Gone Native: Earth Saga (DBZ/DC Comics)

Watch as the moment the Titans and Supergirl leave, the Earth gets invaded by the PTO, led by a Big Gete Star created Metal Freeza, only for a Brainiac possessed Broly to interrupt that fight, only for Darkseid to interrupt that fight, only for Cooler to interrupt that fight, only for a swarm of Metal Freezas to interrupt that fight, all leading into a crisis crossover event with the adjacent universe's Z-Warriors.
 
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Diplomacy
It wasn't the first time Raven had been to space. They had briefly traveled to Kori's home planet some years ago, and they occasionally had to venture out when a bad guy had a secret base on one of Jupiter's moons, or something of the like. The stars in the true darkness of space, free of the planet's atmosphere and the light pollution of its cities, was one of the few hauntingly beautiful things that Raven had ever seen. In the spacious viewing area of their ship, Raven was sure that it was a feeling that the architect of the ship must also have shared.

She sat in front of a wide window that served as a wall, her toned legs crossed in meditation and her eyes closed. She was looking out over the vast expanse of space with something more than her eyes. The room she was in was lavish -- they were on a ship that their guides had simply called a shuttle, but it had more in common with a luxury yacht than not. Various liquors for all manner of species were stocked in the shelves of its bar, and though the tray of food that sat beside her had remained untouched, the delight that she sensed from her friends as they ate told her that it must have been delicious. There was a couch built into the floor of the viewing room, which was split into two elevations. Its plush cushions were soft, but physical comforts were a distraction.

Breathing in deeply, she let the emotions of the ship wash over her. She felt her friends' anxiety and determination. Tim was already digging into the ship's mainframe in search of filters or censoring programs that would edit the information they were receiving from the Galactic Network, while also rooting around for any plans to double cross them and dump them into the vacuum of space. So far, his efforts had availed him of nothing other than a sense of security and the reassurance that he was doing something. Kori was busy flying around the ship, speaking to everyone that she came across. Wally and Garfield were watching TV -- one of the soap operas.

She moved her attention from the familiar aura's of h er friends to the crew of the ship. There was pride. And there was some fear. She had felt the combination before -- from people that knew that they did good work, but were afraid to disappoint. King Tarble being that someone. It was a small crew, just enough to man the shuttle.

The other presence on board. Less familiar than her friends, but more familiar than the ships crew. Kara felt bored, but beneath it was a keen sense of anticipation. She was excited for something, but Raven didn't know what. To see an alien Empire? One that they were on the precipice of outright war with? Kara floated through the halls like Kori, seemingly having no destination in mind, but Raven noticed that Kara's path was leading her to where she was meditating. A few minutes later, Raven heard the doors slide open behind her.

"Er- sorry," Kara said when she saw Raven sitting there, eyes closed, but her apology lacked genuine remorse. The other woman should have been able to hear her heartbeat from anywhere on the ship. What Raven felt from her was something more along the line of reluctance. She wanted to talk, but some worry was holding her back.

"Can I help you, Kara?" Raven asked, prompting the conversation that Kara was here to have. Kara floated inside of the room, her fingers in a mix.

"How do you think Earth is doing?" Kara questioned, apparently not able to jump straight into the topic. To that, Raven opened her eyes, viewing the depths of space. A thought crossed her mind, but she ignored it. Suppressed it in favor of answering.

If she had to speak the truth… "Probably not very well," Raven answered. She had felt the emotions of people when the UN agreed to send them. There was fear. Terror at the easy fall of North Rhelasia. At how easily Tarble carried out his threat.

The fall of North Realasia showed the people of Earth just how small they were in comparison to Tarble. And how minuscule they were in his view -- the destruction of a nation had been treated with the same casual ease as picking up the groceries. It wasn't an undertaking of any kind. It was a chore. One that Tarble had treated with the same reluctance as taking out the trash.

"People are afraid, and fear makes people do stupid things," Raven voiced her concern. One that Kara seemed to share. She still all too easily recalled the final conversation she had with Tarble. The emotions that had rolled off of him. Exhaustion tinged with reluctance. Overshadowing them all his willpower and resolve. After hearing his declaration that he was a King before all else… Raven didn't know if he was the most emotionally resilient person she had ever met, or the most fragile.

His resolve shone brightly, but there were cracks. Blemishes. It was still standing, holding strong, but he was suffering underneath an enormous weight.

Kara floated over, taking a seat next to her as they both floated in midair, "Yeah, that sounds about right. But… I think it'll be fine. No one actually wants a war. I don't think anyone would provoke him." She said, but it sounded like the reassurance was more for herself than Raven. One that didn't work based on the twinge of dread Raven felt from her.

"Tarble won't respond to slights or provocations made against him," Raven said, voicing what she knew to be true. She had seen it. It was a pattern. He brushed off the team of villains- the Suicide Squad, with little issue despite the attempt on his life. He provoked the US government with that declaration of intent, only when the riots started.

The only time Tarble took action was on behalf of other people. Even Adonis fell into that category, though his murder had felt more personal than the state execution that Tarble said it was.

Kara looked at her sharply, "So, you think he actually cares?" She asked, and that seemed to be the topic she wanted to speak about. "When we were fighting, he called it off when we neared a village. I mean, did he do that because he knew he was going to get his ass kicked, or…?"

"Tarble does care," Raven said, wondering why she was becoming the expert on Tarble for the people around her -- from his feelings to his intentions. "And he's doing what he thinks is best. But the question is if he's right or not." There was a reason that the saying ' the road to hell is paved with good intentions' was so famous -- it was undeniably true. "We're going to see if he is or if Earth really is better off without his empire."

"I can't imagine it could be much worse," Kara remarked idly, before wincing ever so slightly -- a flash of shame. It seemed that was an opinion that had slipped out from her. One that she felt and believed, but felt bad for having. Before either of them could say anything, a voice spoke up through the intercom.

"We will be arriving shortly. If you have any preparations to make, then please make them now," the voice informed in perfect English. She shouldn't be surprised by it, but she was -- for a diverse empire, one would think that the language barrier would be a tall one, but it was non-existent. Raven straightened out, letting her cloak fall over her shoulders and pulling up her hood, leaving only the bottom half of her face exposed. Kara let out a sigh as she stretched.

Their eyes met and they exchanged a small nod -- the conversation would be forgotten for now. Now it was time to do what they were here to do. The two of them drifted to the door they had entered where they saw the others on this mission -- Tim, Wally, Kori, and Garfield. Raven realized that they were descending when she started to pick up on emotions that didn't belong to the crew or her friends. They felt… normal. Some were happy. Some were sad. Others angry or jubilant.

There wasn't an immediate flood of negativity, so there was that. It felt like a normal city, but… larger. Raven didn't know where they were, but it was populated. She might have thought it was the capital city if it wasn't for Earth having that… honor.

The door began to open, shifting into a ramp. As it lowered, Raven saw a woman standing at the center of the platform where the ramp landed, flanked by attendants. Raven fought down a momentary flash of surprise -- the woman almost looked like an Azarathian monk. She was humanoid in appearance with light skin that had a dark hue to it. However, her eyes were jet black and no Azarathian monk would dress as ridiculously as she was -- the dark purple dress covered her body had a fanned-up collar. Much like a peacock.

She smiled at them as they walked or floated down the ramp, "Welcome Earthlings to the temporary capital of Tarble's Empire, a city planet called Weijolf," she said, gesturing to the city around them. It was only then that Raven took her eyes off the other woman -- it looked like a city of the future, the kind that humanity dreamed of having one day. Tall buildings that had gentle, impossible curves and an almost polished shine. Darting between them were hovercars in an endless stream, leaving the streets for the people below to walk. Raven saw countless aliens -- and each one she saw seemed to be a different species.

Then she realized that same sight stretched on all around her. Far beyond the limits of any city on Earth. She turned to the woman, who smiled gently, feeling… pride or smugness at their reaction. Like a cat felt when it had caught a mouse.

"My name is Ada'la, King Tarble's aid. Currently, we are at his home estate on the planet. This is where you will be housed for the duration of your stay," Ada'la informed as the shuttle took off, revealing that they were on the equivalent of a carpark for a mansion. Said mansion was blindingly white and expansive -- Raven wasn't sure if the word mansion truly covered it. The building was at least three entire city blocks wide, almost fifty stories tall. Who knew how long the building was. It seemed so wildly excessive. Especially when she compared it against Tarble's utilitarian attitude.

"Tarble lives here?!" Garfield exclaimed and Raven felt a sharp pang of anger from Ada'la. Not irritation or frustration. Anger. Like she had just been slapped in the face.

"King Tarble owns the estate, but he has never been here. In all honesty, I doubt he knows it exists. It is merely one of many," Ada'la stressed the word King hard enough that even Garfield took the hint with a small wince. "At the moment, it houses his family and some close friends." Raven felt a pang of sadness from Ada'la. Raven momentarily let her senses extend toward the oversized... mansion, and frowned at how small of a numbr that was. She wondered if the sorrow was for Tarble, or because she had shared a connection with those that were lost in the war.

"Thank you," Tim responded for the group. Ada'la nodded, her eyes drifting to the Shielded S on Kara's chest. Which made Supergirl puff out her chest with pride, unashamed of the emblem. "While we appreciate it, our goal is to explore King Tarble's empire with the time that we have. I'm not sure if you are aware, but Earth is having a summit to decide if it will join King Tarble's empire."

Frustration and annoyance, but her smile didn't slip. "Yes, I am quite aware of the issue. As such, I have prepared a number of planets to be visited to help your home planet see that it's far safer underneath the wing of King Tarble's Empire." Ada'la replied. She was annoyed with them for being here. Annoyed with Earth. For what reason remained to be seen, but it felt deeper than the annoyance that Raven would expect at Earth for not instantly rolling over.

Wally raised a hand, "Uh, does T- King Tarble's Empire have an actual name?" He asked, and Ada'la's smile became a little more genuine as she felt pleased by the question.

"That is its name," Ada'la said, pinning them all with a gentle look that was also somehow sharp enough to cut. "It is not the Saiyan Empire, nor named with symbolic meaning. This Empire, all fourteen million planets, and all of the might they can bring, is King Tarble's." She said, driving the point home. Ada'la was delighted -- a mixture of pride and almost affection.

What she described was an absolute dictatorship. Or Monarchy. In this case, they might as well be the same thing.

Tim felt pensive about that -- at the volumes that outlook spoke. "I see," he settled on.

"I doubt that you do," Ada'la stated, not quite unkindly, but with firm dismissiveness. Like she was humoring a child that didn't quite understand how vast the ocean was. "If you did, then you would not be here, heroes of Earth." As she spoke, Raven felt confusion. Doubt. But not from the woman in front of her.

She tilted her head ever so slightly but said nothing.

Kori, sensing the growing tension in the air at the two opposing forces, "We would be most overjoyed to explore the locations you have decided upon. Does one of them include Tameran? I… would be most happy if I could see my sister," she said and there was a longing there that ran far deeper than just missing her sister. Raven had been there during the two sisters' last reunion, and heartwarming wasn't how Raven would describe it. It was a mystery why Kori was holding out hope for a reconnection, but… Raven wasn't exactly in any position to throw stones when it came to family.

Adal'la looked to her, opening her mouth to respond, but they were interrupted by the sound of an explosion -- the group looked over just in time to see two small figures break through the wall of the building. They fought furiously, exchanging a flurry of blows -- some of which she could feel the force behind from all the way where she stood, rustling her hood. Then, almost as one, the two figures paused and looked in their direction.

Children. Saiyan children based on the bright yellow eyes and the tails twitching in anticipation behind them.

