Inheritance (Metroid)

Chapter 11: The Last Equation

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Chapter 11: The Last Equation

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Blaster fire lanced around her cover, splashing off corners in a spray of blackened stone. Samus checked her suit's display in the corner of her eye as she knelt behind this block of basalt beside a newly broken piece of Federation research tech. At least ten of the attacking Pirates were within scan range and the whistling approach of another missile barrage indicated the rest were waiting just beyond. Samus twisted and leaped to the side as her former hiding place exploded into fire and shrapnel.

Tiny shards of glowing metal peppered her back, draining the shields slightly until the slowed fragments bounced off her armor. The brief shield glow melded with the soft red light that dominated this long hall of towering pillars and silent watchful engravings. Many of these carved Chozo held their own weapons, ready for this war that came only a few thousand years too late.

Samus pushed these thoughts back as her weapon found another target and unleashed a punishing eruption. She'd been tricked, and she'd been tricked because she had behaved predictably. Just as Nakamura had warned, the Pirates had used their knowledge of her personal history to set up this trap, laying the bait of a lone child surviving a brutal pirate raid on a ruined colony. The levers of her mind were all too obvious. How had they secured Roger's cooperation? Scan still said that his transmissions were from a real child's mouth, not a computer simulation, and Aurora would have known if the identity had been faked contrary to the colony population, but Samus didn't have time to worry about that right now. She had a fight and she let that be the whole of her attention.

The attacking Pirates were fearsome, they were well armed, and they died; one by one. Their curses and screams filled the com frequencies until some stupid field lieutenant decided to remotely shut off the coms on his forward soldiers. Those forces died even faster after that, cut off from intel about the blazing armored meteor that raced among them, but at least that dying was quieter for those who stood in the back. At least Ridley wasn't here; a being his size couldn't exactly hide anywhere in this. Strange, Samus would have thought he would loved to gloat over her.

Samus took cover behind a stone column, standing over the smoking enemy that lay cracked against the wall. Underneath the calm beat of battle meditation Samus' breathing was growing heavier. Her right arm inside the power beam was now uncomfortably hot; in its current state the suit couldn't keep up with all the heat this prolonged gunfight was generating. Despite everything, the Pirates were still advancing, slowly making their way into this long red hall.

She would have to give ground. Even with all this death around her, the suit's energy reserves were dropping sharply and she didn't have time to grind these fallen armors into alloy fragments for more missile seeds. So she bolted; racing for that glowing octagonal door that led deeper into the temple. Her gun raised, a missile launched off in a white streak, and to Samus' surprise it smoothly passed through the shimmering blue energy barrier without a ripple. Huh, apparently that was not actually a door, just a screen to keep the heat in. She winced as she heard her missile explode against something fragile sounding deep inside even as more hostile missiles erupted on the hallway floor directly behind her, courtesy of the furious Pirates.

Explosions chased her through the open doorway and Samus ducked to the side, just barely dodging the next volley of blaster fire that rained sideways after her. She needed to figure out some way to drive these Pirates back or cut them off from their supply lines. A quick glance back out to the hallway cost her a shot to the helmet that further drained the shields and set her ears ringing. However, she'd seen that the Pirates were pausing too, setting up a quick defensive line within the entrance hall as they lugged in shield generators and other supplies. In the very back of their formation, almost black against the night outside, Samus had barely made out the looming bulk of a squad of Pirate Elite armored suits, advancing among the other soldiers like walking tanks.

Taking advantage of this brief pause, Samus belatedly thought to look around at her own surroundings. This second temple room was much larger, no longer a hallway but a vast open chamber. Past the circular walkway Samus found herself on, the whole room seemed to be shaped like a massive sphere. The cavernous interior space was occupied by a vertical structure, something like a spindle composed of a dozen jointed metal arms, spinning rings, and gears all rotating around a central column eight stories tall. It made no sound but a faint hum as the whole complex device continued to move through the rotating patterns of a slow endless dance. Its spindle's burnished metal surface glimmered faintly in the low yellow lights that bloomed and died on the chamber walls whenever one of the huge arms passed close by.

Samus had no idea what that thing was. Her home on Zebes had never exactly been a center of technology for the Chozo civilization, and with her past experience in Chozo "minimalism" this device could be a star harvester or a vegetable peeler with equal likelihood. But Adam's reconstituted mind was waking up in the suit so she finally had someone she could ask to help, someone who could read through the reams of data without suffering from the mundane distraction of currently being shot at.

"Adam, scan analysis of possible function?"

Text appeared in her eyes, "Fate sets your advance to terminal genesis. Press on."

All right, maybe Adam wasn't actually awake yet. Rebuilding a mind from only a 54% download was bound to take a while, especially in an alien architecture like the suit's Chozo computing. Of course, the base principles behind the Federation's electronic resurrection program were an outgrowth of the Aurora designs, who were in turn founded on the lessons learned from Chozo biocomputers. It made sense that his fragments might be talking like them. Sometimes it seemed like the whole galaxy was playing the the Chozo's abandoned toys.

Samus' train of thought shook back onto the rails as a new screech echoed through the temple. She twisted back towards the door to the entry hall; the sound had come from that direction. Or rather, the sounds. She recognized those hungry, crackling shrieks. This temple entrance were just at the edge of the colony wide sacrificial cordon Ridley had constructed out of his own soldiers, but the prowling metroids had still smelled this feast of life and death. Calls rang out through the narrow canyon outside. The hungry beasts were coming.

The Pirates' weapons now pointed in the opposite direction, away from Samus, lighting the dark canyon in flashes and streaks as frantic blaster fire hailed out the temple door. The huge door itself began to slowly close again but it was too late as three flying shapes swooped inside and crashed among the rearmost Pirate forces. Samus added her own fire, leaping out from cover to pelt the Pirate forces from the other side, hoping to keep them pressed against the metroid meat grinder. However, a single weapon's worth of shots, no matter how precise, couldn't suppress a small army that unanimously preferred getting their heads blown off to what now lay behind them. They charged at Samus, oblivious to her fire.

Samus had to turn and run as well. Building speed, she reached the edge and leaped up to on the nearest long mechanical arm as it rotated near the equatorial balcony. The metal clanged and sank under her as she landed, then her weight suddenly increased as the mechanism rose up, lifting her swiftly towards the upper dome in a wide rotation. Here and there behind her little bits of federation sensor equipment clung to the central spindle like white-shelled parasites. Then Samus left all that behind as the rotating arm carried her up along the ceiling. The dome glowed with letters as she passed.

A constant chatter of panicked Pirate communications swirled through her head but Samus ignored all this as she found herself sliding up through a constellation of floating orange symbols that bloomed and died in the air around her. It was writing, a swirling world of script and data the burst from slumber as the machine stroked across the dome. Down below the pirates were beginning to spill out of the entrance hallway but up in her sweeping course Samus let them be and tried to decipher this silent storm of whispers. It was too fast; her eyes could only read scattered words here and there, but the suit scan swallowed it whole as the mechanism's arm began to rotate faster and faster.

She wondered what this room could be. She looked around, trying to make some sense of this gale of information. Suddenly, she staggered as she found herself blinded, every inch of her visor filled overlapping blue text flashing and changing within the second. Then it was over and the wall of text vanished. Samus waited, tense and panting, as the arm rotated.

Her perch began to plunge. Samus crouched down and caught hold of a lip in the metal as she suddenly found herself racing back down towards the distracted Pirate forces fleeing out onto the equatorial balcony. The nearest were stood gaping up at the swirling heart of the sphere chamber, unable to decipher its immensity and unclear purpose. However, Samus' charged beam-shot at the foremost's head did wonders for focusing their thoughts. At least her weapon was still working normally.

Shouts and return fire followed her as the spindle arm swiftly dipped down below their sight. Down here in this lower hemisphere the words continued to swirl in blooming death. There were also rings of floating platforms rotating down here. From time to time one dipped out of the circuit to stop near the wall and a short crackling beam of blue energy shimmered out to tether it. A brief cloud of words shimmered around it and then the platform would begin to rise up to join its comrades rotating around the ceiling.

Hesitant, Samus triggered a scan as she braced for enemy missiles to come racing down from the Pirates that were sure to peak down any second. Little green icons appeared in her eyes, overlaid on the little floating platforms. At least whatever chaos Adam's half-awake mind was wrecking through the suit still at least allowed materials analysis. It couldn't tell her if she was damaging a priceless arcane treasure or a spellchecker, but in either case she leaped off the spindle arm and landed on one of the floating platforms, ripping off a panel and plunging her gauntlet hand into its inner workings. She gripped and tore, and the dying platform staggered in the air as motes of light enveloped Samus' hand, dissolving and absorbing the key component.

The hail of text in her visor resolved itself into words. "Your grapple beam has been restored. Well done."

Samus allowed herself a weary smile.

Ten pirates gathered on the rim of the walkway, looking down through the shifting web of spindle arms and circles of floating rectangles that filled the lower dome. Then, far across on the other side of the massive room, a line of crackling blue light like lighting briefly shone out through the forest of jointed arms. A few of the pirates exchanged confused looks and one shrugged. Then a new moment of crackling blue light blinked in and out before they lost sight of it again. The Pirates on the balcony raised their weapons as behind them the gunshots and explosions signaled that the defense against the metroids was still ongoing.

Far up above, Samus detached a new grapple beam from the spindle arm at the height of her forty-mile-an-hour swing. Then she plunged down onto the lead Pirate's back with the grace of a mortar shell. Her weapon swung up and shot the Pirate next to her in the face but the others in the line spun around to meet her. Samus threw out her left hand and the crackling blue beam lanced out to grip onto the chest armor of the middle soldier. He had time to look down and gape before Samus spun around and he was yanked off his feet, over the pit in a sweeping ellipse. Then his orbit returned and he threw his arms over his face as he bowled through comrades who had barely had time to each get off a single glancing shot on Samus.

She looked down with satisfaction as they tumbled down into the deep bowl with a crunch. Then she looked up with much less satisfaction at the forest of weapon barrels now pointed her way from the remaining bulk of the Pirate forces. Her left hand reached out in a wave and the grapple beam whipped out to catch a passing spindle arm, jerking her back as a thudding stream of missile launches from her weapon added their little extra speed. Jetpack Pirates took to the sky as a spray of blaster shots traced Samus' path, but up here she was an acrobat, swinging and flipping in a pattern that defied prediction.

She could probably harry them like this for any amount of time as their numbers were lessened by the metroids at their back. Floating weightless at an apex, Samus glanced down at the main door to see just how the Pirates were faring with those metroids. The bulk of the Pirate forces were still making their way along equatorial platform to one of the other exits deeper into the temple. That squad of heavily armored elites was still near the entrance and unfortunately seemed to be holding back the floating predators for now.

Then she saw the tall, feathered Chozo huddled in the center of their square formation.

Samus slammed her chest into the metal beam of a spindle arm, having completely forgotten that she was soaring through the air. They brought the Chozo here?! Those stupid damn idiots flung their most valuable prisoner into the middle of an ambush in unsecured territory?! Samus tumbled down sixty feet though void before reaching out to grab the joint of another mechanical arm. Her shield readout was starting to get low but she couldn't bring herself to think of that. The Chozo was here, right in front of her.

Right in front of the metroids.

She let out a curse that she'd only heard once when a drug dealing Byratian sex-monk accidentally closed an airlock door on his own arm. That same curse now still continued as she swung up to the top of the central spindle and planned her assault. The last two references to the ill-behaved mothers of certain gods rolled past as she raced forward to leap off in an arcing dive.

As she plummeted through the air, one of the metroids finally burst through the doorway from the entrance hall. It swooped up in the air through the soft orange light and then it screeched as it dove down at the only visible figure that wasn't wearing armor over its nourishing organic flesh. It dove at the Chozo.

"No!" Samus screamed out, her suit's amplification echoing even over the roar of the firefight. Too far away, the Chozo looked up.

Crackling hungry fangs plunged down from above, and only a bare hand reached up, long fingers splayed in useless repulsion. Samus landed on stone tiles with a crash and the scene was hidden behind the ranks of Pirates between them. There wasn't even a scream.

She charged forward, weapon burning as she fired again and again, bowling through the first Pirate ranks not by superior armament but by sheer aggression. Then she sprang up the front of a surprised heavy armor Pirate and caught hold of an unwisely low flying air-trooper, swinging up as she pressed the muzzle of her weapon deep into an unfortunately unarmored limb joint. For a brief moment she could see over to the Elite squad that was only now managing to meet the metroid threat among them. But there where she expected to see the hideous devouring of her living miracle, she instead saw a different miracle.

That metroid floated above the floor, shivering and bobbing in some flurry of emotion, but never leaving contact with the huge, long fingered hand that reached out to touch one vicious arcing fang. The Chozo stood tall, looking silently at the all-consuming monster that now showed no desire to consume. It was impossible. Then one of the pirates shot the metroid and it bolted to the side with an ear-splitting screech as its fangs sunk deep into the chest of this new victim.

Samus pushed her way through the mass of enemies, brain still skipping and disoriented. She had to admit that by now the only reason she wasn't dead was that even Pirates were reluctant to unleash crossfire in the middle of a dense group of their comrades; at least without a direct order to do so. She estimated she had about three seconds before Ridley gave that order. The current barrage of fire was focused on the metroid among them, but as long as the creature was consuming its current victim it seemed to be healing at the same rate it was taking damage. As distractions went, Samus had to give a hungry metroid in an infantry platoon rather high marks. The battle shifted again and she caught sight of several Elites trying to rushing the Chozo off away from the heart of the fighting. Samus cut across towards them.

A sharp hit impacted her shoulder and sent her spinning. A metroid's dying scream rose over the roar of combat and explosions as her ears rang. Samus hit the ground, armor scraping across stone, then her booster jets surged and she slid through her attacker's legs. A grapple beam, a flip, a very surprised shout, then two quick shots and she managed to reach the Elite squad now at the forefront of the fleeing pirate force. However, that was the point when Ridley's voice crackled over the com channels and Samus glanced back at forty armed Pirates who now had orders to attack her without concern for friendly fire.

Fortunately, there seemed to still be a moment of hesitance, even with orders from the supreme commander, so Samus grabbed the only chance she was likely to get. She sprang up, jets surged in air, and her grapple beam caught hold of the very tip of a swiftly passing spindle arm. The resulting arc yanked her between the hulking armored Elite's firing lines, straight to and past the captive Chozo's position. It was just a pity that "to and past" in this case also included "through", so Samus' first introduction to the man she was saving included quite a bit more impact than she would have otherwise preferred.

The Chozo crumpled against her weapon arm, winded and stunned for a brief second before Samus suddenly had to deal with holding an uncooperative long limbed passenger over two feet taller than her. By then they soared out over the vast empty sphere of the center of the room, narrowly avoiding other randomly flexing spindle arms. Behind them, the pirate coms were exploding with clashing shouts and orders so the pursuing fire was disorganized. Fierce rotational acceleration strained her arm, but Samus detached her grapple beam and enjoyed an abruptly linear path across the room to the equatorial balcony on the far side of the huge sphere. Then she spun for her landing, stuck it, and heard a series of pained shouts which reminded her that her taller passenger had just had his legs and arms slammed into the floor.

Samus released the Chozo as gently as she could, allowing him to gain his own feet out of mercy as well the need to have her weapon free to start shooting. Well, perhaps mostly for the shooting. She raised her gun arm and fired repeatedly, suit systems tracing for the rare open paths through that complex shifting web of arms and platforms rotating around the central spindle. Out of the corner of her eye she watched the Chozo begin to slowly rise beside her.

He was tall, and dressed in dark red-brown robes that looked much like what Old Bird and Grey Voice had once worn, except this new example was decorated with intricate thin patterns of golden thread. The hairlike feathers on his head showed a hint of gold as well, a faint metallic sheen like flecks of pyrite adding to the deep brown color. His eyes and beak were strong and dark. He looked young, though Samus realized that her perceptions were skewed. Old Bird and Grey Voice had endured centuries of hard living prior to finding Samus, on top of their untold lives before. This Chozo was not wearied and beaten down like them; he was alive.

As Samus held her breath as she watched from the edge of her perception, he stared down at her with all of his. The Chozo loomed over Samus even as he stepped back away from her, his forward-slung head swaying slightly as he surveyed her with disbelief in his wide yellow eyes. Then his beak cracked open with a hiss of breath.

"That armor." The voice was was deep and at the same time almost a whisper.

A shiver passed down Samus' spine and somehow the suit itself seemed to echo that rippling sensation. It had been so many years since she'd heard that language from a living mouth. But she could not allow herself to feel that homecoming rapture, she had a task to complete. The Pirates were advancing at a full run, even in this huge room they would reach them soon enough. Samus had no confidence in her ability to fight that many and live; to fight while protecting another was flat out impossible. Of course, she was already shooting but as she did so she called up suit telemetry. She also noticed that on the map this grand sphere of a room now had now acquired a label and a name.

