up like we did. I wish you would've reached out for help when you had the chance. Maybe it would've helped us both overcome her loss sooner, maybe it would've at least helped me. I don't know, and... I don't think fantasizing like that is the best idea, either. All I know is that you tried your best, but I was still hurt afterwards for years to come. I miss you.

It was awkward; it was painful; but she was doing it.

I don't have to be ashamed of the person I became anymore, though. I don't—don't want to be ashamed.

Sue focused on that thought, repeating it in her mind as many times as she could stomach. She wasn't sure what effect it was supposed to have, whether the relief from it was supposed to be immediate or not. Either way, it wasn't doing as much as she wanted it to, even if she could feel the headache-inducing pressure in her head grow just a bit more bearable with each repetition.

The relief didn't last forever, and at a certain point the words had turned from reassurance to just empty sounds—as good a moment as any to take a breath and refocus onto something else. Mourning for her dad had been a… limited success, which left her antsy about how doing the same with her mom would go.

Only one way to find out.

Mom?

To her relief, the thoughts associated with her other parent were much easier to stomach, despite the much more gruesome way in which she'd lost her. There wasn't any drawn-out decline to remember, no second hand shame or trauma passed onto her. Only the image of a loving, radiant woman, colored that much rosier with the passage of time, and the accident that took her life.

I hope you're happy too, Mom. It's been so long, and I still think of you often. I remember the things we did together, all the camping trips you took me to, all the guitar lessons you gave me, all the strawberry ice cream you got me whenever I was feeling down.

The memories ached to be recalled, and the fight against her own expression of sadness was swiftly lost. Though, in a way, those were the easy, straightforward tears, something she knew that at least she had the full right to cry over.

It hurts to know you're gone. I wish you were still with me, that you were there to see me grow up and how similar I ended up looking—but you weren't. And I think... I think I'm finally okay with that. I think I'm ready to move on, after all these years. I still love you so, so much though, and I wish I could've expressed that to you while you were still around. I'll be okay now, I think. I have people looking after me, little people I look after, m-maybe even someone looking at me the same way you looked at Dad. Maybe if you'd been there, then stuff with Dad wouldn't be anywhere near that bad, but—it's okay. It's okay.

Sue held in a small flinch at that last point, at the release of tension turning sour because of the impact her mom could've had on her dad. She ignored that thread in her mind, hurriedly shoving it off to the side to concentrate on everything else instead. To grieve and mourn over the things she was ready to, to make a long overdue peace with that reality.

And, that small tangent aside, she'd managed just that.

Goodbye, Mom. I'll always love you.

The discarded thought was still there, small and shriveled and refusing to be forgotten wholly. For better or worse, she'd just have to endure it for now, grumbling to herself as she withdrew from her focused state. It wasn't a total success, not by a long shot—but it was progress. She didn't succeed at everything she wanted to, but... it was okay. It was okay to not succeed at things.

Things were okay.

With one final deep breath, Sue pulled her palms apart and opened her eyes—and almost broke into laughter instantly at the sight that awaited her. On the floor, beside her seat, Joy and Twinkle were mimicking her prayer to the best extent their respective anatomies allowed them to. The metal girl was clasping her hands while pointing both her face and her maw at the floor, while the bundle of ghost beside her was reaching up with a pair of tentacles, intertwining them in lieu of keeping them pressed together.

Both of them sat still and with closed eyes—and they weren't even the only ones in that regard. Further into the room, beside Sundance, Comet was just as focused as his friends pretended to be, entirely still as he sensed all the emotions in the room, now that Sundance had dispelled her sparkling barrier. Sue wouldn't maintain her focus at seeing all the tykes being so focused, and as much as she tried to hold her amusement in,

She just couldn't pull it off, not this time.

Instead, she broke into loud, relieved giggles, forcing Spark to scramble off her lap as she leaned in and pulled both the little ones onto it. Their reactions were positively confused, squeaking and clinging to their guardian as Comet babbled and wriggled at the emotions in the room finally clearing up. Twinkle wasted no time wrapping as many of their tentacles around Sue's stomach as they could, easing out only with her touch. Joy, in the meantime, pulled the arm, petting her into a tight hug—and spotted the glistening wetness on her cheeks. Taken aback, she asked, "M-more cry?"

Indeed—but those are the good sort of tears.

Glad at her mentor for having restored the translation in the room, Sue responded. "Mhm! I'm—I'm still doing good, Joy, and Sundance is still helping me. I was sad earlier, but I'm good now. Those were good tears."

Fascinated, Joy nodded at every translated word. "T-Tears not bad?"

A smile bloomed on Sue's face before she even realized it, the pride accompanying it warm and radiant. "Not always, no," she answered. "Some tears can be good. And even the 'bad' tears aren't naughty or anything. It's okay to cry."

It was such a massive insight for the lil' metal girl she had a hard time processing it all, her hold of her guardian's arm growing weaker as she considered it. No words in response—only a lot of relief and scooting even closer to the tall psychic's body.

Just a couple feet away, a much older girl had her own question. "Are you feeling better, Sue?" Spark asked, leaning on her friend's uninjured leg.

Not as much as Sue would've wanted, but... yeah, the answer wasn't really debatable. "Yeah, I'm feeling better now, had a long and very needed talk. Thank you, Sparkie."

"Yay yay yay—*ow*," the fiery kit shuddered, curling up to Sue as she turned around to address her mom. "Thanks, mom!"

"You are very welcome, sweetie," Sundance replied, clearing her throat as she switched back to spoken word.

Sue looked up at her mentor, the wordless gratitude clear in her expression. "Still a lot of... well, everything on my mind, and I'm quite tired, but I am better now, I'm sure."

"That is great to hear, Sue. None of this is easy, and any progress is something to cherish and be proud of," the vixen beamed. "And speaking of nothing being easy," she groaned, her expression noticeably faltering. Before Sue could speak up in concern, Sundance looked over her shoulder towards a basket of elongated sticks. She then rifled through them with her mental grasp, before settling on the straightest, most cane-like one. "I sure wouldn't mind having something to eat before bedtime."

Won't say no to that either.


Sue didn't even think about dissuading her mentor away from going out on a walk—she sure was attempting it in a much more responsible way than her pupil could've ever claimed to. Instead, she stuck to the vixen's side, offering her a shoulder to lean on, alongside her makeshift cane. The resulting march wasn't fast, but it was much more steady than Sue's early attempts at walking, while inflicting notably less injury to the vixen with her every step.

Not an especially high bar to clear, but Duck be my witness, it is possible to fail it hard.

Even Comet was cooperating so far, not wriggling too hard even as he squeaked in Sue's arms. He took up most of her attention, leaving the other little ones to march beside the adults on the ground. They didn't seem to mind that—all it meant was that Twinkle clung to Joy's maw instead of Sue's torso, the difference in weight unnoticeable for the girl. And even if it had been, having a wispy, pitch-black tentacle to hold with her hand as they walked through Moonview was worth all the extra weight. Spark walking beside her, keeping her company and warm, helped too.

If only she'd been tall enough to hold Sue's hand.

The increasingly orange sunlight nudged them to keep up their pace, but they weren't in any rush. For once, they could take their time, get comfortable, and just have something to eat. Tomorrow would be a big day for some of them, even if Sue was still doubtful if she even should contribute to carrying all the supplies towards Newmoon. Largely because... yeah, there was no way she'd be carrying anything worth a damn there, not with her slow pace and general roughed up state.

On the other hand, maybe they'd be happy to see her again? Even then, just getting there was itself a problem Sue didn't know how to solve. Again, something for tomorrow. Right now, they had arrived at the clearing.

The bulk of the tables were already occupied, but there were a couple of stragglers, and a few more that had just one or two people sitting at them. Sundance homed in on the almost-empty one not far from Poppy's stall, the plate of the person sitting there already almost empty. Sue, however... was focused on somewhere else.

Someone else.

To her relief, Sundance didn't react as she paused, instead trying to make it the rest of the way to the table by herself. It gave her pupil all the time needed to chew through the sight, her pointed fingers nervously tapping on her forearm as she thought through what to do here. Because she wanted to do something with the sight ahead, didn't want to waste the first good chance she had to talk with them in a while.

But what exactly she could talk about with Willow, she didn't know. She still didn't trust them, but... there were just so many unanswered questions. They weren't feeling angry or vengeful, merely distraught and broadly sad. Enough so to draw quiet, concerned squeaks from the lil' Moon Child in her arms, but nothing more.

Sue just couldn't get it. Couldn't comprehend how someone who had been so incredibly kind toward her and Joy could have such an issue with the night kin, something that should've meant so much less to them since they weren't even psychic themselves. She didn't understand—but wanted to. For all her past anger towards them, she didn't want to just leave them there, didn't want to discard them over just that. There had to have been an answer to this, maybe something she could say to sway them the other way. What exactly... she didn't know. Couldn't know. Only one way to find out.

Joy's harsh, confused squeak snapped her out of any further daze, prompting her to catch up and take a seat at the edge of the bench. Joy and Twinkle to her side, Comet on her lap, Sundance off to the stall. A perfect opportunity to chill and grab her bearings. If not for one tiny logistical detail, that is, one that she'd have to intervene with sooner rather than later.

No way is Sunny gonna be able to carry all the dishes by herself.

Sue patted the two kids and got up, walking up to the fox right as she was talking to the unpleasant ghost behind the counter. Trying to not pay attention to Hazel, she spoke up. "I-I don't think you'll be able to carry it all back to the table."

"—and for them—oh? Well..." the vixen began, searching through her mind for an excuse that would let her carry the dishes regardless, to let her feel more helpful. Alas, no catch, again and again. Her psychics weren't reliable, and her physical paws especially weren't, either—best to just call this one a loss. "Sure, sure," she answered, rolling her eyes. "Before I head off, I need to finish the order. Any requests?"

"I suppose something sweet for me and the little ones? Don't have anything more specific in mind, sorry," Sue answered. Comet didn't even come close to understanding her words, but couldn't resist squirming in her arms at the mention of sweetness.

"Sure," Sundance replied, taking the lil' Forest Guardian from Sue. "Hazel, something sugary and nourishing for Sue and all three little ones, please. Wonderful." With that, she headed off to the bench, Comet vocalizing his displeasure at being carried away from all the yummy scents through his many baby sounds.

Truthfully, Sue didn't care for a waiter position, especially not while possibly having to deal with any more of Hazel's... pranks? Shenanigans? Assaults? All three fit in different measures. Either way—not for her, and she made that distaste clear by leaning on the stall's wall and looking away from the ghost. To her dismay, that didn't guarantee she'd be left alone, and she was very aware of that. Though, considering the intense discussion going on between Poppy and her wife, she might've just been able to get through this without any further incidents.

Sue couldn't care one Duck less what they were talking—or more accurately, bickering—about, keeping her gaze trained on something that brought her joy instead. Namely, Joy. And Twinkle, too, the two soon catching onto their guardian smiling at them from afar and waving at her as hard as they could manage. Adorable enough to melt her heart on the spot? Check. More than welcome considering all the struggles and strains of the past day? Check. Eagerly replied to in kind? Check.

Rudely interrupted? Check.

Hazel's ethereal, croaky voice made Sue jump a bit, afraid to look at the prankster that now stood beside her, lest even more nonsense happened. Still, it seemed like she had no choice. She kept her expression flat as her eyes met Hazel's fiercely red ones. And, for the first time in her recollection, she saw in there one emotion in particular that seemed to be the ghost's anathema—hesitation.

Without any reply on Sue's end, Hazel spoke up again. Unfortunately, the communication would be necessary. Pushing through the many, many desires to flip her off or continue to just stare idly at her in a sort of juvenile battle of disrespect, Sue sighed and went through her linking ritual. Her arms were sore after a long day and she really, really didn't want to deal with the ghost's nonsense, but figured Hazel felt just about the same and wouldn't be bothering with her unless it was important.

Dial-up noises, dial-up noises, ding! There.

"*Sigh.* Yes, Hazel?" Sue spoke, not even trying to mask her emotions.

The ghost blinked, taken aback at her bluntness. Still, she continued. "Wanna... thank for caring Joy and lil' ghost," she grumbled.

It was Sue's turn to be stunned, focusing on Hazel as she tried to suss out whether there was any ulterior motive to her words, any sense of mischief in her mind. No such thing as far as she could tell, with the ghost's emotions dominated by unease, mixed with warmth as she turned towards the kids in the distance herself. The once-human still wasn't entirely convinced that the interaction was in good faith, but... why not play along. "Um... thank you, Hazel. I'm glad I could help them out, too, especially Twinkle. The ghost," she added, sensing the seed of confusion in the ghost's mind.

"Bag ghost Twinkle," Hazel chuckled, her unnatural smile gradually creeping back to its full size. "Very happy, they."

"I hope so, yeah."

The conversation wasn't gonna be winning any awards for the best flow or the least awkwardness, but at least it was progressing. Not even that was enough for the pink cook behind the counter, though. Poppy raised her twinkly voice from behind the backdrop of searing sounds, leaving Hazel cringing despite its gentleness. "Really?" she asked in return, looking over her shoulder with an embarrassed, almost pleading expression.

The unenthused flatness and tapping of Poppy's foot against the beaten dirt floor she got in return straightened her out soon enough.

Take that, you—

"Want sorry for prank," Hazel unknowingly cut the nasty thought off, almost bluescreening Sue's mind.

Out of everything she expected the ghost to do, apologizing was almost at the very bottom of the list. Though... sure, the apology was entirely unlike her, but when it was nudged by her wife and also motivated by Twinkle doing better under Sue's wings... she supposed she could see it.

Anger was tiring, and she really didn't want to push herself through any more of it. Sure, why not. "Well... thank you, Hazel. Apology accepted." Sue then did something she knew was a bad idea, bracing for regretting it soon.

Second by second, the hand she'd extended towards the ghost remained un-taken and un-pranked, though. Until, at last, she felt the unnaturally cold touch return her handshake, without anything underhanded. Hazel was even appropriately anguished for wasting such an occasion to inflict misery on prank someone, only proving to Sue that she meant it this once. "Thank, Sue. Look Twinkle, please."

"I will."

With the handshake over, Hazel wasted no time retreating into the kitchen, to Sue's relief. She returned moments later, carrying a wooden plate and a couple of small bowls. The two more bowls Poppy then placed on the counter in her wake, one larger and one smaller, completed the order. Sue realized what was going on just soon enough to grab them before the ghost could get back, wanting to bring them to the table herself. That's what she was there for, after all.

Ignore the thick, sweet aromas emanating from the bowls, please.

With all the bowls brought over and the little ones sat down in places where they could eat from them—mostly on the table—they all got to eating. Everyone sans Sundance and Twinkle got the same meal, though the portion sizes differed. It almost reminded Sue of one of the very unhealthy kinds of cereal. Marble-sized, gently fried balls of what seemed to be molasses-flavored cookie dough, mixed with seared black... spheres. They kinda looked like the individual granules blackberries were made of, but scaled up to the size of blueberries, tasting somewhere between the two. All that drizzled with a pinch of ginger and three pinches of sugar.

It was almost enough to make Sue overlook the topic her mind had latched onto earlier, especially when she crunched through the individual marbles of dough and berry and let their flavors mix in her mouth. Only almost, however. Sooner or later, it'd still return, and only nag her into finishing her meal faster before she'd waste the opportunity.

Once her greedy fingers felt nothing but the wood of the bowl and a few loose grains of sugar at its bottom, she made her move. Without saying a word, she got up, looked past Sundance's furrowed brows, and made her way to a table further into the clearing.

Willow was still there, having long since wrapped up their meal, but still lost in thought. It was only when she sat down at the opposite end of the table did they finally notice her presence, perking up as their eyes went wide. For a moment, Sue worried they'd just run away there and then, unable to look her in the eyes ever again. The medic sure looked like they were about to do it... and then, they deflated with a sigh, resigning themselves to whatever was to follow.

One more repetition of her ritual, one more ache in her horn—onto a long overdue conversation. "Good evening, Willow."

They perked up at her voice, looking away with an absentminded nod. "Evening, Sue. Hope day good, injury good. What thank for presence here?"

"I want to ask you something."

They didn't immediately react to the elaboration, evidently waiting for the inevitable follow up. Before Sue was about to present it, though, someone else butted in, someone that brought a pained smile to both their faces.

Joy smiled brightly at the medic who had bandaged her maw just days prior, waving and pointing at where the barely visible by now scar was. After her efforts were acknowledged with a gentle head pat, she ran towards her guardian, squealing happily as she was lifted onto the bench beside Sue without another word. At least she was happy about this interaction.

With one hand passed onto the girl for holding, Sue got to thinking, mobilizing whatever wits she still had about her to come up with the question. The one that would accurately sum up all her feelings about the medic, about their past, about their choices and beliefs, about their situation. One that would cut through this jagged, uncomfortable contradiction and maybe even convert them to her position.

Alas, try as she might, the words escaped her. Which left the fallback option, one almost as evocative if much simpler.

"Why?"​



Author's Note: Apologies for another delayed chapter x.x

Those might continue to happen, it really depends on whether my writing sessions will smoothen out in the future. Assuming no delays, I write an entire chapter in a single 6-8 hour session, which works great if there aren't any interruptions, but can end up backfiring if said session ends up being derailed by a stray brainworm or I catch a sudden case of utter exhaustion. I'm still figuring out the causes for the latter, and while the caffeine crashes from energy drinks I used to down at the beginnings of the sessions are one culprit, others remain unknown.

In the past, I would probably try to bumrush the chapter anyway and just try to finish it in another writing session the next day, but after the past couple attempts at doing so just crashed and failed, I think I'll stick to delaying the chapter until the next week if keeps happening. Unfortunate, but something something slow something something steady. That and I've already had an experience with burning out for an extended amount of time and I'll do whatever it takes to avoid that happening again.

Also apparently even one chapter of my size every two weeks is a rather decent pace when it comes to fanfiction, according to my friends. I wouldn't know, I actually don't read much myself xdd

Also, I posted a short story earlier today, check it out!



If you're confused about the species of the characters and want them spoiled, I've set up a page listing the species of all the featured characters in each chapter!

If you want to discuss the story, I've set up a Discord server for it! (and my other writings)

Also check out my other story, From the Vast, my series of shorts, The Alarm Goes Off at Six, and a one-off short, Victory Lap!

I also have a Patreon now if you're feeling kind!​
 
Chapter 33: Ghosts


Chapter 33: Ghosts



Willow stared at Sue as the question washed over them, confusing yet clear in equal measure. They glanced away from her, expression twisting into an uncomfortable grimace as they tried to interpret it in some other way. No obvious alternatives presented themselves, but the medic wouldn't let that get to them—Sue had to have meant something else, right? Of course she had to; there was no way she'd just barge in with a topic this heavy.

Or, at least, that's what their uncertain mind clung onto as an excuse. "What 'why', Sue?" they asked, forcefully putting on a soft, tired smile. "Not sure you mean."

To their dismay, Sue wouldn't let them have said excuse for long. "Why are you supporting Root and his plans?" she clarified, trying her hardest to keep her voice from getting too accusative. She was confused, she was disappointed, and she was even angry to an extent, but that wasn't something she wanted Willow to see. Despite everything, she trusted them to engage with her as an equal, to have reasons for their actions that went beyond simple bigotry.

They had to have been different. Right?