They raced forward, crossing the distance between them and their small group in the blink of an eye and touched down in front of them. A littletoo hard, warping the ground around their feet. It was a girl and a boy, both wearing the same style of armor that Raven saw all of Tarble's soldiers wore, but the girl had a red emblem on her chest -- a trident that had a crescent at the bottom curved upwards, each point marked with an wickedly sharp arrow.

Raven knew who the girl was before she said a word, "Is Brother back?" The girl, Elery, questioned, looking at the group arranged before her. A frown tugged at her lips when she didn't see him -- frustration and sadness welled inside of her when it was clear that he wasn't there. "Is he still on your dumb planet?"

"He is still on his diplomatic mission," Ada'la answered, while the humans of the group bristled at the insult. "These are Earth's heroes-"

Elery's attention latched onto the word hero as the two Saiyan children looked at them, Elery's black eyes darting over all of them, sizing them all up. She looked a lot like Tarble -- Raven could see it in her jawline and cheekbones. But their expression couldn't be more different -- Tarble walked around hiding everything beneath a scowl, while Elery was so open with her feelings that Raven didn't need to be an empath to know what she felt.

"Heroes?" Elery questioned, a smile spreading across her face. She coughed lightly into her fist, clearing her throat, "Of course you're here to meet me! I didn't know my Hero-Force was already so famous that people across the galaxy were coming to join up, but I won't just let anyone join! You have to have to meet our high standards! You need to be able to fly! You have to be able to transform! And you have to be strong!"

Ada'la sighed, exasperated, but secretly amused. Kara let out a small laugh, "What about two out of three? If I'm really strong?"

Elery's eyes narrowed, "How strong is strong?"

"Your brother couldn't beat me," Kara informed, and the proclamation was met with disbelief from the three. But it was Elery that spoke.

"No way -- if you fought Brother, then you wouldn't have a planet anymore," she argued, and it was more than a little worrying how she was treating that as a matter of fact. "That's why we don't have one. Planet Vegeta blew up because Brother and Other Brother were fighting Frieza." By Other Brother, Raven figured she meant Prince Vegeta, Tarble's older brother. The other Saiyan boy's eyes narrowed, feeling…

Anger. Sadness… and guilt? An odd combination at the proclamation.

However, he kept it off of his face with a firm nod. "Yeah, King Tarble is the Legendary Super Saiyan. There's no way you could beat him."

Kara opened her mouth, but Tim interjected, "You said that you had locations lined up for us to visit? Which ones are experiencing the most… difficulty?" He questioned, not really being subtle, but he didn't need to be.

However, Elery wasn't so eager to let go of the spotlight, "Great idea!" She decided, smacking a fist into the palm of her hand. "Tryouts just like Brother did with the st! I'll take you to the worst parts of the Empire to see if you're Hero-Force material!" She decided, and she couldn't have presented the offer any better than if she had gift wrapped it.

Tim smiled, "Thank you, Princess Elery." He said, and Ada'la frowned, clearly annoyed with the move. But Raven could also sense that she was quickly adapting her plan, and while the annoyance that she felt indicated that Ada'la didn't appreciate Tim taking advantage of the little girl's naivety, it wasn't enough to cause any major issues with their tour of the empire. Which hinted to Raven that the plan was to let them see the true underbelly of Tarble's Empire.

"Are you going to come, Kakarot?" Elery questioned, looking at the other Saiyan child. Kakarot opened his mouth to agree, but caught himself before he shook his head.

"No, Mom's still really sad about all of her friends and Dad dying. I should stay with her," Kakarot said. Raven shifted her attention to the building the two came out of, idly searching for his mother. Shifting through the emotions, it was easy to see who she was based on the vast sea of sorrow the woman felt. Sorrow, remorse, and...

Fear.

Elery brushed it off, "Alright, I'll finish kicking your butt later," she decided, and as Kakarot took off, she looked to Ada'la expectantly. Ada'la offered a thin smile at the younger girl before the ground beneath them began to glow. Raven looked down at the landing pad, before her eyes darted back to Ada'la.

"Please do not worry -- we will merely be teleporting to-"

"Planet Craxus!" Elery decided, and Ada'la didn't miss a beat.

"Planet Craxus it is," she decided. "I am unaware if you have access to teleportation technology on Earth, but some discomfort is expected with its first use." She warned, and when she earned a few nods, the ground beneath them flashed white, and when the glow faded, Raven saw that they had been teleported somewhere else.

The smell hit her first -- it smelled like the air was laced with sulfur. They stood in the heart of another city, but this one was nowhere near as fantastical as the former had been. The buildings were squat and block-like, some of them even with a passing glance showed signs of warfare. But, the people that paid them passing looks, only to stop and salute to Elery, felt… strong. There was sorrow here, a great deal of it. Along with fear and anxiety, but also hope and resolve.

"How far did we teleport?" Tim asked while Raven looked at Kara, who had a frown on her face. Kori wore a similar frown, but her eyes were filled with empathy for everyone she saw. While Raven could feel what the people of Craxus were feeling, Kara could hear them

Elery responded by holding up a hologram projector, displaying a map of Tarble's Empire -- it showed a starting point and towards the edge of the empire, it showed their current position. The answer was far. Very far. Tim narrowed his eyes at the hologram, and Raven could feel the implications hitting him like a sack of bricks. Tarble's Empire had an empire-wide teleportation system.

Kara flew off in a sudden burst of acceleration, making Ada'la's eyes widen in surprise, while Elery seemed to take it as a challenge because she took off right after her. The two came to a stop not far away. Raven looked at Tim and received a nod in response.

"I'll take us to them," she informed, her shadow growing into a pool of darkness underneath her. They all began to sink into it slow enough to not startle Ada'la, but she didn't so much as blink. It seemed that she had experience with magic. A moment later they emerged from the roof of a building near the two, Kara hovering overhead with Elery beside her. They were floating above a crowd gathered around a central terminal that projected hundreds of holograms.

Kara looked back at Ada'la, "What is this?" She questioned, lowering down to their position at the top of a building.

Ada'la spared a look at the sea of people and the holograms, her expression not betraying the sadness she felt. "The people of Tarble's Empire were all slaves until the death of Frieza. They were freed with the formation of the Empire, and now they seek to reunite with their families. Their species." Her sadness deepened, "This is one of the terminals that they can use to discover if their families… or species still exist by referencing service records."

Raven looked out at the people -- some had hope flaring to life while others were falling into the depths of despair. People wept in anguish, and some with relief. There were hundreds of species below, in all shapes and sizes, but they stood together to confirm those that were lost and celebrate those that had been found.

"It doesn't work really well," Elery admitted with brutal honesty. "Only Brother bothered to keep records of individual soldiers until he became Supreme Commander. But that was only in the last quarter of the war, so there's a bunch of time where the records don't cover."

"And those that are found are being given new home planets as their species recovers from the war. With our terraforming technology, they will be tailor suited for their needs." Ada'la pitched in, offering some good news to help smooth over the bad.

However, Garfield frowned deeply, "If Tarble- King Tarble is giving out planets like they're candy, then why is he trying to make Earth his new home planet?" He demanded sharply, crossing his arms over his chest. Ada'la lips thinned ever so slightly as she spoke.

"Your planet has the honor of being the first planet that King Tarble ever owned. He picked it for sentimental reasons, I imagine," Ada'la said, but there was doubt. She didn't believe the words that she just spoke. There was confusion there as well, leading Raven to believe that she didn't know the reason either.

Elery offered a shrug, rather uncaring about the fate of their planet. "I think it was because he wanted all the fights for himself. That's why he won't let all the other Saiyans join him when he went to take it from you Earthlings. There's no way Brother would be satisfied with how strong he is!" She said, feeling confident in her deduction.

Then she flew to the side, looking at the crowd. She cleared her throat before she took in a deep breath and, "SHUT UP!" She screamed at the top of her lungs, her power flaring, and Raven felt a flash of rage. A primal feeling of wrath. Much like with Tarble, the feeling was quickly crushed, but not quite as completely as Tarble managed. The crowd looked up at her, pausing their mourning and celebration."I am Princess Elery!"

There was a wave of shock… then amazement following her proclamation. At the very least, Elery wasn't feared. "On this day I officially announce the construction of the Hero-Force! Led by me -- Princess Elery!" Ada'la felt exasperation but it was overshadowed by an amusement that the Teen Titans shared. "Behind me are our first recruits -- don't bother remembering them because most of them won't survive initiation!" And like that, the amusement faded, though not from Ada'la.

"But the ones that do will be fully-fledged members of the Hero-Force! Our duty is to beat up anyone that threatens the peace of Brother's Empire! To protect the weaker races that can't defend themselves and can't even transform! And to ensure that when another war breaks out that the Hero-Force are the only soldiers that are needed!" Elery proclaimed her hands on her hips. "If you want to sign up, then do so! But like the Legendary 501st, we only take the best! Death is not only possible, but it's also likely! Probable, even! But it'll be a death for something worth dying for!"

She took in a deep breath, "You will fight and die so others won't!" She finished, feeling pleased with her speech. It was a powerful finish. Raven looked to her friends, finding that they also had mixed feelings about it.

"I see you made your own adjustments," Ada'la noted, not sounding surprised as the crowd cheered as Elery flew back to them.

Elery gave a smile that was all teeth, "It needed some. Brother never hid the odds from anyone, and now we'll only get the ones that really want to fight and that are strong." Raven wondered how much of that had been for their benefit -- a show of announcing the Hero-Force that sounded rather similar to their own team. But, Elery also didn't seem to be the type for that kind of intrigue. Then she turned her attention to them all, "Recruits! Are you ready to die?"

"We aren't recruits. We're heroes of Earth," Tim pointed out, but Elery brushed that concern aside.

"Same thing -- Brother will take over your planet in no time at all, so you might as well join now," she said, and it really showed that she had complete faith in Tarble. She treated his victory as an inevitability. It might just be the faith she had as a younger sibling, but the brief glimpse that Raven saw, that the Titans saw…

If Tarble wanted a war, he would have started one. The fact that he didn't was their only saving grace.

Garfield opened his mouth to argue the point, but Kori placed a hand on his shoulder. "We would be honored to aid you while we can, regardless of future endeavors." Kori decided for them, earning a supportive nod from Tim.

"We are short on time before we have to return to Earth, and we have our own mission to complete, but we'll do what we can," Tim voiced.

Kara smiled lightly, "And what will we be doing, Princess Elery?"

The young Saiyan's smile took an almost sinister edge to it. "One of our fleets went rogue. We're going to put a stop to them before they can do any more damage." She said, excitement rising up in her.

Raven didn't say a word throughout the exchange… but seeing that smile made her worry. And deep down, even as the others agreed to help…

Raven knew this would lead to nothing good.

...

The next chapter is currently available on my Patreon and Subscribe Star, so if you want to read it a week early, all it takes is a single dollar in the tip jar. Or, for five dollars, you can read the chapter after that two weeks before its public release! I hope you enjoyed!
 
Watch Earth have a full moon while the Teen Titans and Supergirl are away, causing the Justice League to think Tarble is attacking.
 
Choices
There were few things more haunting than standing on a desolate planet. It was chilling and unnerving. Humanity loved movies of the post-apocalypse, but they would love it a lot less if they couldn't turn off the TV, take a hot shower and go to bed in an air-conditioned room after eating their fill. It was very different seeing a dead world in person.

The worst part of it were the signs of life. Trees that once stood proudly were withered and dead. The clouds above were nothing but poison, dying the entire sky a sickly yellow. That yellow covered the ground like a toxic miasma, killing everything that it touched. The entire planet was dead.

"The Reach did this," Ada'la informed them as she stepped off of the shuttle used to transport them. "A delaying tactic to slow King Tarble's advance. I don't believe that they expected him to cover expenses to provide adequate protective gear for his soldiers." She noted, a faint blue outline covering her body, the protective gear she mentioned. It was both a shield and a filter, letting them breathe and interact with the world normally.