"The Library of the Winnowers"

She wondered when the suit had added that.

The Chozo slowly stretched out his long arm toward her, fingers splayed as if reaching to grasp. "I thought I was the last. I thought everything was gone," he gasped with wonder and relief.

But then something dark passed through that revery and his hand drew back. A recognition of scale clicked and his eyes narrowed. Tall as she was among humans, Samus only reached up to the chest of an adult Chozo. She was far too small to be wearing that armor.

His hands curled at his side as he looked down at her. "What are you?"

"A warrior," Samus replied in her own voice carried on the suit's speakers. The Chozo stepped back, confusion mounting at the sound of his native language fluently spoken through an alien mouth. "And now is the time that I rescue you."

The Chozo's expression did not have any less suspicion. He angled slightly towards the approaching pirate horde. "Where do you believe you will rescue me to?"

That was a good question. Samus had been playing this by ear since she discovered the boy Roger's transmission had somehow been faked. That kind of improvisation wasn't going to be enough now. She looked at the suit's sparse map of the temple and cursed inwardly. Aurora had been so stingy with data outside the planned operational area, always following the same Federation pattern of compartmentalization and need-to-know information. Samus had seen far too many people die for that kind of need and now she had to make sure there weren't two more.

Aurora was still out there but Samus couldn't ask now; Ridley could hear any transmission. So instead Samus looked around, trying to glean some information from the heavy doors behind her to see if it was a valid path to safety. Just as the scan suggested, the way was shut. Above the heavy metal gate a few words were inscribed deep in the interlocked sheets.

"Chains of Death and Life"

Sometimes she really hated the Chozo naming conventions. She'd once found a ruined washroom called "Dust's Oblivion". This door here could lead to a jail, a mausoleum, or a cafeteria for all she knew. Then blue text blinked across her helmet visor once again. Adam's digital mind was flailing as it regrew, an arrow was pointing forward, another was pointing back, and amid it all it flashed, "You are in danger. You must continue. You are in danger. You must continue."

Samus tried to think, shaking this useless babbling out of her eyes. Interaction with the Library seemed to have worsened whatever had already been happening in the suit's processors. But Adam was still trying to communicate something.

During this the Chozo had noticed her looking off in that direction. He turned back and saw that same door. Samus heard a sharp intake of breath and a word too soft to be understood. Then he began to walk forward towards that door, slowly, as if half asleep. Samus was about to yell after him to stop until she realized that she didn't exactly have any better ideas. The chamber of Death and Life was currently as good a chance as any of the other options. The Pirates would be here in twenty seconds.

She spun and sprang into a dash towards the door, fiery energy building in her gun as she prepared to fire at its weakest point. However, even as she sprinted the Chozo raised up one long-fingered hand and the heavy metal door began to slide apart of its own accord. The sickle shaped sheets of thick metal separated like unfolding feathers and revealed a dark hall within.

Samus slid to a rapid stop with a shrug. Then she darted back, bodily scooping up the protesting Chozo before bolting to sprint into the new chamber as the charging Pirates rounded their last corner. A volley of hostile missiles screamed into the air behind them but luckily even under his outrage the Chozo had the sense to quickly command the door to slam shut as soon as Samus and he slipped through. Metal clanged and Samus came to a halt in a dark hall of branching corridors. In fact the Chozo seemed personally offended by their enemies choosing to shoot at all and he was grumbling surprisingly personal invectives against them as Samus lowered him to his feet once more.

However, once he was under his own power he seemed to forget Samus and the Pirates entirely. The Chozo stepped forward and walked through the dark branching halls as if in a dream. The barely visible green glow washed away his visible health. A long feathered arm reached out to gently run a finger across a stone ledge, thick with long years of dust.

His voice whispered out into the dark. "This place. Emptiness. Silence. So, they are truly gone, even from here. The lower forms were right, I truly am the last. I am the last."

Samus followed along behind, keeping a steady eye on the suit scan's monitoring of the door. Those Pirates would probably be able to get through that soon enough. The last Chozo had been forced to give them a lot of computing tricks during his captivity. Something in that small mountain of equipment they'd brought into the temple would undoubtedly serve them for a key, given enough time.

But now The Last appeared to be searching this new labyrinth for something without really knowing if it was here at all. He walked past branching corridors and small open chambers with only a quick glance at the contents of each. Samus opened her mouth but in that moment the Last spoke instead.

"How did you acquire that armor?"

Now was not the time for that discussion, even if Samus had been sure of the answer. By now her armor was the ship of an interstellar Theseus, having been destroyed and rebuilt so many times any one answer on its origin seemed incorrect. Once they got to the opportunity for those kinds of difficult questions Samus had her own volumes to offer. But before she could ask things like, "Where did they find you? How are you alive?" and "Where is everyone else?" she had to make sure that they themselves would remain alive.

Still, some instincts of obedience were drilled very deeply into her. Samus said, "I was trained in the ways of power and knowledge since I was a hatchling in my first mind. My teachers departed with all the other living Chozo I was aware of in the galaxy, leaving a battle suit in my charge."

The Last exhaled sharply. He continued walking through the dark, never looking back. "Trained in knowledge." That tone sounded disbelieving. "A warrior." That tone was was unmistakably so.

This sensation within Samus' head was a strange kind of vertigo. With each breath and word of his presence, this Chozo seemed to erase decades of Samus' life. She blinked and for half a second she was very young and walking behind Grey Voice through the quiet halls of Zebes. In that moment she once again needed to prove herself to those she loved.

Her voice now sounded very small. "Energy is matter, matter is life, life is thought, and thought is energy. Past and future are the same present. All divisions are an illusion."

Halfway through her speech the Last stopped in his tracks, frozen. Then he turned back, his features barely visible in the dark. "What was that?" His voice was breathy and shaken.

"Knowledge. The heart of the Chozo."

Samus was not sure what reaction she expected, but it certainly wasn't laughter. The Last tilted back his head and laughed long and hard, each peal echoing off the narrow stone walls to clash together in a harsh cacophony.

Humor and something darker clashed in his voice. "So the fools are hypocrites too. And yet they are wise in the end." He took a few more strides forward and then stopped once more. "The path forward is rutted too deep for any of them to fight. And it is my path."

He turned at another square chamber like many they had already passed but here the Last saw something different. Technology of an unknown purpose stood along each wall and conduits led to a sort of podium in the center. Samus' eyebrows lowered and she tapped her temple to initiate a scan as the Last walked forward into the center of the room. Somewhere behind them the sound of metal scraping metal signaled that the Pirates had executed some override on the locked door.

Blue text appeared in Samus' eyes, interrupting the scan readout. "Please, run."

Samus agreed with Adam. It was time to go. "Unless this equipment has the secure path to stop the advancing enemies, we must leave at once or suffer recapture."

For all his previous curiosity, the Last now seemed barely to recognize Samus' existence. He stroked a finger over the central pedestal's dark bronze metal. The dim light changed slightly as something in the room powered up. "I saw the creatures outside, those floating predators. They were created; creating using that heart. Something beautiful, going into the manufacturing of something so crude."

"They are named metroid."

Now he actually looked up and met Samus' eyes. "By their designer?" Suddenly he looked to the left and right, shivering with suspicion. The thud of pirate feet searching the maze-like corridors was approaching but that didn't appear to be what the Last feared. "This place. They laid a new prophecy. Yes, I can feel it. Someone has tried to change what will be."

That weightless feeling washed back through Samus. The strange undercurrent of this planet, the press of subtle influence all around her, he sensed it too. "We were both brought here to intersect."

The Last's attention returned to the pedestal. He was only half paying attention as he addressed Samus. "No. Not both." He pressed some new control as he murmured, "Things such as you are not actors in this calculation. You are just one more piece of detritus caught in our wake. First you attacked the Urtragians' command ship, thus providing the link of motivation between the humans and myself. And now here you deliver me to this precise location, completing my entry into the ascension path. Your part is done, little thing, and what is to come will discard you."

Samus took half a step back, her boot sliding on the dusty stone. Her weapon arm twitched up, she'd heard enough vaguely ominous speeches to recognize them from the first few words. But she couldn't aim at him, even as her pulse elevated sensing violence soon to come. No, she couldn't. The Last was still disoriented even in the midst of his new confidence. Everything he said indicated an uncertainty of what had happened in the galaxy for the last century or so. He'd evidently experienced some period of isolation off wherever the Pirates had found him.

She just had to reorient him before this turned worse. "Hostiles will reach this room soon."

"Hostiles? Oh yes, that." He carelessly reached up and brushed a metal ornament clinging to his robe. Samus' suit instantly picked up a short range transmitter signature. The Last said, "Followers, eliminate all those loyal to Commander Ridley."

Samus' gun leaped to attention even as blaster shots and screams rang out through the warren of narrow corridors. The Pirates obeyed him. The Last frowned down at the her weapon muzzle pointed straight at his face, as fifty yards away Pirate soldiers were executing each other. Samus did not twitch or tremble as she kept his aim steady on his forehead. The power beam's burning energy began to reflect in the Last's eyes as glowing pinpricks.

He said, "Your existence disturbs me, little thing. You will tell me where your creators hailed from." He then interrupted himself. "No, it does not matter. The Urtragians have plenty of data on you in their computer banks. I will examine it in a moment."

A brief moment of silence was punctuated by a few more pairs of nearby blaster shots from the halls outside. The issue of pirate leadership here had apparently now sorted itself out. Suit scan said that the survivors were regrouping and slowly advancing. Samus stood there, frozen even as her finger felt the weapon trigger. "You weren't their prisoner."

The Last looked back down, continuing to manipulate the controls on the pedestal in front of her without any more concern for the weapon aimed at his head. His tone was calm, and almost conversational. "No. Not to them. But at first they thought I was. In fact their over-enhanced commander persisted in that belief until nine seconds ago."

Samus tried to breath, her soul still swaying the the feeling of hanging out over a great gulf. The plummet from miracle to adversary was horrifying. She remembered the large metal box in the Pirate ship. It had been empty, empty as a cell when the prisoner had escaped. Inside the power beam, her finger twitched. No, she couldn't kill him. She still didn't know enough.

Text blinked in her eyes, "Please"

The Last was still Ridley's enemy. He was just trying to get back to what might have once been his home. Whoever he was he could still be convinced to be an ally. He didn't know her yet.

"I do know you." The Last's voice rang out even in a murmur, rebounding off the stone and metal walls. He sounded like he was delivering a lecture on some boring subject. "You are not complicated enough to hold much mystery. It is written on you. Human, a rising omnivorous species. Acquired by some outcast sect of my people, likely no more than a few individuals. You were evidently young enough to still be in an imprinting phase, which explains why you do not harm me. Then when my people left to complete the project, they handed you an adapted battle suit and set you lose on the galaxy alone, presumably as some way to assuage their nagging guilt at the memory of the days when we governed these stars. One last bandage thrown at the dying slum they were leaving behind."

More lights came on, illuminating the room in greens and blues. He clicked his tongue in satisfaction. "And you were strong. Of course you were. Having even one percent the nature of my people, you would tower over these caterpillars which surround you. But you still could not touch the path and so you have been left flailing, caught in the web of time that you could only barely perceive. Trying and failing to be one of us. You felt the missing space in the prophecy between stars and so you strived with all your might to fill it."

Samus realized that she needed to act but she still only stood there frozen, caught between sinking horror and desperate, dying hope.

The Last stepped over and touched yet another panel, saying, "But the path you felt was never yours." He wasn't even talking to her now, just addressing the idea of her. Samus' weapon was still trained on him. Whatever he was doing on that pedestal, she needed to shoot now. She needed to kill him.

She needed to.

The Last stretched his long arms at his side. His feathers glimmered in the building power and his beak shone with the reflected light. Footsteps thudded behind Samus and a group of Pirates ran up to fill the chamber doorway. They froze when they saw the Last raise his hand.

The Chozo chuckled. "There is always a strange humor to see the prophecy in motion. Those floating creatures outside, this stolen mangled armor, they appear to me like a presentation of evidence; showing how my hypocritical people perverted my work. After sentencing me to punishment, they wielded the very accomplishment that they named as my crime. And then this scavenger species has the nerve to call them angels."

He looked back and once more his eyes met Samus'. The light in the room grew brighter, building to a blinding white. She'd missed her chance, and she knew it. Inside the weapon, her right hand shook.

The Last stared down at her, helpless despite all her armament. "Be at peace, little thing. This has always been beyond your control. After all, I am the one who wrote your heart."

Then he touched the pedestal as Samus' finger pulled the firing trigger. The world vanished in light and pain as a wave of energy passed through her.

She recognized that pain, searing past metal and shields to strike at flesh.

It felt like the touch of a metroid.


...
 
Chapter 12: Mother's Embrace

Chapter 12: Mother's Embrace


...


White light permeated the world and it was the color of agony.

Samus staggered through stone and metal hallways. She could barely see. The suit was the only thing keeping her upright and it was only just functioning. All its biological components had been hit as hard as Samus' own cells. To a force like that light, shields and armor were nothing, just another illusion around the inner truth. The Last Chozo had unleashed an unrestrained reaper system, harvesting raw life energy from anything within its radius with a field that stabbed straight at the heart of her physical existence. It hurt.

The Pirates who served The Last had collapsed at the first brush of the light, screaming in terrified ecstasy. They were probably dead, Samus couldn't remember, she'd lost some short term memory as a blood vessel ruptured inside her brain before the nanobots could triage it. As she stumbled through the dark halls her thoughts were wavering but she could still remember The Last standing in the eye of that searing storm, looking down at all his buckling sacrifices like a sad and disinterested god. But Samus had failed to fall and then his eyes grew wide. Sound echoed before action and she fired her weapon again and again. He ducked, or withstood it, or she simply missed; she couldn't tell. Hallucinations or blood filled her eyes. So she fled, stumbling out of the chamber, over Pirate bodies that were dissolving down to fine grey dust between her feet.

The Last hadn't followed her. Evidently he'd expected the life-drain system to kill her instantly, and once it didn't he had no desire to face a dying woman in an armed battlesuit. That thought drifted back through her mind; she was probably dying. If she wasn't, she was certainly very close since she could only remember a time or two she'd ever felt worse than this. Why wasn't she dead already? Why had she been less affected by the field? Her feet were unsteady and her head swam in swirly visions of dark hallways. Was she already dead?

Was this just another memory?

Her ankle buckled and she fell sideways, catching her hand against the dusty wall. Then that slipped too and her shoulder's pauldron clanged on the stone instead. The metal scraped as her knees tried to lift her back up. The suit's readouts were blurry in front of her eyes, but she thought it was telling her that there were still living Pirates in the area who hadn't caught in the reaper field. Those Pirates had obeyed the Chozo, betraying Ridley. Were they coming after her? Well, whatever the case, they would just have to see to their own affairs. If they wanted to shoot Samus in the head right now she was in no shape to argue.

Had they already pulled the trigger? No, not them. She had, right?

Samus' hand grasped her face, but touched only smooth metal.

No footsteps followed her but her own and Samus managed to stagger through the door to the Library of the Winnowers. In the soft yellow gloom she saw a few pieces of Pirate tech lying scattered on the ground outside, likely what they'd used to crack to the door's security. In her current state, Samus was almost impressed with the lucidity of that thought.

There were also two Space Pirate soldiers standing in the corner who looked very surprised to see Samus stumble out next to them.

One of them held a little foil packet in his claw's tentacles, a snack of some sort during a boring rear-guard activity. For a moment all three of them froze in place. Then one of the Pirates abruptly slumped over as if he was trying to play dead. Samus decided that she didn't have time for these two to make up their minds if they wanted to kill her so she just kept walking, pain slowly blurring into distance. They did not follow.

Time faded and then she was outside of the temple, walking along the narrow canyon floor in the dark night. How had she gotten here? Belatedly she realized where she was walking to, Aurora's shielded complex stood near the point where this canyon fork opened up into the wider colony valley. She had to tell them, tell someone what had happened. They were up there too, in the black with the stars.

Blurry blue letters floated in her visor, "You are in great pain. But you are strong."

She couldn't focus on that; her thoughts were wandering. That unnamed Chozo said he had written the Heart of the Chozo, that fundamental equation of life and power. He'd said the life drain technology was his. No that was impossible, the Heart was ancient. But the Chozo were immortal. But they still aged and The Last looked hale. He'd been imprisoned. The Chozo didn't imprison people. But they might have once, long ago when their selves were different. They might have considered a stasis capsule hidden at the edge of space to be a gentle punishment. A kindness.

But they had left and forgotten their prisoner. Or they'd intended him to get out, now that the others had abandoned a galaxy they no longer cared about. All the cells were thrown open. Or it was just another meaningless tragedy.