And, fortunately for them both, the chubby medic had their reasons. They weren't comfortable thinking about them even at the best of times, and the distraction of Joy's adorable, confused self could only help so much, but they didn't run or mouth her off for daring to ask. Their paws tapped on the rough wood of the table—or on each other—as their gaze jumped all over the place, until finally hiding behind their eyelids. There, Willow had an answer, something to get Sue off their case. Hopefully. "Not me place to question forefather faith."

Sue narrowed her eyes. "But this isn't just their faith, right? As far as I understand it, D—the Pale Lady has been worshiped in this wider area for a long time, and that hasn't changed. It's not like Solstice is championing to demolish her altar. Or, say, banish all her worshipers from Moonview," she snarkily added—and cursed herself for doing so immediately afterwards.

To her relief, Willow didn't burst into anger at her jab, focusing on arguing her point instead. "Solstice still pressure our faith. But when she come, siblings still alive."

She lifted her eyebrow at their point, wondering what their siblings had to do with anything. They were their own person, and if maintaining the unbroken sanctity of their ancestral bigotry was such a priority for them, they would've been devoted to that cause from the get go. Even beyond that, their assertion still left room to be argued against.

At least, so Sue thought.

She had much less confidence about her idea than she wished she had, forcing her to take her piercing gaze off the medic to focus. Before she could get too far into it, though, she felt a tug on her arm. Joy was staring back at her, confused and uneasy at the chat going on around her.

No easy way out of this, I'm afraid.

Sue pointed back at the rest of the group, trying to suggest Joy go there instead, but the girl steadfastly refused. She was uncomfortable; she wanted reassurance; she wanted her big friend to make things right—which said friend was entirely eager to do. Sitting on her lap helped, carefully leaning on her torso and hearing her heartbeat helped even more, even if it left the toothy girl staring at her bandaged spike from an inch away. Which just left offering one hand for her to hold in the tip of her maw, the other for her to hold in her little arms, and voilà. One soothed, metal girl, trying her hardest to relax in her guardian's comfort.

By the time Sue was done comforting her, Willow had already shed much of their built-up discomfort, leaning over the table to watch Joy with a genuinely affectionate expression. Alas, it wasn't to last, especially once their eyes met Sue's once more, making them sit back down and sigh as their interrogation continued.

"Why would your siblings being alive make any difference to your faith?" Sue asked, keeping her voice as quiet as she could, rocking the lil' girl on her lap. It wasn't the question she wanted to ask, but it was the safer of the two.

Safer, and ineffective. Willow responded, sighing, "Significant plenty. Spread pressure."

The mention of pressure caught Sue's attention. "Pressure of what?"

"Forefather faith. Need respect, need worship," they answered, straining their voice as if responding to a dimwitted, self-explanatory question. Sue didn't appreciate that tone, about to get back at them with her riskier question—before stopping.

No, I don't want to do this to Joy.

Instead, Sue took one deep breath, then another, then rolled her shoulders for good measure, and only then put the words to the question on her mind. "You mentioned Solstice's influence. What about all the other influence from people of this land? Are you insisting that your forefathers' faith somehow remained unchanged this entire time, free from the influence of Solstice's clan, and it was only her arrival that introduced heresy?"

This was an angle that could backfire spectacularly, one Sue expected to set off people like Root if they ever heard it. She trusted Willow to be smarter than this, to recognize the faith they inherited as but one variant of many that all influenced each other, as opposed to a fixed dogma thrust upon them from Duck herself.

And she was right.

Willow clenched their paws, flinching so hard the curls under their ears jiggled as they turned to stare at the dirt path beside the table. The setting sun highlighted their age, bringing the grayish, spottier patches of fur and wrinkles on their snout into focus. They contrasted greatly with their intense blue eyes, shaking faintly as more intense emotion began to build up within them. Annoyance, offense, everything Sue had hoped she'd be able to avoid, making her lean away from the table just in case.

Thankfully, the medic kept themselves under control, letting their emotions subside before arguing, "We good, peace people, Sue. Peace, faithful, help other around, help everyone. Did good acts, good help, make good world. Not only who dislike night kin."

Channeling her willpower, Sue stopped herself from rolling her eyes at Willow's misdirection. They weren't wrong—their people did a lot of good to the best of her knowledge, and that alone was worth admiration and praise. If not for their willingness to help whoever needed aid, Moonview wouldn't exist. They obviously weren't evil.

And yet, they weren't without flaw, either—even if that flaw happened to be shared with others. "I'm not sure how one makes the other right, Willow. Yes, your people did many great things, but that doesn't make them beyond reproach. Just because they helped strangers, or just because other peoples weren't friendly towards the night kin, that doesn't make their attitudes right."

Sue kept her mouth open, wanting to continue. She wanted to go on about how their insistence that others' hatred of the night kin justifying their hatred was backwards logic, how it assumed that they had somehow earned or deserved that hatred, how it could be extrapolated into painting the world as a cruel, 'just' place where everyone who was suffering had somehow had it coming. But she didn't.

There was a much better point to be made, one she only noticed just now. Two, even. "And you already know that their attitudes aren't right, don't you, Willow? You wouldn't be trying to excuse them if you knew they were in the right. Besides, that the others are doing it too is no excuse—isn't it a point of pride to you, to your entire people, to be better than others, more righteous in your acts?"

She leaned back once she was done with her polemic, more confident about her approach to this discussion. There, something she knew they wouldn't be able to argue much with, not if they wanted to approach the topic in good faith—they were getting angrier.

Nope, maybe not the best of ideas after all.

Her eyes went wide as she stared at the pink and cream medic, their expression so much fiercer than she'd ever remembered it being. Sure, she'd seen—and caused—their annoyance in the past, but this went beyond that, beyond grumbling and huffing. Their paw shook as their blue eyes glared into her, brows furrowing hard enough to make her genuinely afraid she was about to be hurt.

Fortunately, that didn't end up happening, with their emotions finding another outlet. "We still better!" they insisted, squeaks and whines combining into something much more intimidating than Sue would've ever thought possible. They weren't shouting, but only by the thinnest of margins.

For all their intensity, though, their point made little sense. "Then why not lean into being better?" Sue pressed back, pushing through her hesitation and leaning forward in her seat. "I'm sorry, Willow, I refuse to believe you of all people aren't aware of the hurt your forefathers inflicted on the night kin with their decisions. You were here when the plague struck, you were here when they were exiled, why continue to insist on excluding them just because your ancestors did!?"

This time, it was her that had ended up with a raised voice by the end, the final syllable leaving the young girl on her lap shuddering. Willow wasn't doing much better with remaining calm, but at least Sue's pointed response took them aback enough to choke some of their flame. Sadly, that helped little when it came to their reasoning. "Forefathers did for reason," they insisted, clarifying nothing.

It felt circuitous, but Sue was too invested in this silly chat to not dig as deep as she could in search of something that would make it all make sense. She responded, "What reason, then? What about the night kin is so uniquely terrible they deserve shunning and exile?"

For once, something the medic felt much more comfortable about answering, staring back at the Forest Guardian with confidence. "They enemies of Pale Lady. Not know already, Sue?"

Oh I know a fair bit about the relations between the extremely divorced lunar duo, and it sure ain't what you're insisting it is, Willow

As much as Sue wished she could respond with that thought verbatim, she had to resort to a different point. No amount of confidence could offset her having arrived in this world only a week ago, making all her theological assertions moot. Still, she had other options. "Says who? Solanum?"

Bringing Solstice's clan into the conversation again didn't do either of them any good, leaving both Sue and Willow repulsed at the mere mention, if for different reasons. With how unsightly and vulgar as Sue's comparison was, though, the medic couldn't resist arguing back right away, raising their voice and leaning over the table. "They are by nature! That how world is! Just reality, just truth! Not me who decide, Sue! Just reality, just truth, dozens dozens generations. My role is listen truth, not doubt, not defy—"

*whi-whimper*

The shrill sound coming from the toothy girl on Sue's lap sent a chill through both their hearts, leaving the medic shaking as they backed down. Sue was trying her hardest to comfort Joy, holding her even closer and before humming a half-remembered lullaby, hoping it'd bring her the comfort she deserved. It was slowly working, but the little one was still confused about it all. Joy stuttered out a couple words as she looked up to her guardian, intended for Sue's ears but only understood by Willow.

They visibly winced at the sound, closing their eyes and taking deep breaths as they reached up to rub their temples. The Forest Guardian had no idea how to answer, kicking herself over not having established a link with Joy the moment she'd ran over. What if she'd just asked her something important and would grow confused—or worse yet, terrified—about her guardian not responding?

She didn't know, couldn't—

"Apology for loud voice, Joy," Willow cut in, their voice deflated. To Sue's immediate relief, the girl on her lap not only understood the apology, but was comforted by it, nodding weakly and leaning further on her guardian. It was okay. Things were okay.

This entire cursed, tensed discussion wasn't over yet, but everything would be alright.

Sue was torn. She wanted, needed to continue, but didn't want to subject Joy to more of this if she could avoid it. The girl wouldn't want to be separated from her right now even if she were to physically carry her back to Sundance and others, but who knew when she'd get the next opportunity to truly discuss this topic with the medic one-on-one and without anyone eavesdropping?

Thankfully, despite their stubborn dismissal of her points, Willow seemed just as keen on not exposing the little one to any further shouting. And if there was something Sue could still respect them for, it was that. Everything else, though... it was growing harder and harder to. Yes, they were a selfless healer, but was pride really their motivation behind doing so? Sue didn't believe that, couldn't believe that. She hadn't felt a smidge of superiority in their attitude in the past, nothing but good intentions.

And yet, here they were, adamantly excusing their wrongdoings and blaming them all on their ancestors and the steps they had laid out for them. Sue wasn't satisfied with that, nowhere near. And, once she felt Joy's heart grow calm and her own ease out as much as if it would be today, she expressed her dissatisfaction.

"Why, though?" she asked. "Why is it not your spot to challenge or change your people's faith? Are you not one of them? Do you not have the right to contribute and shape them?"

Disdain flashed through their short snout, muffling into dismissal by the time it had reached their vocal cords. "You not understand. Would not understand. You, Sue, one person. Me, descendant. Above, dozens dozens generations. Me they watch, judge. Me, only left, only who can carry tradition and faith. You, not have that burden."

It was Sue's turn to grow annoyed, sharply exhaling through her barely visible nostrils at the implication she didn't have any expectations placed upon her. It was maybe true in this world, now that the intended pathway of finishing college, settling down and starting a family was no longer possible, but that didn't mean she was unfamiliar with how they felt.

On the other hand... Willow had a point, too.

She wasn't a stranger to familial expectations, but they paled compared to the sheer pressure the medic must've been feeling. All she had on her shoulders were the best wishes of her parents, a single generation, and their kind words as opposed to the many, many more Willow was struggling with. The only one left to follow traditions, to follow their faith, barely withstanding the crushing expectations and the peer pressure of thousands upon thousands of ghosts.

At the end of the day, however, they were just that—ghosts. Willow was still their own person with their own volition, free to act as they pleased. And, judging by their scrambled excuses, it wasn't as if they were utterly blind to the harm they were causing. Sue responded, "Are these traditions, that faith, even something you want to carry?"

Willow jerked back, mood snapping from discomfort to a mixture of confusion and disgust. "Y-yes! Beside, what matter if not? Have to. What forefathers think if last child disrespect tradition, how angry they be?"

'What would they think', forever the unrelenting specter.

As much as Sue wanted to snap back, saying that it didn't matter, she knew better than to go there. This entire topic wasn't her strong suit. She wasn't tied to any traditions, any cultural identity; about as plain a slice of white British toast bread as they got. She didn't know if what she was saying was even right.

But Willow didn't know either. They were sure trying to convince themselves they knew, to relegate having to think about it all to long-established traditions and beliefs that would answer it for them. Unfortunately for them, they were too smart for that to work perfectly; too aware of the consequences of theirs and others' actions to let the thick blanket of deferring blame smother all their doubts away and leave only devotion behind.

And it was these doubts that Sue knew she had to use to her advantage. "I can ask you the same thing, Willow," she began. "How angry will your ancestors be to see the last one of their people clinging to oppression even after almost everyone else has moved on? How disappointed will they be to see you put hatred over the values they valued the most—"

Sue paused mid-sentence, freezing at the realization of just how furious Willow had gotten.

She looked at them in fear, watching as their wide eyes drilled into her with wrath far beyond what she thought the medic was even capable of. A voice in the back of her head was yelling at her to get up and run, shouting about how she wasn't safe anymore and she needed to get away now—

Only for Willow to storm off with a huff instead, infuriated and—to all the relief Sue could find within her anymore—conflicted. She sat still, panting as she watched the medic leave the clearing and disappear between the Moonview's many buildings, taking some of the evening sunlight with them. She'd shone a light on their doubt and made it grow stronger, and it was the only reason Sue wasn't considering this entire discussion an absolute waste of their combined time.

It sure could've gone a lot better, though. Much, much better.

Sue knew she shouldn't have been focusing on what could've been, but that fact only slightly muffled the persistent thought's effectiveness. She still felt down, both at her missteps and at having antagonized someone she once looked up to as a friend. The rational part of her argued the latter wasn't her fault, that Willow had brought it upon themselves the moment they let their mask slip off about how they felt about the night kin.

Her emotional part wasn't convinced. Too late to do anything about it, though. It was time to get up, rejoin the others, and probably start heading in the general direction of a bed. Sue lifted Joy into her arms proper, the girl shivering as her maw had to let go of her friend's fingers. She slid out of her seat, straightened her legs, began turning towards the rest of the group—

And saw someone in the treeline.

Someone who looked like Nightbane.

Sue jumped at the sight, deaf to Joy's alarmed squeaks as she tried looking at that spot again—and found nobody. She looked around in panic, whole body shaking as her gaze fixated on every blob that so much as resembled a person between the surrounding trees. None of them amounted to anything on a closer look, though, and the more she thought about it, the more she doubted whether the 'someone' she'd spotted was even real to begin with.

Maybe it was nothing. Or maybe it was Nightbane. Or worse, someone else from Solstice's clan. All the reassurances that it was just Solstice's immediate family suddenly meant nothing, the fleeting observation eroding much of Sue's remaining confidence in them not being a serious threat.

*sq-squeak?*

Right, sorry, Joy.


"I'm—I'm here, I'm here," Sue whispered, holding the little metal girl tighter as she grabbed her bearings. No matter how unnerved she felt, Joy no doubt had it much worse, and it was her comfort her guardian ought to have been prioritizing. "I'm sorry sweetie, I got spooked by something. Here, let's go back to the others now."

Hearing her big friend's voice helped Joy remain calm, which, in turn, reassured Sue. Together, they turned towards the table their friends were sitting at, only to spot a welcome addition—especially now that she was feeling better again. Still not at her best, but miles ahead from the last time Sue had seen her, and that was all she could reasonably expect of her. 'Not quite perfect' sure beat 'so foul her and Sue only wound each other up with their mere presence'.

And, even all that aside, Sue was happy to see her. "Good evening, Solstice!" she spoke up with as much cheer as she could muster, catching the table's upbeat attention. "I'm—I'm glad to see you're feeling better now."

Comet answered her greeting first, squeaking happily from his spot on his mom's lap and earning himself a gentle hair ruffle. The Mayor's smile wasn't as wide as it used to be, but it felt noticeably less forced, a trade-off Sue eagerly accepted any day of the week. "^I'm glad to see you too, Sue—and you as well, Joy~.^" The addition sent giggles through the table as the metal girl in Sue's arms squirmed happily, letting her big friend lower her down onto the ground again.

After a moment of hesitation and looking up at Sue for reassurance, Joy took a step towards the older Forest Guardian. And then, another, and third, until she had made it and gently embraced her legs, trying to feel at ease. It took Sundance all the restraint she had to not swoon at the sight, instead giving Sue an upbeat smile as her friend leaned in and lifted Joy onto her own lap with her physical arms, seating her beside her son. The movement made the girl flinch, but she eased out once she was sat down and comfy—especially with Sue right behind her with a beaming, almost tearful smile.

"Oh, my goodness..." Sue whispered, catching Joy's attention and further calming her with her happiness. "T-twinkle?" She looked around the table, and the ghostly bundle of a child immediately perked up. Within moments, they were scooting up Sue's body, holding her tight and relaxing at her touch. "Do you want to sit with Joy for a moment on Solstice's lap?"

The lil' ghost gave the question as much consideration as they could before declining in their own way—namely, by extending another pair of inky tentacles to hold Sue's torso with. The Mayor didn't mind, starting a chorus of 'awww's' at the sight, one without judgment or mockery, only added to further with Comet's bubbly babbling as he held his friend. Instead, Solstice gently stroked Joy's head and—inspired by Sue—her maw, too. The girl grew stiff at the latter, but soon relaxed, unable to resist how pleasant it felt, even when coming from someone she wasn't as close to as Sue.

"^Did you and Sundance end up talking about anything?^" the Mayor asked, taking Sue out of idly smiling at the sweet scene.

The younger Forest Guardian glanced over at Sundance, wordlessly asking if it was alright to talk about it—and received an immediate nod of confirmation. These were her struggles, after all. "Y-yeah, we did. It was... mostly about my family," Sue answered, smudging the truth somewhat. She didn't want to be dishonest with her mentor, but was afraid to bring up Aurora unprompted lest it would send them both into a very unpleasant territory again. "About my family, and how they kinda still haunt me."

"And haunting like that is ever miserable indeed," Sundance pointedly added, ruffling the fur on Spark's head.

Solstice didn't need to be a psychic to get the allusion, closing her eyes as she nodded. She couldn't deny that the topic still hurt; she didn't know if it would ever stop truly hurting. But it wasn't a pain she had to run away from, a pain she had to keep to herself. It would do neither her nor those she cared about any good, and she finally felt ready to confront that plain truth.

She took a deep breath, dispelled her son's worries with a gentle hair ruffle—and talked. "^Oh yes, it is miserable. I've... I've been thinking about Aurora,^" she admitted, bracing for the pain. It arrived soon after as if beckoned, but weak and muffled, defanged by having been summoned with words and not with ever-winding thoughts. "^I wanted to check up on her at the cemetery, maybe talk to her, but—but I couldn't push myself to. I promise I tried; I just didn't have the strength to take those final few steps. It feels like I should've pushed through regardless.^"

Sundance acknowledged her friend's words, giving her a small but proud smile. "You can try tomorrow, Solstice. It will hurt, but I am glad you're confronting those feelings. I believe in you, whether you succeed tomorrow or need more time still."

"A-and I believe in you too!" Sue added, upbeat and... proud. It was such a weird sensation to acknowledge for Solstice, unexpected and yet more comforting than she had the words for. The Mayor might have doubted whether tomorrow's attempt at talking to her daughter would end any differently than today's, but now she felt willing to give it an honest attempt.

And her pupil wasn't done yet, either. "And now that you've mentioned Aurora... *sigh*, we talked about her too," Sue admitted. Every single bone in her body screamed for her to shut up, to not make things even worse now that she'd admitted to something so dumb and embarrassing. The voices were winning, leaving Sue shuddering as she looked awkwardly at the grassy dirt,

Only for Solstice's words to dispel them all.

"^I understand. I can't—can't imagine all this is any easier for you, Sue.^" Solstice was struggling almost as much, internally debating whether to acknowledge what they were both feeling, the obvious and yet unspoken detail without which Sue's focus on Aurora didn't even make sense. It would've probably helped them both, but she didn't have the strength for it. Not today. But that didn't mean she couldn't express what she thought. "^I'm—I'm proud of you for mentioning this.^"

It was a painful sort of pride, one filled with regret at all this even being so difficult in the first place, but no less genuine because of it. And Sue could definitely tell. "Th-thank you, Solstice," she replied, fluttering her eyelids to abate any more tears for today.