Raven looked back out at the ruined city they stood in -- a city on the planet Craxus, which made the city not far from where they started that much more incredible. She never would have guessed that they were on a dead planet.

"It's being terraformed, right? How long do you expect it to take?" Tim questioned, striding forward as he inspected the abandoned city. There were signs of battle everywhere. From the streets being covered in rubble to the potholes caused by explosions, bullet holes, and scorch marks everywhere… to bodies that were left where they had fallen and rot.

"Yes, planet Craxus is included in a sweeping reform to terraform hundreds of thousands of planets. Given that Craxus produces a rare mineral, it's slotted as a high priority, so it should be done in as little as a year." Ada'la said, going into detail because she knew what she said was impressive.

"A year? And this planet will be teaming with life once again?" Kori questioned, sounding hopeful. Ada'la offered a smile while the rest of them let that sink in. There had been major strides to push for clean energy on Earth, but money made an otherwise simple problem extremely complicated. The fact that this level of damage, to the point that the planet itself felt dead, could be undone was… shocking.

Ada'la nodded, "Of course. In the years that follow, we will be reintroducing the animals that lived here by extracting DNA from their bodies. Such an endevor will take time, but King Tarble is committed to the restoration of the ecosystems that were demolished by the war."

To that, Elery revealed herself, a frown on her face as she crossed her arms. "I don't know why Brother is bothering. He should just spread out the toughest species across all the planets. Like we used to do with planet Vegeta, only when a planet blows up, we won't lose such a harvest of tasty monsters." Raven spared the princess a look -- she was frowning, but she felt anticipation and excitement.

Raven fought off a small smile as she recognized the look. Elery was imitating Tarble all the way down to his scowl.

Then she shook her head, "Recruits! Our mission is an important one!" Elery began, floating over them solely so she could look down at them. Kara was visibly fighting off a smile -- it was easy to tell that Elery had fallen under the cute category in the Kryptonian's mind. For good reason, Raven could admit, but for the rest… for most of the Titans, excluding Kori, they had a bit more insight into to Saiyan princess.

Elery was in the same boat as Tarble was. She grew up on the frontline that her older brother constantly pushed. For the entirety of her life, she only knew war. Tarble… Tarble seemed solemn about it. The fact Elery acted like a normal child was more than a little alarming. Had Tarble protected her from the horrors of war better than the documentaries showed, or was something else at play?

"Our mission is simple! Some bad guys are pretending to be our soldiers- well, they were our soldiers, but they turned out to be jerks, so we're beating them down before they can dirty our name!" Elery informed them of their mission, and Raven could feel Tim mentally shifting gears. She could also feel Ada'la's frustration -- it was clear that she would have liked to show off more high points than low points during their brief tour of Tarble's Empire.

Tim raised a hand, making Elery point at him, "Permission to speak, Earthling!"

"What have they been doing to have themselves be labeled as bad guys?" Tim asked a very loaded question. One that Elery didn't pick up on, but Ada'la certainly did.

"During the initial formation of Tarble's Empire, there were a number of defections to his side. A number of them were escaped slaves, but most came from the military that wished to continue to serve under their Supreme Commander. However, some are not… handling their newfound freedom with grace," she quickly explained.

Elery shrugged, "It doesn't matter who they are or why they're doing it! Are we going to let them get away with it, Hero-Force?!" She demanded, expecting a resounding no.

"No!" Kori cheered with a little too much enthusiasm, earning a broad smile from Elery before she quickly schooled her expression.

"Here's what we know -- there are ground forces in some old mines. They've taken some slaves from various planets prior to joining our side and are having them dig up metal and stuff. That metal and stuff get transported to a fleet, but as of this moment, we are uncertain which ships are guilty of breaking Brother's rules." Elery began, holding up a hologram projector that gave a short brief -- where they are, estimated numbers, people of interest. "Then those ships use something called a black market to smuggle the metal and stuff to other people. Or they're holding onto it in the hopes that it'll be expensive when we implement the economy."

"Implement the economy?' Tim echoed, sounding stunned. "As in…"

"A currency will be introduced to the empire in the coming days," Ada'la quickly smoothed over the point before Elery could do any more damage. "Given that Tarble's Empire is mostly comprised of slaves that had no finances to speak of, some of which don't even understand money as a concept, it was decided to introduce the economy… gently to the population-"

"Not important! Recruits! You have your mission so go show me you deserve a spot in my Hero-Force! And I would say don't die, but I don't have high hopes for some of you," Elery said, looking at Tim. The Titan leader swallowed his irritation before he looked to her. Raven nodded before her shadow began to grow, making all of them sink into the ground. Except for Elery, who dove in headfirst.

A moment later, they were rising out of the ground vastly closer to their target, on a ridge that overlooked it. There was a vast hole in the planet, not too different than mining on Earth based on her limited knowledge. The only difference being that at the bottom were several transports and heavy machinery for extracting whatever mineral was buried. She spotted tunnels that seemed to me smaller mine shafts, Kara tilted her head as she kept an ear out, but Raven's attention was brought to Ada'la when she very pointedly scoffed.

"They aren't using matter extractors. No wonder they're using slave labor, they might as well be primitives," Ada'la remarked. It was obvious that she was doing, but that didn't mean she wasn't doing a good job of it. The point was being made on every front -- Tarble's Empire used technology that was wildly more advanced than the standard on Earth. To the point that anything short was archaic and primitive.

"I'm picking up a few hundred voices and heartbeats," Kara noted, and that caught Elery's attention.

"You're like Brother?" She questioned, earning an odd look from Kara. "Brother always knows where everyone is. I've tried straining my ears really hard, but I still can't hear heartbeats if they're too far away. But Brother can. Or he does something."

Kara seemed to mentally file that away for later, but Tim easily fell into old habits. "Titans -- our top priority is to secure the hostages. Second is finding the fleet connection. If someone runs, then they run. I can't imagine it would be difficult catching them in this wasteland." And with old habits came their own roles.

Leaving Kara as the odd one out, "I'll… make sure the ring leaders don't get away?" She tried -- she had brief moments of cooperation with the Teen Titans, but she never became a full-fledged member. It was more circumstances pit them against the same bad guy instead of actual teamwork.

"Titans, go!" Tim said, and they fell into their roles seamlessly. Wally took off in a blur of speed, vanishing in one of the tunnels of the mines while Raven once again expanded her shadow and sank into the ground. She followed where the emotions were the strongest -- anger, despair, and yearning. When she materialized with Tim in tow, Raven found herself in what could only be described as a pen.

Aliens were seated, collars marking them all. Only those that were nearby bothered to look up at her sudden entrance. Raven was no expert in alien physiology, but she didn't need to be one to know that the aliens had been treated poorly. She saw injuries and neglect. Tim felt anger and he let it strengthen his resolve.

Raven knew he would include the sight in her report, but she could already hear the rebuttal in her ears. How many times had they stumbled onto a similar sight on Earth?

"We're here to help," Tim began, crouching down to the closet alien to inspect his collar. The alien, surprisingly, leaned away from his touch.

"They're bomb collars," the alien spoke in a soft voice that was more of a croak. Similar to a human with a dry throat… or someone that had been exposed to a poisonous atmosphere. "They'll blow up if you mess with them."

To that, Tim felt anger, but he looked to her. "I'm going to gather the intel. Take care of them, Raven," he said before he stood up, heading to the door. Raven was sure that the energy field keeping the aliens penned inside was very complex, but it only took Tim a few short seconds to make it drop. That got the aliens' attention.

"I'm going to remove the bomb collars," Raven said, and oddly enough, it wasn't the first, second, or even third time she had uttered that sentence. It seemed that some things were universal, and one of those things was villians love for explosive collars. "Please remain still," she said, and she felt hope brush against her. It was tainted with fear and uncertainty, but it was by far the strongest emotion in the pen. She took in a calming breath, "Azarath, Metrion, Zinthos."

Her magic reached out to the collars, well over fifty of them in the cramped pen. They were covered in dark magic outlined in white for the briefest of moments before the collars simply clocked open. As the aliens stared on in awe, Raven gathered the collars up into a ball before she flung them into a portal on the ceiling, where they would be deposited far away where they couldn't do any harm.

"That's- are you a member of the 501st?" The alien that Tim had first spoken to questioned. Raven looked down at him, caught off guard by the question.

"I'm not. I'm sorry to say that the 501st was killed in action at the end of the war," and to that, there was nothing but disbelief. Then it struck her. These people didn't know about the war ending, which only would have been a few short weeks ago. How long had they been here?

"The wars over?" The aliens questioned, "So that Saiyan bastard actually did it. I thought the war would last generations."

Raven dropped down, torn between her curiosity and the mission. But… she also had another mission. "Were you a soldier?" She questioned quietly, reaching out to keep a check on the situation. She felt panic and fear, but her friends felt confident. They didn't need her at the moment.

"Slave, more like it. Frieza razed my home planet and enslaved whoever was left," he answered, earning a quiet chorus of agreement. "Prince Tarble bought us to fight in the war."

Raven stilled, "Tarble used slave soldiers?" She questioned quietly because the documentaries certainly left that fact out. Her understanding had been that Tarble bought slaves, freed them, then fought with those that chose to fight. Several of the documentaries made that point explicitly. Raven supposed that's what she got for getting her information from a tainted source.

"Hm? Yeah, plenty. But save your pity for someone else. Prince Tarble's slaves are the lucky ones. At least with him, you had a chance of survival. I'm not sure if Saiyans can feel empathy, but he seemed to act like he had it."

Empathy? "King Tarble was a slave?" She questioned, and that was another detail that had slipped through the cracks. In the shows and the documentaries from both sides of the war, that fact wasn't mentioned -- or, it was implied that at some point he gained his freedom very early on. For the Federation, Raven imagined that it was to prevent Tarble from being cast in a sympathetic light. And the Trade Organization likely wanted to smooth over the fact that their greatest general was still a slave.

The alien looked just as puzzled as she was, "King Tarble?" He questioned right back at her, but he chose to elaborate on her question. "Prince- er, King Tarble was Frieza's favorite slave. Sounds like a hellish position to me, but seems like King Tarble managed to do well for himself in it. But I thought he had a brother? What happened to him?"

"He died," Raven answered shortly, taking in the information, but she was distracted when the alien felt pure relief. Equal to her taking a bomb off of his neck.

"Maybe the gods are real," he muttered to himself. "The War's over, Prince Vegeta is dead… I don't suppose Frieza is dead too?" He asked half as a joke and was thoroughly stunned when Raven offered a curt nod in response. "Huh. Well, seems like a lot happened and I'm doubting you have the time to get us up to speed," the alien said, his voice still raspy, but there was a quality of strength returned to it.

"Can you tell me anything about those that captured you?" She asked, and it was another that spoke up.

"They said we were here on King Tarble's orders, but we didn't believe that. Everyone knows he uses machine labor on planets like these, even if it's way more expensive. But, they all wore Frieza-Force gear and said that we were helping end the war. The fuckers," another alien cursed.

"Are there any others here?" Raven questioned as she stood up, and she was gladdened to see there were nos all around. "My team is clearing through the base. Remain here until we can get you all protective equipment," she requested before she began to float towards the door. However, she was stopped by one of the aliens speaking up.

"If you aren't with the 501st, then who are you?" He asked, and Raven almost answered on reflex. But the name wouldn't have meaning to them here. Instead, Raven offered a gentle smile.

"We're with the Hero-Force," Raven decided on, and the reaction she received was equal to the reaction of people seeing the Teen Titans in person. Hope. And the certainty that they had been saved.

It was a good feeling, and as an empath, it was even more so.