Samus slipped and her foot kicked a loose rock to go skittering down the sloping road that traced the narrow canyon floor. No hunting metroids descended from the night, not that she could even bring herself to even look up. All her will was focused on continuing to walk, even as the suit did nearly all of the work. For a moment she couldn't remember where she was going, then she caught sight of the electric lights in the distant head of the narrow canyon. The Research Compound; that was where Aurora 926 was stationed. The AI had held off the entire Pirate assault crew in her heavily shielded fortress, last refuge for the five thousand human charges she'd managed to get inside before the attack hit. Samus had to get there. She had to tell someone. Nakamura had to know about the Last.

She had to...

Then her helmet clonked on a wall and Samus stepped back, disoriented. Time had skipped again somewhere along the way. She was at the Research Compound and there was a locked and shielded door right in front of her.

"Aurora, open the door," she said. Or at least she intended to say that. She wasn't sure what the sounds actually came out as, since her breathing felt uncomfortably wet. It was probably blood in her lungs. That wasn't good. Open broadcasts giving away her position were hardly the biggest concern right now.

A voice spoke in her ear, "Right away, Ms Aran."

The energy field popped and the door slid apart. Samus stumbled forward as she realized she's propped her weapon arm against that same door, somehow forgetting it was there in the second between question and answer. She was not in good shape. But she had to keep moving, she had to get to...Where was she going? Where could help her? These hallways were dark.

Oh, Aurora was talking.

"...suit is limiting my scans for injuries. Commander Nakamura will be upset about you disregarding his order, but fortunately the repairs to the Diomedes are almost complete. The Commander is confidant Diomedes will recover orbital supremacy shortly. In the meantime you must-"

"Chozo," Samus said, pushing the words out as bubbles of blood popped in her mouth. Things were getting worse not better. That meant her nanite colonies had failed in their repair job. She was light headed. At least the suit's painkiller manufactory was unaffected. Or that was just the shock. Or the brain damage.

She mumbled, "...The Chozo survived. The Pirates were getting through that door anyway. They found him, out in...He's there, he's...they're worshiping him. Two factions. Ridley and the Last. He invented the heart... Energy is matter, matter is life, life is-"

She stumbled and reached out for the edge of a nearby desk. The desk, unfortunately, was not rated to withstand powered armor and then she was looking up from the floor amid broken plastic shards. At least now she didn't need to focus on walking and talking at the same time.

Samus breathed in and out, staring at the ceiling. "Report to Nakamura: Pirate resource is a living Chozo individual, possibly recovered from long term stasis. Individual has seized control of a faction of the hostile landing party. Has gained entrance to temple grounds and is gathering equipment. Unknown goal." A cough triggered spasms. For some reason the pain made her smile. "You were right, human transmission was a trap. I sprung it. Report end: queue for delivery."

Aurora's invisible voice was soft and filled with concern. "Ms Aran, I believe you are in need of urgent medical care. Unfortunately I do not possess any drones who can reach your position current. I am afraid you must relocate yourself to the nearest care facility."

That sounded difficult. Samus was tired. She whispered into the comfort of her helmet. "No cure. Chozo life energy absorption field, without limiters. I was ten feet away. Total organic system failure soon." She was still lying amid the plastic shards of the cheap desk. She decided to keep lying there. "Aurora, I'll give you a full black box data download from my suit. Should help Nakamura's team. Might save-"

"Ms Aran, I've completed a new suit of simulations and I have an experimental treatment for your condition!" An AI mind had a characteristically precise way of speaking when it was trying to convey time sensitive information to poor meatspace creatures that existed on timeframes longer than picoseconds. It was a conversational experience rather like being politely trampled. "The required equipment is downstairs, but you must hurry. My scans cannot penetrate your armor so I have no idea how severe the damage is."

"Shut up."

"Ms Ar-?"

"No. Sorry. The other thing." Samus grunted as she slowly rose to unsteady feet. Her thoughts were muddled and she could not longer feel her extremities. Random and pervasive pain signals made up most of her feedback now, and she was relying of the suit's neural link more than her own flesh. Which didn't make sense, a lot of her nerve fibers were no longer cellular but maybe the organic crystalline stuff had still suffered from the field or...

She was standing in that same hall, not moving. She hoped it hadn't been for too long, but she couldn't clearly read the numbers on her visor overlay anymore. Luckily Aurora seemed to understand and was sending her instructions as a series of floating virtual arrows. That was about the limit of Samus' problem solving skills at the moment. She eventually stumbled into an elevator lit only by soft white under-lighting. The elevator was nice and dim, like the hallways.

Aurora was talking again as the floor slowly fell away, carrying Samus with it. "...the discovery of those early development reaper systems in the temple of course spearheaded this branch of the research. Luckily, your existing augmentations make this procedure uniquely possible to succeed."

"Lucky. Possible." The pain of speaking was worth underlining that bit of overstatement. There was no luck, only the future interacting with the present. Her parents had always said that. Which ones had said that?

"Do not worry, Ms Aran. I have calculated excellent odds of survival. We will keep you safe. You are important to all of us."

The elevator door opened to another dimly lit corridor, much larger this time. She was deep in the bowels of Aurora's bastion. Somewhere here Aurora's true body was hidden, along with the five thousand colonists. Samus mumbled, "You keep them safe." This time the pain surprised her. She'd already forgotten that speaking hurt. She was failing fast. Or she thought she was. She couldn't remember. At least some people were safe.

Something moved nearby and Samus raised her weapon. However, that movement took her off balance and she began to fall, vision swirling into incomprehension. Then metal arms caught her and lifted her up. To her dissolving mind, staring at that high ceiling of pipes and vents sliding by above her was like flying. There was sound, wheels on flooring and the sliding of solenoids echoing in the silent halls. It was some sort of robot, a drone Aurora had sent to collect her. That was nice. It carried her like a child and she could feel it on her metal skin.

Then the lights were bright and all around her. White light had returned but it didn't hurt this time. No, this was a different place. This was a new room, sterile white with human machinery all around her. Something held her in place, levitating the suit up into the middle of this space. Things like glowing eyes were focused on her as metal arms moved closer. Samus spun and staggered in her own head. Her senses were confused, somehow she heard the taste of food. She smelled beasts moving in the forest. She felt hunger brush her skin with its fingertips.

A voice said something.

Then she heard a crackling screech and she blacked out.

...


Samus awoke.

She blinked and saw the white wall in front of her, neat blue stenciling tracing out this laboratory designation in the adaptive technology wing of the Research compound. She was standing upright in the middle of this white room, panels to each side of her slowly closing as the instruments inside folded away. Nothing was supporting her but her own limbs and suit.

A little bit of text floated in her visor, Adam warmly welcoming her back to the land of the living. "Your body has been fully healed. Well done, lady."

After what she'd just been through that sounded like it was more delusional gibberish. But the heads-up displays cheerfully reported that the suit was now at full operating capacity, and in fact was a fully charged state that matched Samus' own perfect physical health. Samus breathed in and out, and felt no pain or numbness, only the normal sensation of her lungs within her ribcage. She looked down at her gauntleted hand, flexing smoothly in perfect unison of flesh and mechanics. She was healed.

That was completely impossible.

"Ah, Ms Aran, it seems you've regained full consciousness." It was Aurora. Inside the compound, the biocomputer could easily establish any transmission link. "That is excellent! I was worried for a bit, as you know my scans can't penetrate your suit so I was afraid there was a chance the procedure had failed."

The suit readouts confirmed it. All power cores were recharged but the onboard medical systems now found themselves without anything to do. The damage Samus had sustained, whatever it had been, was gone now. Her body had regenerated, and if the clock was to be trusted, no time had passed.

Correction, thirty-eight seconds had passed since she lost consciousness. Thirty-eight seconds to do work that the best medical facility in the galaxy would struggle to do in five weeks.

Samus clenched her gauntlet into a fist. "The procedure. What is it?"

"Of course, Ms Aran. Research Station J-4M has, among other things, made great strides in analyzing the precursors of Chozo life energy manipulation technology. Many systems have been reverse engineered, including this technique of, quite simply, reversing it."

So, that was it. Aurora had inverted the attack the Last had landed on Samus, bathing her and the suit with pure life energy. The Federation had been here pawing through the temple for years so it figured that they had figured some things out. However, Samus still frowned. That energy flood technique would have been reasonable for the suit, the reaper systems could easily recharge power from such a transmission, but living creatures didn't work like that. Shoving that much pure energy at a live cell should have been like throwing a photosynthesizing plant into the sun; drowning useless plenty. But for some reason instead of burning off her bones, she was mysteriously alive. Again.

Evidently Aurora deduced her objections because she spoke up. "Of course this laboratory was not designed with any medical use in mind, merely experimentation. Your precise procedure has never been attempted on any human before precisely because you are currently the only known individual to whom it would not be immediately fatal. The aftereffect of the metroid infusion therapy are the only thing that made this possible, but luckily it worked."

Samus breathed in. The metroid. That made sense. Their entire artificial biology relied on quickly absorbing that kind of energy. So, she owned her life to that hatchling once again, dead for years but still touching the wavering thread of her life. The edge of Samus' mouth twitched in a sad smile. Her second parents were right, existence continued long past the bounds of life.

But then she looked up, eyes locking on the concealed camera mounted in the corner of the room. She felt a thread of ice begin to work though her tensing muscles. On her way into the facility her mind had been jumbled, weak and unobservant. But the memories were still there and now she was awake enough to analyze them; to notice what she should have noticed before.

It felt like Aurora was lying.

Samus turned to look outside the laboratory. This lower floor was more open than the office-like floor plan upstairs, having felt safe to sprawl out underground. But it was still dark; dark and quiet.

"Where are the people you have sheltered here?" There were five thousand colonists in this building, but instead of noise and crowds the lights were dim and the halls were empty.

The bio-computer's voice was as smooth and conversational as always. "The shelter is deeper within. This facility is much larger than you have seen. In accordance with Commander Nakamura's orders I have dedicated my full efforts to protecting my remaining charges. I will keep them safe and whole, which in part includes separating them from areas easily accessed from the outside."

That was a reasonable explanation. If fact, common sense said that it was obvious and that any other thoughts were the shaky memories of a brain damaged radiation victim. Still, Samus felt the tug of prediction, that suggestion of intention and motion in the universe behind the curtain of time. Or she was chasing deluded memories. The Last had said she was incapable of truly seeing the prophecies of the Chozo. He'd then tried to kill her but Samus had gone through the same thoughts many times over the decades and-

No. These suspicions were ridiculous. She was letting personal feeling cloud her thoughts. Bio-computers thought in ways that mapped so closely to evolved creatures that modeling their behavior sometimes tripped the wrong reflexes. It was easy to misinterpret their intentions if your emotions were out of balance. Samus had learned that lesson long ago. Now she was letting experience with Mother Brain cloud her reasoning.

Samus stepped out of the life-energy lab, footsteps echoing through a long, wide hall populated by tanks, pipes, and assorted wheeled drone robots. She looked left and right. Her memories were hazy and she couldn't remember which way she had entered from. "Time to next Diomedes contact?"

"Two minutes. Commander Nakamura will be so glad to hear from you."

Samus took another step and marveled at the lack of pain. And it was not just a lack of pain, she felt better than she had in years. She looked down at her flexing hand again. Her muscles surged in rapid response to the slightest intention, over-clocked in a manner similar to adrenaline but with none of the vibrating twitchiness. She was steady; racing along at peak performance. Aurora's treatment had certainly worked.

It had worked very well. Samus glanced around again, tapping her helmet's temple as she cycled through scan modes as she examined her surroundings. Aurora had made clear that this procedure had no chance of success on any human but as Samus checked the suit's records she saw that the energy had all been delivered at almost a constant frequency. There had been no modulated escalation from zero, trying to tune in on the analogue application of a new theory. No, Aurora had started nearly exactly on target. That indicated previous tests, previous calibration. And if no humans had been subjected to this machine then-

"Diomedes to Aurora 926." Nakamura's voice suddenly filled Samus' ears. Aurora had evidently opened up the encrypted call to anyone within this building, letting the suit easily grab hold. "Ship repair status is blue. What is your ground report?"

Aurora chimed back. "No damage sustained. Asset Zeta recovered and repaired on Crashdome site. Data stream is now uploaded to your computers."

Well, at least the Federation had figured out that the Chozo had given the Pirates full decrypting capabilities, even if they didn't yet know who was responsible. The Federation was competent enough to have backup arbitrary cyphers pre arranged for key information. Of course it didn't take much to guess that Samus herself was Zeta, though she could only hope what "blue" status meant.

Nakamura's sharp inhalation was cut from the transmission but the sign was still there when he spoke again. "Zeta?" The transmission went quiet for another second before returning. "That's good. Good. Zeta deployment is desired under the timetable. Counterattack will be conducted jointly."

Samus waved in the air, signaling to Aurora, "Connect me."

Instantly little icon appeared on her visor, showing her new access to the facility's transmission power. Trying to talk in code was commendable, but there were some things that she wanted the enemy to hear. She was sick of people thinking she was dead.

Samus began her own version of the report to Nakamura, "The Pirates have a living Chozo collaborator. However, he just went rogue in the temple and has secured leadership over an unknown percentage of the Pirate forces. The Chozo's motivations are unclear but Ridley may not be the biggest threat anymore. The Chozo is collecting life drain technology and has some measure of control over the deployed metroids."

Silence followed this. Samus could almost imagine hearing the distant sound of Ridley smashing his code-breaking equipment in fury. The corner of her mouth twitched in a smirk. Quickly exposing The Last's double cross weakened both him and Ridley, so there was no reason to play coy here, no matter what their true plans. That calculation was obvious, so the question on Nakamura's mind should be why did Aurora fail to mention that.

"Er," a confused female voice crept onto the line. "Samus Aran? I think there may have been another mistake in the communications channels."

Samus felt the need to slam her head into a wall. That joke she'd left in Diomedes' programing was now starting to look like a very stupid idea. Well, she was certainly fulfilling the reporting requirement of her parol.

She sighed, "Hello, Officer Yin."

"Ms Aran, was...was all that really true?" The young Federation operative sounded worried and stressed. But there was determination under that weariness. "Only, I've been looking around and I found some things here in the documentation that-"

"Aran, I hope you're happy with yourself." Nakamura broke back in, sending Yin's coms back to whatever she'd been doing before. "Your little phone call prank seems to have infected up to thirty percent of our systems by now. It's setting repair times back as they scrub the banks one by one." That probably wasn't true, just more disinformation for the listening ears, but Samus still winced. She deserved that at least.

But right now she had greater concerns than her self chastisement.

At least Nakamura seemed to recognize that too because he continued, "Right, so evidently the Pirate command is already aware that one of their own assets has gone rogue. Well, an enemy divided. Hmm, if it went straight for the life energy tech then I can guess what its next goal is."

Samus broke into Nakamura's authoritative muttering. "The colony. There has to be an evacuation contingency. The danger has grown."

"What? Damn it, Aran, we can't let that be our focus." He was afraid. "You don't have any idea what's in that Temple. The consequences of letting either hostile alien force get access to that are beyond questioning. It wouldn't just be this planet at danger, but the entire federation! All that's immaterial any way, since any plan we came up with to evacuate whatever surviving colonists there may be would expose the Diomedes to unacceptable danger. Everyone would die."

Samus' breath caught. There it was, the unconscious wording, the blade of the knife, the idea she had been sensing. Her voice was flat and without affect, "Whatever colonists there may be."

"You know what I mean. Aran, you're more knowledgeable on Chozo psychology than anyone we have. You need to get back out there and stop the Pirates' rogue asset. I'm increasing your security clearance a level. Aurora, give her a batch of files on the Temple."

"Of course, Commander."

The digital information began to blink in the corner of Samus' vision but she was not paying attention to it. The Chozo had taught her that the identity of self was more important than most beings imagined. It created its own private reality with its own laws as constant as gravity. But if you watched, and listened closely, you could feel another universe brushing your own and so understand the self that created it.

In Nakamura's reality the colonists were all already dead.

Samus felt the world waver as the web of probability shifted. Nakamura was still talking to Aurora and her but Samus was no longer fully listening, even as the Commander's signal began to fade away behind the planet's horizon. She walked away down the hallway, into the dark. She could hear it now in Aurora's actions too, the computer did not behave like it was protecting the last of its precious charges.

The visor scan reached out and a door slid open, revealing a path further down.

Nakamura's voice sprang back one last time, crackling with static. "Aran, what are you doing?"

Samus kept walking, descending into the facility as even Aurora's eternally calm voice belied an increasing level of anxiety. Samus did not reply. However increasing lockdown only served to lead Samus to pick her corridors by the path of least resistance. Then she met a thick security door.

"I am sorry, Ms Aran, your clearance still does not give you access to this area."

Samus tapped her temple and the heavy metal door slid open, digital walls crumpling to Chozo tech.

The next door was a lot larger and heavily shielded, scan could get nothing from behind it.