Off to the side, Sundance found a moment to roll her eyes without being noticed. Not as much progress as she might have hoped, but more than she expected. The two Forest Guardians working through their respective ghosts wasn't the only thing on the vixen's mind, though. "I'm not gonna pry what you talked about with Willow, Sue, but... are you sure you're alright? You were terrified afterwards for a moment."

Oh boy, and here I hoped they didn't notice. Though...

Sue shivered at the recollection, nodding firmly. "Well, yes, I got quite spooked there. I was just tired and saw something weird in the woods. Nothing serious, but I do have a question unrelated to that."

Precisely nobody bought the pretense that the question about to be asked was unrelated to what had scared Sue, but none of the older women saw it fit to point holes in it. "^Go ahead, Sue,^" Solstice reassured.

"Is... is someone looking out for what Solanum and the rest of your family are up to?"

As composed as Sue had tried to remain when asking her question, some of her earlier fear still slipped through. Again, neither Sundance nor Solstice could blame her, with the latter answering soon after, "^I don't think so, no. I doubt they'll linger around for much longer after today.^"

Not the answer Sue wanted, but one she knew what to say in response to. "Well, I think it might be a good idea to have someone looking after them." She had many reasons to want that, but realized that one of them would be what the other two women would immediately leap to. "A-and yes, I know I'm still affected by what they had done today and Nightbane's entire f-fucking thing, and I'd be lying if I said this isn't contributing to me asking for it, but it's not my only reason. I'm seriously worried they have an ulterior motive for coming here, more so than just wanting to harass you, Solstice."

Hardly the most convincing argumentation in the world. Thankfully, it was still enough, if almost entirely thanks to that first, emotional reason. "^Alright,^" Solstice responded, hiding her incredulity. "^I'll ask for someone to keep track of them tomorrow. Astra would've been good at that, though she's unfortunately absent.^"

...

Of course.

Sue's eyes went wide. So that was why Root was so eager to send Astra on another scouting mission. He wanted her gone for a reason, and that reason must've been leaving Moonview without someone capable of spying or fighting Solanum and her band! She had no idea just how capable a fighter the dragon was, but her raw strength alone would've made her formidable, even against the invaders' psychics. This was it, this must've been it, the realization winding Sue up even more—

Something cold, slimy, and wriggly was touching her leg.

She had only barely kept herself from jumping at the sensation, rational mind cutting in with a candidate for who this sensation might've belonged to. And sure enough, said hunch was correct, turning Sue's panicked leap in the making into a weak, unnerved chuckle at seeing Basil's little one trying to slither along her leg. And, given that she'd never seen him be intentionally left on his own, meant that someone was probably looking for him.

And she was down to help return him to said someone, and air her mind at the same time.

"H-hey there, little guy," she faux-confidently greeted, carefully picking the brown caterpillar up. He was about as uncomfortable to hold as Sue would've guessed, especially with the constant squirming, but she tried not to pay that much mind—especially with him finally spotting her back once he was brought to within a few feet of her face, held at an arm's length.

As if a switch had flipped, confusion and agitation filling his not-yet-formed mind turned into calm happiness at recognizing someone. It didn't result in much change to his behavior, and especially didn't help with his squirming, but it was still appreciated. "Let's go find your dads, eh?"

Sundance's and Solstice's giggles were a pleasant backdrop for Sue getting up and turning away, but Joy was still unsure what was going on. She was torn between being interested in the brown caterpillar, and being skittish about her guardian walking away. Luckily, there just so was a course of action that satisfied both concerns—leaping off the Mayor's lap and breaking into a dash to catch up with Sue.

If the once-human had trusted herself to be able to carry the lil' bug in one hand, she would've kneeled to pet Joy once she'd caught up with them. But, in the absence of that, words had to suffice. "I'm here Joy, I'm here! Everything is alright, we're just helping our little friend find their dads—oh, and I think we found... uh, Basil's mate."

Her memory of names might've failed her, but she was sure the giant butterfly's appearance would remain seared into her mind forever, even past the shock of their... mutual introduction. Though, to be fair, that was true of almost everyone else in Moonview as well. As striking as their massive red compound eyes were, though, their vision didn't seem to be all that good. It took until Sue was within fifteen feet of them or so for them to finally make her—and the lil' bug in her arms—out.

Their emotions were much more dire than Sue had expected, but they didn't last. A chirping buzz of relief and joy filled the air as they dashed over, subsuming the grief and fear that had shone through earlier once they took the brown caterpillar into their tiny blue paws. Sue wasn't sure whether actual butterflies even had arms, but that was not a limitation this world cared about either way, so what did it matter? Either way, their son was as happy as his infant mind could express; the butterfly was ecstatically nuzzling their little one all over the underside of their head segment, and things were—

BIRCH! His name is Birch. Finally remembered.

—and things were good. Once Birch was done making their baby bug flail and squirm, he shifted his attention to Sue and Joy instead; the latter waving at him happily. Just like Sue earlier, he didn't have the spare arms to wave back at her, forcing him to express his greetings differently. He flapped his powerful wings a few times, the resulting gust of wind somehow ruffling Sue's hair even further and almost knocking Joy off her feet—to the girl's amusement, surprisingly. She half-squealed, half-growled something in return, and just like earlier, Birch responded with another gust of wind, letting out laughter-like buzzing all the while.

And if only the wind didn't contain some weird glitter that made Sue sneeze and feel itchy, she wouldn't have had any issues with it. Thankfully, Birch realized what was going on and spared the Forest Guardian a third Gust, flying over with mild concern. Joy was more overtly disappointed, but didn't let it get to her—especially when she still could play waving at each other back and forth with the caterpillar.

Sue wasn't even sure if her sneezing was Birch's fault, but either way, it was annoying more than anything. "Oh, I'm—I'm—*achoo!*—I'm good. *Sniff*, good Duck I wouldn't think my allergies would flare up hereeee—*achoo!*"

Not hearing any alarm in the Forest Guardian's tone, the big butterfly calmed down instead, flying back to keep his distance as the buzzes continued. Giddy but controlled and apologetic towards her, excitable towards Joy, and relieved towards the little one. It probably involved thanks of some sort, and Sue acted proactively by slightly bowing towards him in return.

His amusement hinted at her having either gotten his intent or the timing way, way off, but Sue was feeling too good—and too sniffly—to let that get to her.

Once Birch had flown off, his son buzzing in his paws all the while, Sue turned around towards their table—and saw it was already empty. She only caught a brief glimpse of Sundance and Spark before they disappeared behind buildings on their way back to their dwelling, leaving just Solstice and Comet walking towards them. For once, the latter was allowed to walk on the dirt and grass beside his mom. Or, at least, to try to walk beside her, constantly stumbling and stopping, tripping and falling, and failing all that—awkwardly waddling.

Still, progress! "Good job, Comet!" Sue smiled.

*squeeeak!*

His antics helped keep the atmosphere light once he and his mom had caught up to Sue, the two adults exchanging tired, but unfaltering smiles. The air between them wasn't perfectly clear yet, but they could look each other in the eye again. And just having that was more reassurance than either of them would've expected—or been comfortable admitting to themselves.

"^Is Birch doing alright?^" Solstice asked once Comet was just a few steps away from Sue.

"Oh? Why wouldn't he be?"

The Mayor hesitated for a while before admitting with a sigh, "^He has had a recent tragedy in the family, to my knowledge. I'm glad he's keeping positive through it, though I hope he'll talk with someone if it gets too much.^"

Sue winced, feeling bad about not having said something to reassure him in that case. Then again, aside from that instant of awful murk, he genuinely felt good at being reunited with his son, and not even in the pretend way she and Solstice were all too keen on. Maybe she would've only made it worse by bringing it up.

Yeah, I've had enough fretting about stuff like this for a while.

She had much more important things to be thinking about, after all. Things, and people. Shaking the previous topic aside, Sue looked straight at Solstice, with the older Forest Guardian noticing the attention and looking back at her after picking her son up into her arms. Once, she would've been terrified at those demonic eyes staring into her. Once, she would've been aghast at the idea of a 'real' Forest Guardian facing her like this. Once, she would've felt too guilty about everything they were both feeling to maintain eye contact for more than a shameful instant.

Once, but no longer.

Taking a bold step forward, Sue raised her hand and patted Solstice's shoulder. The older Forest Guardian wasn't familiar with the gesture, but she didn't flinch—Sue's intent was obvious. And so, so appreciated. Instead, the Mayor's eyes shone as her psychics embraced her pupil and oriented her into a side hug, gentle and warm to the touch. Not something the younger Forest Guardian would've done, but all the more reassuring because of it, the combined warmth undoing more of their respective insecurities than any dry chat.

Especially when accompanied by words. "I'm glad you—you're trying to face it all, Solstice," Sue whispered.

Her mentor beamed. "^Thank you, Sue. And I'm... I'm proud of you. I haven't said that enough, nowhere near enough. I'm proud of your intervention yesterday, of your determination to make things right in Newmoon, of how you've been looking after Joy and now Twinkle, too. I know none of that has been easy for you, but you've been trying your best each and every time. You're doing great things, and more importantly, you're a great person yourself. And I'm hardly the only one that thinks so~.^"

Sue had no idea when all these tears had snuck up on her, but she didn't have it in her to mind that much. She let them flow freely, basking in the warmth of Solstice's words. Twinkle and Joy were quick to notice what looked like distress, but the Mayor was on top of things, covertly whispering reassurances about their... their guardian being happy. Because she was happy.

She hadn't remembered feeling like this, this comfort, ever since that fateful memory Solstice had watched with her in the cemetery.

The sun was setting around them, but they didn't rush. Sue's eyes were puffy from tears, her cheeks glistened with sticky wetness, but neither of these facts mattered, neither of them could matter. Things were okay. She was okay, not just in the moment, but... in general. Inherently. It's been so, so long since she'd last allowed herself to think that.

"Th-th-thank you, *sniff*, Solstice..." Sue mumbled, voice unsteady and cracking.

"^You're very welcome, Sue. Feeling ready to walk back home?^"

Sue was taken aback at the nudge, but couldn't blame her mentor for it—the very last sliver of the sun had just crept its way behind the horizon, best not to waste any more time. "Y-yeah, I-I think I'm ready! How about you, Joy?"

The metal girl perked up, looking away from the beautiful shades of shifting sky above her and towards her guardian. "G-g-go, yes! Y-you happy?"

More than I know how to describe, Joy.

"Yes, yes I am, sweetie. And I hope you are, too!"

"Yeeees!" Joy squealed. "P-p-pretty, up!"

"^The sunsets are beautiful this time of the year, indeed. Imagine if you could capture all those shifting colors in a painting, or weave them into clothing.^"

Sue held in a chuckle—all the 'smart' junk back on Earth could probably do something like that, but even with all its wires and power usage, it still wouldn't have come close to the real thing. "That would be pretty, yeah. Wanna hop into my arms so that you can watch the sky?"

It wasn't even a question.


The route back to Solstice's tent wasn't a particularly difficult or busy one, especially with much of it passing through the outskirts of Moonview. Duck's altar was in the same state Sue had last seen it in. The flowers in front of the shattered wall were wilting, evidently untouched since before it went down, with nobody exactly certain on how to handle it now. She could only chuckle at the realization—and this time, Solstice was feeling confident enough to laugh along with her.

For all his excited wriggling, Comet didn't last long once their path grew dark, easing out more and more in his mom's arms. Joy, however, was still enthralled with the skies above, watching closely as the dark reds faded to purples, then blues, then finally darkness—and, at the other end of the heavens, to pinpricks of stars. The Moon was there too, its thick crescent silently watching over them.

And beside them, between the buildings, a trembling, dimly glowing bundle.

The younger Forest Guardian took a moment to come to after Solstice had pointed out the dim fear in a nearby alleyway, but once she knew where to probe with her tugging sense, she could sense it too. She could even tell who it belonged to based on that feeling alone! Or at least so she hoped—it was hard to deny the possibility of her sight influencing that 'hunch'.

"^Crackle? Are you okay?^" Solstice asked, kneeling beside him.

Sue had no idea how a fire could whimper, but the hidden glowing boy had managed to make that sound, regardless. Worryingly, he didn't react to the Mayor's words, leaving her unsure as her pupil tried her luck. "Crackle, did something happen to you?" It was the most obvious reason for Sue, and it wasn't like Moonview was lacking in suspects for having done such a thing, letting a few drops of anger into her thought process.

Not this time, though. "S-S-Sue! Nothing happened to me. I'm—I'm just afraid of the night," the lamp child answered, telepathy turning many tiny variations of hissing and crackling into tones and words.

Too bad it didn't help with making his answer make sense. "W-why?"

"Because Mr. Root told me the night kin are gonna be coming now! A-and that they're evil and they're gonna hurt us!"

Had Solstice been any more tired, the impulse to facepalm would've won. Sue, instead, was just left disappointed—but still somewhat hopeful. They were clearly listening to her, so maybe she could try to argue? "Oh no, that's not true, Crackle! Some of them are a little scary, sure, but they won't hurt you more than anyone else would."

Immediately, conflict filled his mind, a battle of 'he said' versus 'she said' that threatened to subsume him whole. "But how do you know that, Sue?"

"Because... I visited them a couple days ago, and they didn't hurt me!"

They didn't, only that fucking bird. And, well, Alastor had tried, but Crackle doesn't need to know that—

"Ooooohhh. I see," the bedsheet ghost sighed, picking himself up from the ground. Sue wasn't sure why he was even taking her assertions at face value instead of bringing up Sundance as a counterargument, but she wasn't about to argue with that. The mean side of her brain suggested it was because Crackle sure didn't feel like he got to talk much with anyone, but she was sure there had to have been a different explanation. "Won't they want to hurt me because I make light?"

Sue blinked. "What—oh no no no," she answered, trying to hold in giggles. "They don't sit in darkness all day."

Crackle gasped. "Oh! I didn't know that. Thank you, Sue!" Reassured, they hovered closer to her, carefully wrapping their black... limbs around her waist. Even beyond their uncomfortable warmth, they felt less like flesh and more like stiff metal, making their affection about as pleasant as hugging a kettle. Didn't matter, though—she was glad to have helped them out, especially since she hadn't gotten burned yet.

"Y-you're welcome, Crackle! U-um, gonna be lighting up the—"

"*GASP!* Yes, I almost forgot, thank you Sue!" Crackle jolted into the air. "Goodbye Sue, goodbye Mrs. S-S-Solstice!" Before either of them could respond, Crackle was already gone, his trek through Moonview heralded by the streets lighting up with a dim, purplish light.

As silly as this entire exchange had been, one detail in it had left Sue worried, even after they were on the move again. "Does he interact with Root often?"

Solstice sighed. "^Unfortunately, yes. Root's the one looking after him to the best of my knowledge. Mentors him, too—for better or worse, he's the best suited person in Moonview to do so.^"

Sue wasn't convinced how well that overgrown ferret was suited to mentoring anyone about anything that wasn't putting on a pointy white hat and matching robes, but she had little room to argue. And so, she didn't, letting that point fade into the night as they reached the Mayor's tent.

Joy grumbled about being taken indoors just as the stars were getting really visible, but her annoyance didn't last long in the light of her own drowsiness. Twinkle needed little prodding to fall asleep either, and all Comet required was being lowered into his cot. Before long, it was just the two Forest Guardians, exhausted physically, emotionally, and mentally from a long, long day.

And yet, they felt good—better than they have in days.

In some ways, better than they have in years.

It wouldn't be long before Sue joined the two little ones beside her in unconsciousness. Still, she was hesitant to let go of awareness yet, even as warm as Solstice's affection had made her feel. Her fears from earlier in the day had been dulled, soothed, overshadowed, and weren't threatening to tear her psyche apart—but she was still curious about the catalyst behind them. "S-Solstice?" she whispered.

There were no words in response, merely a faint psychic touch on her head, accompanied by the other Forest Guardian's dimly glowing eyes opening to look at her.

"If it's not too much... what was Aurora like?"

Predictably, Solstice's eyes closed at the question, her emotions threatening to sour from their previous mute contentment. It hurt to think about, and Sue feared she'd inadvertently triggered another breakdown—but her mentor held through it. The Mayor wasn't sure if she'd be able to maintain this kind of focus when the time came to talk to Aurora, but she could cling onto it now. "^Always wanted to help everyone she ran into, no matter how much or how little she was really capable of it, hah.^"

A sniffle filled the silence, then another.

"^Loved to practice her psychics, even if they were quite hard for her. And...^" Solstice trailed off, breathing heavily. "^Could we talk about her more tomorrow? I'm not sure how much I can do it tonight, I'm afraid.^"

"Oh no no, it's okay," Sue whispered. "I really hope we can do that."

Her mentor opened her eyes again, looking at her with a soft, motherly expression. "^I'll try my best. It is long overdue.^"

And that's all Sue could ever ask for. "Thank you, Solstice. Sleep well."

"^May She keep your rest peaceful.^"


♪C A E♭ F♭ A E♭ F♭ G A E♭ B♭—♪

Sue kept her eyes closed as her hands played music on their own, putting her mom's guitar to good use. Even once she'd come to, she took her time opening her eyes to whatever awaited her this time—it's been a while since she last had the chance to just sit down and listen to something pleasant.

Alas, this un-reality would only indulge her for so long, with the individual chords growing disjointed before stopping altogether as her dreamed-up guitar skills had finally descended all the way down to her actual guitar skills. Killjoy.

Even with the music gone, she was still hesitant to look at what awaited her. The last thing she wanted was another confrontation with Justice—or worse. How about a calm dream where it was just her, the kid—the little ones, Lilly, and a nice beach? Or a cafe? Or hell, even a decent chip shop. None of that, yet again, that much she was sure of without even having to open her eyes.

Into this replica of a replica of the place where I saw my mom alive for the last time.

Many of the surrounding details were growing almost distressingly familiar. To her right, a shadowy figure, the twisting darkness trying its hardest to coalesce into a vertically elongated shape but failing. To her left, just like in her last dream, Joy and Twinkle, still dancing and squirming in their seat even with the music gone. Just like the last time, they turned to her smiling and excited, waved at her—and were gone in the blink of an eye.

Before her, someone else. Someone like her.

Freezing dread filled Sue's mind as she took in the details of the stranger, so similar to what she was familiar with and yet so different. White body, green legs, short skirt of loose skin. Green hair falling onto their shoulders, twin red horns sticking out of their head, though not in the same way as with Comet. Taller than him, much shorter than her. Facing away from her.

As much as Sue tried to focus on them, she couldn't figure out who it was. She felt she should know, but she didn't, and each moment where the facts refused to click together only added more fuel to the quickly burning panic within her. Who was this; why were they so familiar!?

Before Sue knew, a Dark Void began to encircle her, closing in on her while her entire attention was focused on this shadow, this ghost before her. At last, they moved, twitching as if shocked as they lifted their head and began turning it towards her—

"BEGONE."

And then, a blink later, the shadow before her was gone, joining the usual two beside her. Sue panted as she caught her breath, panicking eyes looking around the scene in trying to figure out what was going on. The darkness was gone; the fire was back; everything was as usual—and Night Father was there, too.