Raven descended into the floor through a portal before she reemerged through a wall near Tim and Wally. She was in some sort of command center -- there were at least twenty aliens, all bound and lined against a wall in various states of consciousness. Tim didn't even look up as he poured over an alien computer, interacting with a hologram as if he had been born doing it. Wally gave her a thumbs up to show that everything was going according to plan.

Raven turned her attention to the security cameras. She did see one in the pen, but her attention was drawn to the ones showing her friends take on the rest of the base. Kara and Kori made themselves obvious targets to take the enemies' attention. Garfield was doing mob up as a silverback gorilla after Wally had blitzed through the base.

It was a short and some mission. One that they had gone on what felt like a thousand times before. Raven fell into a support role, Kori and normally Jamie would act as the powerhouses, while Wally would use his speed for crowd control. Garfield's role changed as easily as he transformed -- bugs for stealth, T-rexs for challenging fights, and multilimbed creatures for cried control.

Tim, however, was at his best when it came to dealing with technology. He put together pieces of a case better than any one of them, making connections that no one else would. And when Raven felt a familiar flash of confidence, Raven knew that Tim had gotten through security.

"I have the names. The admiral of the fleet is in on it, and so is the commander of a ship called The Enny," Tim informed them, digging deeper in the information. The name seemed to come from a serial number, taking the letters and numbers to make a name. "Nothing suggests that the crews were in on it. They were just following orders their commanders gave them…"

Raven sensed that it was coming, "But?"

"But, the deliveries were handed off to another fleet with the Enny as transport. The issue is, I can't find any reference to the fleet of ships mentioned in King Tarble's database. Either I haven't dug deep enough into his empire's systems, or the fleet doesn't belong to Tarble." Tim explained, making Wally frown. But Raven saw it.

"But it could belong to the Trade Organization," she ventured, and Tim nodded. After all, Tarble had taken the equipment that his soldiers had when he created his empire. Raven couldn't imagine that both factions had undergone a complete refit, so they would both share the same ships, guns, and whatever a military needed to wage war.

Meaning that they might have discovered proof that the Trade Organization was operating in Tarble's empire.

"What's the issue?" Wally questioned, sounding uncertain.

Tim responded with actions rather than words. A hologram changed to display Tarble, only he looked far worse for wear. There was dried blood on his face and hair, his clothing was ripped to shreds, revealing a number of injuries. Above all else, he looked exhausted. Haunted. Yet, as he seemed to glare at the camera, he seemed strong and he spoke with conviction.

He gave a message to the galaxy -- proclaiming the death of Frieza and the separation of his empire. There was a lot to latch onto in the short speech, but Raven found herself drawn to a sentence he had uttered.

'I threw away my ideals, my conscience, and beliefs.'

Raven was no master detective, nor did she study under someone that was proclaimed as the world's greatest detective. But, that simple sentence made a lot of things click into place. It explained a number of actions that Tarble made. It confirmed some of her own thoughts while making her reevaluate other opinions.

Tarble was a liar. He hadn't lied to anyone of them, but he was lying to himself. He had cut away everything that he didn't need to fight the war…

And he was on Earth to try to get some of it back.

"Oh," Wally muttered as the speech finished, latching onto something very different. "That's… are we going to give the evidence to them?" He questioned, sounding doubtful.

"It's not really our call to make," Tim returned, his tone not betraying his uncertainty. "This isn't our empire."

"But it will be if Earth decides to join," Wally pointed out. "You heard him. And so far Tarble's done pretty much exactly what he said he would do every time. He's threatened total war against whoever picks a fight with him."

It was a choice. To look out for Earth's interests over the interests of citizens in a foreign empire. It should be a simple choice, but it was anything but. Especially the ramifications of the evidence would have.

"It'll start a war," Raven pointed out, making both boys look at her. "If we give Tarble evidence that the Trade Organization is operating in his empire, enslaving his citizens while pretending to be members of his military… he'll follow through." Her opinion was made clear. She had been right in Japan -- Tarble was looking for something familiar. And this would give him an excuse to return to what he knew.

Tim looked away, "If Tarble goes to war, then the focus will shift away from Earth. And now that people know the threat is real, by the time he comes back, Earth will be ready." He voiced, earning dark looks from both of them.

"You seriously want to start a war to protect Earth? I mean… a lot of people are going to die, Robin. I'm not okay with that," Wally said, shaking his head.

Tim shook his head as well, "I don't, but people back on Earth will. They aren't going to care how many people die out in space if their nations are protected." He pointed out. "If we give the evidence to the UN, they will give it to Tarble to get him to leave Earth."

It was obvious what he was hinting at, "We can't delete it." Raven offered a stern rebuke. "This can't be the only operation. There has to be more. Deleting it now means the others will go unnoticed for longer." And more innocent people would suffer for it.

This was the hardest part of being a hero. The most bitter pill that you had to swallow was that you couldn't help everyone. That you had to settle for helping those that you could. It was never easy. And it never got any easier, no matter how many times Raven faced a choice like this… only this choice would affect the lives of people far beyond Earth.

There wasn't a good option. But, as heroes, it was their job to make a better option. Maybe they couldn't save everyone, but they would save all those that they could.

"We don't give it to Tarble," Raven continued after a lengthy beat of silence. "We give it to Ada'la." It was subverting Tarble's authority, but Raven didn't find that she really cared when doing so would mean outright war. "She'll know what to do with it… and we leave this out of our report to Earth."

It wasn't in Earth's best interest to not give them what amounted to be a silver bullet and time to prepare. She didn't have the right to make this decision that would affect billions of lives.

But Raven would take that right regardless.

Wally seemed to mull it over for a moment before he offered a hesitant nod, sending Tim a sideways look, "I… can live with that," he voiced his opinion. He was anxious and uncertain. Just like her, Wally understood how many people would be affected by their decision, and he didn't want to be the one making it.

Tim was silent, warring with himself. Much like Jason, Batman had put a cold edge inside of his Robins. With Jason, it never saw much use. The late Robin had embraced his emotions with full force, letting him feel everything and he let them guide him. Possibly into an early grave. Tim had that same edge as Batman. That ruthlessness never saw much use, and only for acts of good, but it let him coldly analyze a situation to get the most ideal outcome.

And to Raven's relief, he nodded in agreement.

"We'll give it to Ada'la. Then what happens next is out of our hands," Tim decided. Meaning that if there was a war, then it wasn't for a lack of trying to prevent it.

And if there was a war…

Raven wondered how many heroes would be content to stay on Earth knowing that countless lives were being snuffed out in the galaxy around them.



Not long after, they were back on the shuttle, leaving Craxus. Those that had been enslaved were freed and sent to get medical attention. Those that had been captured were in holding, their fate unknown and to be decided. The detour hadn't been a long one, but it felt exhausting, and even more so because they still had a number of stops to see.

But, as Elery congratulated them all for surviving, and taking special notice of Tim, who she had been certain would die, Raven sought out their guide. A few questions plaguing her, and Ada'la might be the only one that had answers.

Raven found her in the observation room nursing an alien equivalent to wine as she stared off into the void. She had the information, and Raven could feel her indecisiveness on what to do with it. Proving that she was the right choice. She understood what would come next.

Ada'la glanced at her as Raven entered through the door, giving her a friendly expression that she didn't feel.

"Why did Tarble choose Earth as his capital?" Raven questioned, her cloak fluttering around her as she floated to Ada'la.

The alien gave her a practiced smile, "Sentemantality. Earth was-" she began, and Raven could feel how practiced the answer was. Because beneath her words was confusion. Uncertainty. Doubt.

"You don't believe that," Raven interjected calmly. Ada'la's eyes narrowed a fraction but her smile didn't falter. Though, she did reach up to her earrings.

"I see these didn't work," Ada'la noted, taking them out. "King Tarble was right -- you are deceptively powerful. I had these enchanted specifically to block your empath abilities."

"I'm flattered," Raven remarked and she wondered how Ada'la would react if she learned that not even she knew how powerful she was. That the flashes of the depths of her power frightened her because even then, she felt no strain. "But you didn't answer my question. I think we both know that Tarble isn't one for sentimentality."

Ada'la's lips thinned as her smile fell, seeing no point in hiding behind it. She searched Raven's gaze for a moment before she looked away. "I don't know," Ada'la said and for the first time since they met, Raven found that the woman was being honest. "I prepared for the war ending, as much as I could. I never saw independence as a possibility, but I knew that King Tarble would need a capital. I prepared one for him. I even had several backup planets to serve as the Saiyan home planet prepared because I knew it was an inevitability that it would be destroyed."

"I met King Tarble when he was just a boy. Even then, he was a force to be reckoned with. He led thousands of soldiers despite being so young, and had a number of military accomplishments… but what made him so incredible was that he understood that nothing could be gained without sacrifice. And he fought so hard to make sure that he was the one that took the brunt of that cost." Ada'la continued unprompted. "Everything that he did was rational. It followed a simple train of logic -- if it helped end the war, he would do it without complaint. If it didn't, then he wouldn't do it."

Then Ada'la sighed, "His choice of a capital is unlike him. It makes no sense. I will admit that your planet has capable individuals, more than I was expecting, but that doesn't explain why King Tarble would choose Earth. Or stay there as his empire needs his guiding hand. It…" she trailed off, falling silent.

Raven saw the emotion that Ada'la was trying to hide. "What happened with Tarble's brother?" Raven asked quietly.

Tarble… the anguish he felt whenever his brother was mentioned. And the hate he felt whenever his team was brought up. And how he felt when he murdered Adonis…

"I don't know. The only one that knows the whole story is King Tarble. The rest died on Planet Vegeta," Ada'la answered honestly. "But King Tarble loved his brother. And his team. Likely more than he should, even when they didn't deserve it." She added, undercutting any dubious conclusion Raven could have made.

What about those that didn't know the whole story? The question nearly left Raven's lips, but she swallowed it down. There wasn't a point in asking. She wouldn't receive an answer.

Ada'la turned around to face her fully, "I have no clue why King Tarble places any value on your planet, much less why he's giving it such special attention. But I will advise you to come to a decision quickly. This Empire needs its king, and you Earthlings have monopolized too much of his time already." Ada'la stated, walking by Raven towards the door, letting the conversation end there.

Leaving her alone with only the void and her thoughts.

...

Since I forgot to post the plug last chapter until after most of you were gone -- I have another story called Fool's World. It's a F/SN story with some slight multicross elements. If that sounds like your cup of tea, then please check it out!

The next chapter is currently available on my Patreon and Subscribe Star, so if you want to read it a week early, all it takes is a single dollar in the tip jar. Or, for five dollars, you can read the chapter after that two weeks before its public release! I hope you enjoyed!
 
All of them. They'll all sit back and let other people die in places they don't care about. Because they already do that, and they already did that.
To be fair to them, Earth is running on a MAD policy. No hero will be allowed to meddle with things outside their remit because doing more risks war. It's why the JL treats its UN mandate as seriously asnit does, even if they technically dom't need or want it chaining them down.

Also lots of typos in this chapter. No time for me to go back and point them out though, so hopeflly those in SB are more able to help.
 
God's damn it Robin! How can he be so naive? Whether it takes Tarble took 50 years or 200 years to destroy the Reach, that is nowhere near enough for Earth to get its shit together. Unification and industrial expansion will take at least a century if everything goes right. Even then Earth is surrounded by the millions of star systems Tarble owns. Half of those systems being military production forge worlds and attendant resource extraction star systems Vegeta constructed.

Tarble can simply bury them all in Achuultani sized Suppression Fleets. If he doesn't decide to destroy all life in a single moment
 
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Even after seeing Tarble's empire firsthand, Robin still thinks Earth can win given prep time? I mean, I get that he's used to working with the king of "can beat anyone with enough prep time," but really. …Does Robin know something we don't? Is platinum kryptonite a thing, here?
 