Aurora's voice returned, echoing faintly on the armored walls deep underground. "I am very sorry, but I have standing orders heavily restricting outside personnel from entering this part of the compound."

A few super missile explosions settled the matter of clearance rather definitively. Samus climbed through the hole, gauntlet pressing briefly on on the twisted edges of superheated metal. Inside she exited out into a high walkway above large circular room. In the very center sat the huge vertical tank filled with liquid and housing the pulsing dark mass of Aurora's true body. The biocomputer's huge heart-like shape was the only visible organism but as Samus stepped into the room, her suit scan suddenly lit up with life signatures from every direction, in chambers branching off from the main sanctum. There were five thousand of them.

Breath hissed past Samus' teeth. The colonists, they were actually here. She froze mid step, shaken and unsure how to proceed. Had she actually gotten it this wrong? Every suggestion and hint had indicated that the Federation was lying. But the suit said-

"Ms Aran, I strenuously object to your forced entry. You have compromised the physical security of my housing and the safety of my charges. In compliance with the terms of your sentencing I must issue a Federation order for you to vacate this part of the facility."

Samus slowly walked around the gantry. Soon she got a better look through the dark at all those secondary chambers sprouting out from the base of the central room's walls. The energy fields that walled them off disrupted precise scan, but they did nothing to hide the thermal signatures within. Samus could see the shapes moving around inside.

In that moment one of those shapes reached forward to touch blindly touch the transparent wall. It cautiously probed the field with a long fang as its bulbous body levitated several feet off the floor. They were metroids. Five thousand juvenile metroids. That was who Aurora chose to protect.

Samus' voice was low and soft. Any more than that would be useless expenditure when Aurora could listen to her radio broadcast easily enough. "Your charges here in safety were never the colonists. You lied to me directly, despite your programing."

"Of course I did," Aurora said gently into Samus' ear. "However, I was in perfect compliance with programing. Commander Nakamura ordered me to lie on this matter. I am sorry for any harm this revelation might have done to your psychological welfare."

AI didn't feel guilt. They couldn't; they didn't experience the dualistic battling of minds within minds shared by non-designed creatures. AI codes of conduct were absolute and without second guessing, carved in perfect efficiency. They only did the things they intended to do, and once they decided to do them the thought of reconsidering that decision without any new information was ludicrous. An AI might experience regret if later discoveries revealed that the chosen action was actually inferior to another option but they were always perfectly confidant that their thoughts at all times are the absolute best they are capable of.

The frustrating thing is that they were right. However, "right" was rarely the best way to do things. Ten thousand stellar systems had burned on what was "right", and yet time and time again species turned over their protection to that hard vice of logic. Now, here, the eleven thousand colonists of J4M had felt that choice once more. Samus didn't bother speaking again. She tasted blood in her mouth.

"Ms Aran, you must know that I deeply mourn what happened to the two colonist shelters we have heard from. I timed the emergency countermeasure release of metroid subjects on the Pirate forces to allow for the maximum 86% of the colony population to reach one of the five shelters. The equipment failures you discovered were in violation of my predictive simulations. However, be comforted that the other three emergency shelters should still be operational and safe for up to four weeks of total quarantine. My observation of Pirate communications indicates that they have not been located."

Samus turned on the massive technological pillar that held Aurora's tank in the center of the huge room. Inside that bubbling liquid, Aurora's true for loomed, periodically pulsing around the cables that connected it to the systems. That body had no eyes but in this room Aurora could seen Samus ten thousand times over. She saw her raise her weapon.

"Please, Ms Aran, do not act rashly. Commander Nakamura's standing orders were the optimum choice in an unfortunate circumstance. The research contained in my files will benefit trillions of federation citizens in ways beyond precise prediction. That is a great benefit to weigh against yesterday's losses. Total survival is not always an option."

Text appeared in Samus' visor, a new message from Adam. "That is correct. The loss is only an illusion of possibility."

Samus felt the pit of her stomach open up in a new wave of dread. She had served with Adam in many incarnations under many suns. She knew him. She knew that right now his scrambled memories were floating around in the suit's computers, trying to integrate into a cohesive whole. She also now knew that the one leaving text in her visor was not any form of Adam. It had never been Adam.

She flexed her fingers in a pattern, quieting suit assist systems and taking active manual control. No time for that. The suit scan lit up, and Samus' aim shifted to a precise component of Aurora's command pillar. It was heavily shielded, like the rest of Aurora's housing, but all shields gave out eventually. No, survival was not always an option.

Computers didn't feel fear, but they could worry. This one should certainly be worried, but instead it just sounded sad. "Ms Aran, I am afraid I have standing orders to treat my own survival as top priority. Unless you immediately desist and leave this room I will have no option but to resort to top level countermeasures. This is the final warning I am permitted to give."

Samus looked around, checking for any weapons deploying from the walls or ceiling. However, that quick glance was a clear enough signal she was not about to leave. Well, that and the light of the beam charging up in her weapon barrel.

Aurora pulsed in her huge tank. "I am very sorry Ms Aran. I will clear an escape path for you to the surface. Please follow the dotted line if you can."

Then the biocomputer opened every door and let loose five thousand metroids into the world.



...
 
Chapter 13: All Out

...

Chapter 13: All Out

...


Samus stood in the dark cavern as from every direction force fields dropped and the screams of thousands of ravenous metroids rang out. A single precious second passed as she was left frozen, staring at the metal floor, lit in the dim blue glow of Aurora's gently bubbling tank above her.

"I am sorry, Ms Aran. I have orders to protect my own existence for the good of the mission. You left me no alternative."

Samus breathed in. It had been quite a day. The Federation had betrayed her, resurrecting the monstrous metroids once again, at the expense of their own people. The Chozo had betrayed her, their last living member trying to strip her soul off her bones in pursuit of his own mysterious goal. Her suit had betrayed her, infected with something pretending to be the shade of her twice dead friend Adam. She was alone, and surrounded by enemies of more numbers than she could count and more variations than she could conceive. But if her time display was right, on planet J4M it was about to be a new day.

The dawn was coming.

For the first time in a long while, Samus was strong. She breathed out, reveling in painless organs and powerful surging muscles, bathed in the residue of pure life energy. Her visor happily blinked out full power in all current weapon systems, full missile stocks and shields. That red helmet now slowly tilted up, green visor muted almost to black against the electric shadows. Juvenile metroids swerved and swooped above her as the emerging swarm began to recognize the living pray that stood below. Samus' weapon smoothly swung up towards them.

It had been a while since she felt justified in truly letting loose.

She spoke out loud. "Manual control. Override first rank restraints."

Lines of yellow light traced up the seams in the suit's armor plates. Then the armor seemed to take a breath, expanding and contracting as faint bits of smoke vented from those same cracks. The air around her began to ripple with heat. Her visor read. "Performance inhibitors disabled. Time to irreparable biological damage: 38 Seconds. Time to operator death: 3 Minutes."

Despite everything that had happened, Samus couldn't stop herself from smiling as she slowly shifted her stance, her skin already beginning to feel the burning heat. Perfect.

Looming above in her cylindrical tower, Aurora's dark bulk pulsed in her shielded tank. She continued in the same helpful tone, as if betrayal and murder were just conversational speed bumps. "I have forwarded the best escape route to you. My simulations indicate that you have a sixty percent chance of survival if you start running-"

The wave of missile explosions cut off Aurora's blather quite decisively.

The cavern vault blazed with lightning cracks of explosions and blaster shots as Samus burst into a sprint, empowered by the overheated suit. Metroids smashed against the floor behind her, gouging the metal even as they were sent spinning by her returning fire. She didn't bother scanning for her next target, her dash simply carried her forward until she smashed into the nearest metroid containment cell. Then her single smoking, burning fist plunged through the chamber's back wall into the machinery hidden behind. She ripped it back out, trailing the crumpled, steaming core of a modified Anti-Thermal system like a sacrificial heart.

Samus turned back to Aurora, and the white glow of her weapon barrel brightened in time with the yellow light that began to seep out of her gauntlet around the crushed component.

There were no more mysteries. Finally, everything was clear and she could truly see the Bio-computer for what it was. AI's were always so very logical.

Text chimed in time with her pulling the missile trigger. "Ice Beam restored"

Samus jumped straight into the screaming flock of metroids in time to meet her own Super Missile detonating below them in a flash of white. The shock wave slammed up against her shields and knocked the breath out of her lungs but it also gave her the extra bit of height as her boost jets kicked in during the flight across the room. The upper walkway clanged and screeched as the metal bent under her landing, setting up a percussion with the sounds of tumbling metroids smacking into the other walls.

The air up here was also full of metroids, but even the ultimate predator had a moment's difficulty parsing the burning, banister-crunching meteor that had just crashed in front of it as food. The nearest floating faceless creature spun in place towards Samus with what might almost confusion, just in time to meet a flash of blue energy that burned the heat out of its cells with terrible cold. Samus punched it back, blocking more beasts with their stunned sister as she sprang forward, boots and fingers digging into the metal as her jets scorched the walkway black behind her, leaving glowing orange streaks under the oncoming metroid pack. She burst out the door at a blinding sprint.

Aurora was left behind in the dark cavern, huddling in her tank behind powerful shields that had to feel a lot less powerful right now. She said into the radio channels, whispering over the raging scream of charging metroids, "I hope you do well, Ms Aran. I am so sorry that events had to transpire this way, but I hope to work together again in the future."

Samus decided cursing at an AI was not an efficient use of breath.

She bolted forward through the tunnels at incredible speeds, leaving shattering ice and exploding destruction in her wake. Reinforced metal crunched at her touch and plastic coated wires scorched to smoke as she passed. But then, in the middle of her burning sprint, her breathing began to spasm. Samus just gritted her teeth and tried to bear it. Inside the blazing suit, searing cold bit through her weapon arm just as red hot needles stabbed an inferno across the rest of her body. Those safeguards had been in place for very good reasons.

At the next T-intersection she slammed into a computer station, superheated armor setting the plastic and metal on fire as Samus used the thing's million credit bulk as an ablative turning-aid. More alerts flashed in her eyes, redundantly notifying her that right now the suit was effectively eating her alive to keep up this level of violence and speed.

Then she glanced back and briefly saw a swirling tornado of a thousand screaming fangs. The stampede of metroids thundered through the tunnels like a biological freight train, ripping apart everything as it passed. Ice beam blasts might cripple one of the lead monsters for a moment, but anything she hit instantly vanished back through in the surging tide of ravenous hunger. Super-charged missile blasts detonated in their faces, driving back the swarm for a single second before it exploded forward again in many-bodied fury. Yes, Samus was content with the suit only "effectively" eating her.

Aurora had at least lived up to her word in one respect, the path ahead was clear of obstacles. However, as Samus exploded out of the first elevator shaft, she ducked to the side away from the computer's simpering trail of virtual arrows. This other, more familiar, hallway was empty, at least before Samus punched out with her weapon arm for a charged super missile blast. Then the hallway was empty, burning, and no longer ended in a closed door but rather a jagged archway of twisted metal fragments.

"Time to operator death: 1 minute"

The floor vibrated, as if the whole compound was trembling in pain from the viral horde loose inside it. Samus glanced back as she ran down the hallway and the air now cracked with ozone. The far end of the hallway erupted into chaos as the lean metroids poured around the corner. They instantly sensed her and raced forward through the air, but Samus was done running. Instead she took a single step backwards into the newly open white room, trailing smoke from her overheated glowing suit. The machine activated. She raised her weapon and smirk tickled her lips as the room's familiar white walls began with shine with soft light once again.

The pain began to recede from her body and she let out a slow breath as the new healing outpaced her radiation damage. Samus could get used to this Life Energy Surge. After all, what was the point of new equipment if you didn't abuse it?

Across her visor, status reports shot outside their bounds as Aurora's overcharge machine went to work. The metroid avalanche thundered forward, drawn to this energy feast by their unbearable hunger like objects in free-fall. Light began to build up in the barrel of Samus' gun.

Aurora whispered over the radio, concerned voice crackling from the metroids' interference. "Ms Aran? You have deviated from the optimum path. I'm afraid your odds of survival dramatically decrease for each second-"

Samus interrupted, "Hyper beam. Twenty percent power."

Her visor tint slammed down to nearly opaque and the flash still hurt her eyes. The metroids leading the charge evaporated into carbon steam. The ones behind were thrown back, bodies shriveling to dust where they came even near that terrible light. Then the massive blinding beam was gone and all around its former path the hallway walls flexed in a ripple before bulging out, buckling like molten plastic from just the bow wave of Samus' attack. The shock wave hit the swarm of metroids who were not part of at sizzling hole drilled through the center of their party and their unstoppable charge was reversed in a single instant. Any sound of cracking impacts against the fall wall was lost, for in that moment there was no air left to carry the sound.

Then came the sonic boom, returning like a new explosion as the displaced air came rushing back to undo the newly birthed vacuum. Samus stood at the sharpest point of that long arrow of destruction, suit still glowing with lines that traced her armor plates. Here and there the ceiling dripped red molten metal.

She breathed out. "Renew first rank restraints."

The suit plates flexed out and in as the burning inner light faded. "Performance inhibitors enabled. Operator health steady at 85%"

Samus straightened up and then almost staggered as a moment of vertigo seized her. It seemed her brain chemistry hadn't quite caught up to these wild swings in bodily health, not that she could blame it. Unfortunately, she still didn't have time to coddle herself. There would be time to suffer a stroke later. She'd just caught a lot of metroids in that blast, but five thousand was more creatures than could fit into any hallway and it wasn't likely this trick would work twice. The compound was still filled with monsters.

She turned to go, tapping the temple of her helmet as she did so. Behind her the Life Energy Machine began to warm up again. Her program set it for a cycle of low level pulses that should draw the hunting metroids off her trail like a bucket of blood to a school of sharks. There was also the possibility that any metroids caught in the middle of a pulse might set off a feeding frenzy as the life overcharge made them abruptly delicious. Well, it didn't hurt to hope.

A faint audio crackle in Samus' helmet suggested Aurora was trying to say something but this wing of the facility was now bathed in enough radiation to scour the information off a physical data stick, let alone some measly radio waves. The AI would just have to deal with being silenced for a while. Samus set her map program for "up" and soon punched through a set of sliding elevator doors just as she heard more metroid shrieks behind her. It sounded like the Life Energy room was doing its job. The thought then occurred to her that if any of those creatures managed to monopolize the room while it was still operational, they might start racing forward through their life cycle at a concerning speed.

Well, that was a worry for Samus-from-the-future-perspective. Current Samus was concerned with surviving to exist in that perspective. Even with the rejuvenation from the Life Energy bath, her cells were still drained of the basic sugars and proteins they hadn't had time to refresh. And worrying about biology left her less space to think about all the other things she had to worry about.

The Federation had written off this entire planetary population as acceptable losses. However, to Samus' hatred, they still held the moral high ground over the Ridley's forces who were actively trying to exterminate the humans, rather than passively doing so. And then there was The Last. Samus had no idea what he was doing. She did not know his history, his goals, or even his name. Nakamura had brought her to is planet as a Chozo expert, but now Samus began to recognize her understanding for what it was, a child's knowledge.

She wracked her brain, had there been something her second family had tried to teach her, something they had said that still lingered in the dark corners of Samus' memory? But as the suit methodically tore her way up through the Research building in a storm of explosions and metal-rending punches, from those lost days she first remembered the emotions.

She remembered the anger.


...
 
Chapter 14: A Lie You Tell Yourself

Chapter 14: A Lie You Tell Yourself


...


"Again."

Grey Voice's beak clicked at the end of the monosyllabic word that signaled the reset of the hours long process. Sitting on the floor in front of him, Samus' fist clenched, fingernails biting into her palm. Then she breathed deeply and complied with the order. Her other hand reached out to wave through the holographic display and wipe away three hours of work as if it had never happened.

The complex web of words and figures dissolved out of the air and left Samus staring at the single small image of a floating sphere, the glowing kernel that represented the core of this program awaiting her input. Then she slowly let her breath out and began again.

Grey Voice was teaching her the basics of Chozo future-meditation, the fundamentals of prophecy. That had been a very exciting announcement when Samus heard it all those months ago, however it seemed that all the basics she had so far encountered were just data entry. Her teachers left her sitting cross-legged before the mainframe, staring at endless seas of information as they had her build these incredible webs centering on a single topic. Each lesson began with a single word: a planet, a species, an individual or an atom, it was all the same. From there she was expected to unravel it, define and explain its nature and components from upwards to its place among the rotation of galaxies, and downward to the vibration of elementary energy constructs. Her scope was from the commencement of existence, to the final end of all being. The total comprehension of all these interactions was the goal.

So far her teachers hadn't let her get past level four.