Sue could faintly recall seeing Him a couple nights ago in a terrible, injured state, and He sure hadn't gotten any better since. His left arm hung limply from its shoulder, only attached to it with a handful of thin, dark threads. That aside, He was as usual—black body, white head, crimson collar and all, calmly watching the fire as He sat a respectful distance away from her.

The last time they had interacted didn't go the most... swimmingly. On one hand, that was decidedly His fault for siccing multiple cruel deities upon her in His dumb investigation, but on the other, He was just about the only celestial being that was genuinely trying to help her out, even if for His own reasons.

I just hope he isn't too upset with me.

Left unsure what to say, Sue broke the quiet with a greeting. "Um, good—good evening, Night Father?" At last, a reaction, His pale blue eye turning to focus on her.

"Greetings."

"Hi, hi. Uh, sorry for your arm?"

"Inconsequential. Gratitude towards you."

It took Sue embarrassingly long to realize what He was referring to, a nervous chuckle leaving her afterwards. She expected people to thank her for that, sure, but not... deities. "Y-you're welcome. So, uh... any reason for the visit, or just to say thanks?"

"Knowledge of the guilty party."

Sue froze at the admission, not expecting Him to have gone from blindly fumbling to figuring out the culprit in just a few nights. "A-are you sure? Who is it? Is—is it Justice?"

"Certain. Identity..."

His voice trailed off, almost as if uncertain. Sue didn't like this, not after Justice's many non-answers about which divine bastard had the bright idea to spirit away her, of all people. "Wh-who is it!?"

"Cannot answer."

She had had enough. "WHY!? I'M SO FUCKING TIRED OF EVERYONE PLAYING THESE STUPID GAMES—"

"Remember last dream. When saw guilty, dream shattered."

...

"Wh-what do you mean? You mean our last dream t-together? I remember th-that fucking Justice douche talking to me with its dumb piece of paper, and then... Th-then—"

Sue tried to focus on what happened afterwards. She flexed every neuron her brain would allow her to, recalling everything up to when some unknown voice made her look over her shoulder. Then… nothing.

The same nothing as when trying to recall what happened before she ended up in this world. "W-wait, so that thing isn't even letting me know who it is!?"

"Almost certain. Apology inadequate answer."

If she hadn't already been so tired of swearing revenge on assorted celestial beings, she would've promised the deity responsible enough punishment to make Margaret Thatcher's eternal resting place seem like a five star resort. "It's—it's fine. W-wait, so it's not Justice?"

"Correct. Justice not likely cause. However, very likely meddling."

"S-so It has something to do with all this! It came in, has been bothering me in my dreams, brought even more pain and confusion into this entire mess and it wasn't even who brought me here!?" Sue half shouted, half begged for an answer, only barely keeping herself together.

"Correct."

None of this was making any sense. "B-but for what?"

"Revenge against the guilty party."

The same reasoning Justice Itself gave her when first talking to her. She had no reason to suspect Night Father was in cahoots with It, which meant that not only Justice didn't lie, but that It was fighting against the 'guilty party'. Sue's mind was much more keen to use more flowery descriptions for that unknown deity, but couldn't decide on which—or whether she ought to keep herself to under fewer than five swear words in a row.

Even that confirmation provided little relief. "So, Justice is just using me like a tool to get back at the 'guilty party', somehow?"

"Basing on knowledge of Justice—almost certain."

Sue felt sick, and so did her imagination. With the stage now set beyond any doubt, it inspired new exciting and terrifying possibilities for what might've been going on. The most harrowing one of all was one where whoever had sent her here was the 'good' one, and Justice was the actual 'evil' she would have to somehow defeat in her stay here. Did it make any sense? Hell no.

Was her mind feeling capable of coming up with anything better? She sure fucking wished. "None of this makes any sense..." she whimpered, distraught.

"Guilty party, very annoying. Justice, very petty."

The mental image of being used as a cudgel for one asshole to beat another asshole with sure is thrilling.


Sue shuddered, wrapping her arms around herself. "Wh-what now? I'm—I'm not sure what to do with this knowledge."

"Long term, continue as were. Only Justice knows its plan. Short term, want confirm."

"C-confirm what?"

"Knowledge of guilty party destroy dream."

She nodded idly, not particularly caring about His experiments. Guess in the best-case scenario, she'd have her hollow answer, a name to curse but which she had no hopes of ever hurting in the waking world. Otherwise—assuming she understood His explanation—she'd just wake up.

That sure sounded nice after having been through all this. "Sure, go ahead."

"Certain ready?"

"Not like I'm waiting for much in this cruel fucking joke of a place—"

Sue blinked.

The dawn creeped across the walls of Solstice's tent, and it was beautiful.



AUTHOR NOTES: This chapter surprisingly didn't take that wrong to write, but I took my time writing something else in the meantime! I started a new series, Lunar Magic, based on a WIP I had laying around for a few years now. It won't be another massive longfic (probably only 3-4 chapters), but I'm still happy with how it looks so far, especially since it's a cute / upbeat cleanse from dourness of recent Another Way chapters, and it lets me test out some ideas that I like, but which it's too late to add into my other fics. Check it out!



If you're confused about the species of the characters and want them spoiled, I've set up a page listing the species of all the featured characters in each chapter!

If you want to discuss the story, I've set up a Discord server for it! (and my other writings)

Also check out my other story, From the Vast, Lunar Magic, The Alarm Goes Off at Six, and Victory Lap!

I also have a Patreon now if you're feeling kind!​
 
Interlude V: Velocity


Interlude V: Velocity



Something very important, huh?

The Windrider sighed as she opened her eyes once more, her faint psychic grasp lifting Latch's letter before her yet again. She'd read and re-read it dozens of times, unable to stop thinking about it even as the sun set around her. Despite her many attempts to rest, sleep refused to arrive, just like her friend's words refused to leave her mind.

The excitement therein wasn't anything unusual for him. However, it was almost always aimed towards his research—and even then, only when he had confirmed a discovery or another. To see it regard something concerning her, and sensitive enough for him to refrain from describing it... left her confused.

For what could even be out there that truly concerned her anymore?

The thought cut through her idle pondering. The shrieks of her friend's letter getting creased in her psychic grasp broke the silence. It hurt to think about, but was a valid consideration. For all the years they've known each other, Latch knew little about her. Definitely not for the lack of trying, either. She was a friend to him, a title she held with joy. At the same time, he also treated her like a puzzle, a living box of secrets and mysteries that had grasped his curiosity and refused to let go.

His nickname for her—a single sound his language approximated to 'V'—was the closest he'd ever gotten to glimpsing one of said secrets. She remembered being annoyed at it once; angry that he'd overheard her drunken reminiscing of the conversations she'd had with her kin over a millennium ago and had somehow figured out which of the whistled, growled sounds corresponded to her name.

Nobody would ever utter it ever again; the intricacies of its pronunciation lost to anyone not of her kin. Nobody was to even try, either. For their names were sacred, gifts from the emerald deity of dragons itself.

And yet, the Windrider was glad Latch kept trying.

It wasn't much; he would never even get close, but... it was a connection. One much closer than she'd had with anyone since the tragedy that had devoured the archipelago she'd just made her pilgrimage to. She doubted she would ever meet someone like him again, someone so willing to chip away at her defenses, so determined to find out more about her as a person and not a demigod or a being of legend. Too stubborn to ever bounce off her aloofness. Maybe one day she'd finally crack, finally open up, finally admit to the most terrifying truth of all—

That, between her solitude and fraying memories, there just wasn't much to her anymore.

Anyhow.

She let go of his letter and closed her eyes once more, focusing on the sounds of the ocean. She'd maintained her determination for an impressive two minutes before curiosity reared its head again. And, once more, it honed in on the subject of Latch's message.

The best—and most unrealistic—scenario would be the news of more of her kin having been found by some distant exploratory mission. The Windrider considered it only for a moment before shaking the thought aside. She had already lost many, many decades to futile searching. The last thing she needed was to fall into that hole again.

So, if not that, what else? Very few even remotely plausible ideas sprang to mind, and she had lived far too long to derive any pleasure in outlandish speculation anymore. Or, at least, so she thought. Perhaps she just hadn't had any topics interesting enough to daydream about in the recent past; her mind suffocated by idle reminiscing, regrets, and... less than pleasant sights surrounding her whenever she stayed with Latch.

Not from him, thankfully. As far as the dragon was concerned, her friend was the shining star of his people; the very best and most thoughtful that Golden Sky had to offer. Sadly, all that meant that whenever she looked out the windows from his workshop, whenever she descended from his tower, whenever she attempted to talk to anyone, she only saw misery.

Castes upon castes. A vast empire, fueled by forced labor in its many vassal territories. Ruled by bureaucrats who have long since lost the ability to perceive their people as anything but an amorphous mass to be assigned and optimized. Whether there were any noble ideas left in its heart, any of the light she had once seen in its people when it was but a single settlement...

The Windrider didn't know.

She didn't want to think about it, either.


With her train of thought sufficiently chilled by the unpleasant topic, sleep didn't take long to arrive. It was arduous, bereft of either physical comfort or emotional calm, but it was there. She was used to it, really. Rest was something mortal beings experienced, something she was by her very nature above.

Which wasn't true in the slightest. But sometimes, when she really tried hard to, she could just about delude herself into thinking so. It was easier that way, to pretend she had never lost anything and her current state was just how she'd always been—broken and restless.

There was bliss in that doomed finality, release from any effort to even try to move on. It wasn't ever strong enough to overcome her profound exhaustion, but that was a minor detail.

Like many times before, the Windrider woke up before dawn, already protectively curled up and shrouded by her reflective down. After pulling her body out of its defensive posture, she cleaned up the space around herself and finished the leftover provisions she couldn't force into her stomach the previous evening. If today would go as planned, she'd arrive in Golden Sky before noon, get comfortable in what was once a storage room in Latch's workshop—now her makeshift den—and preferably stay there until the next full moon.

While listening to Latch go on about whatever he'd discovered, of course.

The thought provided just the kick needed to wrap up her meal and clean up everything she could after herself. Latch's letter, shed down and feathers, any crumbs large enough for her keen eyesight to spot. All of them were grasped with her psychics, crushed, incinerated with a few wisps of dragonfire, and their ash discarded into the wind. Until, at last, no signs of her presence had remained.

Until, at last, she had joined her kin in being but a ghost.

With her ghostly host not seeming to be around, the Windrider closed the door to the tiny outpost and flew off. The earliest tinges of light were brushing against one end of the sky, wordlessly guiding her on where to go. Westward, towards the jewel of the empire. Away from the light. Outracing the sunrise for just that bit longer.

Each mile to the west brought her further and further into skies and seas she recognized, the increasingly familiar path getting rid of at least that source of stress. She was certain she could traverse the rest of the way there with her eyes closed, guided solely by her sense of place in the world. Or, if she were to be mean—and not undeservedly so—by her nose alone.

The juvenile thought forced the briefest of chuckles from her snout; the sound utterly dwarfed by the deafening rush of wind brought on by her flight. As much as she wanted to sprint the rest of the way there as fast as her aging body would allow, it was in hers and Latch's best interest to avoid being noticed as much as possible, and that demanded more conservative velocities.

Being exposed to the Golden Sky's ships and the forced labor force that powered them for any longer than necessary was regrettable, but it wasn't what annoyed her the most. It was the sun, rapidly gaining ground on her and lighting up the surrounding skies. Oh, how it burned, from Wiki purple to Pecha pink; from Sitrus yellow to Rawst blue. A divine spectacle, possibly the only one in the entire small world that hadn't ever ceased to fill her with awe.

She hated it. It made her reminisce.

How many nights she had spent talking with Love about the nature of mortal and divine existence, how many days she had spent resting in the ornate shrine the pink-shelled deity had called home. How many dawns she had watched by her side, exhausted, exhilarated, sometimes even exasperated. Too many to count—or forget. The cruel reality of that fact filled the dragon's white and red body with rage.

Tried as she might to contain her emotions, they only kept building up, handily winning the fight against her usual detachment. They screamed for release, one she finally granted them once the any and all ships were firmly past the horizon. Thunder after Thunder obscured her cries as it boiled the waters below, promising to relieve her fury but only adding to it while draining her strength.

Love wouldn't have wanted her to do this, to degrade herself to Valor at His worst. The thought stung, cutting her display of impotent wrath short. And with it stopped, the feelings it had been obscuring were finally allowed to resume.

And so, the Windrider wept, resuming her invisible flight.

The only thing that hurt more than losing them all was knowing what happened to them afterwards. She might not have been successful in finding her kin, but with time, she had tracked down the whereabouts of the husks that used to be her friends and mentors. Most of them, at least.

Passage had been swept away in the waves She once reigned over, carried by the tides until making landfall. The suffocating mists She had brought with Herself drove away all those who once lived near, and the briny tears endlessly spilling from Her shell had eroded the very land beneath Her. To the best of the Windrider's knowledge, She was still in the same spot over two centuries later, sinking into the earth and poisoning the groundwaters, surrounded by endlessly growing crystals of salt.

Hers was the most merciful end of the ones the dragon knew for certain.

Love's lust for life and cruelty alike had persisted, even with her mind gone. Drawn to the former, only to inflict the latter upon it. All who as much as saw Her were subjected to incapacitating mental torture, ending only with their deaths or an exceedingly lucky escape. Beyond just sentient beings, however, Her curse extended to all that was alive. Plants flayed and withered, the soil grew barren, fungi turned into ash; the air itself was brought to a standstill.

She was the most dangerous and the hardest to track; Her bond with Her islands intense enough for any disturbance to draw Her attention. Sometimes, what followed was a Teleport across the globe—a display of psychic power obscene enough to glass the sterile sand all around her—followed by swift death of whatever fool that thought it wise to disturb the cursed land. But only sometimes.

Bloom, on the other hand, remained unaccounted for. Year after year, decade after decade, all spent scouring the shores of the surrounding continents in search of Him, with nothing to show for it. The dragon's best guess was that He was terrorizing the depths of the ocean, a place not even she could reach.

Valor's fate was the most violent one, as befit Him. Locked into an unending, fiery rage, His movement throughout the globe used to be as unpredictable as the lightning itself. One day, He would circle the same spot in the middle of the ocean; another, he would race straight towards the nearest coastal settlement before blasting it into shreds and hunting down everyone trying to escape.

Golden Sky averting that fate—and containing what remained of Valor—made the Windrider pay attention to them.

According to their boastful legends, their mine was sacred, blessed with unending ore, with their city having grown around it. The truth, to the best of the dragon's knowledge, was... less glamorous, but broadly the same. There was a scar in reality going through those caverns, forever changing and renewing them—and forever trapping any soul unfortunate enough to be at the wrong place at the wrong time. Mining was a crucial job, relegated to prisoners and vagrants; their mummified remains doomed to be one-day discovered in a 'new' tunnel of this Mysterious Dungeon the Golden Sky viewed as hallowed.

Realizing they could not fight against the husk of a deity, the rulers of Golden Sky staked everything on their sacred mine. Valor was lured there, body after body, until He was far enough in for the unending caves to trap Him. It was a costly, nigh-pyrrhic victory, costing thousands upon thousands of lives, as well as their main supply of raw ore.

And if that was where their involvement ended, the Windrider might have even found them respectable.

There have been talks—still rumors, at this point—of tapping into the trapped deity's unending wrath and His raw electric power. The mere thought of one of her mentors being reduced to a pile of charcoal in a furnace disgusted her. She knew her opinion wouldn't amount to anything, though.

After all, she was just like Him—a ghost of an age long past, thrashing aimlessly in a world that was no longer her home.

...

...

Onward.



AUTHOR'S NOTE:
Unrelated to the story itself, but I won't waste the opportunity to gush about my first piece of fanart!


By the wonderful @gakrielevs!

Inspired by the following exchange on my Discord server (link below):



If you're confused about the species of the characters and want them spoiled, I've set up a page listing the species of all the featured characters in each chapter!

If you want to discuss the story, I've set up a Discord server for it! (and my other writings)

Also check out my other story, From the Vast, Lunar Magic, The Alarm Goes Off at Six, and Victory Lap!

I also have a Patreon now if you're feeling kind!​
 
Chapter 34: Charity


Chapter 34: Charity



For once, Sue woke up early enough for everyone else to still be asleep, even despite the creeping dawn. It took her a few minutes of staring upwards in a daze to finally recall what had happened in her dream before she was suddenly pulled out of it. The gash in her recent memories where the events that transpired should've been didn't reassure her any. Once she'd pieced it together, though, she just sighed and got comfortable on her bedding.

Seems Night Father was right, after all.

That answered one mystery, but so many others remained. Mysteries that not even having the identity, fingerprints, and mugshot of the responsible deity would have explained, but which still burned her psyche to think about. Why was she the one thrust into this world? Why was she being taunted with her memories being kept from her, over and over again? The questions hurt to think about, no less so even after Night Father's recent assistance, but... Sue didn't let them get to her. Not this time.

Yes, she wanted to know the answers and hoped she'd get them one day, but they didn't matter anywhere near as much as what she had right beside her. She carefully reached to stroke Joy's maw with one hand as the other brushed its fingers against the canvas of Twinkle's bag. No matter the reason for her god-given task, no matter their excuse for putting her here, in this dangerous world where she'd brushed against death more in days than she had in years back on Earth, she was here now; she had people, big and small, caring for her. And she cared for them in return.

As far as she was concerned, this was her actual mission here, her grand goal in this world. To help these two lil' oddballs feel loved and cared for, to make positive change around her wherever she could, maybe to even help Moonview and Newmoon mend some of their scars—not because an asshole god told her so, but because she wanted to help, however she could.

All that and more could come later this morning, though.

Hopefully Solstice won't mind if I snooze a bit...


A few hours later, the first part of Sue that awoke from her nap was her nose. The thick, peppery smell of yesterday's breakfast filled the air once more, now somehow even more intense. Her ears chimed in shortly after, noticing the distant murmur of a well-awake town, the quiet crackling of flames, and diligent scraping of a wooden spoon as it stirred the pot's contents. All those would've been lovely on their own, but occasional interjections from a shrill, harsh, girly voice, responded to by a smoother, older, more sing-song voice only made the scene incomparably more pleasant.

Triply so once the latter voice had noticed Sue having woken up, and extended the tent's telepathic translation to her.

"Wh-wh-what... umm, red a-and yellow?" Joy asked, uncertain.

"Red and yellow?" Solstice responded, unsure. There was faint shuffling in response, quickly interrupted by the Mayor cautioning "Careful Joy, the pot is very hot. Here, let me levitate some of the chopped veggies—"

"Th-this one!"

"Ah! That's a carrot, sweetie. They're really sweet, and orange," the older Forest Guardian explained.

Joy tried her best to pronounce the sounds she'd heard. "Orh-rgh-oooorhhha—"

"Oooooorange," Solstice repeated, an audible smile in her voice.

"Orgh—orhange?"

"You got it, Joy! Their color is orange, between red and yellow. Any other veggies you wanna know more about?"

*yaaaaaaaaaawnnnn—*

Sue didn't realize the sound came from her until she felt the focus of the rest of the room home in on her, the little toothy girl included. A smile crept on her face as she heard Joy get up from her seat and walk closer. Before long, her little hands were clumsily patting against her chin to catch her attention. At first slowly, then increasingly faster as Sue's smile grew without her responding.

"Joy, I think Sue still wants to rest some—"

"No no, I'm okay, I'm okay," Sue giggled, finally prying her eyes open and squinting at the metal child beside her. "Good morning Joy, good morning Solstice." Joy responded with a shrill, excited squeak before kneeling and pulling all she could reach of the sleeping Forest Guardian into her arms. Sue couldn't resist laughing in response as she held the girl close and sat up. A quick check determined Twinkle to still be asleep, snuggled up to her torso. "Someone's really excited to see me," she smiled.