My read on Robin is that, by necessity, he's been raised to think that David can beat Goliath if he plays his cards right. Batman regularly goes up against ridiculous odds and succeeds nonetheless, and has taught Robin to do the same: you really can't fight crime in Gotham without that little bit of heroic hubris, the concept that no matter how small you are, you can make a dent in the way things are and force them to be just a little bit more like what you want them to be, if you're skilled enough. And that's not even getting into the odds they face in their respective teams, proving themselves capable of contributing and excelling even against foes that by all rights, they should instantly lose against. Long story short, Robin is primed to never see a situation as a total loss. Normally, that's a benefit: as I said, you can't fight crime in Gotham without having that inability to accept how outmatched you are. But in this case, I think Robin's fallen prey to that general mindset in spite of being so thoroughly outnumbered that every single human could blow up a starship singlehandedly and they'd still lose a war.

This might also have to do with the human inability to really comprehend numbers that large. Sure, we can measure trillions as a species, but the average human struggles to even comprehend how many a million is, let alone a billion or a trillion. The way the numbers get typed out is somewhat misleading, in the sense that a lot of people vastly underestimate the difference between a million and a billion by an order of magnitude, and would probably do the same with billions and trillions if trillions came up more frequently. Robin might be falling prey to that same issue: he's smart, but that doesn't make him infallible, and it can be hard to truly comprehend just how many more people Tarble has under his command than Earth could pump out in a hundred years.
 
Decisions
The return from the planet Craxus was rewarded with more work. They only had a small window of time to gather intelligence on Tarble's Empire, so they had to make the most of it. All of them kept notes of their observations and findings, but Tim's were by far the most expansive and detailed. That was simply his nature.

What was unexpected was that Elery decided to stick with them. In an effort to stave off boredom, which she openly admitted.

"Can you transform?" Elery pestered Kara, who she found the most impressive of the group. For a species that valued strength, that was hardly a surprise. You couldn't get much tougher than a Kryptonian.

Kara weathered the constant barrage of questions with an easy smile. "I can't," and Elery's disappointment was immeasurable. As if she suddenly decided life just wasn't worth living anymore. But she quickly bounced back.

"Are you sure? You look like a Saiyan, just without the tail, so you might be able to transform if you try really hard," Elery continued, finding hope in the face of reality. She flew around in the lounge of a ship that took them to another destination that Ada'la had lined up.

One in the Vega System. Kori's excitement was papabile, it radiated from her with near physical force. Teleportation and FTL speeds weren't anywhere near fast enough for the Tamaranean princess.

"I'm sure. And the same thing could be said for humans," Kara pointed out, making Elery's face blanch as she shit a dirty look at Tim, saying without words exactly how unimpressed she was with humanity.

Elery shook her head, "No," she dismissed the entire idea as a possibility.

Tim let out a sigh, "I'm right here, you know," he pointed out from his seat, lowering the datapad to pin a look at an unrepentant Elery.

"I know. Talking about people behind their back is dumb. How else are you going to hear what I have to say about you?" Elery questioned, crossing her arms and Kara was visibly fighting off a smile. And losing. Instead, the Kryptonian looked in her direction so they could share a look.

Raven allowed herself a small smile. This trip was progressing better than she thought it would. When they took off, she expected tension and barely concealed hostility. While it was there, Elery proved to break the worst of it. Though, at Tim's expense. The Saiyan princess was too excitable, naturally breaking any tension she didn't cause.

"Saiyans have a bunch of transformations. We can turn into oozarus, we can transform in the Wrath State, and Brother can turn into the Legendary Super Saiyan," Elery lorded her races transformations over Tim, the one true human in the Titans now. "Can you even power up?"

Tim wasn't anywhere near annoyed as he made himself appear. The prodding and insults washed over his back like a duck, leaving him unaffected by the taunts. "Maybe," Tim hedged. "How about you show me how it's done," he said, earning a broad smile from Elery as Tim attempted to manipulate her to give away all the secrets of a Saiyans strength. His efforts weren't really needed. Raven was pretty sure they could just ask and get honest answers.

"Of course! Maybe you can become the first useful human," Elery offered, genuinely meaning what she said. Both the racism and the hope that he could power up.

Settling down on the ground, Elery took a wide stance, "First, you brace yourself like this; hn!" Elery began, "Then you become more powerful like this; HNNNN!" there was a stir the air as power radiated off of Elery, proving that as much as she was an excitable young girl, she was strong in her own right. "Then, finally, you let loose like this: AHHHHHHHHH!" Elery threw her head back and screamed as the air hit them like a wall, the ship starting to warp underneath an unseen force, her cloak behind blasted back as her hair was treated much the same.

Then the force receded as Elery stood with her hands on her hips, gesturing at Tim. "Now, you try."

"What?" Tim blinked, making Elery's smile fall. "You didn't explain anything. You just made some faces and screamed."

Elery looked affronted, "I explained how to power up! Don't blame me because you're too dumb to understand! The fault lies with the student, not the teacher!" Elery added, sounding like she was quoting someone as she jabbed an accusatory finger in Tim's direction.

"There wasn't an explanation-" Tim started to argue, only to catch himself, knowing that there was no point. He looked to the others for support and found it -- they hadn't understood either. But, regardless of the explanation, Elery proved that she was in a higher weight class than Raven had expected. She had felt the power in the air, like electricity dancing on her skin -- she wasn't anywhere near as powerful as Tarble, but Raven suspected that only she and Kara would stand a chance against the Saiyan princess.

There wasn't an animal strong enough to fight a Saiyan on even footing. Wally also stood a chance, but in the confines of a ship, his odds were diminished. Greatly. Kara could easily beat her, and Raven doubted that all Saiyans had mutilated their souls to ward off magic. Hopefully. She could still scarcely believe anyone would subject themselves to that, and the idea of an entire race doing so was honestly horrifying.

"Was to! You just suck! Why is Brother making us live on a planet of you weaklings?!" Elery questioned, throwing her hands up with a shake of her head. She looked to Kara, expecting support, but instead, she got a gentle smile.

"Humans might be fragile, but that's no excuse to look down on them," she gently chided. Not quite sure how much authority she had to do so.

"The only redeeming features humans have is that they can get cool powers," Elery remained steadfast in her beliefs while casting another dirty look at Tim, not happy that he wasn't spontaneously developing superpowers.

"Would your brother share that belief?" Raven questioned, making Elery's face twist when she knew the answer. Though, she was too stubborn by half to admit that she was wrong. "I thought the 501st was a place where all abilities had value. Regardless of strength." To that, Elery sent a harsh glare at her, telling Raven that she had touched a sore spot without meaning to.

"Don't talk about the 501st like you knew them," Elery bit out in a low growl of a tone. There was grief there, but… it was different. It was so very different. When a human grieved, it was always there in the background. It could be smothered by other emotions, but it was still there. It was a wound that needed time to heal. Elery didn't have that grief until Raven made a point about the 501st.

Her emotions were like tidal waves -- when they were brought forth, they crashed down and were overwhelming. But, they retreated back to the sea until they were brought forth.

However, Tarble didn't share that trait, which caused the misstep. Tarble… he grieved like a human, even if he crushed his emotions with an iron grip.

"And Brother made the 501st a place where useful abilities were recognized," Elery said, jabbing a finger at Tim. "Anything he can do, another alien can do better and odds are they won't be so weak. I was stronger than him when I was a baby!"

"This… is the Vega System?" Kori said, breaking the growing tension in the lounge. Everyone's attention went to the window to see that they had teleported again. The vast expanse that was space was still on the other side of the window, but it was anything but empty now. Raven's lips parted, the closest she had ever come to her jaw-dropping in shock.

The others weren't anywhere near as restrained. "Dude, this is-" Garfield cut himself off, approaching the window and placing a hand on it.

On the other side could only be described as devastation. For as far as the eye could see, there was the ruined wreckage of countless ships. Truly countless. They were absolutely everywhere, filling up millions of miles of space to the absolute brim. The only way that they could get through without hitting something was because clear paths were made to and from the planets in the system.

Raven saw a machine shifting through the wreckage, a corpse in its claws that tossed it into a net… that was disturbingly full. The machine was one of many, one of the thousands that picked through the wreckage.

Raven barely heard the door slide open and Ada'la enter, "It will take several years to recover all of the bodies in the system," Ada'la informed. "The final battle of the war was the bloodiest. The Federation sent two trillion soldiers into this system. Less than a fifth survived." Raven couldn't picture it. Near three hundred times the human population had fought in this system, and a fifth of that made it out. Not even a fifth.

She tried to imagine what that battle would look like -- the volume of people. The sheer amount of death. And in response to her attempts, she felt something brush across her skin. A ghostly touch. No words were exchanged, but feeling washed over her. For the briefest of moments, Raven felt it. She felt billions of lives being snuffed out in an instant, and the battle so fierce that no one even noticed. Death on an unimaginable scale.

Raven calmed herself with a deep breath, closing her eyes and finding her center. She had felt death before, which is why she wasn't overwhelmed. But never on such an unimaginable scale.

"I didn't get to fight in it. It was just a trap to make the Federation commit a bunch of their forces while me and a bunch of others took a bunch of capital planets," Elery said, sounding disappointed that she hadn't been here.

The battle left a weeping wound on the system. So many strong emotions as people fought their hardest and died. Resolve. Determination. Anguish and fear, but courageously pushing forward even at the cost of their lives.

"It was a lie," Raven voiced, her lips thinned. It felt like she was being pressed down on all sides by an invisible force. She… was a beacon of sorts. An empath. And a powerful one. The echoes of the dead were drawn to her like moths to a flame, using her to cry out their last feelings. They weren't vengeful spirits or even ghosts. But, in a single chorus, so many dead in one place left an impression for those sensitive enough to feel it. "King Tarble lied."

"Not a lie," Ada'la corrected. "The enemy assumed that there was a good reason for the secrecy in the Vega System. They feared King Tarble -- both his physical prowess and his capacity for war. Their fear led them to the worst possible conclusion because that is what King Tarble taught them to assume throughout the war when dealing with him. They believed they are stopping a weapon of mass destruction. Something so powerful that it would end the war."

Raven opened her eyes and looked out at the window to see what she could only describe as several planets that looked like they had been smashed together and broken into pieces. As if they were simple stones. "But there was nothing here," Raven voiced what the echo of the dead cried out. "They all died for nothing."

"They died so the war would end. The deaths on both sides were the price of peace," Ada'la responded, her voice solemn. "If it hadn't ended here, then several times more would have been killed across the war front over the centuries the war would have lasted without King Tarble. The only difference is that they died here instead of scattered about across the front line."

There was a heavy silence as they continued their way to Tamaran. It felt like they were walking over graves as they approached, and in a way, they were. It was a horrible feeling. Even seeing the awe-inspiring sight of Tamaran couldn't detract from it -- the planet was in pieces. Vast metal plates that had once covered the planet's surface were floating up above, letting other pieces move in. One that was covered in dirt.

They were replacing the crust of a planet. Like it was a Lego block that needed to be snapped into place.

They descended onto the planet in a section that already had been replaced, allowing them to step off the ship to a city. Kori gasped as soon as she saw it, her hands going to her mouth, and the pure, radiant joy that she felt almost matched the furious echoes of the dead who knew they died for a lie. The city seemed futuristic, but at the same time… simple. Like a room that you just moved into so it didn't have a personal touch.

Of all the races that Raven had encountered, Tamaranean were one of her favorites. They were an emotional species, so their happiness and joy were vast and deep. They landed in an airport of sorts, and the Tamaranean quickly spotted Kori and greeted her warmly.

They waved and smiled, but there was something holding them back. It was a pretty big difference from the last time Kori returned, where the people had mobbed her to celebrate her return. If Kori didn't seem to care in the slightest, though.