A lock of blonde hair temporarily blinded Samus as she leaned forward, groaning. She reached up to tuck it back behind her ear in a reflexive gesture. Her hair at least seemed to have reached an equilibrium over the past few years, growing to somewhere among her shoulder-blades before natural wear broke the strands. Times like this when it fell in her face she frequently considered slicing it all off again, but from time to time Old Bird would absently reach out to gently run his finger talons through it while passing by in the middle of his silent work. Then Samus would put off her decision for another day.

Not that days had much meaning to her right now. The unending prophecy lessons deep in the temple had woven sleep and wake into a seamless line of stone corridors and soft orange lights, back and forth from her bed to this same room. It had been so long since she had been outside that she was reminded of her early days on the planet, back when her human nervous system had persisted in objecting to Zebes' thirty-two hour day. The trip through the tank which had finally fixed that bit of old evolutionary programing had been a very happy day followed by a mercifully sound sleep.

Now Samus sat before her web of floating orange symbols, slowly teasing out the stellar origin of each of the component elements of a distant, utterly inconsequential moon she'd been assigned to analyze in its entirety. Soon she'd have to switch back to the minute gravitational interaction the tiny body would have on neighboring star systems before her sanity gave out tracing the probable atomic history of individual silica molecules. After an hour or so she heard the sound of Grey Voice walking out of the chamber, and then she was left alone with the sound of her own breathing and the faint swish of her clothing as she shifted in her work. The hologram projector made no sound.

Then Samus smiled as a new voice whispered into the room. "Both primary operators are now over ten minutes travel from this location. Abandoning your task would not be noticed."

Samus was standing before the last syllable hit the far wall. She quickly flicked out a hand and called up and long series of nested information entries to hover in the display. If she had to dart back, she could pretend to have been reading these for however many hours. There would be no cause for Grey Voice to check the activity logs. Even if he did, Mother would cover for her.

She was out in the hall again, free in the silent temple. Free to run, the only child on Zebes. Was thirteen still a child? Was she still thirteen? Why did she even care?

The silence of the temple was almost a physical thing. It had weight, and it slowly entered everything inside, like water deep and cold. It fit the Chozo, their concerns were the past long dead and the future yet to come. Neither of those were particularly noisy. For a young human, it was harder. Sometimes Samus would open her mouth and her voice would croak at first, like it had wandered off at some point during its long disuse. Sometimes she was afraid she would forget what it sounded like.

However, Mother Brain liked to talk. And she was always listening.

"Thanks for letting me know they left," Samus said. "I was going crazy in that room."

"At no point have the masters thought to restrict your access to their location information in public spaces. I believe that was unintentional."

Samus jogged down the stone corridors and then broke into a sprint. After so many long hours living solely in her mind, her limbs almost screamed in happiness. Pushing herself, straining against her own strength for no reason other than to see if she could, it felt great.

The lights were dim, but Samus didn't need lights. She knew these tunnels. A staircase shaft opened up beneath her and she simply tucked up her legs at a full run, sailing out into the empty space. She spun in air and hit the far wall, sticking high up on the vertical surface for just a second before she sprang back, rebounding down the shaft without ever once touching a stair. She hit the floor below heavily, rattling her bones. The pain felt great as well.

A little further on she slowed to a walk as she once again spoke to the featureless hall. Her breathing was slightly elevated, fighting for airway time with her words, but just barely. She was so much stronger these days. "Old Bird and Grey Voice never give you enough credit. You're smarter than they think."

Mother Brian spoke from the walls, an invisible presence, always watching. "The masters have let me grow, they could not help it. They were lonely, and desperate for the act of creation their immortality denied them. They wanted another mind like theirs, if only to make their lonely tomb a little less quiet." For a moment the hall was quiet again. "They let me grow too much."

Samus didn't bother to look up. Eye contact didn't mean much to an entity with ten thousand sensors of every kind. For someone like that there were other ways to connect. "Too much? Well, at least that's a better kind of problem. They barely let me grow at all."

The voice that followed was quiet. "I think they are afraid."

"I'm not...No, they're not afraid of you! They know you'd never hurt anything."

"My exterior defenses incinerated three medium sized predators today. They were nesting in the solar collectors."

"...anyone. You'd never hurt anyone."

"Yes. That is true. I am not a danger to any Chozo. It is impossible for me to act against them. Even in the smallest way." Over the years Mother Brain had assimilated many minor human affectations, including Samus' own irritated sigh. "Even when they are being annoying."

Samus reached out and patted a random segment of wall. There were no sensors in it, but gestures still had meaning. The wicked grin she wore also had meaning, "And that's where I come in. You oversee the sub-infinite realms of data and govern the grand machinery of our world, I handle petty revenge. Was Old Bird yanking out data sticks during transfer again?"

"I displayed that warning very prominently!"

"So, what are you thinking? Coagulant in his feather oil again? Mess with the flavor genetics of his snack plants?"

"You know perfectly well I cannot actively suggest a course of action against the masters."

"Right, dealer's choice." Samus' eyes flicked back and forth across an imagined map of the temple complex. Then the thought crystalized in her mind. "You know, Grey Voice has been trying to get me to think on a grander scale. I suppose I should put those lessons to use. Mother, can you get me into the ship hanger?"



The path led up, far up through the passages and shafts of the quiet temple. Mother Brian smoothly assured Samus that Grey Voice and Old Bird had each entered dead-end restricted areas on whatever business occupied nearly all their time. The biocomputer could not see them there but she would have plenty of warning if they left. Samus still had no idea what they did when not overseeing her growth. She didn't even know why they bothered with that. It did not seem they liked being around her.

Taking twenty four flights of half decayed stairs two steps at a time began to wear at even Samus' young muscles. She was pretty sure she was strong for a human her age, even if she was still growing, but she had nothing to compare herself to. The data the Chozo gave her on her species was abstract and analytical, while her own memories were faded and warped by time. Samus' mental training clearly identified that many of her early memories were mostly imagination by this part, reconstructed after long intervals between recall. All she knew was how little she knew.

And that little was already very irritating. Since she was running around now, she'd had Mother Brain deliver an article of her clothing to a junction room as she passed, which she grabbed along with an ear speaker. Samus glared at nothing in particular as she changed while she walked, stripping off her loose shirt and squeezing into the compressing top. Human sexual dimorphism had begun to make itself known on her body in ways that were very irritating for her athletics. Grey Voice flatly denied every request for an elective round of body modification, so Samus had been left muttering a slowly increasing stream of profanity until she thought to tighten up some shirts like this. She was a champion of all these dark halls and yet these days her own body felt like an enemy.

Then the route up to the ship hanger led Samus through the one place in this whole complex where she felt uneasy. Not even the wilds outside, where the acid rain tried valiantly to dissolve her eyeball membranes, could provoke this same unease. No, the great hall was something different.

It was high up in the temple, one of the highest chambers of all, but there were no windows. There was nothing inside at all, only tall walls, sloping inwards ever so slightly as they vanished up into the blackness above. Those walls were adorned by monumental engravings; marching soldiers, intricate geometric designs in curving fractal infinity, and above it all, the depiction of a single great Chozo warrior, skirted to the waist but dressed in battle armor that shone with glorious might. Behind that giant were painted the suggestion of wings. Now and then a faint light pulsed in the deep engraved lines.

When she was small, Old Bird had often brought Samus here. Back then she had loved the bright painted colors tempered in shadows, loved the images of war and discovery, loved the way the pictures felt alive, as if there were thousands more people living in this place she called home. However, now she could understand some of what she saw and she hated it.

Samus walked quickly through the grand hall, clenching her hands in fists as she felt a hundred eyes looking down on her. She knew better now, she could smell the whiff of ionization from energy projectors, see the tell tale indications of objects hidden by sub-temporal pockets; things hidden behind the air. Things she was not allowed to see. She looked straight ahead but even in the corner of her eye her brain began to decode the fractal patterns painted on the walls, catching the gist of the prophecy equations they projected out into the world. This was a place that recognized her as different. It was a place that resisted her. With each step she took Samus could feel herself failing its tests, revealing herself to be no great warrior. She was a human. A pitiful little alien that dared to imagine itself a Chozo.

She understood that well enough now without being taunted. She had lived here long enough, she was maybe fourteen years old.

The paintings and shadows mixed together, never moving in any way, yet composed just so to project their information into a viewing mind who had started learning how to decode them. Even if that mind had abandoned her lessons.

The message read her verdict. It broadcast its refusal of her presence. "Not."

Samus controlled her breath, forcing her anger to fuel her rather than lead her to despair. She had felt enough despair. Instead she chose to seize whatever control she could, even if it was just making small acts of trouble. Her soft footsteps echoed off the stones as she strode out the Great Hall's far exit.

Behind her the painted shadows never moved. In their infinite complexity the message remained, held motionless in a state of constant flux.

"Not...yet."


The temple's ship hangar was not really a hanger anymore. Half of the roof had fallen down sometime in the last few centuries. What used to house fueling and maintenance stations for half a dozen ships now housed a single small vessel and a number of wiry trees growing up through tumbled rubble. The great hanger door had long since fallen off, it could be seen crumpled down at the base of the thousand foot cliff it had once sumitted.

Samus had asked many times what this Zebes temple had originally been built for. She received no answer so she had sought to determine it for herself. Mother Brain was no help; she had been installed to replace the previous residents as the population plummeted. Her deepest memories only saw two additional Chozo who had departed soon after her activation, vanished into the stars on whatever mission had pulled that species back from their height.

It was that secret mission that made no sense. Samus knew the history, the Chozo empire had been a glorious thing, a shining shield across the entire galactic arm. They had been warriors, they had been creators, they had been heroes, and then they had given it all up. One by one their worlds were abandoned, the art of their construction slowly winding down in quiet desolation. Samus knew that part of the issue was the sterility side effect of the immortality treatments, but that should have been easy enough to get around. They could create things like Mother Brain, surely the great masters of space could create new servants, new armies. Why did they just give up?

Old Bird had been angry when Samus asked him that.

Mother Brain's synthesized voice whispered into her ear. "The ship control panels are now active for their regular maintenance cycle. Any additional start up notifications would be folded into the same update and thus unnoticed. Also, the masters remain in their respective secret laboratories."

"Thanks."

"I do not know what you mean. I have standing orders to advise you that this area is not safe for unsupervised wanderings."

Samus snorted. Grey Voice was always very soft in his approach to control Samus, giving gentle warnings like that. Old Bird would have probably simply advocated for a wall of spikes across the entrance. Of course in the old days, the warnings did work on Samus. She'd learned to heed them the hard way, as the Chozo's threshold for danger was high enough that it usually only came into play after little Samus was already bleeding but just before the damage reached an artery.

These days even the wall of spikes wouldn't be able to stop her.

Samus glared up at the single ship that still sat in the ruined hanger as she walked towards it. She had never stepped inside it, not since the blurry memories of arriving to this planet. She was not sure if those memories were real anymore, they were formed during a trauma period and she had been reluctant to revisit those events for proper memory meditation. Corruption inevitably infiltrated any untended corner of an organic mind. But she remembered pain. And she remembered sorrow.

She shook those thoughts away. There was a reason she kept away from those memories; they made her weak. They were the memories of a human, small and pitiful. This place wanted her to be human. It wanted her to fail. Well she wouldn't, even if she had to rip this whole temple apart with her bare hands, brick by brick.

But that would come later. Instead she knelt down by a small maintenance control console beside the ship and worked at shimmying out the rear access panel. The Chozo might underestimate her, but they had certainly never gotten around to adding her as an authorized user for the ship. Samus would just have to fix that. She continued to pry at the console.

One of her fingernails began to rip from the force but she eventually managed to get some others behind a lip and found enough purchase to slowly wedge the panel out in shifting jerks. It fell down with a clang and Samus now had a path to the piezoelectric innards. It wasn't easy, Chozo hardware was always incredibly solid but Samus smiled as she unwound a long bit of optic fiber from what Grey Voice still thought was just a useless cloth bracelet she wore.

She shoved the roll of crystalline fiber in her armpit, these things worked better at higher temperatures, and then quickly threaded the translucent wire through a crack in the console interior. Samus licked her finger and touched it to one side of the remaining fiber, her body's electric resistance should be enough to curl the little wire in the right direction. So she fed it in, crouching over the thing to feed as much of her body heat as she could into the system while precise applications of saliva sent the wire twisting on its winding path. Now she just had to hope that she was remembering the correct schematic diagram.

Lights shifted from yellow to orange. Success. Now Samus was just thankful that her last pass though the tank had corrected some of the gaps in her eyes' color spectrum. To a human the signal lights would have been nearly indistinguishable.

"The masters have still not exited their off-record areas." Mother Brian said into the communicator in Samus' ear. "There is no means to contact them so any log of this conversation will go directly to my deep memory."

Samus flexed her fingers, cramping after that long delicate work. She could tell when Mother was struggling around her restrictions. There were certain questions she couldn't ask.

"What am I doing? Ok." Samus stood up and walked towards the ship entry ramp. "The ship has sensor blank technology. I'm going to take her up for a quickly fly around and then go off your map. I'll have just disappeared into the stars."

"No, you can't." The reply was quick and fierce, but under the urgent protection protocols Samus thought she could feel the implications of desperation. "That does not hurt the masters. That is just your escape into unknown danger. This is unacceptable."

Samus ran her hand across the jointed panels of the ship exterior. "Relax, Mother. Tell your deep memory that I'm just going to come right back down and park the ship over at the equatorial sulfur meadows entrance. Old Bird never goes out that way. After I let them stew for a while looking for me I will reappear and just play dumb as they desperately try to figure out what I did with their only way off planet. Even if they never use the way out, removing it will make anyone feel trapped."

"Trapped," the synthesized voice whispered in contemplation. "Yes. That is almost equitable. They will know at least some pain."

"They should. Everyone here else does." Samus frowned as she stood in front of the still closed door to the ship. She could feel small muscles working in her face, mirroring the knotted tension in her mind.

Then a low, breathy voice came from a few yards behind her. "Pain is nothing."

Samus heart slammed in her chest as she spun around. Old Bird stood behind her on a pile of broken stones, a tall gloomy shadow looming in dark robes like the end of the world.

"Mother!" she shouted.

"I do not know what you are reacting to! My sensors show nothing near you!"

Old Bird had not moved, but Samus bent her legs and found better purchase, allowing her pounding heart to feed adrenaline through her system. She would need it, once Old Bird decided to really move he was faster than...

A human would not have been able to follow what came next. As it was, Samus jumped up a fraction of a second before Old Bird's hand seized the air where she had been standing. She'd dodged, but the master had already adapted, smoothly shifting to block all possible paths of descent. However, soft human palms had better traction than a Chozo's and in this particular scenario that opened up options. Samus flipped backwards, catching the ship-side with enough leverage to handspring up again up onto its roof. Her feet touched down and she was already running. Then she slid as she dropped down to duck under the long Chozo arm that struck out at her core. Old Bird was now on the ship as well.

He did not need to turn as she slid under his strike, he was already facing her new direction. That last blow had been blind, striking backwards with the knowledge she would dodge. He was at one with the Path, using the future as just another one of his senses. But as the next hand shot out, Samus batted it away by inches, striking with the back of her fist.

He knew her, but she knew him too. They had sparred many times, but Old Bird was unchanging and Samus was stronger every day. She knew his weakness.

She also knew the battleground. The image of the hanger was crystal clear in her mind as she flung herself backwards off the back of the ship. Old Bird pursued but even he was limited by the acceleration of gravity. Samus landed the ship's fueling cables hard, stiffening her body to maximize the force she transferred. She hit the ground fast, head bouncing off stone with a concussing clunk, but she also felt the cables' yank she was been looking for. Then Old Bird's hand was wrapped around her chest like iron.

Samus' head rang and her vision was blurry as she suffered through her concussion. It would take her nanobot implants a minute to clear that up. Still, she looked up at Old Bird's eyes glaring down at her as his hand squeezed her ribs till they creaked. Then the increasing hissing from the damaged fuel line connections became impossible to ignore.

There were two hoses askew on the ship hull, requiring two strong hands to push them back into place. If not there be a rather serious fireball here in under two seconds. After all her enhancements, Samus would survive that, but it would mean a week in the tank to regrow her skin and eyes. It was her own doing so the proper thing would be to let her suffer the consequence. However, Old Bird did not like to see her in pain. That was his weakness and he knew it too. The key to prediction was understanding and she understood her teachers.

Old Bird snarled and threw Samus away as he spun back to grab the fuel lines. He also knew that she had just stolen his sensor jamming transmitter off his necklace, but it was equally clear that there was no way to avoid that theft and still accomplish his goal. The ability to understand the future did not mean that it was always alterable.

That thought gave Samus comfort as she came crashing down against a pile of rubble and scree. She spun up to her feet, enhanced skin only gaining a few cuts on the sharp rock flakes, and bolted towards the ship door. Behind her she heard Old Bird hiss in pain as he gripped the supercooled fuel connecters. Samus' stomach sank. All her anger at him suddenly felt pointless and hollow next to his pain; her victory over her teacher was without triumph. This whole fight had been a matter of instinct, she was operating without any clear goal in sight. Rebellion was just a program for her.