"Goo-ood mh-mhorning!" Joy responded, excited about having pronounced the words right—and about her guardian being awake, of course.

Once Sue had finished rubbing the sand out of her eyes, she slid to the edge of her bed and sat the girl comfortably on her lap. As if on autopilot, one hand let itself be gripped by the tip of her maw as the other carefully pet Joy's front head, the little one's relaxation downright palpable for her psychic senses. Twinkle themselves was creeping closer to awareness after Sue had sat up, but wasn't there yet—giving her a perfect opportunity to check in on Solstice.

Their eyes met each other as they put on their most confident smiles, neither as unerringly upbeat as they would've wanted. And that was okay. They had a lot to talk about later today, and Sue was glad to not sense much hesitation in the older Forest Guardian at the thought of having that important conversation. Either way, that was for then, and now they were here; they were feeling okay, and more than anything else, they were glad to see each other.

"How was your rest, Sue?" her mentor asked, redirecting her gaze down at the pot before her.

I could go on and on about that, but something tells me the last thing Solstice wants to hear right now is the melodrama of gods squabbling with one another for unknown reasons.

Sue stretched in her seat, and Joy followed in tow, mimicking her motions. "Had quite a dream and woke up early, but overall I'm quite good. Whattcha making?"

"Thickening yesterday's leftovers, adding some spices to soften the flavor, and we'll be having them with some bread," Solstice explained, nudging Sue's attention to a small loaf of what looked like cornbread. "Gotta make the most out of it, ha."

As spicy as her last breakfast was, Sue most definitely didn't mind having some more of it. She absentmindedly nodded at her mentor's explanation, before looking down at Twinkle's gradually creeping tentacles wrapping around her and smiling widely. "Hello there, Twinkle. I hope you slept well." Taking care not to disturb them too much, she unwrapped the knot that kept them attached to her torso—and her skin most definitely appreciated it.

The little ghost wasn't as talkative as Joy, but they didn't lack in ways of expressing their affection and gratitude for their guardian's wishes—if at the cost of some of the affection going the metal girl's way. They reached up to the hand that was currently dispensing affection toward Joy's front head, and pulled on it with all their might, managing to nudge it just enough to lower it down between themselves and the other little one. At last, their reward, Sue's hand, theirs to wrap themselves around. And Joy's to pet in return, letting her have her revenge.

A revenge that Sue couldn't get enough of—and probably never would.

"Goodness, I'm so happy to have you two," Sue sighed dreamily. The little ones were happy, too, expressing that by holding her hand even tighter. Sweet as the sight was, though, the younger Forest Guardian knew full well today would have a lot more in store than just observing the tykes' antics, even excluding the difficult discussion she was hoping to have. "So, how's the aid to Newmoon looking?" she asked. "Lilly mentioned it yesterday, and I was curious."

To her relief, Solstice didn't seem taken aback at all, maintaining her calm as she switched to telepathy and explained. "^The current plans are to wrap our preparations in the morning, and head out around noon. If I were to hazard a guess, all the supplies are already individually prepared. It's just a matter of figuring out the transport for them all, and prioritizing what we take.^"

Only good news, just the balm Sue's mind needed. "That's great news! Is transport gonna be the bottleneck?"

"^Potentially, yes,^" Solstice answered, chewing through the question in her head. "^Thankfully, I reckon we have enough strong, eager hands to carry everything we'd want to there—can't imagine having to leave anything behind for a future round of aid.^"

The Mayor stirred the pot some more once she'd answered Sue's question, only to stop herself at realizing she'd forgotten something. "^Aside from stone and lumber. We have a few people strong enough to carry it, but it might still be a better idea to carry only a minimal amount of them this first time. Can't imagine anyone in Newmoon having much need to build much right now—^" she stopped herself, wincing at having made yet another assumption. "^Actually, best to just ask what they'll need in the immediate future once we arrive.^"

That sounded reasonable as far as Sue went, and her mentor catching herself brought a tiny, but well-meaning smirk to her face. Though, there remained one part of the entire aid undertaking that she was woefully uncertain about, selfish as it was—herself. She hoped it wouldn't be an issue if she tagged along, but the multi-hour walk from Moonview to Newmoon would pose a challenge even if she were to just walk along them. And after her mentor having discouraged Lilly's younger sister from doing just that yesterday, Sue doubted her odds would be much better.

Still, no way but to ask. Guess I'll never stop learning that lesson the hard way, will I?

"Actually, I had a question. Would it be alright if I tagged along with you all?" Sue asked. Her true motives might have been... less than perfectly innocent, what with Lilly also helping in the effort, but she hoped Solstice wouldn't be able to see through them so easily.

Solstice sharply inhaled through her nose in amusement. "^Yes, of course, Sue, why not? Just would have to ask someone to look after Joy and Twinkle. Sundance already agreed to look after Comet, and I don't think she'll say no to your little duo. Besides, if she's gonna be making a costume for Twinkle, then having them there would help immensely with that, no doubt.^"

Sue wasn't as wholeheartedly convinced, what with Joy's frightened reaction yesterday, but she hoped that clearer communication with the two tykes would prevent another scare like that. Which... was something she could do right now, even. "Joy, Twinkle?" she asked, shaking her clung-to hand. The metal girl looked up at her in curiosity and the bagful of ghost extended their tentacles up towards her, as if asking to be picked up. Which she then did moments after, without even having to think about it. "So, me and Solstice will be going on a long walk, and I won't be here for most of the day. Is it okay if Sundance looks after you two today? It's the nice fox lady you met yesterday."

The 'fox lady' quantifier explained exactly nothing on its own, while perking up Solstice's attention. Thankfully, the older Forest Guardian knew exactly how to help, mentally nudging the little ones to bring their attention to the memories of being looked after by the fiery vixen. Twinkle was immediately happy at the idea, but Joy was less so, and both psychics noticed. Sue wasted no time thinking of something to say to help the girl overcome the unpleasant situation yesterday—but, before she knew it, she didn't have to. Joy mimicked what she'd seen adults do and nodded firmly, capping off her response with a stuttered, "Y-y-yes."

Sue was so, so proud.

With both the little ones once more snuggled up to her, the resulting emotional warmth was enough to nudge the final remaining member of their impromptu household from his rest. Babbling filled the tent as Comet came to, shuffling around his cot before scrambling to his feet and peeking out through the thin bars on its sides. He looked at his mom, let out a happy squeak, and fell back down into a sitting position from the sheer excitement—before standing up again, eager to get out.

And Solstice soon delivered, sitting him down on her lap as he yawned and struggled against wanting to doze back off. The scene was adorable enough to bring the dumbest and widest of smiles to Sue's face. It almost made her forget about the unanswered question in the room, one that kept her from being fully comfortable with her mentor's reassurance—but only, almost. "What about my limp, though? Won't I lag behind everyone else and slow down the entire convoy?" she asked, uncertain whether the word 'convoy' was ideal but not knowing how else to phrase it.

The Mayor laughed quietly before giving her a very knowing look. "^Something tells me that, even in that worst-case scenario, Lilly will carry you there in her own arms.^"

Before Sue knew it, her entire face was enveloped in a burning blush at having been seen through so easily. She looked away from her mentor as she reined her embarrassment in, putting in her utmost effort to prevent it from bleeding into insecurity or discomfort. Which paid off, letting her sigh happily and answer without shame, "Y-yeah, that's basically what would happen if I were to guess. She—she told me she was coming yesterday..."

For once, Solstice didn't have it in her to express amusement at her pupil's mood, however well-intentioned. Instead, she just beamed at her, glad beyond words—physical and mental alike—that she and Lilly were hitting it off so well. "^Perfect, then! Besides, I doubt there are many people Newmoon would appreciate seeing more than you, even if just to have that confirmation that you're doing okay after what Juniper did.^"

That angle also tracked, yes. Sue was glad that the older Forest Guardian didn't bring up the people of Newmoon being grateful to her for 'saving' them—even if that would happen, she didn't want to fantasize about it. Especially with her having been but one voice of many opposing Root, even if hers was the one to break through his torrent of hateful rhetoric. She didn't want to be a hero.

She just wanted everyone to be alright.

"^Either way, that'll be then. And now, breakfast everyone!^" Solstice cheerfully exclaimed, before pouring everyone their portions of the now much thicker stew—finally enough to be worthy of that label. This time, Twinkle didn't mind staying on the sides, leaning against their guardian while watching the older Forest Guardian cut slices from the loaf she'd brought with herself and hand them out.

Once more, Comet had to be helped with his portion, babbling as he watched his mom dip his slice into the thick stew before presenting it for him to nibble at. Sue tried to pretend she immediately understood how the meal was supposed to be eaten instead of copying it from the lil' Moon Child. The stew was thicker and much less spicy this time, its bite replaced with a smoky sweetness that lent itself very well for being used as a de facto dip for the bread.

The lil' ghost was okay with staying on the sides, but they were still curious—and Sue answered their curiosity, breaking away a small piece of dry cornbread for them to taste. To hers and Solstice's surprise, Twinkle reacted much better to the treat than the last time, pulling it into the void inside their bag where it was presumably eaten. Or vaporized. Or spirited away. Or thrown into another dimension. It didn't matter; they liked it all the same. They only ended up asking for a couple more pieces before stopping, anyway. Maybe their magical, ghostly stomach was small despite its weirdness?

Questions for someone else to answer, while Sue reaped its spoils—feeling a full, drowsy hauntling flatten themselves on her lap, their amorphous body entirely relaxed.

Behold, a portable pancake ghost child.

It didn't take long for others to get through their portions. After being thickened, there was only enough stew left for maybe two full bowls. The leftovers got cleaned meticulously, with Sue and Solstice going through almost a third of the loaf as they methodically mopped up the remaining stew. It wasn't a substitute for washing, of course, but it was best that they got to taste the most concentrated, slightly burned parts of the stew and not the dirt outside.

Once the pot was spotless and Sue felt like she was more cornbread than Forest Guardian by mass, it was time to head out. Her mentor was about to ask her to help carry Comet to their mutual vixen friend before stopping at the last moment—no, not right now. Not with her blasted family around. The thought was accompanied by a strong chill going through the older psychic, strong enough to spread to her pupil and offspring. Even that gloom was nothing for Comet's antics, though, with the Moon Child reacting to his mom's shaking by trying to mirror it, showing the world his best dance moves as he wiggled in place and waved his lil' arms.

Wouldn't be winning any competitions, but it won the hearts of everyone around, and that's all that mattered.


To her relief, Solstice didn't end up accompanying Sue outside for long. Now that the breakfast was over, it was very much work time for her—there were some details to be finalized and distributions of resources they ought to bring to be settled on. Of course, Sue couldn't be asked to bring the three little ones to Sundance's by herself, not after yesterday, which meant asking someone to walk with her and help out if needed.

And there was just the perfect pair of people nearby to help the younger Forest Guardian with that task. "^Patina!^" Solstice called out, stopping the tall, fiery psychic mid-step. The Mayor dashed up to her and her parent, with Sue trailing close behind. "^Would you mind escorting Sue and the kids over to Sundance?^"

Patina herself was somewhat taken aback, but more so at the randomness of the task as opposed to anything else. She turned towards the Forest Guardians, the contents of the thick bags she was holding filling the air with dry rustling. "^Don't mind doin' that, no worries. Any reason for that, though? Doubt I make the best guardian, ha!^" she answered, her voice crackling and noisy.

Solstice sighed. "^My family is unfortunately around, and I'm worried they'll try something with Comet.^" The lil' Moon Child was oblivious to the topic of the conversation, but noticed the downturn in his mom's mood all the same, holding her closer.

"^Ah, so that's who these ne'er-do-wells were,^" Patina sneered, remembering the unsettling interaction from the previous day. "^Caught them creepin' on me yesterday, had no idea what their deal was since they looked similar to ya. Sure, I'll help y'all out! Don't have a free 'and right now, and I ain't sure about psychicing lil' Comet here—^"

"D-don't worry, I can carry him," Sue offered, taking the tyke from his mom's arms.

"^I could have assisted,^" Celestica added, to everyone's amusement. Both at their comment, and at Comet's reaction to hearing a different voice, his confused squeak lifting everyone's spirits.

"^Ya sure ya wouldn't drop him, Celly?^" Patina chuckled, her voice confusing Comet even more as she turned towards Solstice. "^But but but, getting ahead of mahself—we'll figure it out Solly, don't let us keep ya waitin'!^"

The Mayor appreciated the clarification greatly, giving the paired psychics a quick, but genuine bow before turning deeper into Moonview and breaking into a brisk march. The lil' Moon Child waved and babbled towards her as she left, thankfully not minding a lack of response—he had a different mystery on his mind. He turned towards Patina and Celestica, observing them intently as the group resumed their march.

"^Your interest is highly amusing, Comet,^" the immobile psychic chimed in, bits of genuine amusement leaking through their gravely mental voice.

The fiery woman looked at the lil' Forest Guardian in amusement. "^Guess he's gettin' tripped by us bein' so close.^"

"^No different from everyone else, then.^"

"^Hell of a lot more cuter, though!^"

"^I concur.^"

Not even Joy could resist the building giggles that spread through the group watching Comet's reaction to that exchange, his little head growing dizzy from looking up and down. It provided a much-needed reprieve from the tension filling the air, both the more personal sort referencing Solstice's relatives, and the general unrest from everyone being busy gathering resources for Newmoon.

And now that Sue's mind had steered towards said topic, she couldn't help but notice the bags in Patina's hands. "Are the bags in your hands intended for Newmoon?" she asked, perking her de facto guardians up.

An immediate affirmation, a cheerful one at that. "^Yep! Bringing some of the charcoal stockpiles I had piling up to the gatherin' spot, gonna be helping carry stuff too. Bit of a walk, but I sure could use my legs gettin' stretched from time to time. Would do me good, especially nowadays. And—gonna try lending them a hand in building their own charcoal pit, comes in handy often. If there's time, of course.^"

"^And if they're interested,^" Celestica added.

"^Yep yep! Also worth keepin' in mind. The last thing I wanna do is step on some more toes on Moonview's behalf.^"

Celestica's greenish plates lit up as their eye looked at Patina's head. "^Airing your lungs from all the fumes that had built up in them will certainly help,^" they deadpanned.

Patina rolled her eyes. "^Ya sayin' it like I got sulfur crystals growin' in there.^"

"^Are you insisting you do not?^"

"^I sure hope I do! Would be more sulfur than I can get my hands on right now, could do a lot of stuff with it, keep on looking into hair dyes and such—oh.^" The fiery woman stopped, reminding herself of her mishap from a couple of days ago. "^Sorry for the bleachin' again, Sue,^" she nervously apologized.

With everything that had happened within the past couple of days—and the obvious difficulty in even seeing how she looked without help—Sue had all but forgotten about the mishap with Patina's attempts to straighten her hair. Even the miserable burning sensation, as overwhelming as it was at the time, was little more than a footnote in her recent memories. The discoloration sure wouldn't help her look any more normal, but considering much of her reference for what passed as normal among Forest Guardians was Solstice's family, she was perfectly fine not looking normal. There was also that one Forest Guardian she could recall seeing in a... vision after Juniper's attack, but their details grew hazier by the day.

Ultimately, nobody else was having an issue with how her hair looked, so why would she?

"Don't worry Patina, it's all good," Sue smiled weakly. "Guess my hair's just designed to remain a mess forever, hah."

"^Sure wouldn't mind going toe to toe against Destiny Itself with the next straightener I fix up!^" Patina boasted.

Sue's eye twitched. "I don't think that'll be necessary, promise!"

"^Well, I'll be darned...^" Patina mumbled in the least convincingly upset way possible.

"^Considering the explosiveness of some of your recent experiments, that is not out of consideration indeed. With regards to your earlier question, Sue. Will you be heading to Newmoon as well?^" Celestica asked.

"^Ya should! And, before I forget—^"

Celestica's plates shifted, cutting their daughter off. "^I reckon Sue has already heard plenty of thanks for her role in putting Root in his place.^"

"^Not like one more woulda hurt her anyway, then~.^"

"^Said outcome cannot be wholly discounted.^"

I used to be a village mess like you, until I took a 'thank you' to the knee.

The mental image forced a chuckle or two past Sue's lips, livening up the little psychic in her arms, as well as the lil' ghost. She didn't have the most flexibility with both her arms occupied by Comet, but she still tried to dispense Twinkle whatever affection she could at the moment. "Y-yeah, I'll try to come too."

Patina radiated satisfaction. "^Now that's what I'm talkin' about! Wouldn't have thought you were already convinced to head there—guess standing up to Root really got to ya, eh?^"

Sue chuckled before blushing as she thought about the actual reasons for her decision. "...among other things, yes." The merged psychics' curiosity was downright palpable, leaving the younger Forest Guardian squirming slightly until finally looking up and spotting their destination. "Seems we're almost at Sundance's! Thanks for help Patina, Celestica, I'll—I'll take it from here."

The fire woman shot her a very smug, very knowing look. "^Uh-huuuuh. Well, either way, take care Sue, see ya in a bit!^"

"^Farewell for the time being.^"

"T-take care, you two," Sue responded nervously and turned the corner towards the steps to Sundance's dwelling. Sure, her real motivation wasn't exactly a secret, but she had hoped it would've been at least slightly harder to piece together.

...

Then again, she wasn't sure whether Patina had actually figured out the connection between her and Lilly and was shooting her that look because of it. She could've very well been bluffing, or had come up with some other reason that sounded convincing but was actually incorrect. It was a more comforting explanation, if nothing else.

...

I'm worrying way too much about this, aren't I?

With that predictable and yet somewhat disappointing realization and the accompanying sigh, Sue had finally arrived at her mentor's doorstep. Actually climbing up was more of a challenge than she'd imagined—not because Twinkle and Comet were extraordinarily heavy, but because Joy was so small she could barely scale one step at a time, with the staircase ahead coming off as more of an extreme obstacle course. Thankfully, the help arrived soon after.

Spark woofed an excited greeting as she ran down the stairs, interspersing it with one or two whimpers. To Sue's relief, the moment the kit spotted the struggling metal girl, she ran down and began to assist her with the grueling climb. Even with the help, conquering all the steps took a while for Joy, but it was okay. She just needed a hand, much like everyone else from time to time. Sue had no idea whether the internal reassurance that came with that framing would last for long, but it sure made her feel much warmer as she stepped into Sundance's dwelling.

"Good morning, Sue," the older vixen woofed, stretching her body afterwards. She still opted to lie on the floor, but it was clear now that said choice wasn't because of that being the only pose she could maintain, but because of it just being the most comfortable. Before her, laid several sketches of Twinkle's outfit Sue didn't spot yesterday, including one depicting the broad shape of each individual piece of fabric they would need for it. Just needed the little ghost themselves to act as a model.

Sue smiled weakly, holding the lil' ghost closer to herself before lowering them and Comet to the floor. "Hey, Sundance. I hope you don't mind looking after Joy and Twinkle too—"

"Not at all, worry not," Sundance reassured with a smile.

Sue was still somewhat unconvinced, watching Spark help Joy make it through the final few steps with a bit of worry. "Even after yesterday?"