"There are so many of my people," Kori observed. "There are no Tameranian slaves?" She questioned no one in particular, but the hope she felt was powerful. Everyone felt it as she floated above them, her hands clasped in a silent prayer.

Ada'la was the one that answered, "Not in Tarble's Empire, no. Sadly, I cannot speak for the Trade Organization nor the Federation, but Queen Komand'r has made an active effort to break the bonds of every Tamaranean and bring them to your home planet."

Then she elaborated when Kori let out a breath of relief, "Which is being renovated. It was turned into a battleground, but we took samples of all the foliage and animals. Once the planet's ecosystem has been restored, we will be reintroducing the native wildlife, similar to how we are to the thousands of planets that are being terraformed."

She used the word renovation and applied it to planets.

"I wish to see my sister," Kori said, looking to Tim. They were on an important mission, but any resistance that Tim might have had melted away when he saw her hopeful look.

"You're sister is one of the leaders of King Tarble's Empire. It would make sense to meet her," Tim said, rationalizing the choice. Kori smiled before she took off in a blast, not waiting for them as she headed for a tall skyscraper that had a circle balcony going around it near the top. Elery seemed to take it as a race, while the Titans all shared a look.

They met Komand'r once and it had been a poor impression. The last time they met, Komand'r hated Kori for being chosen as the heir to their people over her. Now that she was queen, that issue should be nipped in the bud, but those things so very rarely end as neatly as they should. Raven expanded her shadow, teleporting them to the balcony that Kodi was headed to, and arrived just after she did. Kori was fast when she wanted to be.

Raven was greeted with feelings of hope and anger. Of joy and fear. Of love and… something that resembled hate.

"Sister!" Kori exclaimed, her gaze landing on Komamd'r. Raven looked at the Tamaranean queen -- the resemblance between her and Kori was there, but the disease she suffered as a child left her with jet black hair and dark violet eyes compared to the red hair and green eyes every other Tamaranean seemed to have.

She was seated on a throne at the center of the room, but it seemed to be more of an ornate lounge chair on a platform with stairs leading up to it. Komamd'r wore little -- a trait of the Tamaraneans. Kori would wear nothing if she could get away with it, and on their home planet, they could. Komamd'rs dress was little more than two sleeves of cloth that draped over her shoulders, the sleeves joined together at her waist and there were golden chains along her hips to keep the dress from slipping anywhere.

On her head was a crown seated at her hairline, and metal fangs dripped down at the edges to frame her face. Her expression said all that it needed to, it portrayed exactly what she felt.

They were not welcomed here. Kori most of all.

"Koriand'r," Komamd'r greeted her sister coolly, and that was enough to stop Kori in her tracks. "Titans. I would say it's a pleasure, but that would very much be a lie." Then her gaze slid to Ada'la and Elery, "It is a pleasure to finally meet you in person, Princess Elery. Your brother speaks fondly of you."

Elery puffed up, "Of course he does! What does he say?" She asked, fishing for compliments.

"It is good to see you, Komamd'r. King Tarble told me of your exploits during the war! I couldn't believe our people are finally free," Koriand'r pressed on, floating forward, but Kori wasn't oblivious to the growing tension in the room. Komamd'r narrowed her eyes into a glare that stopped Kori cold.

This was going about as well as Raven imagined it would.

"My people," Komamd'r corrected, a deadly edge in her voice as her hands clenched into fists. "It seems King Tarble has not informed you that you were removed from the succession." She spat out, her words laced with venom.

The words hurt Kori. Badly. "I never wanted to be queen, Komamd'r," Kori said, her voice conveying the depth of her sorrow. "I do not care if I am not a princess of our people. I just want to be your sister."

Komamd'r stood, her face shifting into a snarl, "You should care! Our people were slaves! We lived under the boot of the Citadelian empire, and you were on Earth pretending that you were a human!" She spat out, anger welling in her chest. Raven had seen this before.

People got used to thinking a certain way about people. When they learned to be angry with them, they stayed angry even when the original reason for their anger was gone. Komamd'r got what she wanted -- she was queen, but she grew up resenting Kori and that wouldn't change so easily.

"I never forgot the plight of our people, but we both knew that even with the two of us, we could not defeat the Citadelian empire. Not without great cost," Kori replied, her voice as serious as Raven had ever heard it. It wasn't a word she often used to describe Kori, but as she stood before her sister that looked down at her, the word serious was the only one that came to mind. The rest of the Titans stood back, knowing that they had no place in the discussion, though they wanted to speak. All of them did.

And Elery… Elery was feeling a maelstrom of emotions. She should focus more on it, but her friend was Infront of her. Kori had her attention.

"Except there wasn't. King Tarble came to the Vega system alone, and within days the Citadelian empire was no more and the pirates were eliminated. Our people were free and those that enslaved us paid the price for it in blood," Komamd'r snapped.

"And all it took was submitting to a mass murderer and committing your people to the War of Light," Tim said, not able to… no. He was doing it on purpose. He was poking the fire to see what came up in the sparks. He was putting the mission first before Kori's reunion with her sister.

Komamd'r began to walk down the steps, but she still looked down at them. "Yes. That's all it took. And it was well worth the price. I rule the Vega system at King Tarble's behest. My people will prosper like they never have before. Because of me and the sacrifices that I made for them." Komamd'r came to a stop on the final step. "We should have gone to King Tarble as soon as we escaped the Psions. All that pain and suffering we endured was unneeded. We should have never listened to those old fools on Okkar about the Trade Organization."

It was obvious without being an empath. It was how she spoke, and how unashamed she was of it. Komamd'r had feelings for Tarble. It was a question of if they were romantic feelings or feelings because of what he could do for her.

"Komamd'r, you and I both know that our people would have been crushed by the Trade Organization. We would have traded one master for another. I left for the good of our people," Kori returned, and Raven could see it. Kori was beloved by the people. They rallied around her as easily as breathing.

"You refused to accept any sacrifice for our people," Komamd'r spat.

Kori clenched her hands into fists, "The marriage you arranged was not for the benefit of our people. You wanted to hurt me."

"I can multitask," Komamd'r hissed, her eyes glowing violet light. "Tamaran would have gained a powerful ally against the Citadelian empire and you would have been married to a slug. I couldn't even take your place because they wouldn't accept defective goods. It had to be you. It's always about you. Perfect Koriand'r that can do no wrong," she bit out, barring her teeth.

"I have always loved you, Komamd'r. Your anger is misplaced. I never did anything but love you and want you to be happy," Kori argued back, green light coating her hands as she prepared a starbolt. The tension grew as everyone prepared themselves for a fight.

"Stop it!" An unexpected voice screamed out, bringing everyone's attention to Elery. Raven was shocked to see that she had tears in her eyes. "Stop fighting about stuff that doesn't matter!" She shouted at the top of her lungs before she turned around and took off flying with a burst of wind. Raven watched her go, her emotions rapidly dwindling in the distance. But the sorrow and grief that she felt were too personal to be about Kori and Komamd'r.

There was silence in her wake as both Tamaraneans felt uncertain and ashamed. Though, one felt more shame than the other. Raven looked to Ada'la for an explanation to see her watching Elery fly away with a sadness that Raven couldn't explain.

Komamd'r recovered first, "Forgive my outburst. You are welcome on Tamaran. Conduct your investigation and learn what King Tarble can offer your planet." She said, floating back to take a seat on her throne. There was no warmth in her eyes. Her words were polite, but her tone was ice cold. "Perhaps, with some luck, this will be the last time we ever see each other."

Komamd'r knew that the words would strike deep and they did. Raven felt Kori's emotional turmoil as if it were her own.

"Then I hope we are not lucky," Kori returned, turning around, and there was pain in her eyes. Raven wished she could say that she hadn't foreseen this. But she hadn't been able to stop it either. You couldn't tell people who to love, regardless of if they deserved it or not. All Raven could do was try to be there for the aftermath.

Raven looked to Kara, who caught her look with one of her own. The Kryptonian offered a curt nod before she began to float up.

"I'll go check on Princess Elery," she said before taking off in the same direction as the Saiyan Princess.

Raven opened her shadow and teleported all of them to the base of the tower, her eyes meeting Komamd'rs. Her gaze was cold and intense emotion rolled off of her in waves. She was angry and furious and nothing hinted that she regretted anything that was said. They sank through the floor and reemerged from the ground, and instantly, Garfield reached out.

"Don't listen to her, Star -- she's just bitter and angry," Garfield consoled.

Tim was swift to join in, "If reconcile was so easy, then you wouldn't be fighting in the first place. The only time you two can't is when both of you stop reaching out."

It was obvious that they were all prepared for the conversation to go exactly how it did because they all had words to reassure her in a vain hope to cheer her up. "She is angry, but she's also scared. She thinks she found her place and she's afraid you'll take it from her. I know you don't want to, but… people can't help what they feel." It was insensitive to reveal what another felt, and it wasn't something she often did but the situation called for it.

Kori gave her a wane smile, trying to cheer up, but the traded words weighed heavily on her. Garfield picked up on it, "Hey, let's go see the sights! Maybe we can find your… K'norkfa?" He said, butchering the word that was already incomprehensible. And to their collective relief, Kori's eyes lit up.

"I know where Galfore would be!" Kori said before she took off, and both Wally and Garfield took off after her. Raven looked to Tim, whose lips thinned.

"It seems you Earthlings are dwindling by the minute," she remarked. They deserved the barn. They were here on a mission and personal issues got in the way. "Shall we continue the tour?" Ada'la asked, a smile that could be mistaken for kind on her lips. She was pleased by the turn of events.

Tim looked at her and Raven considered the situation. They had twenty-four hours to do a grand tour of Tarble's empire, but even with teleportation and FTL speeds, it was too slow. They covered one planet, started on another, and they were down half a team. It was clear that they had vastly underestimated the sheer size of Tarble's Empire. Raven knew that there were fourteen million planets, but it was blatantly clear that the time they had wasn't even remotely enough to get even a sample size of his empire. They needed months. A year, maybe.

"I think," Raven began, "I should go back to Earth and ask Tarble for an extension on the summit." Ada'la stiffened, though not visibly. The only sign of it was that her smile fell into a cool mask.

"You'd think he'd go for it?" Tim asked, and Ada'la opened her mouth to speak, but Raven answered before she could.

"It can't hurt to ask," Raven remarked. He set the deadline once. And no one would complain if he did it again. Her eyes went to Ada'la, "we could ask for an extension of a couple of months. It would let Tarble take care of things on his end." And to that, Raven felt Ada'la's gratitude even if she didn't show it.

She nodded, "A perfectly reasonable request that in sure King Tarble will consider with an appropriate amount of thought. I trust that you know the way back to the shop?" Raven nodded, "Simply tell the attendants that you wish to go to Earth. The trip shouldn't be more than a few hours."

Tim gave her a firm nod and was nonplussed when Ada'la linked his arm with hers as they continued the guide. Raven returned the nod and sank into the ground. She did feel bad for not being there for Kori, but Earth was at stake. Kara was there, so if there was trouble, when you had a Kryptonian in your corner, you didn't have a lot to worry about.

Minutes later, Raven found herself back in space and she only realized a weight had lifted off of her shoulders when she was out of the Vega system. The oppressive feeling vanished, letting her breathe easy. To center herself, Raven closed her eyes and meditated during the trip. Unlike what most thought, there was a great deal of thinking during meditation.

Normally, Raven carefully examined why she felt certain ways, what made her feel that way, and package the feelings in neat boxes to never be opened again. But, instead, Raven found herself examining everything she had witnessed. The feelings she had experienced. The information that had been gleaned as well as the people she had met.

She separated the issues, mulled over the information. And reexamined her conclusions.

Komamd'r said something that stick with her. A phrase that put a thought into words. That Kori had been on Earth pretending to be human.