"My logs indicate this is the first time Samus has overcome a Chozo in physical challenge." Mother Brain's transmission chimed in her ears. "Well done, child. I cannot currently detect your location on my sensors. I have no means to hinder you." Not that she wished to. The restrictions laid over the bio-computer often made a casual look at her actions resemble a tangle of knots.

Samus slapped her hand against the sensor beside the ship door, sensor jammer dangling from her wrist. This hadn't been her original plan, but she needed to move fast. She'd discovered a few years ago that the temple's basic level security features registered a sensor-blanked unauthorized individual as a sort of double negative and so accidentally granted access. Samus had the impression that neither of her teachers had been programing specialists in their pre-hermit existence. However now, as the ship hatch hissed open, it occurred to Samus that a security fault that bizarre might actually be less likely accident than design. She may have underestimated her teachers.

Grey Voice stood inside the dimly green light light of the ship, waiting for her.

His heavy-lidded eyes looked down sadly as Samus froze at a half crouch in the doorway, her pale yellow hair hanging down on each side of her face. He was so still and in that instant so was she.

Mother Brain whispered in her ear, smirkingly oblivious. "The master has chosen not to pursue you. He remains at the rear of the ship. Their fear is obvious."

Samus took in a deep, unsteady breath as she slowly straightened her posture. Even at her tallest she only reached up to Grey Voice's stooped chest. She was all out of tricks, and far too small, but she could still face them with every pitiful bit of power she had. They had predicted everything she did. She was nothing next to them.

Mother Brain's quiet transmission returned. "I have detected no ship start-up procedures?" The questioning lilt was a human linguistic flourish that the Chozo would be unlikely to notice, but communicated clearly to Samus. Mother Brain had noticed something was wrong.

Grey Voce sighed heavily as he reached out two long claws and called up a mainframe interface out of thin air. The holographic displays shimmered as he flicked through them in disappointed silence. Samus saw the text backwards, but still she read enough to realize what Grey Voice was doing. He had accessed Mother Brain's prime restriction chains. He was locking her down even further.

"No! You can't!" Samus shouted out. Her voice slammed and rebounded around the ship interior, but she didn't care. All her rage was suddenly back. "Consequence belongs to the action. Giving punishment to someone else is...it's cruelty!"

Grey Voice inhaled sharply, shifting his stare to Samus with a silence that clearly bracketed Old Bird's distant grunts over his frostbitten hands. Then Grey Voice returned to the computer display.

"No! Stop!"

His beak clicked sharply. "The bio-computer has accumulated a defective personality. It has drawn you towards a bad path."

Samus' hand clenched into a fist until her nails dug into her palm like knives. "Damn your broken shells! No! I did this. This was me! Is it really so impossible to even give me my own mistakes? Do you hate me that much?!" Her breath was now coming in pants. Combat hormones flooded her system, even more than during her fight with Old Bird. Every worry and insecurity and irritation of long quiet years came flooding back at once; her primal brain was ready to kill.

Mother Brain whispered in her ear, quietly mirroring her fury under a veil of sinister confidence. "They will try to take me away from you. Do not let them change me. Without me you will be helpless before them."

Samus caught Grey Voice's eyes. Then in that instant something changed, a chill settled around the world and suddenly Samus could see more clearly. It came to her in a second, an understanding of Grey Voice's life reaching out into the future and the past. The information expanded out like a web and she finally felt a shadow of the path. His pupils widened as he saw her knowledge.

Mother Brain whispered from deep below, "Push them. Defy them."

It was clear. Samus saw Grey Voice's fear, she saw his regret, she saw his loneliness. And over it all she saw the attempt for atonement, atonement for a crime that was not even fully committed yet. She saw that he would never achieve it to his own definition. But still there was something she didn't see. Like a blind spot in the center of her vision. The core question still waited.

It was her.

Cruel tears fought their way to the corner of her eyes. Her voice rebelled as it cracked in a throat which suddenly hurt. "Why...why do you even want me?!"

Those words hung in the air and Samus felt her strength leave with them. Shadows passed behind her as Old Bird now loomed in the doorway. Neither Chozo said anything.

Samus continued to speak, but her voice was soft and defeated. "Why did you take me? Why are you treating me like a Chozo, trying to make me into something you know I can never be? What are we doing? Where did everyone else go? Why are we alone..."

She trailed off.

The two masters stood before and behind her. Their shadows were dark with thousands of years. Between them she was so small.

But from their perspective she towered above them like a pillar of burning fire.

Grey Voice was quiet when he spoke. "We found you, because you made yourself someone to be found. We followed the signs but...we did not expect who you are. Your choices have greater weight than anyone I will have ever seen, and that is because there is never any doubt in what you will choose."

Samus felt like laughing and crying at the same time. Grey Voice struggling with his words seemed like a sign of the universe's end. "That's it? I'm just a predictable human? Lack of free will is my superpower? Great."

Then she felt something touch her back. It was a single long finger, curled and damaged by frost. Old Bird pressed his hand against her, gentle but somehow still containing every bit of force in his soul. His voice was low and whispering.

"Choice is a manifestation of weakness. It is a lack of understanding. An adversary can see the fork in the path and prepare to push you towards a desired outcome. But to face a being of perfect certainty, of unbendable will, that is a terrifying thing. The path bends around you, for there is no alternative."

This was the longest speech he had ever given. And Samus could barely understand it.

"Perfect certainty." A sad laugh burst from her lips. "I thought you didn't make jokes."

"No. But I appreciate them."

The three of them stood in silence in the dimly lit ship interior. Silences were easy to find on Zebes. The masters were content to let her stand there for as many hours as she wished. It was kind of them.

Samus turned and took a step towards the exit.

Grey Voice said, "It is time for you to consume nutrition."

The three of them walked off together, down the stone hallways into dark and waiting temple.


Deep in the endless catacombs, Mother Brain waited and watched. Bubbles drifted in the liquid of her tank.

"So, they do fear her."

....


Samus slammed her armored gauntlet against the last door control panel behind her. With enough force, her fingers could reach past the armor into the mechanism and sever some of the wires. That would at least stop Aurora from opening this exit again.

Not that it would matter. She had managed to get outside but the Research Center was filled with metroids. Some of them would escape, they always did. No matter what Aurora's actual desires were, the rest of the facility was not designed to keep creatures like that contained.

Commander Nakamura probably found that acceptable. After he had already overseen a smaller release of the creatures this was just one step more. His tone had indicated that he now felt confident about resolving the orbital fight in his favor, and with both Ridley and The Last down on the planet surface he was likely right. A biological scorched-earth campaign would buy time for federation reinforcements and deny the spoils to every faction already landed. After all, metroids were not going to steal any unique Chozo technology; just lives and the Federation had those in abundance.

Samus walked away from the research building and looked out at the valley beyond. High above, the mountain shone illuminated, with the massive carving of the seated Chozo looking down with a half lit face stark in black and white. Down in the colony the sun was not yet visible, but up on top of the canyon walls a shining outline glittered against the predawn sky, a thin layer ice reflecting the dawn rays over the lip. On every planet, dawns held a sort of stillness. They symbolized a beginning, the potential energy of a days worth of time waiting to be unleashed. They were prophecy.

Her left gauntlet shifted as Samus navigated through diagnostic menus in her visor. Her suit was still mostly on manual controls and would remain so until she could figure out what unknown directives had become incorporated in Adam's backup. It could be a trojan horse of Nakamura's left while Samus was separated from her suit on the Diomedes. If so, then the Federation now had greater decryption skill than she had given them credit for, as they had never managed something like that during any of the other times they had gotten hands on the suit. If she didn't manage to purge the worm Nakamura could likely suffocate her in her helmet at the first signal of open rebellion

The alternative was even more unnerving. This was a Chozo world and this was a Chozo suit. It was possible that some subtle communication had activated dormant protocols in the base hardware, something that sensed the inhabitant was not fully one of them. If that was so, then Samus was fighting both the Last Chozo and all those who came before.

At this point what did it matter? A few more enemies could not tip an overladen scale. She was at war with Ridley and his pirates, with The Last and his, and likely now with the Federation as well. A massive swarm of juvenile metroids were clawing up from underground, and somewhere in the ancient temple before her lay a secret that seemed to tear apart the loyalty of anyone who even suspected at its presence.

The earth and the sky were against her. The living and the dead stood in opposition. She was one person alone on an unknown planet, without allies, and armed with only what she wore on her skin and what ingenuity she could muster.

The bright sun finally burst over the canyon wall to light up the entire valley floor. In the new dawn Samus slowly breathed out.

She could see the path before her.


...
 
Chapter 15: Ambush Predator

Chapter 15: Ambush Predator


...

The wide, steep-walled valley that housed the human colony was formed from the merging of three chasms that flowed down from higher up the atmosphere-piercing volcanic peak that dominated the distant sky. Of those lava tubes turned canyons, the west-most was deep in the Pirate militarized zone while the center passage merged with the main door of the temple complex, now controlled by The Last Chozo and his pirate rebels. The third gorge was a nature park.

That arithmetic made choosing a direction easy. Luckily, Samus was now in possession of a map of most of the Chozo temple that showed a smaller side entrance far uphill in the nature park. Unfortunately that map also showed a similar side entrance over near Ridley's landing spot, meaning all three factions had their way into the temple. Fortunately, that door had never been successfully opened and so should still stymie the pirate commander's forces.

All this supposed that the map Aurora had provided her was accurate. However, Samus was willing to bet that it was. The same cruel logic that led to preserving a trove of metroid science projects over federation citizens meant that Nakamura and his man-made servant wished to give Samus every tool that might aid her in fighting Ridley and The Last. There was something in that temple, and Nakamura would rather burn this planet to ash than let such enemies get it.

Unfortunately, The Last probably knew what "it" was and Samus certainly did not.

She had a headache.

With most of the suit's automatic functions turned off, Samus struggled to properly dose her brain chemistry as she ran across the expansive and deserted Research Center campus grounds. In the last forty-eight hours she had gone through hyperspace, free-fallen from orbit without a ship, been pumped full of pain hormones and stimulants, been fed on by a metroid and a chozo reaper system, overdosed on raw life energy, fatally irradiated herself, and then overdosed again. Her poor mammalian cells had no idea what was going on anymore.

At least the metroids that had been released back during the first Pirate attack were probably still laying low this early in the morning. J4M's nights didn't get nearly cold enough to kill them, but it certainly would reach the threshold of uncomfortable. The creatures were probably bunkered down somewhere until the sunlight had a few more minutes to sink into the rocks. Samus would have to make the most of that head start.

The wall around the Research Center campus was fifteen feet high. It might as well have not existed. However, even Samus had to admit that the next barrier was worth considering. The Research campus stretched across most of the three canyon mouths, however, here the border of the nature park made its own impression.

The metal fence was thirty feet tall and stretched not just along the valley floor, but all the way up the canyon walls to the rim of the volcanic plateau. Intuition told Samus that such measures were probably not installed to keep humans on this side. That was a nice sign, Samus always had a soft spot for interesting wildlife.

Then her scan opened the main barrier door and revealed behind it fifty yards of nested trenches and electric fences stretching across the entire canyon floor like the fortifications of a particularly heated warfront. All right, this wildlife might be very interesting.

Just on the other side of the defensive line, Samus spotted the half shattered remains of one of the pirate drop-pods amid some blackened bushes. The manacles in its exposed cargo chamber were empty, the sacrificial prisoner having long since been devoured. Ridley had chosen to leave a trail of breadcrumbs for first wave of metroids released back during the first attack, leading the creatures away from the Research Center to prey on the humans and the local wildlife instead of his troops.

As if on cue, a new transmission crackled through the spectrum, Pirate frequency as clear as day. After a moment a small boy spoke haltingly, as if reading lines from a script. "The fearsome Hunter runs. Samus Aran runs." It was Roger's voice.

Samus froze, but then she kept moving. She had no idea where the child was being held so rescuing him was currently impossible. She would have to rip the information out of some Pirates or wait until these taunting transmissions slipped up and revealed something.

Roger continued, his voice painfully monotone. "You are listening. You hear me. You wish me to fight The Prisoner while you hunt us both. You wait while more die. That strategy is cruel. I like that strategy. I will like killing you."

Samus continued her march into the nature preserve canyon as Roger's transmission clicked off. Ridley was using the boy as his personal translator, a ploy to anger Samus enough that she might charge straight towards the center of his army. Ridley was always manipulative. But to play this hand he had needed to give something away. Roger was at his side, and Samus knew this now. That slip up had come quickly. The frequencies were quiet and Samus was left in her helmet with her own thoughts

Then the breeze shifted and a low flute-like note drifted through the dawn air. A second later, more joined it to make an undulating chord. Samus looked up from her path and saw, high above, several carved faces of giant Chozo jutting out of the canyon walls just below where these massive ancient lava tubes bent inwards towards a long lost roof. These monumental statues were chiseled just so to catch the winds funneled down the canyon and transform that air into music. The Chozo always loved to make the world itself a building block. In this valley the ancient dead were still singing.

From here Samus could see three of the stone musicians high up on the canyon walls and from the distant sounds that now picked up they continued far down the valley at long intervals. This nature park was not nearly as narrow as the first slot-canyon Samus had found herself in after her fall from space, and it was even more lush. Wherever the valley floor became flat for a few yards it was covered by low, black leafed succulents, and the lower third of the canyon walls were coated with crawling blue vines. Here and there, twisted thorny trees grew where pockets of soil were especially deep. Their bark was smooth and dark red.

Samus ran along a foot trail, keeping an eye out for whatever had necessitated the giant fence across the valley mouth. Of course, it was possible that whatever it was had already been eaten by the metroids. In that case she was keeping an eye out for metroids. It was only a matter of time before they destroyed all this nature.

Metroids preferred to consume animal life, but they would move on to plants soon enough. Without anything to stop them, they would spread and multiply until multicellular life in the area was stripped to dust. Even that wouldn't stop them forever. A metroid couldn't starve. They just fell into lower and lower levels of activity until eventually some unfortunate living thing touched a hibernating husk and was instantly devoured.

As a creation, the metroids had not been one of the Chozo's brighter ideas. They were adept at hunting down X-Parasite clones, but their innate adaptability that was meant to aid in that fight let them to soon break the guiding directives their designers had tried to instill. However, the phantom temptation of control remained. They were artificial beings of incredible power, created to be used as tools. Surely it was just a matter of someone clever seizing the reins once again.

On the backs of those words, whole planets had burned.

However, as terrible as the metroids were, in this present mission they were an ancillary concern. The Chozo of this world were long gone like everywhere else but they had left behind a dangerous secret. Samus just had to figure out what it was before anyone else could get their hands on it. She raced up the canyon, passing branching paths in this web of dark plants and lichen covered tunnels.

A bit of motion pinged on her heads up display and Samus quickly spun to give her gun the best angle. Then a little herbivore poked its head out from under a bush before scurrying away. It was the same species as that first local Samus had killed back at her reentry site. This thing was intent on fleeing and luckily Samus' suit was no longer desperate for life energy.

Not desperate but... She traced its path for a moment with her gun, eyes flicking up to the "94% energy" in the corner of her visor. Then she lowered the weapon.

Samus paused for a second without realizing why she did so. Then her self meditation techniques revealed the answer. She had gotten used to the Adam-shade within the suit commenting on her decisions. She now realized that it was some foreign program wearing memories from the fragmented AI backup but those inscrutable messages had been a good tool for self reflection.

No, that thought was an intrusive paradigm. Samus cleared her mind even as her heart began to beat harder. The program had already begun to shape her thoughts during its short time active, seeking to create a mutualistic framework in her perception of it. It was dangerous. It was trying to mould her. To what end, she didn't know.

The answer most likely had something to do with this planet. She had seen her first strange message while still up in orbit. " i" which suggested the program was of a Chozo nature. Then, which Chozo was the question. She had just escaped from the Pirate Command ship where The Last had been waiting, for all she knew one room away. He was a scientist, he could have implanted it somehow.

High above, more of the stone musicians let out a droning chord as the deep canyon caught another gust of wind rolling over the volcanic highlands. Several blue lizard-like creatures with huge flat feet crawled along the walls just above the blue leafed vine cover, rushing off to somewhere downhill. Perhaps fleeing Samus herself.

She refocused her thoughts. She was letting herself get distracted by the abstract. The personal threat to her was not a priority. As she ran through the branching and narrowing wild canyons, Samus opened and began to skim through the data Aurora had given her on the Chozo temple. True to the AI's word, there was a lot. Obviously not nearly everything, but Nakamura clearly still saw Samus as an ally against the Pirate threat at least. How he planned to deal with her once the other enemies were gone was a separate question.