"Even after yesterday. Though clarifying that you're leaving for a few hours would be ideal to prevent them from getting frightened again." The words weren't meant as a jab, and it took Sue all the mental strength she had to not take them as such. She didn't have to feel bad just because of having made an understandable omission in the heat of the moment—she just had to try avoiding it next time.

She could do this, and if their responses back at Solstice's tent were any sign, Joy and Twinkle could do this, too. "Yep. Let's get that done now, then," Sue responded with determination in her voice, offering both the little ones a hand. The latter took it right away, still easing out after the sudden change of surroundings, and the former edashed towards it as soon as she'd made it past the door frame, panting with her entire tiny body.

Sue might've resisted scooping them both in a hug there and then, but that didn't extend to giving them both some pets and ruffles.

"Joy, Twinkle?" she spoke up, catching their attention and making sure Sundance's translation aid had encompassed them all. "Like I said earlier, I'll be heading out for now, and I'll be back in a few hours. Sundance will be keeping you all company until then." So far, so good—the little ones seemed to have heard her, and haven't reacted negatively, in line with their breakfast chat. "Goodbye, see you later!"

And then, she took a couple steps towards the door.

"N-noooooooo!" Joy squealed, making Sue freeze mid-step as she ran over and hugged her leg. Her distress was hard to ignore, very real despite its sudden appearance. Twinkle wasn't faring much better, though in their case, fear manifested as freezing in place—which they did, shaking weakly.

Thank Duck we had breakfast and headed out early.

Sue had expected that reaction, though not really so suddenly at the very end. Annoying, especially with her having already felt relieved that it all went without a hitch, but better now than in two hours when she wouldn't be here to help calm them down. She didn't let it get to her, facing the little girl and the equally tiny ghost with a smile as she carefully sat down on the floor beside them, letting them scramble onto her lap.

Those bony hips most definitely weren't built to sit on hard stone, but it could wait, too. "I'm here, I'm here," Sue reassured, stroking the backs of both Twinkle and Joy as they clung to her torso. "What's wrong?" she then asked, less to find out and more so to help them express it in their own words.

"S-s-scared..." the metal girl mumbled. She struggled against her own airways and voice for a second, but eventually continued, "P-p-please not leave..."

Twinkle's only response was a couple of drawn-out whimpers, the ghost too unnerved to put together even clear thoughts for Sundance to translate. It was unfortunate, but equally understandable—same with Joy's fear. Sue had a couple ideas of how to respond to it, but settled on trying to be as descriptive as she could. "Joy, the place I'll be going to is very far away. The walk will be very long, too long for you two. You'd get really tired, and probably really scared too. I'll be back later today to pick you both up, and until then, Sundance and Spark will be watching over—"

"Oh, I'm going to Newmoon t-too!" Spark cut in, wincing as she laid down before Sue's lap. "I wanna tell—*ow*—tell Pollux the good news myself!"

"Awww, that's sweet of you, Sparkie. But—in that case, just Sundance will be watching over you," Sue corrected herself.

The adult fox in question lifted a wooden bowl in the air, giving it a little shake. "I grabbed us snacks ahead of time, too."

"See?" Sue beamed. "She'll keep you safe, you'll have snacks, and you'll be able to help Sundance with making a costume for Twinkle? Isn't that exciting?" She kept a close watch over the moods of the two kids, feeling the changes her words elicited in them. Most of what she'd just said had little impact, until the very end, where the premise of helping the baggy ghost with their outfit appealed to Joy in particular.

Ultimately, she'd need to be more direct. "I'm not abandoning you," Sue whispered, holding the tykes closer. "I love you both so much. I apologize for yesterday and leaving you both so suddenly for a while, and I don't want that to happen again. I care for you two so very much, and I always will."

The aid of Sundance's translation helped Sue's words have their desired effect—getting the two kids thinking. They remained huddled to her as they chewed through the words, their tension slowly evaporating with every deep breath. Surprisingly, it was Twinkle to try "speaking up" first, with Sundance finally making enough sense of their thoughts to put them to words. "Safe...?"

Sue smiled as wide as her Forest Guardian face would allow her to. "Yep! You're all safe here, and nobody will hurt you here." It had some impact, but was far from a magic bullet. She was perfectly content sitting here for as long as she had to, anything to make these two tiny magical creatures she felt much closer to than she could admit to herself better.

Joy was next to put her thoughts to words. She looked up at her guardian from her lap and carefully grabbed her hand to wrap her tiny arms around. "B-b-back later?" she half-mumbled, half-squeaked out.

Her guardian answered with firm, calm nods. "Yes, I'll be back in a few hours, before it gets dark."

An immediate reassurance, one that soothed Sue's heart as much as it did Joy's. The girl wasn't done yet, though. "N-n-n-not angry?"

Oh, sweetie...

Sue lifted Joy closer to her chest, holding her as firmly as her noodly arms would allow. "I'm not angry at you, Joy, I promise. I'm not angry at either of you. I'm not leaving you here because I dislike you, but because I don't want you to get scared or tired. How about—maybe in a while, once things get calmer, we can go there together? Then you'll get to see where I'll be going to today."

The toothy girl needed little convincing to appreciate that idea, straightening out as she was lowered onto Sue's lap. She stood up, looked up at her guardian, and pulled her into as big of a hug as she could manage—with both her arms and her maw, turning it so that its flat side curved slightly along Sue's back. Not something the Forest Guardian had ever seen her do before, but no less adorable because of it. Sue beamed as she planted a brief smooch on Joy's forehead, Twinkle holding her free hand close all the while. "Are you feeling better, Joy?"

"Y-y-yeah!" the girl chirped, radiating more confidence than Sue had ever felt from her. As if to make her guardian feel even prouder, she then turned towards Twinkle and lifted them into a clumsy, earnest hug too, trying to pass on the reassurance that had bloomed inside her. It was precious, and it left Sue feeling even happier at the aftermath of—

"T-t-twinkle! We s-safe. M-mom back later!"

...

...

Sue froze mid-pet at the word, her mind suddenly going blank. Every smile, every warm, proud sensation, every shred of relief, all of them immediately overshadowed by this single, off-the-cuff word choice. Something Joy had no reason to pretend, something that Sue had spent days preventing from taking root in her psyche. It felt wonderful beyond words to imagine, but that was exactly the reason she couldn't—because she didn't want to lie to herself, to pretend the tykes thought of her this close when she had no reason to assume that, only for the reality to inevitably disappoint her.

Except, this time, it didn't.

Her expression shifted and squirmed as it valiantly held back the moisture building in her eyes from spilling down her face. She wrapped her arms tight around the little ones, holding them closer than she ever had before. Her hands held their little hands and even littler ghostly tentacles, rubbing against them with her fingers. They—they really thought of her as her mom, at least Joy did, which would make them her, her—

My children.

And suddenly, Sue realized it was her who now had a very hard time letting go of the two, the thought making her break into mute, slightly teary laughter. She wasn't alone in that, either, with even a brief glance further into the room spotting Sundance's amused, proud expression on full display, capped off with a wink.

"^Need a moment?^" the vixen whispered covertly.

Her pupil took a deep breath and nodded in return, before slowly unclenching herself from around the tykes. They got the cue to scramble off her lap soon after—though not before she snuck one more smooch on both their foreheads, anything to make them feel half as warm and loved as she was feeling right now. Her body shook as she stood back up and stretched, the aching in her lower half overshadowed by the happiness lighting up her mind. "I-I love you both so much. B-bye bye, Joy, b-b-bye bye, Twinkle!"

She sensed the brief pangs of worry coming from—from her kids as they watched her walk through the door. Thankfully, said feelings couldn't withstand being subjected to seeing their mom's smile and energetic waving, the latter returned in kind soon after. Before Sue knew it, it was just her and Spark at the bottom of the staircase, leaving her feeling surprisingly empty. It only lasted for a while, but it was still a palpable shift—

*woof, woof—whimper—woof?*

Right, linking time. Getting a grip on herself again, Sue went through the motions of constructing a connection between herself and the lil' fox, the action done faster than she could ever remember it happening. Another little bit of progress, as marginal as it was helpful. "S-sorry Sparkie, I-I didn't hear you there."

"No worry, Sue! Why crying, you?" Spark asked, her voice more confused than it was concerned.

Why was Sue crying this time, indeed. She giggled to herself as she got going, recreating the steps to where the path towards Newmoon began, assuming that's where the drop-off point for all the gathered resources would be. "W-well, Spark, I'm just happy that Joy and Twinkle care about me this much," she explained in rather reserved terms, nowhere near close enough to conveying the sheer warmth fluttering in her chest.

The lil' fox laughed. "Yeah, they really do! Joy told me yesterday that she really loved her mom, and when I asked who that was, she drew both you and Astra!"

Nope, not winning the battle with tears this time—

*growl, growl grumble*


The second set of animal sounds shot a freezing shiver down Sue and Spark's spines, the sheer emotional whiplash almost giving the former a headache. She wasn't sure who exactly it was right away, but the lil' fox's immediate terror helped fill in the gaps.

With the almost worst-case answer.

Any and all happiness had washed from Sue's face by the time she finished turning toward the source of the sound, finding him to be who she dreaded he was. The cream and dark purple badger stood a few good meters away from her, staring her down inquisitively. Contrary to the rage Sue had expected him to feel, however, Root didn't seem to be angry at all, certainly nowhere near as furious as he had gotten on that fateful evening. Instead, he was... intrigued, observing her closely as he awaited a response to his words. That's not to say there were no negative feelings coiled up inside his mind either—annoyed frustration, cold resentment, both of them present if masked under the pretense of manners.

He was standing on the side of a busy intersection, making it especially unlikely he would try to attack her with so many witnesses. She had no idea whatsoever what he wanted, but whatever it was, she would endure—she'd already overpowered him once at his worst; she could absolutely do it again. Perhaps she could even try to dig into him some.

Staring fiercely at Root, Sue extended a second link towards him, the gesturing of her arms and fingers raising his eyebrow. She neither noticed nor cared about what he thought of that, her attention instead distracted by Spark's bright, unpleasant fear emanating from right behind her.

Don't worry Sparkie, I'll take care of him.

"Yes?" Sue spoke up towards Root, breathing heavily as she kept her expression neutral.

"Now hear, Moon-chosen?" the badger replied.

"Yes, I can hear you. What do you want, Root?"

Her bluntness took him aback somewhat, slipping a few drops of annoyance into his thoughts and an ever-so-slight scowl into his expression, but he tried not to let it get into his voice. "Perfect. Curious about you, I," he began, eying out every odd thing about her. Her posture, her mannerisms, her perpetually unkempt hair, even the way she did her psychics—none of them befitting the grace her kin were meant to embody, none of them normal. "Curious about reasons, yours. Why disrespect Pale Lady desire, Moon-chosen? Why give night kin not deserved mercy, you?"

Sue narrowed her eyes. He was trying to dig into her reasoning, but why? To the best of her ability to figure out, the curiosity he was displaying was genuine, but if there was anyone in the entire Moonview who she wouldn't associate with genuine interest in getting to know others better, it was the bipedal, fiery badger. Perhaps that was an omission on her end. Perhaps...

...

Perhaps he was inspired by her having done that same thing to Willow the day before.

Sue didn't like either of the answers. Instead, she brushed that unknown aside and replied curtly, pushing past the racist overtones, "The 'mercy', as you call it, isn't somehow undeserved."

Root scoffed. "Magnanimous, you. Misguided, you. Charity virtuous, indeed. Experienced Moon-chosen charity, my kin. Must only give worthy, charity. Otherwise, squandered, waste."

The framing of her actions as some kind of magnanimous, patronizing good will annoyed Sue more than the bigoted thrust of the priest's words. She couldn't understand how he could look at the mess that was her and interpret anything she'd done as 'magnanimous' with a straight face. Ultimately, it didn't matter either way—especially with the detail he'd snuck in there catching her attention instead. "The Forest Guardians have helped your kin in the past?"

It was just the question the badger had been waiting for. His body language straightened out as his smile turned marginally more genuine, with his short arms splaying wide. "Utmost certainty. By Moon-chosen helped, lowly us, lowly me. Many Moons past, attacked were we. Pushed us from land, lesser kin. Filthy kin. Standing water kin, swamp and mud kin. Beneath most, us even."

The racial categorization inherent to Root's every word wasn't any more pleasant to listen to for the umpteenth time, even with Sue doing her best effort in focusing past those unsightly descriptors and on the thrust of the priest's words. Where he kept categorizing and separating his people from their attackers, Sue only drew parallels—but it wasn't time for them yet. "Why did they attack you?" she asked.

"Accusations foolish of arson. Accusations forest fire. Unthinkable, lesser mud kin accuse. More pure than earth are flames, than mud. Accuse, no right had they, below us. Yielded we. Too many, them. Never stop attack they, never stop harass they. Attack they, kill they, never satisfy. Death uncountable, forced me this shape." He looked down at himself, his body shivering. "Many family death. Mate, death. Watch him after death, Pale Lady, beg I."

Sue was staring wide eyed as Root wove his tale. It was nothing like she expected, especially with—as far as she could sense—Root being entirely truthful in everything he'd said so far. However, he clearly wasn't done yet, and so she remained silent.

"After many day, help Moon-chosen. Swamp kin barbarism, stop Moon-chosen. Messenger Pale Lady, save us Moon-chosen charity. Lesson for us—Pale Lady our guardian. Moon-chosen, messengers Hers. That, Moon-chosen charity. Against lesser kin, protect. You, mercy night kin want. You, take away Moon-chosen charity, act."

The intended rhetorical slam-dunk would've been unlikely to make an impact on her even if it hadn't been mangled in translation, but it wasn't what Sue was focused on. She could only gawk at Root, trying to make sense of what he'd just said, make sense of his actions when taking what he'd been through into consideration, removed from the festering clothing of racialized language.

If she'd interpreted his words right, his people had experienced a genocide from whoever the 'swamp' and 'mud' kin were, before being saved by the Forest Guardian intervention. Root himself had lost family and even a partner, an enormity of loss few even in Newmoon could compare to. Sue had no idea how else to interpret his words; this had to have been what he was implying—

But it made no sense! How could this have been the case!? How could someone who has been through that be striving for nothing more than to inflict that same horror on others!? There has to have been something she wasn't seeing, something she'd maybe misinterpreted; her brain refused to comprehend the picture being painted before her.

She just had to find out what it was. "What—what makes the situation you're putting the night kin through any different from what your own people have experienced!?"

A great question. A terrible question. Root snarled at her words, offense filling his entire body at the gall of his kin being compared to night kin. For the first time since this accursed conversation had begun, Sue felt him get genuinely angry, the purplish flames sprouting from around his neck pushing her and Spark a couple steps back. "How dare insult such!? Cannot compare kin me, kin flames and guidance, and night kin. Hoped you smarter, I. Smart to know, not able compare these. Cannot compare—night kin danger. Real danger. Damned filth, Pale Lady cursed, lowest, lowest, lowest. Evil in flesh."

A part of Sue wanted to scoff at the obvious double standard, but at that point, she'd be shooting fish in a barrel with a howitzer. Root knew this was a double standard; he actively cherished and underlined that fact; he clearly didn't care about it in the vacuum. For a second, Sue considered asking him about how he would've reacted if she had been a night kin, before disregarding that idea—he would've probably responded very similarly.

*Would've been a good one to bring up against Willow yesterday though, darn.*

There was no point in arguing what kin did or didn't deserve help, because the way Root saw it, that fact was dictated by which kin were 'above' or 'below' each other on some abstract hierarchy he kept alluding to. The only way forward was to attack that very assumption, not to argue where anyone belonged on said hierarchy, but to reject it entirely. At least, that's how Sue saw it. She couldn't deny not having given it much thought back on Earth, not least of all because there she was also on top of almost all such hierarchies. Being a woman in a man's world sucked at times, but it would've sucked ten times more if she'd been a poor brown immigrant as opposed to a middle-class(ish) white native.

"I guess that's where we differ," Sue responded. "I don't see myself or other Forest Guardian as the 'chosen', or the night kin as being 'beneath' us."

To little surprise, her show-stopper of a line had no effect on its listener, only eliciting further disgust—and confusion. Intense, pitiful confusion at something so simple, as if the mere idea of such natural hierarchies not existing was literal insanity. Or, perhaps even more patronizingly, childish hope. "Hoped I, smarter you. Naive, foolish you. Throw away Pale Lady gift, chosen her. Instead, seek blame for inevitable damnation, you. Moon-chosen kin mission, cut rot. Destroy filth, destroy Pale Lady enemies. With prayer, with charity, with Her light, with violence, with flame—"

Root paused mid-rant, and Sue's heart skipped a beat. She watched him calm down in what seemed to be an eureka moment, the most unnerving one she'd ever seen. As if a switch had flipped, his righteous fury had dissipated into confidence, with his light smirk sending freezing fear down her body. He concluded shortly afterwards, "Hope I, one day accept natural reality, you," before turning around and walking off, his bipedal gait clumsy and forced.

For a while, Sue could only stand there, unnerved and pissed, terrified that him and Solanum and others were going to do something, but without any idea why. Worries circled around in her mind, louder and louder, threatening to plunge her deep into a panic attack—

"S-Sue?" Spark woofed, almost making the Forest Guardian jump on the spot. "Are you okay?"

No, she most definitely wasn't okay—but that wasn't something for the lil' fox to deal with. "I'm—I'm alright, just a bit frazzled from having to talk to him." She didn't even need to look down at the kit to know she wasn't entirely buying her reassurance, but there was little she could do about it on the spot.

"Well, he's gone now, anyway. Let's get going Sparkie; it's almost noon. People are waiting for us."



AUTHOR'S NOTE: A couple announcements!

One, the commission of the one and only Sundance is finally finished, by the immensely talented art_meow! You can see it in Chapter 10, close to the end, and I'll make a separate post with it in a few days.

Two, the artist I've commissioned the stickers you've seen in some of the past chapters deserves way more exposure than she's currenly getting! (and she criminally undervalues her art). Here's her carrd, here's her pricing, here's her patreon! Go commission her now! I'm not asking.



If you're confused about the species of the characters and want them spoiled, I've set up a page listing the species of all the featured characters in each chapter!

If you want to discuss the story, I've set up a Discord server for it! (and my other writings)

Also check out my other story, From the Vast, Lunar Magic, The Alarm Goes Off at Six, and Victory Lap!

I also have a Patreon now if you're feeling kind!​
 
Chapter 35: Solidarity New


Chapter 35: Solidarity



Despite sensing Spark's unrest following her unwilling chat with Root, Sue tried her hardest not to acknowledge it—or, Duck forbid, react to it. She was expending all the willpower she could scrounge up on remaining calm even as she replayed the exchange to herself, a task that grew harder and harder with each repetition. She heard, saw, and sensed the switch inside the badger at the end; he'd gotten an idea, she knew it. What kind of idea, or how dangerous it'd be for everyone involved in this ongoing mess? No clue.

No clue, no comfort, no relief. Only the knowledge he had some sort of one-up on her in mind, hidden until it was revealed at the worst possible time, undoubtedly.

As usual, really.

Unamusing as the thought was, it wasn't wrong, either. Trying to analyze what had happened in a more rational way revealed very little concrete, which both helped and didn't. He was a bigot, sure, but it certainly felt like he wasn't the type to ever get his hands dirty. The same held true for Solstice's family, if what she said was to be believed. Even if they conspired together to launch a smear campaign of sorts, a good chunk of Moonview would visit Newmoon today. They'll get to see the creatures there as people and former neighbors as opposed to light-hating beasts, undermining Root's efforts.