Raven wondered how much that applied to Tarble.

Raven felt light pierce through her closed eyelids, making her open them in the expectation that she would see the sun. The must have been close for it to get through the tint on the windows. However, her heart plummeted to her stomach when she saw it wasn't the sun at all.

Earth was before her, the swirl of white clouds, immense blue oceans, and green landmass. The moon hovered above, revolving around the planet… but it was dwarfed next to a dark blue ball that hung above the planet like a sword of Damocles. It was miles above the Earth, beyond even the moon.

And to Raven's growing horror, the ball began to descend.

...

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Consequences
Stress tests were a necessary evil. You ran the risk of breaking whatever it was that you were testing, but you also learned where it was weak. In an object, it was as simple as remaking it with the weaknesses in mind to make sure that they didn't reoccur in the next version. But things got vastly more complicated after that -- relationships, organizations… governments. As they often did, things became more complicated when you introduced people into the equation.

With people it wasn't so simple as starting from scratch and learning what went wrong. Yet, stress testing was no less important. From some points of view, it was even more so. People's lives would be impacted by the imperfections, often in bad ways, even if a select few would find ways to benefit from it.

I experienced my fair share of it during the war. My armies, my fleets, my tactics -- all were put through the wringer until the imperfections in them were ground away. A plan that was too complicated, with too many moving parts, was simplified until it stopped ending with the deaths of my men. On the individual level my armies fought in their own unique way, so I gave them equipment that would bolster their strengths and sure up their weaknesses.

And now, I was putting Earth through a stress test of its own, to test its people and their systems of governance, and we were all learning just how ill-suited they were to the task.

In the days following the fall of North Rhelasia, the people of Earth were at odds with themselves. All over the planet, people saw something that they had wanted to change, but had been unable to. There was a growing voice, however, scattered and muted by those furious, that were celebrating. They embraced the change. I held no illusions that they would still be happy about me if I flew over and dismantled their government, but that growing minority

Unsurprisingly, most were upset. I had just applied more pressure to one of the world's major systems of governance -- the UN -- by effortlessly dismantling one of their rogue nations. There were parts of the world that were making threats of violence to ward me away from their own rogue nations. Other parts of the UN were scrambling for a response. They were trying to get their cake and eat it too -- denouncing me while also securing the North Rhelasian border to enforce the dismantlement of the nation.

China was upset. However, perhaps unsurprisingly, it was the North Rhelasians that were the most upset. There were plenty that were grateful, but the vast majority of the citizen population hated my guts.

By killing their leader, I became the ultimate evil in their eyes. Even though I was actively improving their lives.

The similarities weren't lost on me. I suspect that news to my own defeat would be met with a similar response. And that got under my skin more than I cared to admit.

I took in a deep breath as I looked at Lois Lane, who was currently shoving a microphone in my face. I wasn't sure how she got here. We were in the heart of North Rhelasia, in a joint military checkpoint between my forces and the UN. As far as I knew, reporters weren't welcomed, but that didn't seem to bother Lois Lane in the slightest. Since she was here, I answered her question, "No, I don't care."

"You violated Earth sovereignty before the summit being held to decide if you have any legal claim to Earth, and you… don't care?" She questioned, and it was easy to see how the answer made her uncomfortable. Her and a few others were milling about nearby as we stood underneath a tent with no sides. Rain lightly fell from the sky, filling the heavy silence with a slight pitter-patter.

"What was happening here was wrong. I wouldn't have needed to take action if you humans dealt with the situation," I responded curtly as I accepted a tablet from one of my soldiers. It felt… good. Familiar. Almost like I was back to being a general at the head of an army, ready to invade another planet. But that familiarity was too dangerous for me to indulge in.

"That doesn't change the fact you violated Earth's sovereignty," Lois Lane countered. "How can humanity expect you to keep your word about not attacking Earth if we can prove that the planet doesn't belong to your Empire?

"Because I said I would," I answered drily, looking over the tablet. Lists of supplies given to the refugees, where they were given, and how much we still had. My habit of packing surpluses of food was useful once again, because I had enough food to feed the nation a hundred times over. However, we were going through a great deal of healing fluid.

It would be a simple matter to order more -- as healing fluid was one of the few solutions to healing a multi-species army, trillions of gallons of it had been produced for the war. We still had that surplus. But, I was considering another alternative. The Medicine Ball was one of the few techniques that every member of my species has learned, if only for convenience's sake.

I wanted Earth settled before I brought any other Saiyans to the planet, but perhaps it would be best to bring a few. Enough to cover the medical needs of the humans, and in doing so, we would show that we were more than a warmongering race. Even if my race was filled with warmongers, we had the potential to be more .

Handing back the tablet, I saw that the answer didn't satisfy Lois Lane in the slightest. "I am a man of my word. I've done exactly what I said I would -- I destroyed the nation that withheld my broadcast. Now, I'm telling you that if Earth presents a legally sound and reasonable case that the planet is not mine, then I will leave you be." I reminded her, and I could see that I had kicked the legs of her argument out from underneath her.

Her lips pressed together into a thin line, "So, we have to trust you?"

"I haven't given humanity any reason to mistrust me. Dislike me, maybe, but not to distrust. Nor do I intend to," I said, my gaze sliding over to Wonder Woman as she entered my range of view after dropping down from the sky. She was soaking wet, but she didn't seem to mind in the slightest, her own gaze meeting mine. I saw her eyes narrow ever so slightly.

I didn't know her well. The Justice League, true to our agreement, had given me a guard to guide me on Earth. Well, guards, but only ever one at a time. They seemed to take four-hour shifts -- Superman, Martian Manhunter, the Flash, Shazam, Aquaman, and Wonder Woman. Of them all, Superman and Shazam were the most talkative. The Flash was more awkward than anything, while Martian Manhunter, Aquaman, and Wonder Woman maintained a polite manner, but it was clear their goal was to guard me instead of converse.

"I've even allowed some of your heroes to explore my empire to gather evidence against me," I said. It was a terrible thing, but they would likely know my empire better than me by the time they returned. Which was another reason to settle this matter promptly. My necklace, despite its gravity-defying properties, felt heavy around my neck, weighed down by the bone of the last Super Saiyan.

She latched onto that and immediately rounded on Wonder Woman as she approached -- the red-haired man holding the camera behind her turned to look at Wonder Woman as well, seemingly catching the Amazon off guard. But, after a moment, the expression she wore said that she wasn't surprised to see Lois here. "Wonder Woman, what can you tell us about the team sent to the…" Lois paused before she turned to look at me, making the cameraman look back at me as well.

It was an obvious prompt, but I shrugged. "My empire doesn't have a name yet."

The look I got in response to that told me that Lois was thoroughly unimpressed with me, and she got away with it because her face wasn't exposed to the camera. Without missing a beat, she looked back at Wonder Woman, who had composed herself with the brief opening, "The Justice League makes no comment."

"Has the team been sanctioned by the UN, or could this be seen as the Justice League taking independent action?" Lois continued anyway, not pulling any punches. For anyone it seems. It seemed like Lois Lane didn't know what a softball question was, much less know how to throw one. Wonder Woman didn't react beyond giving a very mild look. With a simple question, Wonder Woman was pinned -- giving a response would give Lois what she wanted while not making a response would paint them in a bad light.

"The diplomatic team has been sanctioned by the UN," Wonder Woman answered curtly, giving in a little to ensure that The Justice League wouldn't be crucified by the Public. Well, not any more than they already were. "The Justice League will not answer any further questions, Ms. Lane." She said in a tone that said that even though she had given an inch, Lois shouldn't take a mile. "You should return home. This isn't an area for civilians, media or otherwise."

To that, Lois smirked. "The people of Earth have a right to see what's happening in North Rhelasia," she said, casting a look at me like I should back her up.

I didn't.

Instead, I turned and walked away as I spotted an incoming team flying in on a saucer-shaped transport ship. I wouldn't normally bother, but on the transport ship, I saw scuff marks on the paint and indentions on the metal. Someone had fired upon the transport with a caliber of gun far stronger than the ones we'd encountered in North Rhelasia so far. The rain drizzled down on me, falling in fat drops that quickly soaked my hair, though it still stood in position. I heard Lois called out to me as I headed to where the ship touched down.

We set up in the market park because it was large enough to act as a makeshift airport. My fleet sent the number of ships agreed upon with the UN down, a meager twenty-five, and this location acted as staging point where they would be sent out to deliver relief. There were four other ships parked at the moment as they delivered people as well as loaded up more supplies.

The transport touched down as I approached. My eyes narrowed ever so slightly -- the number was off. For a transport bringing people here, there should be twice as many people on the ship. Perhaps they found an unwilling village? It wasn't out of the ordinary, but combined with the signs of combat-

"King Tarble, what are you expecting the team sent to your empire as envoys to return saying? Given that you seem to value your word so highly, can Earth expect to see an unbiased view of your empire? Its greats and its lows?" Lois Lane questioned me, catching up to me as we came to a stop in the busy port teeming with humans and my soldiers.

"I gave instructions to my… agent?" I started, only to realize that Ada'la lacked a proper title to describe what she did for the empire. I never gave her one. She just slipped into the role of whatever she was so easily, it just felt like an extension of her work being my agent. "Grand Vizier Ada'la will escort the envoy through my Empire. She has chosen some destinations to be seen. But, knowing the envoys, I fully expect detours to be made from the official tour. What they witness will be admissible to Earth's case."

I looked to Lois, who didn't seem to mind the rain even as it ruined her makeup. She seemed a tad stumped, but overall pleased with my answer. She opened her mouth to ask another question, but I never heard what it was because her words were drawn out by the sound of something exploding. I felt familiar heat on my face as I instinctively stepped in front of Lois, my eyes turning to the ship that had exploded. I felt a chunk of shrapnel break on my body as flames washed over the port.

There was shouting, humans were screaming as they started to flee. My soldiers reacted -- the war wasn't so old that they had forgotten their instincts. They formed up, dragging away the wounded while taking cover. The UN soldiers reacted well by guiding the fleeing humans.

"Thanks," Lois muttered, sounding surprisingly calm about her brush with death. I said nothing as I looked at the flaming wreck of my transport ship. My ki sensing abilities narrowed, still covering the entirety of North Rhelasia, but I could pick out the presences with finer detail.

"Get to safety," I bit the words out as I marched forward towards the flames. As I did, I pressed an hand to my ear. "All forces, high alert. We are being targeted. Three transports have been destroyed -- Overwatch, show me what happened." I demanded of my fleet as I stepped inside the burning wreckage, unbothered by the fire. The explosion tore up the interior, but the hull was still strong. The fact parts of it were destroyed said more about the bomb than it did the ship.

I saw parts of bodies, the fire making some of them unidentifiable. There were humans in the ship, but as I stepped forward, my eyes narrowed into slits when I saw that they were armed. They weren't human weapons, or at the very least, they weren't the kinds that were available on the mass market. Bulkier. That could explain the shots on the hull.

My soldiers' bodies held up better than the human's thanks to their armor and barriers. Because of that, I saw that they had been restrained by cuffs strong enough that they also endured the blast. The source of which had been from the core room where the power source was kept. It was blasted open, and stepping into it, I saw a body of one of my soldiers. He had a cuff on an arm, but not the other. I knew his species -- a regenerator.

My eyes turned to the power source that billowed out heat and fire, looking for an explanation. Despite the incredible destruction, I spotted something that didn't belong. A canister. Dropping to a knee, I picked it up to see that behind the scorch marks, there were trace amounts of a purple fluid inside of it.

I had the pieces I needed. A team of humans commandeered my transport and restrained my soldiers. They brought something on board and flew back to the HQ, but on route, one of my soldiers ripped off his hand and made his way to the reactor room where he initiated a power surge of some kind that caused the ship to explode. He sacrificed his life and the lives of his teammates to prevent whatever the humans had planned.