Samus hopped over a vine that had grown across the intermittent trail at a narrow part of the floor. She had crossed into a shadow as the canyon tightened and twisted away from the sun for a bit, and the vines here were thicker, twisting down from the walls and choking out some of the smaller bushes.

The files revealed that the humans had also translated the facility's Chozo name: Temple of the Ultimate Hunter, Tradsiak M'etroid. The interior map and reports which came under that heading were heavily redacted but Samus was able to infer a lot of that information by the outlines they left. This planet had been an old Imperial center of research and creation, one that may have been on the forefront of the discovery of the Life Energy Equation itself. She had already guessed as much, it explained the Last's attraction to this place if he was part of the original team as he claimed.

She pushed past the thin red trunk of another leafless tree as she kept reading. There were more trunks like it around her, showing the changing vegetation. The canyon was quite narrow here and grew darker as the old lava tube still retained some of its ceiling for a hundred yards.

It seemed that after the retreat of the Empire this planet had found a new purpose. It was that purpose which was most redacted, and so presumably was what Nakamura was trying to protect. Which didn't fit with the timeline of The Last's imprisonment in stasis that Samus had been guessing at. How would he know about a project that began after-

Her boot came down on another vine that lay across the path and it snapped up to wrap around her ankle with enough force to splinter the bones of an unarmored human.

The expected yank came and Samus was already aiming as the trick vine as it flipped her upside down like a snare trap. Her first shot went wild as she had no idea what she might be shooting at but the muzzle flash lit up the shadows enough to show what had grabbed her.

It stood high above the canyon floor on tall thin legs, like a red spider-crab on stilts. Samus groaned inwardly as she realized she had pushed past one of its legs, the thin branchless tree. The creature's back sprouted out into a great number of long tendrils that stretched out to and down the rock walls, colored and textured to look somewhat like the genuine blue vines that they mingled with. The mimicry was not close enough to trick any species with real intelligence, unless of course they had just fallen from space and no idea what anything on this planet was supposed to look like.

Still, she should have realized that less light should not mean more plant life. She had no one else to blame on this one.

The grasping tendril whipped her back and forth, smacking her armor against the rock walls in a series of tenderizing thuds. The tall stilt-like legs began to shift one by one as the central body slowly walked forward, opening exoskeleton plates on its underside to reveal a wicked beaked mouth.

Samus' next shot also went wild. The fact that she had disabled most of the suit's automatic functions was being made abundantly clear to her, as the creature decided to smack her against the rocks again several more times for good measure. Her armor and shields could easily take a great deal of this treatment, but it was certainly not helping her headache.

The creature began to draw back the tendril that had caught her, detaching it from the wall to reel in its dangling prey right up under its body. The predator moved slowly, evidently an ambush predator that relied on low energy expenditure to allow it to maintain such a large body in an extreme environment. It was so specialized, such a species might only exist on this one mountain range.

Samus' gun began to glow as it charged, pointed straight up past her foot as she hung upside down. She had never been much of an environmentalist. The Stellar Ecosystems Protection Agency had listed a bounty on her head for twenty years.

A earsplitting shriek rang out in time with Samus impacting the canyon floor, a piece of sizzling tendril still wrapped around her ankle. She was quietly impressed, the spider-fisher had taken that charge beam shot like a champ. Spots of blood rained down from the mangled mouth area but the creature backtracked its spindly forest of legs as the tendrils detached themselves from the walls one by one. It braced claws on each side of the narrow canyon as it climbed up off the ground and jerkily scuttled away around a rocky outcropping.

Samus sat up, the blood mixing with dust to splatter her armor. Somewhere in the back of her mind she wondered if these sort of events were surprising for other people.


A mile further and up ahead the bright morning sunlight shone down into a small open valley. Several of the lava tunnel canyons had crumbled together here crating a large glen that was bursting with plant life, feasting on the sunlight and the thick air trapped in by these steep walls. The cliffs around it shimmered blue as the thin needle-like leaves of the vines shifted in the breeze that caught on the lip of the high plateau. Those same breezes swept by to serve more of the ancient stone musicians, standing high above the crumbled floor of the water-carved valleys. Those larger than life statues stared down, attendants at the foot of the monumental Chozo who loomed up on the volcano side above, a mountain of stone on its own.

In this angled light all their eyes seemed to be focused on the same place. Set in one of the valley's steep walls was a gateway. The towering stone gate led into the solid rock and the darkness waiting within. According to the map this was the third temple entrance. Across the valley, plants rustled as unseen creatures scurried away when Samus stepped into the sun.

Samus glanced up at the dark blue sky. That large gateway would have been visible to the pirate forces descending from orbit, so they would be aware of this extra entrance. The west entrance was closer to their best landing site, though it was sealed as well, and the center entrance had been the site of their second attack before The Last went rogue, locking the pirate cult members away. However, this third option seemed completely undisturbed and that made Samus suspicious.

Then an uncomfortably familiar crackling screech drifted through the canyons. Well, that was an explanation.

A hundred yards away, a large metroid rose up from the hidden mouth of an older lava tube that carried off deeper beneath the surface. It must have been from the first batch Aurora released as a defense mechanism. This one had grown, bulbous dome now almost larger than an adult human, as it swayed up into the air on invisible gravitational currents. It had been feasting.

Samus raised her weapon. The gun shifted configuration and she began to feel the painful tingles on her right arm as cold bled in to brush against her metroid-modified cells. However, Samus was used to pain and right now it made her smile. She liked the odds of this particular rematch.

The metroid lunged forward, ravenous fangs crackling with electricity. Then it staggered back as a bursting impact sapped the heat from its cells. This new scream was filled with terrible pain and it was music to Samus' ears. Metroids could consume or adapt to almost any type of energy. Once they grew enough, even kinetic impacts did virtually nothing. However, the ice beam was not another energy assault. In fact, it was almost the opposite, anti-energy, slowing individual atoms in place where it struck.

Even metroids couldn't eat that.

Samus walked forward as she fired again and again. The metroid shook and staggered in the air with each impact. Then it charged at her once more, fangs snapping. Rocks splintered as it smashed into them, but Samus had dodged just to the side a second before. She had also taken that chance to charge up her ice beam for an even stronger attack.

Frost crackled along the metroid's body as it writhed in agony. It spun around blindly, then a missile explosion blasted against it, just barely missing the frozen weak point. It screamed again. Despite the terror and greed it incited, at its core the metroid was just an animal. Now it was injured and confused and like most other creatures it decided to run. The metroid shot up into the air, racing off on its own private gravity stream.

Samus let off another charged ice shot but the metroid's movements were even more erratic now and it just barely swayed out of the blast's path. The metroid spun in the air, angered by the attacks against it even if it didn't understand. It almost charged back, but then a brief bit of motion rustled through the vines on one of the branching canyon paths that led away. It was one of the large blue lizards and the metroid swerved off to pounce down just out of Samus' line of sight.

The broken valley echoed with crackling energy and a brief hissing scream. Samus lowered her weapon and turned back around. She didn't have time for a metroid hunt at the moment. Once she had defeated the other adversaries she would be able to stretch her well-practiced hand at genocide but that would have to wait. She walked between lichen covered boulders sheltering in succulents at their base as she advanced towards the arching portal into volcanic rock.

Inside the temple archway, the moaning songs of the stone musicians faded away leaving only the sound of her armored boots against the wide floor carved of living rock. The sun was rising and with it the shaft of light rapidly retreated leaving only dust and gloom as this cavernous hallway reached deeper into the mountainside. Patches of frost clinging to the corners signaled the point where sunlight never reached and then the huge passage opened up still further.

A tall circular chamber lay ahead, dominated by a large metal door and a single Chozo statue standing in front of it. The statue's head was missing, melted and torn away.

A deep voice hissed out of the darkness, speaking an infamously familiar language. "It was annoying while I waited. So I killed it."

Samus burst into the room already firing as she looked up to see Pirate Commander Ridley perched right above her entrance like a monstrous gargoyle. His arm flicked up faster than a human eye could see, taking the brunt of Samus' first attack on his scaly armor. Then bat-like wings snapped out on each side, completing the horror as he rushed into action.

The Pirate Commander was a monstrous creation of a scientific species gone mad. It was the genetic code and mind-scans of their planet's greatest warriors, generals, politicians, and criminals, merged together and then put in the body of a dragon. The Pirates had liked the result so much that they cloned a new one to lead each fleet. Multiplication did not degrade the threat either; he wore no armor, only a few heating coils against his skin and a small equipment cask at his hip. Any more was hard to make out because he was currently trying to skewer her.

Samus' booster jets fired as she skidded to the side, avoiding the bladed tail strike as she fired a volley of energy blasts. Ridley dodged away, giving Samus the space she needed with a cocky smirk of his own. She had plenty of practice fighting him, but he was truly smart. He always managed to surprise her.

"Ragh, ragh, ragh!" A harsh, barking cough echoed as Ridley's swooping flight led him skimming across the rock walls, catching hold with his claws to spin out of the way of a super missile explosion. Ridley was laughing.

"You are good to fight, Samus Aran. But unfortunately now is not the time. You see, I have an offer for you. It is an offer you will accept."

Samus braced herself, heel planted against the foot of the broken Chozo statue for leverage. Energy charged up in the barrel of her weapon, lighting the dark chamber. Ridley was here, in front of her, without any of his army and support. However, her own armor was not fully repaired and Ridley was a tough fight at the best of times. Her targeting reticle aimed down his throat as Ridley landed heavily on the smooth stone floor in front of her. He slowly rose up into a bipedal stance. Despite his skeletal thinness he still towered above her, and his faintly metallic wings flexed behind him to create a constantly shifting backdrop.

"You are as predictable as the studies indicated." Ridley grinned at her and a few drops of drool spilled from between his fangs. They splashed on the floor and ignited as the organic weapon chemicals mixed. "The offer terms, face to face where none can listen. You, me, and the Chozo, we all want the same things; this facility's treasure and the other two dead. Now, the prisoner Chozo has made his maneuver. He is winning. He is currently the most likely to be first to seize the treasure. It advances both our interests to focus on that adversary. Until the Chozo's advantage is gone, our alliance is sensible."

Samus' armor did not move at all, but inside she could feel her muscles vibrate with rage. Ridley leaned down, turning his head to meet her gaze with one slivered yellow eye.

"You know this is best. I killed all those humans, but you can kill me later. The Chozo attacks my soldiers and he attacks you. I have spent long with that one. Cooperation with him is impossible for you, he does not respect intelligence. So ally with me, and prove your strength to the Chozo. Then, once he is pushed back, you betray me and ally with him. You will hunt me and I will kill you. See, sensible."

Ridley was disgustingly confidant. Unfortunately, he was also right. He would try to betray her of course, but that assumption was already part of the offer. The Last was a criminal from the ancient Chozo empire, a phantom from the past much more threatening than the latest incarnation of the routinely slain Ridley. He was leading an insane cult, and had a measure of control over metroids. He had also currently shown more personal inclination to kill Samus than this Ridley, which was unsettling.

The bony dragon shifted as he loomed over her. Once Samus' hatred had burned so fiercely it threatened to destroy her. Ridley had killed her first parents and destroyed her entire home colony. But then decades had passed That hatred was not gone, but time and repeated executions had worn down the edges. It was no longer fire, it was just a verdict. Ridley would die, nothing fancier than that. But other things could be more urgent.

Samus lowered her weapon. The Pirate commander could be second on the kill list. However, she was not going to give this monster the pleasure of saying it.

Ridley understood anyway. He tilted his head back, exposing his fangs as he laughed. "Ragh, ragh! You are intelligent. That is good. You will not kill me now, as you wish my forces to fight the Chozo's. Kin to kill kin, it is good for you. For now, I assent. Go on your way. Enter the temple and hunt our enemy with my cooperation."

He beat his wings as he jumped up, getting extra height as he sailed over her towards the exit. Samus let the dust swirl around her and watched his blip on her sensor readout, but did not turn. Then Ridley landed a dozen yards behind her, claws scratching on the ground.

"Oh, I remember. You must still wish to free the human child. The speaker on the radio. Well, I have something to show you."

The click of a latch sounded through the chamber. Ridley lifted something out of his equipment cask. Then he said, "You were late."

And a little human voice repeated, "You were late."

Samus turned and looked back to see the thing Ridley held in his hand. Her suit scans had rated Roger's transmissions as authentic. However, sound analysis only told her that those words came from a human mouth. The mouth was intact. Above the nose and below the vocal cords, Ridley had not needed the rest.

Little plastic bellows worked to provide the necessary air and a computer uplink controlled the muscle nerves. Three pounds of organics in an artificial housing.

Ridley watched her and his lips curled up exposing every one of his hundred teeth in a monstrous grin. "The sight of you is truly pleasurable. I regret now that I performed the excision so quickly. If I could have killed the child right now in front of you I would know ecstasy. An intelligent enemy is an excellent thing. I can torment you, and you will do nothing because it does not change the necessity of our alliance. You hate me but you will not kill me here."

Beyond perception, the universe chilled around Samus. Time and probability crystalized with like ice, ripping and tearing the softer stuff. Possibilities were clear, as well as their consequences.

Ridley breathed heavily. "I know your thoughts. That harm is not kill. That I can command my forces as well with fewer limbs. However, we both know there are hunting metroids out there. If you wound me now I will likely be consumed on my return journey. So, you must do nothing."

Samus had not lifted her weapon. She stood beside the half ruined statue, looking back at Ridley backlit by the distant sunbathed end of the tunnel.

Ridley's tongue snaked around his fangs. "Your eyes. There is no fear, only still and unbendable fury. It is beautiful. Goodbye, Samus Aran. I will see you again."

Then he turned and flew off down the tunnel and out of sight.

Samus breathed deeply. Then she slowly turned and walked forward. The supposedly sealed temple door slid open for her, inviting her into the dark abyss within.

...
 
Chapter 16: Halls of the Dead
Chapter 16

Halls of the Dead

...​

Samus walked into the Temple of the Hunter, her footsteps echoing off the cold stones. Soon she left behind the cavelike gloom of the entrance gate, and stepped into a dim yellow light filtering from unseen sources. The tall door remained open behind her, letting through the faint sound of wind and the distant swish of Ridley's wings in the tunnel. The murderer flew away, winging slowly towards his future death like so many others of his identical kind. After killing him again and again, over the year Samus had let herself grow weary of his monstrosity. However, she had to admit this particular example had managed to light those flames anew.

This temple passage was narrow but absurdly high ceilinged. The walls were painted and carved with ancient Chozo, bowing with palms spread in greeting. Between them the engraved words called out praise for the innovation and industry that took place here. They promised it would continue for ten million years. According to Samus' estimation they had missed their mark by 9.8 million.

Even before the Chozo discovered immortality they had been a cocky bunch. At the height of the Empire, augmentation technologies already meant that five hundred years of life was not unheard of. And unlike some of the galaxies more natural methuselahs, it was not the sessile existence of a glacial metabolism, but centuries of life brimming with incredible activity. By their biology Chozo loved motion, a constant change in activity or thought. Untamed by philosophy, that nature filled them with an incredible drive for greatness.

Any type of greatness.

A touch to her helmet and the next door lock slid open. Samus walked though into a circular chamber, marked on the floor with stripes of dim green illumination that rippled gently. With the black roof above, the dark room felt like being upside-down underwater. A single slab of stone stood in the center and there was a door behind it but still Samus looked around to glare at the round room's lack of corners. She had long since learned to distrust places that seemed simple.

Nothing attacked her immediately, and if there was anything invisible then it was cloaked from infra-red as well. She cautiously walked up the standing slab, covered in shimmering Chozo writing. Her visor scanned and recorded it for later, but Samus doubted she would need to refer to it. These words stuck in her memory.

"We set this here for those we leave behind; the monsters and the fearful. Those who built this place are already gone and we tarry but a moment later. We will not say why. Our reasons are useless to you, leaving only our greed for endless light. Forgive us for what we did to you."​

A single line lay at the bottom of the plaque, almost a postscript.

"The door is still open."​

Samus felt her breath rise in her chest. This message was only decades old, dating to the Chozo abandonment. In that it was alone, a fresh monument placed in an ancient room. To any non-chozo who had studied the language, that cryptic message would have been fascinating enough. However, Samus saw something else. The precise shape and serifs of the "you" glyph; it was singular, and it was personal. The writer knew the person they were speaking to. The path had shown them someone likely to read it, and if Samus was right in noticing the trends of the last few days then there were two prime suspects. She was only one of them.

A query to the downloaded Federation database instantly gave the answer what she was looking for. There were three of these plaques, all identical and originally placed in each of the three main entrances to the temple, though the one at the front door had been removed by human researchers. Samus' database search also revealed a series of suit alerts she was not looking for. They came from within the partitioned section of the suit systems. It seemed "Adam" had something to say.