The conviction she, the builders, and some others had for helping Newmoon wasn't universal, sure, but most villagers were closer to it than the positively murderous hatred she felt from some of the Pale Lady's most fervent worshippers. Sue had a very hard time imagining them getting whipped into the same hateful fervor that led to the night kin's exile the second time. And, without that, any violent plans Duck's devotees may have had were doomed to fail.

Not something she'd ever want to verify the hard way, though—

"S-Sue?" the fiery kit beside her whimpered, catching up to her. Sue might have been managing her fears decently well, but it was clear Spark wasn't doing too hot in that regard, and the constant aching sure wasn't helping either.

They didn't have a lot of time, but they were also quite close to where the path to Newmoon began. She could spare a moment to check up on her very first friend in this wild, magical world. Putting on her least flaky smile, Sue crouched beside the kit and offered her a hand. "What's up, Spark?"

The kit took her time coming up with a response. She first opted to take up the comfort she'd been offered, nuzzling the sides of her snout against Sue's soft, green skin. Every time her pointy fingers brushed through the lil' fox's yellow and white fur, another piece of fear flaked off and drifted into the ether, soothing the emotional trembling—and physical discomfort—in the girl's body. "Scared, Root," Spark eventually replied. Putting her emotions to words immediately brought some of their edge back, but her friend was there to help.

Brushing the short fur along the kit's back and head brought both of them comfort, giving Sue time to think of what to say. 'Me too' would be honest, but wouldn't help Spark's fears any. 'He won't do anything' would be way too confident, cocky even, for her liking—not to say the fox would likely see through that assertion in an instant.

Which left a different reassurance. "No matter what he does, we won't let him hurt anyone—especially Pollux." Sue's words made the lil' fox shudder, at least initially. Not having her fears be offhandedly brushed off as silly, dispelled out of her consideration outright, forced her to grapple with them more than usual, something she still struggled with. At the same time, being comforted that they would be alright, even if the worst-case scenario came to pass, had more effect on her than she expected, taking the edge off the horrors her little mind kept siccing on her.

Because Sue was right. Nobody would let Pollux get hurt, especially in Newmoon. And, after having unfortunately known the priest for a few years now, Spark knew he'd have about as much luck at combat as she would at calligraphy.

More importantly, she wanted her big friend's words to be right. And, without any pesky details for her fears to latch onto, they gradually withered, ceasing their assault on her psyche. She wanted to ask more, ask things she knew full well Sue wouldn't be able to answer, but her earlier words ringed in her mind again. People were waiting for them.

"Thank, Sue," Spark woofed quietly before resuming her earlier march, keeping even closer to the Forest Guardian's leg than before. Sue joined her soon after, glad her words had a positive impact, even if she herself wasn't anywhere near as certain as she wanted to be.

None of them were, but they had to live with that.

If nothing else, the scene they'd walked into soon after provided some distraction—mainly through overstimulation. Dozens of people stood and chatted around a steadily growing assortment of carts, bags, baskets, jars, and even a rectangular stone boulder for flavor. Inside all of them, food and fabric and rope and kindling; medicine and tools; clay and thread; sweat and tears. Most carts were downright overloaded with supplies, but even with their space entirely used up, they didn't come close to fitting all the town had gathered.

Some villagers had planned for that from the get go, tying sacks around their bodies to let them carry more—be it by themselves or with help of a dextrous neighbor. Some knew they wouldn't have that luxury, stretching their limbs and preparing to carry their share of items, with only their strength to aid them.

Some were dragging entire carts by themselves without breaking a sweat. Though, in this specific carrier's case, Sue had no idea whether she even could break a sweat. Ideally, it'd be something they'd discover together one day—but not right now. Right now, Lilly was patiently making her way through the crowd, carrying with herself a heaping load of fruits and vegetables, familiar and unnatural alike. The Forest Guardian had no idea whether it'd be even theoretically possible for Newmoon to eat it all before it went bad, but she was sure they'd find some use for it, even in that case.

Sue's pondering about what a hamlet of ten or so people would do with north of a ton of fresh produce was cut off by the leafy dancer squeezing the breath out of her as she lifted her up.

"Lilly, a-air," Sue croaked, her lungs crushed with the power of love. To Lilly's credit, she lowered her girlfriend onto solid ground the moment she heard her strained voice. That didn't mean she let go of the Forest Guardian, though, loosening her embrace juuuust enough to stop choking her crush before gently leaning on her. Coincidentally, exactly what Sue wanted too.

"Hello Lilly!" Spark cheered in between harsh giggles as she watched the farmhand planthandle her friend. The dancer whistled a greeting back right after, breaking into a quiet, melodic tune afterwards. Sue had no idea whether it was speech or song, but it was very pleasant to the ear either way. Much like Lilly as a whole was pleasant to her everything, ribcage aside.

As fun as fawning was, they wouldn't get far without help from her brain's translating magic. Having her arms be effectively pinned made all the necessary gestures significantly harder, but nowhere near impossible. The motivation of actually getting to talk to her crush probably helped a lot, too, however that fact couldn't be independently verified.

Swerve with one hand, push with the other, try to keep her arms like this as a self-imposed challenge even after Lilly had realized what was happening and let go of her, and bingo. The same sensation both of them had felt so many times in the recent days, one that Sue had grown very used to—and which Lilly had become excited by, more and more each time. "Can hear, Sue?" she whistled out, looking up at the Forest Guardian from her embrace.

"Yes!" Sue beamed, netting herself a tighter and only slightly choking squeeze. "S-so happy you're here, Lilly. This is gonna be a long walk, and any help with carrying stuff will be appreciated."

The plant girl knew full well when she was being deliberately flattered—and she didn't care, taking Sue's words in stride and not resisting showing off just a bit more. "Yesss, help I!" She accompanied her words by lifting Sue off the ground with the effort of picking up a discarded candy wrapper, beaming at the psychic as she looked directly up at her. "Gather fruit some. Harvest little did. Everything important!"

Suppose harvesting all the produce she could immediately beforehand made sure it'd be as fresh as possible. Even if it means a bunch of it still has some dirt on it.

"Not alone, too!" she continued, piquing Sue's interest. "Bluegrass! Bluegrass, where you?" Sue searched through her memories to see if she'd encountered said Bluegrass in the past and knew how they looked like, but couldn't recall anything beyond having maybe heard the name before. Spark most definitely could, though, perking up at Lilly's call and scooting both around and underneath the cart in search for the missing villager.

Lilly, for her part, moved Sue into one arm as she slowly pivoted on her heel, squinting her eyes and scanning the crowds in search of her friend. Sue tried her best to help, but without having a single clue who they were looking for, she had to resort to providing moral support, delivered through gentle pats on Lilly's shoulder. The dancer didn't overtly react to them, but if her tightening embrace was any sign, she very much noticed the gesture.

Among other things.

Sue paid the pile of fruit at the back of the cart with no mind, her gaze only snapping there briefly after seeing some fruits tumble down the heap. That couldn't be said for her crush, though. She knew these yellow fruits; she knew how they behaved in a pile, how easily they rolled—and how they didn't behave. With only a split-second of hesitation, Lilly leaped along the side of the cart and reached straight into the pile of fresh produce. In less than a second, Sue heard a startled squeak from between the fruits, then Lilly's triumphant whistle, before the stowaway was pulled into the air, leaving the suspected Bluegrass dangling from their tail for the world to see.

Oh hey, that's them!

She didn't know much about the leafy green and cream snake, but what she'd seen of them only endeared them to her. And, now that she could associate their embarrassed expression with an actual name, she could even greet them and pass on her gratitude for helping Joy the other day! Or, she could have, if not for Lilly cutting in moments after. "There you! Bluegrass, why sneak you?" she asked, equal parts amused and confused.

Bluegrass dangled upside down as they hissed out a response, red eyes snapping between everyone in sight as they spoke, Sue included. The sight of the Forest Guardian gave them a brief pause as they scanned the nearby ground in search of one particular toothy toddler, but in her absence, greeting just her parent was more than good enough for them. "Scare? Why scare you?" Lilly replied. She then relayed, "Oh—'Greeting', say he, Sue!"

"Hello!" Sue smiled, tilting her head to match the snake's orientation. "Th-thanks for helping Joy the other day."

Without skipping a beat, the dancer forwarded the words, netting them both a bright, cute blush from the boy before them. The warm emotions helped him remain composed even as he began talking about the source of his fears. The earlier mention about him being scared left Sue uncertain about what he was afraid of in particular, hoping she wouldn't have to be disappointed in someone she felt grateful for again. To her—and Lilly's—relief, his answer disarmed their worries soon after. "Meeting people scared you? Not worry, here me! Here Sue!"

Sue did her part, nodding confidently once Lilly brought her up. She had no idea how long the resulting reassurance would last for, but either way it was effective enough to at least make the lil' snake stop shaking (as hard). It was good enough for Lilly, making her carefully lower Bluegrass onto the dirt below—followed by Sue, to her spine's relief and heart's regret.

Before she could lean on Lilly again and go back to not having to acknowledge the long, messy journey ahead of them, the exchange between the dancer and the snake reminded her of something. "Lilly?" she asked, waiting until her pink, wide eyes met hers. "Nervous about going to Newmoon?" Sue thought back to their little drunken chat before she'd left for the night kin village the first time, and Lilly's clear worry on that subject.

Her crush remembered it, too, and wanted to be as honest as she could. She took a deep breath, and answered, "Nervous I? Yes. But, much much better with you! If trust Sue, trust I."

That was just about the best response Sue could reasonably expect, smiling widely in return. She wasn't used to being a source of reassurance and motivation for... well, anybody, but especially not about anything this serious. It felt nice. It felt so, so nice. "Thank you, Lilly. That—that really means a lot to me."

Seeing Lilly's pale cheeks be engulfed in a light green blush was just about the prettiest sight Sue could imagine. It didn't last long, but it meant a lot to them both. It wasn't like they weren't keen on making it last even longer, though—but, unfortunately, duty came first, and the surrounding carts were finally starting to move. Not a lot of time left.

Which raised... another issue. "Um, Lilly? I'm not sure if I'll be able to walk like—" Sue began. The last word of her sentence was shoved to the back of her throat as she was abruptly picked up into Lilly's leafy arms again; the world around her turned into a blur as she was carried around. Where or why exactly, she had no idea. Lilly clearly did, though, staying quiet as she leaped and sprinted through the crowd, keeping her eyes peeled for something

"Here it!"

The half-shouted, half-whistled exclamation didn't even have the time to get settled in Sue's brain before Lilly broke into her longest dash yet, coming to a stop next to one of the other carts. She exchanged a few words with someone nearby, out of Sue's view, before lifting the Forest Guardian and sitting her down in front of the cart, in what appeared to be a designated seat.

Once the dust had settled and Sue's eyes were no longer spinning, she took a glance behind herself to check the cart's contents. Seeds were definitely one of the more practical things to give to Newmoon, though Sue was confused at seeing a mix of several kinds, including a ton of smaller, dark ones. Ultimately, not her place to argue or wonder—especially with Lilly enthusiastically picking up the cart's handles soon after, winking at the Forest Guardian over her shoulder. "How this, Sue?"

The seat was about as comfortable as unpolished wood could be, but that mattered little with the convenience, the company, and most importantly, the sights. "I-it's great!" Sue hurriedly answered, cursing her blush at that last thought. Whether Lilly had realized where her crush's fluster came from or not, she couldn't resist giggling at the sight, making Sue want to melt in embarrassment.

"Hope comfortable, too!" Lilly added.

Sue's wobbly smile grew that bit more focused. "I-it definitely is with you here." She didn't expect her incredibly corny line to have gotten anywhere near that kind of fluster from Lilly—but it did so anyway; the dancer was too taken aback to respond right away. The surrounding bustle and Spark finally catching up to them before leaping onto Sue's lap didn't let either of the two linger on their feelings for long, though. Some other time, some other place.

And in the here and now, everyone was either getting ready, or arriving at the scene. "^Seems you three are all ready!^" Solstice laughed quietly, passing the two lovey-dovey dorks a knowing look and Spark a gentle smile as she approached. "^Is it already time? I hope I wasn't late in all the hold-up.^"

The question had Sue look up at the sky to check whether it was exactly noon, while Lilly did a mental roll call of everyone around, both of them pretending not to be embarrassed. While the Forest Guardian was nowhere near outdoorsy enough to be sure off the top of her head, her strong-legged girlfriend was almost certain everyone who either had something to bring or was strong enough to help carry cargo was already there. Neither of them ended up responding to Solstice's question, though.

The front of the convoy heading out into the forest path was answer enough.

The road was bumpy, but Sue didn't mind. Or at the very least, she valued the comfort of helping with a good deed while surrounded by friends ~~and more~~ more than the discomfort of her backside being rattled every other second. She passed Solstice a light smile, checking on how the Mayor was doing when faced with venturing out into Newmoon once more. The older Forest Guardian was feeling confident, though it was the sort of confidence that needed to be constantly maintained with thoughts of everything being alright; a voluntary and willful confidence in active defiance of ever creeping anxiety. Sue was equal parts proud and jealous.

Before long, her attention had veered elsewhere, and then, from said elsewhere, towards the rest of the surrounding convoy. She knew better than to underestimate Lilly's strength, but the dancer was keen to impress her with it over and over again, maintaining a consistently high pace despite the load—much more than what could be said for most of the others. They moved fast enough to end up overtaking a good chunk of the convoy, giving Sue a good look at what others she recognized were carrying with them, and how well they were managing their load.

The results varied.

Orchid's biology didn't lend itself to carrying much on herself, but with the vines sprouting from the mess of flowers around her neck, she didn't have to. Each individual vine only carried a small, nondescript bag, contrasting with the intricate, fancy satchel wrapped around her body. What they contained, Sue had no way of knowing, but 'medicine' was a good guess. Others' payloads were easier to make out, helped immensely by them being visible out in the open. Dewdrop couldn't carry much in either his actual legs or the... back legs, but it was a limitation he cared little about. A stack of rolled up fabric sat on his back, between the not-legs, secured to both them and his body with several glistening threads of silk. It sure as hell wasn't comfortable, and the red-black spider made no attempt to hide his struggles, but he persisted all the same.

Further along, they ran into the cart Lilly had originally brought with herself, as well as the person who now carried it. Sue recognized the blue overgrown probably-amphibian at a glance, but wasn't certain of her name. High... something? No, wait, High Tide, that was it. Either way, High Tide was slightly struggling with her load, but her thoughts weren't focused on that. Instead, a constant undercurrent of unrest surged through her mind, spinning in circles and growing that bit louder each time as she looked around the convoy. It was the kind of unrest Solstice was dealing with, but without the active effort being put in to keep it under control. Hopefully, she'd get better once they finally arrived at Newmoon.

By the time Lilly had overtaken High Tide enough for the blue amphibian and her cart to be firmly out of range of Sue's neck—unless she figured out how to swivel it directly backwards—another group came into view, one that Sue was more glad to see. Or, more precisely, she was glad to see one third of the group, was ambivalent to positive about the second third, and just hoped that the final third wouldn't get any dumb ideas again. For her and everyone else's sake, said final third was too busy being unnaturally skittish to even think about pranking anyone again. Something that the other two had both noticed and weren't shy about ribbing her about.

Poppy's twinkling voice was as pleasant as it was incomprehensible, stirring Hazel out of her anxious murmurs. The prankster ghost didn't respond beyond a few grumbles, grunting repeatedly as she tried to levitate while pulling the cart behind herself. She only lasted a couple feet each time, ending up with more of an awkward hop as opposed to a proper ghostly glide. It was a fact that the other ghost with prankster tendencies noticed and pointed out; their prehensile, orange hair easily pulled their handle while their gourd-like body hovered in the air.

The pink cook marched ahead of the other two, carrying her fair share in a much more... unorthodox way. Or, rather, unorthodox by this world's standards. Sue had precisely zero idea where Poppy found the comically tall backpack strapped to her ears and shoulders alike, or how she was carrying it despite it being taller than herself—but by Duck, she was doing just that in a more gracefully than Sue thought possible. It was a sight—and smell—to behold. The aroma of baked goods and savory treats gradually filtering through the rest of the convoy, only making everyone behind them hungrier. The handful of items at the very top threatening to fall out each time Poppy did so much as glance around were just as attention grabbing, if for other reasons.

Hazel grumbled something back to Soot and Poppy in response to the latter's earlier comment, netting herself an amused giggle from the former. The pumpkin-ish ghost was hardly done either, their amusement shining bright as they teased Hazel again and again, making the other spook roll her eyes wider and wider each time. The cook mostly just sighed at the two, but occasionally offered a few reassuring words towards her wife, as well as greetings at anyone nearby. Including, eventually, Sue and others.

All Sue could do was wave at the trio and nod absentmindedly at their exchange, neither minding nor caring much about it. Just some teasing, fleeting and ultimately unimportant.

But also, crucially, funny. And Lilly loathed the idea of Sue skipping out on her source of giggles for the past few minutes. "Sue," she whispered unsuccessfully, nudging her head towards the mostly ghostly band beside them. "Want know what talk they?"

Missing out on some gossip? Well, I'd never.

"Sure."

"Yessssssss," Lilly chuckled. "Scared dark, Hazel! Soot laugh, joke about Hazel not want competition in shadow."

To nobody's surprise, Lilly's whisper was much louder than intended, and the group walking just a few feet away from them overheard it easily. Hazel croaked something out in defiance, stammering slightly as she gathered words. Soot's snarky response was immediate, only aggravating the other ghost's annoyance with its mocking tone. Which, in turn, was then defused by Poppy moments later. She wasn't angry or even stern, her words delivered in an uncharacteristically flat sigh. Whatever she said, it seemed to have been effective, snapping the other two out of their respective annoyance and amusement.

For a second, Sue thought it was serious enough that her friend wouldn't end up translating it. Which she indeed didn't, at least not right away. Lilly waited until she gained enough ground on the other group to overtake them, and then a few minutes afterwards for good measure. Even if Solstice had been keeping up with them until that point, she'd opted to conserve her strength at Lilly's dash, not present anymore after Sue glanced over to check again. By the time the scent of Poppy's cooking had completely dissipated and Sue had a hard time even seeing the other group in the distance behind them, Lilly finally brought up the topic again. "Want know what say they?" she eventually asked, tone much more sober than earlier.

Sue doubted it would be a knee-slapper, but considering Lilly was even bringing translating it up, it couldn't have been that bad or personal. "Mhm."

"Say Hazel about not fear dark, fear what in dark. Joke Soot about scary scary bird and bug in dark. Say then Poppy, 'know scared them you, Hazel, but they friends mine, promise I'."

That made sense for why it chilled the air so much, and Sue couldn't help but feel for Poppy somewhat. Not just the emotional rollercoaster over the past few days, made even worse by her knowing and being friends with at least Ginger, but also having to deal with Hazel's antics during all this. Though, that perception could've been just a tad biased because of the Forest Guardian's own experiences with the ghost. Maybe. Just maybe. Sue sighed. "I really hope Hazel takes it to heart."

"And not tease more Soot. Not help when serious," Lilly added. As far as Sue was concerned, that remark also applied more to the other ghost, but her history with the gourd-shaped jokester was admittedly limited. Who knew, maybe Soot was just as unbearable in large doses as Hazel used to be? Not something Sue wanted to find out either way.