He died a hero. He died with honor and glory.

He shouldn't have died at all.

"Sir, Overwatch is clean. No signs of combat- nor reports. All ships are reported as green," my fleet told me even as I felt their presence vanish.

"Our systems are compromised," I deduced easily, stepping out of the flaming wreckage. Twenty-five soldiers. I lost twenty-five of them. The number might be small, especially in comparison to the losses that we had suffered during the War of Light, but those twenty-five soldiers' lives weighed heavily on me. I had been right there. If I…

The war was over. Soldiers weren't meant to die during peace.

Wonder Woman looked at me as she spoke to a UN soldier. One of their leaders. He said something before taking off, leaving Wonder Woman alone with me. She met my gaze and there was remorse there, but there was also resolve. "King Tarble, I ask that you don't overreact."

I slipped deeper into the Wrath State, and an aura of green licked at my skin, joining the steam and smoke. "What would be an appropriate reaction to this?" I asked her with a quiet and deadly edge to my tone.

"We don't know who is behind this attack," Wonder Woman said, not answering my question. "I swear, I shall aid you and bring those that are responsible to justice. Do not let this sabotage our attempts at making this end peacefully. You could be playing into the perpetrator's hands."

"What would be an appropriate reaction to the death of twenty-five of my soldiers?" I asked her again, rubble rising as I sank even deeper into the Wrath State. To Stage Fifteen. Then beyond it. Chunks tore from the ground, the rain blasted away from me before it could fall. The asphalt and stone broke apart, reduced to dust as I took a very slow and pointed step forward. "Who were here on an aid mission?"

Wonder Woman's hand neared her sword, but she said nothing. Because saying what she believed would justify my actions.

"I don't care what you say of me. I don't care what you think. I understand that I have made mistakes, and I have tried to learn from them. I tried to be reasonable. I have tolerated attempts on my life. I have accepted humanity's scorn for my actions," I spoke slowly and deliberately as I took another step and it was as if the city was going to shake itself apart from the simple action. It might have if I didn't strengthen the ground with ki to make it more durable. "But not this. I will not accept this."

My soldiers trusted me with their lives. They had for the entirety of the war. It was my greatest shame that I couldn't give them what they deserve for their loyalty but the very least, I owed my loyalty to them.

With a final step, I was close enough to Wonder Woman that I could reach out and touch her.

"I told the people of Earth I would not tolerate unprovoked attacks on my soldiers. So, I will ask you this one last time Wonder Woman," I stated, glaring into her bright blue eyes. "What is an appropriate response to this?"

I didn't really expect anything in her gaze. But, to my surprise, there was sympathy. It was well guarded, but also plain for me to see. The anger in her stance was at the situation, rather than me. She was being careful not to say the wrong thing and set me off.

"Action," Wonder Woman replied after a moment, the words slipping from her mouth almost of their own will rather than hers. "The death of your soldiers requires action."

"Will you get in my way for taking action?" I asked her and I almost didn't know what I wanted her response to be. Part of me wanted her to say yes. That part of me craved violence and conflict -- it wasn't just a natural instinct. It was one fueled by frustration and anger. I had placed a target on my back. They should have aimed for me rather than my soldiers.

Another part of me wanted this to end peacefully. I understood what she was saying. Since I came to earth, the straws kept piling up. She was asking me to not let this be the straw that broke the camel's back.

"If you bring the perpetrators to Justice… then I will not. The death of your men deserves an answer," Wonder Woman decided, "And as a gesture of good faith, I will help you bring them to justice." She said, and by that, she meant that she would stop me if I decided to kill them. "It will help with the peace talks. This was an act of terror -- it's well within my rights to take action."

Her accompanying me would give my actions a thin veneer of legitimacy. But I doubted that anyone would actually care about how legitimate they were. The summit was soon, and anything short of inaction would be perceived as aggressive.

But, at this moment, I found that I couldn't care less about what some humans would say.

"Follow me," I ordered, turning, before I blasted into the air, a sonic boom blasting through the city streets as I shot a few hundred feet straight up. . I zeroed in on the other transports -- there were over ten left that were currently active, but I sensed a problem now that I was paying more attention. Without waiting to see if Wonder Woman would keep up, I blasted towards the nearest transport, using my aura to keep the rain from my eyes. I closed the distance in no time at all, quickly spotting the transport on the ground. Not at all where it should be.

It was in the middle of a clearing in a dense forest -- I saw it was open, and being unloaded. My soldiers were there, but their strength was fading.

I didn't slow down as I adjusted my path straight towards the group. I slammed into the earth like a meteor, my feet tearing a long furrow into the ground even as I toughened it up to slow me down. The nearby trees were eviscerated on my landing, falling over or being torn out of the ground and thrown back, colliding and knocking over more trees in a domino chain of destruction from the force behind them. I skidded a hundred feet over the target, but once I slowed down enough, I readjusted my trajectory and blasted forward to the center of the encampment.

There were two dozen humans, half of them looking in the wrong direction. They carried the same bulky guns, and now that they weren't half-destroyed, I noted that they did seem to be human in make. I saw the same kind of design theory -- clearly made for a hand with five fingers, a human magazine, and chamber set up. The humans themselves wore black armor with no insignia, their faces covered by black tinted masks.

Before the humans could react, I was in the heart of their encampment. Ki gathered in my hands, the dark blue energy emitting light between my fingers in the dark forest. It flew free of my hands before the humans could so much as register was it was. Small blasts of ki surged from the palm of my hand, each one darting to one of the humans.

In a second, the clearing became filled with pained screaming as the humans dropped to the ground. Their weapons hit the ground along with the offending arms holding the, as well as a severed leg each so that they couldn't flee. They all dropped to the ground, those standing guard over my soldiers inside the transport, those loading up the contents of the ship, and those making sure no one came to investigate.

I flew straight through the wall of the ship, the metal tearing around my body as I tore through it like wet tissue. Entering the ship, I was immediately greeted by the sight of an unidentified purple gas filling the interior -- my necklace provided me with air, even in a vacuum, so I didn't need to breathe, but I felt a stinging sensation on my skin. My gaze darted to the source -- another purple canister.

Leveling a hand at it, I fired a ki blast directly at it -- instantly destroying it and carving a line into the earth for a few hundred feet. At the same time, I formed a ki ball around me that stretched until the transparent bubble ripped the ship from the inside out, the ki seamlessly washing over my bound soldiers, freeing them from the purple smoke.

"What happened," I questioned, dropping to a knee in front of them. All of them were in the hold -- all alive. So the humans had not only gotten the better of my soldiers but subdued them as well. Had they been lax with their security or was this an indicator of the threat I was dealing with?

The saiyanoid soldier looked at me -- his dark pink skin was irritated, making him appear red. Dark red blood dripped from his eyes and nose as he made a gurgling sound, but no words came. A Medicine Ball formed in my hand, washing them in its soothing light. Almost immediately, I saw them breathe a little easier. But the Medicine Ball relied on a person's own strength to heal them, and they were all too weak to remain conscious.

"Overwatch, prepare medical pods and immediate extraction. Be warned, the soldiers have been exposed to some kind of toxin," I warned the fleet and received an immediate reply.

"Our sensors have been cleared, King Tarble, but we were unable to track the source of the disturbance. The enemy pulled out when they realized we were close." The admiral replied and that was not what I wanted to hear. I wanted whoever did this found.

"Tarble!" Wonder Woman shouted at me from outside, but I ignored her in favor of walking through the wall of the holding area to see two humans that were gasping in agony. I dropped down and picked one up by the throat.

"Who?" I questioned, my voice ice cold. There was no anger in it. Or rage. I was in Stage Twenty of the Wrath State, and there was nothing in my voice other than the cold threat of certain death. With my immense strength, it was an honest struggle to not just crush his throat on accident. Wonder Woman burst through the side of the ship next to me, her sword, and lasso in hand.

I reached up and ripped the mask off of the human's face. Pale skin, blonde hair, and blue eyes. Given that we were in North Rhelasia, that stood out.

The human looked at me for a brief moment before he shifted his jaw. "Earth is for humanity!" he said defiantly, and there was a small beat of silence.

A slow smile appeared on my face, "A suicide pill? What dedication," I remarked lightly, taking a pointed step back so the human could be hit with the full force of the Medicine Ball, which focused on healing the poison before it could do any damage to him. Now there was panic in his eyes as he saw the easy way out was no longer available to him. "If you want death that badly, I'll happily give it to you after you answer my questions."

"King Tarble-" Wonder Woman started, only to fall short when she saw my soldiers laying against the wall, barely clinging to life. She offered a hand, and in it was her lasso. "This will compel him to speak the truth."

"Convenient," I remarked, taking the lasso and wrapping it around the human. "What did you do to my men?"

The man visibly tried to fight off the truth. Veins bulged in his neck, and despite the blood loss, his face turned an angry red. And, to his credit, he even tried to bite his tongue off to keep from answering the question. But the Medicine Ball healed his wounds and regrew his tongue, and once it did, I had my answer. "It's some kind of poison!" He shouted, gasping as he did so. "I just know it rips through Xenos."

The implications were clear, "Genocide? You do not want to play that game with me." I growled and the human spat blood in my face. I didn't care. It wasn't the first time I'd been covered in blood.

"Who are you?" I questioned, getting a notification that the fleet was sending in evacs. Quarantine measures were implemented, so that should take care of it. The issue was that I had also been exposed to the toxin, or disease.

"Louis Amelie," Louis answered and it seems the truth came out easily once he started speaking it. He clenched his eyes shut, bracing himself for the question that he knew was coming.

I squeezed down ever so slightly, "And who ordered this, Louis Amelie?" I asked him under Wonder Woman's watchful eye.

Louis grit his teeth and for a moment, I thought he might bite off his tongue again. "UN Secretary-General Tseng Dangun!" He gasped out, making Wonder Woman flinch back ever so slightly.

"The UN ordered this?" I demanded to know, my voice never getting higher or lower. Like the news meant nothing at all.

"I'm… part of a special team. Black Ops. Faked my death and everything. Our mission is to get our hands on your weapons and armor to be tested for weaknesses. And to test the poison. The attacks would be staged at your HQ, hopefully killing you in the process while making it appear to be rogue North Rhelasian dissenters," Louis answered, gasping as the full truth was extracted from him.

Wonder Woman was immediately on damage control, "The lasso compelled the truth as he knows it. Louis, did the Secretary-General directly give you this order? Or any known affiliates? Or were you merely told that you were operating on the UN's behalf?"

This time, Louis didn't fight so hard to answer the question. "We were given orders by our handler. A grayed-out screen."

Wonder Woman looked at me, her gaze imploring, "Let us investigate further. It's possible he was acting on the behalf of a rogue party, not the UN. It… happens quite often." She said, taking back her lasso, but even as she spoke, her grip on her sword didn't lessen in the slightest.

I didn't respond as I let go of Louis, letting him fall to the ground with a thump. I turned to Wonder Woman, looking her in the eyes. "How confident are you that it would go well for you if I used that lasso on the UN leader?" I asked her quietly and pointedly. There was a small, but telling beat of silence, and there was doubt in her eyes.

It was difficult to describe what I was feeling when she failed to answer. But, if I had to put it into words… I finally felt at peace.

I gave Wonder Woman a smile that could be mistaken for kind. Gentle even.

"We gave it our best shot."

...

No updates between the 7th-14th.

The next chapter is currently available on my Patreon and Subscribe Star, so if you want to read it a week early, all it takes is a single dollar in the tip jar. Or, for five dollars, you can read the chapter after that two weeks before its public release! I hope you enjoyed!
 
Well, there goes the neighborhood. Guess Earth really was relying on The Justice League to save them from their own stupidity.
 
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