With the exchange wrapped up, the silence from earlier resumed, slightly more morose than before. With them surging ahead of most of the rest of the convoy, barring its very front, there soon weren't any other villagers for Sue to gawk at, forcing her to distract herself with the beauty of the surrounding nature. And petting Spark on her lap too, though mostly the former. The woods looked mostly nondescript, though she could've sworn she recognized some trees around her from her doomed solo journey to Newmoon. They were just as lively as she remembered them being, though, with an assortment of birds watching their cart pass by from the canopy above.

It was a sight she would've once not given a second thought about, but now, she wondered. They were people just like everyone else around her, that much she couldn't doubt anymore. What did they think about the artificial village in their midst, about Moonview and its people? Maybe 'artificial' wasn't the right term there. The walls and homes of Moonview are no more artificial than a bird's nest back on Earth. What Moonview was, though, was very cosmopolitan and stationary, rooted to the ground with all its different peoples all at once instead of having the freedom to relocate with the changing seasons or conditions. Both of those would've been a concern for those that had spent their lives in a—and Sue loathed this choice of words while simultaneously not knowing what else to use—'feral' way.

She was curious, but said curiosity was something that would have to be left for another day. This was neither the time to think about that, nor to think about anything else—not with the ground growing even rougher and Sue's seat even rockier. As much as she might have wished to focus entirely on keeping her rear from falling off the cart, the world around her demanded attention. More specifically, the small leafy snake still slithering alongside them demanded attention, grasping it in his coils through the brute force of calmly speaking up and waiting for a response.

With Lilly not responding right away, Sue wondered whether Bluegrass's words were even addressed to any of them, or if the lil' snake was just mumbling to himself to pass the time. As it turned out, it was the former—and once Lilly remembered her passenger would need help with understanding the question that had just asked, she finally passed it on. "Sorry for wait! Ask Bluegrass, where Joy. Curious, uh, too, I."

Whether the leafy dancer's last addition was because she was genuinely curious or to cover up her having not consciously noticed the absence of the kids until now, Sue could only guess and giggle about. She turned to face Bluegrass with a slightly blurry smile, holding Spark close to her lap as she answered. "Oh, Joy is staying with Sundance, together with Twinkle. I may take them here eventually, but figured this trip would be much too long and overwhelming for them, and they've already had plenty of scares lately."

Without skipping a beat, Lilly got to translating. Bluegrass slithered further along to catch up with her as he listened, though neither he nor she could immediately make sense of something in Sue's explanation. "Sue?" Lilly spoke up, uncertain. "Who 'Twinkle'?"

...

Goodness, have I really not told her their name yet? I guess things have been hectic ever since Twinkle first found me...

The realization of just how much of a blur the past few days have been made her chuckle. "Lilly, remember that little ghost I found a few days ago that I carried in a little bag?"

"Bag ghost—OH! Remember, I! Very very small, cute! Twinkle they?"

Sue nodded firmly at Lilly's question, and the dancer wasted no breath explaining everything she knew about the ghost in question to her serpentine friend. Said everything only amounted for three sentences or so, but by Duck were these three intriguing, baffling sentences full of mystery. Said mystery only grew as she talked about them, eventually manifesting in more questions being passed back to Sue. "Better feel they? With you stay?"

The second question made Sue want to nod her head so intensely it was at risk of flying off her neck, but propriety demanded answering them in order. "Yes, they feel much, much better. They're quite shy, but really like drawing! And... yes, they'll be staying with me for the foreseeable future. They—they have grown quite fond of me." Just thinking back to what she's heard from Joy earlier today threatened to send more tears down Sue's face, but she held through, if barely.

"They and Joy thi—*ow*—think Sue is their mom," Spark helpfully added as she stretched, freezing Sue's mind and body in place. It was true, but not something she wanted to be publicly known, not with it being so recent and undecided. They could very well change their minds on a whim, could be Joy had simply meant it affectionately and not in a real—

*squeeeze!*

Spark might not have realized the impact her words had on the Forest Guardian, but Lilly definitely did, especially with how stiff she had gotten. She wasn't sure of the exact cause, but could tell Sue was very tense about something. Couldn't figure out what, though, especially with the sheer adorableness of what Spark had just told them about. Lilly asked, snapping her girlfriend out of her shock, "Good you, Sue?"

I don't know. Some of this still doesn't feel real.

"I-I think so, yeah," Sue mumbled noncommittally. "Just—just worried about what Spark said."

The fiery kit gulped. "O-oh. S-sorry—*ouch...*"

"No no, you've done nothing wrong Spark, promise," Sue pleaded, some of her emotions leaking through. "Guess it's just... still worried about them thinking I'm their mom."

"Why worry? They care lot you! Know Joy trust you, Twinkle trust too, sure I! Why you be mom worried about?"

Lilly's question was easy to interpret and almost impossible to answer. Not without busting out and digging into every single dirty patch of mental threads and memories that made up her tattered psyche, at least. And that was without even getting into the... practical and time-sensitive reasons why the kids thinking of her as their mom was as worrisome as it was blissful. Which, as her mind was keen to remind her, was also true with her relationship with Lilly.

A part of her wanted to just shrug it off with something non-committal but also misleading, to downplay the blatantly visible impact all this had on her. She knew better nowadays than to try that. Instead, she admitted to the small slice of truth, deeply hoping Lilly would care for it appropriately. "It's a lot, but... among other things, I don't wanna disappoint them."

"Don't know if ever disappoint anyone you," Lilly replied in as earnest a tone as she could manage.

"I know I've disappointed myself plenty..." Sue mumbled, hoping she'd be able to keep that particular thought contained underneath her skullcap. Tried as she might to wrangle it, her psyche always found ways to slither out of the neat little cage she wished to contain it in. All her effort amounted to nothing, only at most delaying the inevitable impact on her surface thoughts, actions and even body language—as presented here, with the Forest Guardian almost curling around the leafy dancer. To Sue's relief, tears were still far off, especially after being shed so liberally earlier. The one saving grace of the current situation.

"Not always can be who want," Lilly mused, holding Sue close with one arm as the other stroked Spark's fur. "Sometime all can do is try, and again. And that good. I know you try, Sue, and again. Not always do what want—and that good. Promise."

Beautiful, simple response, hiding all the details their ol' pal devil liked to hide inside of. Sue had a hard time denying that she was trying, even in her current state, but did that even matter? Could that even matter? She had no doubt her father had tried too, and look at where it got him and his daughter—

No. Stop. Not now, please.

Sue flinched as she tried to get a grip on herself again, looking up at Lilly and acknowledging her reassurance with a faint nod. There was still much more to be said about this matter, but with the carts behind them in the convoy catching up to them fast, it was best for everyone for them to get a move on again—Sue included. Then again, as she knew all too well by now, those kinds of thoughts could only ever be delayed—never forgotten. A worry for future her, either way.

A couple rounds of Sue putting on her most calm and composed facade later, Lilly was finally reassured enough to resume pulling the cart, even breaking into a light jog to make up for the lost time. The pace, even while burdened by a cartload of produce, was still much too fast for the grassy snake accompanying them, as evidenced by panicked gasps trailing off further and further behind them. Sue was just about to speak up about whether they should slow down for him, but Lilly was already two steps ahead. Without any fanfare, she eased out all the way to a relaxed walk, letting Bluegrass catch up with them before... reaching to pick him up and carefully placing him beside Sue on the wooden seat.

The exchange of surprised looks between the serpent and the Forest Guardian was immediately interrupted by the breakneck pace from earlier resuming moments after.

Sue couldn't deny getting startled at the sudden appearance of a snake beside her, but with this one being as sweet as he was, her better nature gradually calmed her down. Not fully, especially not with their journey still being so bumpy, but enough to let her at least try to comfort him, too. Spark also contributed, both in being their shared personal heater, and by licking Bluegrass' cheek once he had slithered onto Sue's lap beside her. Sue hoped the snake was doing alright, and acted on that hope by asking to make sure. "Is Bluegrass alright?"

Lilly slowed down half a gear, both to catch her breath and to make the rumbling quiet enough for her voice to be audible over it. She forwarded Sue's question to the snake, watched over her shoulder as the planty reptile blinked up at the Forest Guardian, and passed his reply to her crush. "Good feel he! Tired, nervous, but good!"

Sue recalled Lilly giving her the reason for the snake's nerves, asking to make sure. "He's nervous about meeting new people?"

Bluegrass answered right away, though his words clearly took Lilly aback. She almost tripped on the uneven path, blushed almost as bright as she did earlier, sighed in relief, and confirmed, "Y-yes! G-good for him!"

There were way too many stutters in these words for there to not be something up, and both Sue and Lilly knew full well. The former gave the latter a knowing look, lifting her eyebrow in amusement. She didn't even have to resort to words for the dancer to know her omission had been seen through—though Bluegrass did, and his hissed objection to something was hard to mistake for anything else. Eventually, Lilly reluctantly added, "And... *sigh*, and say he not want disappoint me."

Sue couldn't help but to let out a quiet 'aww' at that, smiling down at Bluegrass—only to see him still staring expectantly up at the leafy dancer. She wasn't sure what else he wanted from her, but he was clearly waiting for something more. He hissed again, as if reminding her of that last untranslated detail—until finally, she relented. "He say he not want disappoint me because amazing I *grumble grumble*"

Now that made more sense as being something Lilly would be flustered about. And, it also made Sue more appreciative of Bluegrass's good taste—because hell yeah, he was right, Lilly was amazing. "He's very right about that!" Sue grinned, leaning forward in her seat. Each new shade of green on Lilly's cheeks only made Sue's amusement grow—and her heart swell. Sue wasn't immune to the mutual fluster either, her cheeks burning bright red at the exchange, much of her warmth towards her girlfriend ending up reflected on her. It was soothing, it was lovely—it even helped Lilly run even faster, soon finally catching up to the very front of the convoy.

Sue fully expected the builders to be individually carrying the most out of everyone, but the sheer difference in scale still took her aback. Granite led the group, with one of his upper arms helping carry a hefty stone block, and the other three each holding multiple thin logs' worth of timber. If his steady pace was anything to go by, he wasn't even close to breaking a sweat at the load, with his only worry being not accidentally dropping anything because of an itchy nose. The larger of the two bipedal rhinos, Bedrock, was also carrying a bunch of timber. In his case, though, most of it straddled the cart behind him, its frame only barely holding underneath the many logs.

The rest of the builder team weren't as fitted to carry tons of cargo, but that didn't mean they weren't trying to help in their own ways. Chisel, the red, metallic insect, had several large sacks tied all over her body. The occasional puffs of white powder that escaped from them gave their contents away as most likely either lime or cement. Hoff, the spiky pangolin, didn't have the stature to do even that, which left the lighter, but no less important, items. Even with enough strength to cleave trees in half and put up homes with their bare hands, tools were important as ever, and Hoff was carrying more than enough for Newmoon—both for now, and likely for years to come. Multiple hammers, picks, trowels, saws, rulers, and levels. There were even dozens of nails tied awkwardly together and to her back, as well as a couple of sticks of chalk and charcoal each, tucked between her claws or behind her ears.

Daisy was mostly preoccupied with balancing the other end of the stone block Granite was carrying, as well as paying attention to the path ahead in case they needed to detour anywhere. Or, more realistically, take down a tree or two to carve out a path wide enough for themselves. Her awareness wasn't limited to what lay ahead of them, either. Her low growl alerted the rest of the group to someone catching up behind them, and once they all made out who it was, they erupted in cheers that pierced the surrounding silence—much to Sue's fluster.

Oh, come on, I don't have to be greeted like that...

Torn between wanting to be polite and not wanting to draw even more attention to herself, Sue settled on returning their greeting with a timid wave, acknowledging them without appearing open to chit-chat. To her relief, the builders reacted how she was hoping they would, focusing on walking as opposed to chatting her up. The tons of cargo shared between them may have influenced that, too—as did the growing shade around them, brought on by the thickening woods. They had to be getting closer, but how close exactly Sue had no idea.

Though... there was someone around who did. "Sparkie? How close do you think we are?"

Sue's words made the fiery kit jump—not because she got scared, but because she had almost dozed off by that point. Spark blinked with her big eyes as she came to, huddling closer to her friends as she processed her big friend's words. Once she did, she froze and looked up, the darkness of this particular stretch of the woods familiar to her. That familiarity didn't extend to this specific spot, as she soon explained. "U-uhh, we—*yaaaawn*—we're close now, I think. Not sure how close exactly, though."

The first point made sense, but not the latter. "I would've thought you'd be quite familiar with this place," Sue mused.

Spark knew better than to freak out at her visits to Newmoon being brought up so casually—things were good now and nobody would be mad at her for doing so—but them being acknowledged still left her uneasy. "I almost never used the path," she woofed quietly, laying flat on Sue's lap. "I was scared of anyone at all seeing me, and usually took a path through the trees while just staying close to the path."

That made sense, and netted the lil' fox a lot more affection in advance, whenever she wished to receive it. She definitely wasn't saying no to Sue and Bluegrass's continued touch, her fur being gently played with staving off the annoying aching all over her body that only seemed to grow with each passing hour. If it was up to her, she'd spend the rest of the day like this with Pollux and others coming to her instead. But, alas, no such mercy—

*caw, CAW!*

The piercing sound coming from further ahead made everyone jump, especially as it was followed up on by the panicked flapping of wings, carrying its source away. Sue recognized the cawing, recalling the night kin bird from her first visit in Newmoon—and she wasn't the only one. The builders stopped, and Lilly followed soon after, unrest and uncertainty growing between them by the moment.

Something wasn't adding up. Sue asked, "What did they say?"

"Rainfall said 'they're coming', and—*ouch*—and everyone else is talking about what to do next..." Spark whispered, huddling closer to the Forest Guardian.

The group's apprehension was understandable, especially with Newmoon not having a reason to think their presence here would be for any good reason. The non-zero chance they were all walking into a trap wasn't lost on Sue. Though, she heavily doubted said chance had fewer than four zeros after the decimal point. If nothing else, if Newmoon really was waiting for them with a trap, Rainfall wouldn't have cawed like that to announce their approach. Now, something like preparing for a battle was... much, much more plausible, though Sue hoped beyond hope it would not come to that—and not just because she and others would be caught in the crossfire.

The group might've been uncertain what to do now, but there was someone who was. And, with the caws echoing through the woods, she took it as her cue to catch up with the front of the convoy. Her Teleport sent a shockwave through the surrounding area, one Sue only perceived with her sixth sense. She watched as the older Forest Guardian approached the builders after having suddenly appeared nearby, letting her psychics recover while chatting with the builders using her physical voice. Ultimately, there were few specifics to be discussed—just reassurance to keep going forward.

Granite and his team didn't have to be told twice. The gray four-arms got them moving again with a single command, and Lilly followed close afterwards, similarly on edge. Sue expected Solstice to fall behind and walk alongside her for the rest of the way to Newmoon. Instead, the Mayor stayed at the front, choosing to lead them all personally, no matter what would happen next.

The path was barely wide enough for Bedrock to fit his cart-ful of logs through it, forcing almost everyone to walk single file. Tension only grew with each passing step as hope combined with worry, both for themselves and for the hamlet ahead of them. They were coming bearing good news and even better offerings—but would it be enough? Would it be too late? Only one way to know, and they were marching full steam ahead towards it.

And just a few minutes later, they had finally cleared the last corner between them and the loosely delineated town, and slowed down. Newmoon may have been much too small to have exact borders most of the time, but at that moment, the line in the sand separating it from the world was very real—and very much guarded. Almost every adult Sue had seen in her first visit to the town stood there, their fierce stares not flinching even as they saw Moonview's forces draw closer. The message was very clear: they weren't going anywhere.

Thankfully for them, they wouldn't have to.

Solstice signaled for the group to stop with a gesture, putting a few hundred feet between them and the denizens of the night kin town. Spark and Bluegrass climbed on top of the cart to get a better view as the entire clearing was shrouded in thick, suffocating silence. Not even the Mayor was certain of what to do next, mind spinning as worry threatened to take control over it again—before stopping, forcibly gripped by her own psychics. There was only one thing left to do, which she then did, taking one step ahead of the stopped convoy, and then another. She breathed heavily as she approached Newmoon, churning through what to say, how to even potentially sum up everything that had happened in the past few days.

Behind her, Sue examined everyone she could make out from the distance—Ginger, Alastor, Heather, Thorns. Juniper was nowhere to be seen—

And neither was Daystar.

Sue remembered the lanky biped's tree climbing antics from her previous visit in the night kin settlement, eyes immediately jumping between the surrounding trees in search of her distinctive coloring. It ended up being the glint of her forehead gem that gave her away; in a spot Sue was certain she'd examined several times before. She was up on the tree closest to Solstice, posed as if ready to pounce.

Or scout.

Daystar's call had nowhere near the carrying power as Rainfall's caw, but its effect on its intended recipients wasn't any smaller because of that. Sue watched as the wall guarding Newmoon shuddered and reeled, several faint gasps echoing through the silence. Sue's heart hammered as she watched Solstice look over her shoulder and beckon them all closer as she resumed her march with a pep in her step.

She watched Ginger be the one to approach them in return, while Heather inched backwards further into Newmoon with their every step. She watched as Daystar leaped and climbed along the trees, getting close enough to examine not just what the builders had brought with themselves, but their cart too, gasping quietly once she'd spotted Sue.

She watched as one particular icy performer finally dared to peek out from behind Alastor, shock spreading over her expression as the reality of the situation sank in.

Just a few minutes later, their convoy had stopped again—and this time, because it had reached its destination. Not even Ginger's relaxed attitude could diminish the sheer shock on his expression as he eyed them all, and especially after he'd spotted the cart behind them come into view—and then the next, and the next, much of the convoy hurrying to catch up to the front. And yet, no words had yet been exchanged, for nobody had any idea what to say in response to something like this.

Ginger gave it his best shot, with Solstice's quick intervention extending her translation to Sue. "—ell, hello there, everyone. It's... certainly been a while. Am I right in assuming that all—all that is for us?"

"^Indeed,^" Solstice answered, her tone equal parts affirmative and disbelieving. "^We figured a more material show of support would only be appropriate, now that we—we undid the banishment of the night kin.^"

That revelation was comparatively less surprising than the tons upon tons of resources being brought before them, but it didn't mean it had any less of an impact. Some gasped, some stared in awe, some even smiled, in defiance of their jaded expectations of how they would've reacted to something like this. Some even cried, especially Snowdrop as she floated closer, her freezing tears flowing down her limbless body. The emotions were building inside everyone, and not even most builders could avoid shedding a tear. Or a hundred.

The growing crowd watched as Granite carefully lowered his cargo onto the ground, the block of stone included, before approaching his long-time friend. Their reunion wasn't anywhere near as exaggerated as back in Moonview, limited to just a single, drawn-out handshake, but it wasn't any less emotional because of it. Daystar could only stare at what felt like half of the town she was convinced would remain their enemy forever, still processing the sight even as she climbed down and rejoined her friends.

Snowdrop wasted no time floating over to her, crying out in a haunted, elated voice the moment she'd wrapped her arms around her. "I-it happened, it really happened!" she wailed, voice catching as if unsure whether it wanted to cry or laugh.

Daystar... smiled. "Y-yeah, it did, Snowy."

"It really, really did..."​



If you're confused about the species of the characters and want them spoiled, I've set up a page listing the species of all the featured characters in each chapter!

If you want to discuss the story, I've set up a Discord server for it! (and my other writings)

Also check out my other story, From the Vast, Lunar Magic, The Alarm Goes Off at Six, and Victory Lap!

I also have a Patreon now if you're feeling kind!​
 
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