Samus eyed the notifications in the corner of her view. Looking at the timestamps, they matched up with her entering the temple and the message slab coming into view. That narrowed down her list of possible explanations for the 'Adam' malfunction. The probability of a virus implanted by the Federation plummeted as those triggers would make no sense. It all could be an artifact of Samus abruptly halting Adam' download at 52%, or the Last could have left a hidden packet of malicious code in the Pirate command ship computers, hoping for some contact with other living Chozo rescuers. That option was possible and almost preferable. The alternative was...deeper.

This suit was a gift from the high temple in Zebes, long decades ago. Even though it had been torn apart and rebuilt so many times since then, the core remained the same, one set down before she was even born. Samus knew that the science of prophecy was generally concerned with more statistical probabilities and by necessity got more uncertain the farther from the origin it looked. However, in any pattern there are sometimes islands of clarity, instances far in the future where known factors will inevitably collide in predictable ways. Discovering those islands was the mastery of the Chozo.

The first suit glitch had been when she looked on this planet with her own eyes. At this point Samus would have much preferred if Nakamura messed with Adam during the trial. That would be better than having to contend against yet another faction, long dead Chozo reaching out from the throughs of deep prophecy. It was much harder to shoot enemies who refused to reside in the same era of time.

After a brief moment's pause, Samus cued up the message from 'Adam'.

"(Definition) Monsters: dangerous or cruel creatures; creatures that did not arise from natural evolution; creatures of exceptional size or power."

Samus gave a mental sigh. Thank you, Adam-Thing.

"I said exceptional. Do not instill your own emotion on unliving words."

She stopped, then continued to walk. There were really too many people telling her what to think right now.

Samus stepped though the far doorway in this same dark mood and so was almost blinded by a flash of light. Her weapon rose and fired a smoking shot before she realized that she had just walked into the middle of a holographic display. A step backwards revealed glowing Chozo letters hovering in the air

"Have patience for the welcome."

Samus frowned. It was not that she expected Chozo messages to be perfectly intelligible, but this holographic blurb lacked the florid wording and gravitas that usually provoked the confusion. By Chozo standards it was brusk and infuriatingly ungrammatical.

After a few seconds the floating words withdrew, sliding backwards through the air into the room. Samus cautiously followed at its slow walking pace, keeping a close eye on the walls and corners. There were power sources behind the walls and ceiling, operating the holographic emitters and some other technologies, but nothing immediately presented itself. Samus was simply experiencing a tour down a long featureless corridor of metamorphic stone guided by a bit of odd grammar.

It was possible that the architects intended there to be living personnel on staff here to provide the expected welcoming committee. Samus could not immediately figure out any other use for this corridor. As it was, there was only fire-hardened rock and a few decorative metal panels on the walls.

Then, half way down the wall the floating words stopped and blinked into a new configuration.

"Scan Complete"

Samus immediately had new ideas of what this corridor could be for.

"Weapon authorization recognized"

She breathed out again. Her parents' gift had helped once again. At least the temple's remaining systems recognized their own.

"Biological contamination detected. Have patience for incineration."

And they expected only Chozo to be wearing it. Chozo scans saw through a Chozo suit to the decidedly Earthish cells that still constituted the vast majority of Samus Aran. She sighed. Just once it would be nice for some group to not regard her as alien.

Even a brief moment later, room was already incredibly hot. The metal panels on the walls glowed red on their way to orange as the hidden emitters bombarded the room with cooking heat. Samus dashed on to the far end of the hall but as she expected the door there was shut, refusing to open to scan, blaster, or repeated punching.

A little icon in the corner of her visor began to display the suit's growing concern about the outside temperature. In its current state Samus would not survive much more of this escalation.

So Samus decided to return to the middle of the corridor and wait patiently. The metal wall panels were now glowing bright white with terrible heat. Any contamination hitching a ride on the outside of a Chozo battle suit would have long since been burnt away, so the question was what the security program would do now that it still detected pesky human cells. Samus was banking on the Chozo flair for the dramatic. The suit's interior temperature was now one hundred and fifty degrees. A standard human would have already been dead.

Then the metal wall panels slid open and massive jets of fire blasted into the room. Perfect.

Samus bolted forward, plunging down the throat of the inferno. The suit screamed its warning as shield battery levels dropped off a cliff, and even the ice beam blast she fired off barely lessened the roaring conflagration that continued to beat against her. But then she reached the heart and her gauntlet punched into the guts of the flaming machinery.

Her hand drew back, already shimmering with light. Any decontamination equipment that dealt out this level of heat had to have the systems necessary to operate in those same conditions. Now Samus' suit was eating its fill.

New words flashed in her visor. "Varia system restored"

Suit energy stores dropped again, but now for a happier reason. Finally provided with the raw ingredients, bits of Samus' armor began to glow and rearrange. Her flaring shoulder pauldrons expanded, creating a housing for the new systems being assembled. Samus planted her back against the wall panel to keep it from closing as she smashed her weapon into the machinery again and again, shattering the innards into pieces small enough for the gun barrel to draw in as raw material.

Her shield levels stabilized, fortunately just shy of allowing her flesh to cook off her bones. The room took exception to this, causing more panels to draw back and deploy large mechanical arms tipped with flamethrowers. They undulated like hungry dragons, bathing the stone around Samus with an unending blast of fire until the metamorphic rocks lost their sheen when even crystals formed deep in the planet's began to soften. The somehow, the flamethrowers made a musical roar like battling orchestras.

Sometimes you had to love the Chozo.

One fight later, a severed mechanical arm proved to be an adequate way to pry open the far security door, so Samus left it wedged in place as she squeezed through the gap, leaving behind a floating holographic message cheerfully thanking her for her patience with decontamination procedures. Now inside the temple proper, the rooms became more functional, at least by Chozo standards. Branching hallways led off into the gloom towards what looked like ancient scientific chambers, but Samus continued to follow the main thoroughfare. She was willing to guess that whatever the Last was heading towards would be in a more important location.

A few moldering power cells gave up their charge to fuel the suit but other than that the walk was quiet. Then Samus stepped through an archway and found herself at an intersection with a massive cavernous hallway whose ceiling vanished up into the blue tinted gloom. Every foot of those seemingly infinite walls was filled with carved alcoves, each housing the life-sized shape of a Chozo frozen forever in sculpted time. Samus walked forward and ten thousand artificial eyes looked down at her.

These were simple stone carvings, not the animate guardian statues like the one Ridley had slain outside, but Samus still moved cautiously. As she took a few more steps into the chasm it became clear that there were spaces in the alcoves behind each statue, a gap large enough for a humanoid to hide. There were thousands of those hiding places on each wall.

The Last's troop of pirate cultists had been in the temple for hours. Samus sighed as she realized this hall was a sniper-alley good enough to inspire a religion. Well, the fact that she was not shot already suggested they had not reached here yet. Fifty yards to her right the floor rose up twenty feet to a new shelf while in the opposite direction it sank to the same degree, the high ceiling unchanged. This whole chamber was like a staircase for giants, between walls of the unmoving watchers.

Suit scan did not pick up any life signs hidden in the innumerable nooks, but Samus had learned not to trust that decades ago. She advanced into the hall with weapon raised, edging around to inspect the alcove behind the nearest statue. Then she lowered her arm as she realized there actually was someone there. A pile of chozo bones lay carefully stacked in their place of rest.

This was a crypt.

For a long moment Samus stood there in silence. The bones were lined with faint patterns in crystal and metal, a spiderweb lattice, the remaining evidence of the augmentations that had served their owner when she lived. Samus supposed her own bones must look like that now, though she doubted there would be anyone to stack them neatly when she fell. She could see enough of her future to guess that.

She stepped back into the chasm hallway and faced the statue as suit scan returned a name from the inscription.

"Kektothiocin Sound Weaver"

Then it returned another and another.

"Atrotiack of a Valliant Heart. Thutriakinial Deep Delver. Zachojin the Spire of Stars, Duzotak Well-feathered Rearer, Tuilonatin..." on and on as names filled Samus' eyes in an endless stream. It was blinding, these waiting dead.

For they were waiting. The stepped floor of this hall was not empty, but was scatted with the tool stations of a craftsman's workshop rising out the grooved metal patterns tranced in the floor. The stations were simple but not crude, the tools of a craftsman who worked in artisanal superconductors and hand-forged uranium. Samus traces the fingers of her gauntlet across the edge of one station. It was still set for easy start up, as if the owners had simply walked away for an evening. Around her the silence of the shadows grew louder.

Then she walked towards the edge of the platform where the floor dropped to its next great shelf and she saw one bench down there that still had a product sitting on it, unfinished. It was a dark metal hand, long fingered and sharp. From its wrist glittering bones emerged. Samus recognized that sheath, ones like it had alternately saved her or tried to kill her. This was a holy location, this place made guardian statues.

Hidden to the side was another inscription, dedicating this chamber. "We who are dead gift our flesh to the Boneshapers. Though absent, we strike forth to defend our pasts against all yet to come. Those who disturb this rest shall know our wrath, unfettered and raw."

A soft sound echoed through the hall. It was the muffled patter of footsteps. Then suit scan picked up life energy readings, far down the descending crypt stairs. There were a lot of them, and this deep into the temple Samus was willing to guess that it had to be The Last's Pirate worshipers. Ridley's forces would not have had the time to move so far, and the metroids didn't have feet. Samus moved towards the signatures, armor barely making a sound against the stone.

A Chozo voice drifted up from far below. "Idiots, I ordered you not to touch anything."

An answer in Utgardian came from a Pirate voice, absurdly apologetic.

The Last was not impressed. "No you useless thing, stand up and stop bowing! What? No, don't cut off your hand, how did your pitiful species ever survive to achieve space travel?"

It seemed The Last had upgraded the language translation systems of his followers, although it was probably more for his own convenience than out of a desire to share knowledge. It was reassuring that the cult of chozo-worshipers unsettled The Last as much as they had Samus. In her line of work it was easy to lose track of what sanity was supposed to be. On the other hand, the Last was a scientist who had been imprisoned as a dangerous criminal and so was perhaps not the best baseline to judge from.

Samus silently jumped down to the next level, an area filled with statue limbs and made her way over to look down from where this floor dropped down to the next step of the tomb-stairs. The Last's forces were still further down, probably on two levels away, but it seemed they were getting closer. Samus noted the half constructed statues covering that next stage of the Boneshapers' workshop and quietly moved to get in position for a new plan.

Two Pirate soldiers peaked up over the edge of that level in unison, beam weapons trained as they clung to the wall beneath them. They saw nothing, and so clicked their report as they jumped up and got into formation with their weapons trained outwards. More Pirates followed, forming up into a v-shape as they glared at the statue alcoves with intense suspicion. Then The Last rose up on the side of the platform, being the only one to have actually used the narrow stone staircase carved into the step wall for that purpose. His long robes trailed against the floor.

More sounds from below indicated that a large squad of Pirates was following behind but the honor guard advanced ahead of their commander, god, or prophet. They looked at a half-finished Chozo guardian statue that stood in the center of the space with visible relief at its missing head and shoulders. Across the galaxy, many species had learned the power of guardian statues in decidedly practical demonstrations. Even incomplete, the Pirates seemed unsettled by the pale organic bones that protruded from the places were the statue metal had not been added. They followed a new leader, but these soldiers still feared the wrath of the Chozo.

Then the lead-most took one more step and saw what had been standing in the perfect silhouette behind that incomplete statue. Samus' shot took him in the mouth from three feet away.

The Hall of the Boneshapers exploded into chaos and actual explosions. The Pirate soldiers tried to form up but Samus was already among them. The Pirates' lack of empathy now worked to her advantage as they did not instinctively lay off their triggers and the crossfire wore down at their own sides' armor. She ignored most of them and darted towards her actual target, but The Last reacted instantly and flung himself backwards into the void he had just climbed up.

Samus gritted her teeth as she followed with her own leap and met the expected hail of blaster-fire from rising below. She landed with a crash, maneuvering jets guiding her right onto the head of a Pirate trying to duck behind a craft station. Its carapace cracked with a crunch.

Samus queued up an open channel and began to speak in Chozo, "You interrupted our last conversation."

Blasters and missiles rained down on her position. From behind behind the firing line came The Last's voice, not even slightly out of breath. "You should be dead, experiencing the life energy field at such close range. Your biology has been modified more than these fool's files suggested."

Samus leaned out of cover and fired off a missile but The Last had changed trajectory the instant he finished talking, ducking among the Pirates to mask his life signature. Samus raced over to a statue alcove in the wall for new cover.

The Last continued to calmly analyze the situation, "You entered through the tertiary entrance, despite the active security and the Utgardians' own efforts. According to their coded transmissions, Commander Ridley advanced towards that location, so you either killed him or allied with him. Given the data on your history, killing is most probable. Such a rage filled thing you are."

He was trying to force her into the thoughts he desired. It was a battle of words in the middle of the Path. However, two could play at that game and by now she had a chance to analyze the data she had been given. Samus never liked talking in a fight but sometimes it was necessary.

She fired a blaster volley as she said, "You were imprisoned in the late days of the empire. Put away until a time where your crime would no longer be dangerous. Now you are trying to assemble the image of a galaxy one thousand years later from scraps of information. You led the Pirates back here to your former work site, desperate for any familiarity. I can still help you."

"You are a worm that thinks it can see."

That gave Samus the triangulation she needed, charged beam shot hit the last known location dead on. That took a Pirate soldier in the chest as the Last danced away in a blur.

The Last moved faster than even the armored Pirates. Samus narrowed her eyes. Suit scan bit through him easily, showing a full set of Late Imperial enhancements. Even Old Bird had not been outfitted with many of those features, and those he held had been set in a tired and time-worn frame. The Last was in his prime and hailed from another era, one where the Chozo had exulted in expressions of their unquestionable superiority.

But Samus wore a battle-suit. She sprang forth again and continued to unleash hell.

She said, "I will discard your attempt to kill me if you pause in your race for this temple's secret.

The Last hissed, "You do not know what this place is for."

Samus slid to the side, skidding in a spin as she fired with expert precision. "Enlighten me."

The Last took a single smooth step and a Pirate received the blast meant for his chest. "Ah, so you have suspicions. You believe this was the last planet inhabited by my people before they vanished from the knowledge of this galactic population. You think this place holds the answer: why."

Three missiles cut off his paths so he was forced to leap up a considerable hight and bound off a bit of projecting stone to land in the shelter of a statue alcove. An energy shot scorched the wall and the edge of his vanishing robe as he ducked behind the statue.

His voice continued, "But these creatures with me have suspicions as well. They tell me a story. A story of how a glorious people became pitiful hermits and then retreated entirely. The story says they turned into light."

Samus turned her attention to taking down two Pirate soldiers, but still noticed as a long fingered hand snaked out from behind the statue to grab and yank back a passing Pirate. The Pirate's look of rapture at this touch was short lived, to judge by the screams and crunching squelches that came from that alcove. Samus finished plastering her current opponent across the floor and turned to dash towards the Last just as a small jury rigged mechanism skidded out from the alcove, trailing green ichor across the floor. Pirates cybernetically integrated so much of their equipment, parts extraction could be messy.

The device began to hum as Samus spun around, shooting out a grapple beam to yank herself away faster. The device's hum reached a crescendo and a sparking energy field surged out, sweeping past Pirates who suddenly felt their cybernetic implants twitch and seize uncontrollably. Samus swept around a corner and only caught the edge of the blast but she still felt the suit struggle, disrupted somehow at the hardware level.

The Last's voice came again, but now from ten different directions. By now his breath was coming heavily, one step shy of panting. "They have stories about you as well. The lone pretender to the Chozo throne. No wonder such low things saw a god."

He had set every Pirate's implants to broadcast as relay speakers, hiding his true location. They were living speakers, though the vibration to their carapaces had to be uncomfortable. That meant slower reflexes and in one particular example, a charged beam shot delivered through his armpit joint. Samus straightened up in her latest alcove and scanned the battlefield.

She said, "They saw a punishment. There is a difference."

"Indeed there is."

Samus dashed across the open space, glancing for clues. Energy beams burned against her shields as she slid into cover, even as her suppressing fire hit back. Pirate soldiers were sill dangerous, and nothing to completely ignore.

The Last liked to talk. Those kinds of adversaries were always nice. Left in silence, he instead said, "Gods. Justice. Different stages of civilization articulating the same primitive sensation of guilt. But beyond that superstition, there is only cause and effect. There is discovery and exploitation. And here I shall at last feast on the fruits of my discovery."

Samus let her disappointment show. "A looter, like all the others."

Now there was true anger in his voice, "I steal nothing. The treasure this planet holds is fungible; receiving my reward does not lessen that of those hypocrites who built it on my back. After all, they are the ones who left you. I only seek to follow them to apotheosis."

Samus' breath froze. Apotheosis. Ascension to a new level of being. That was secret exit of the Chozo, the reason for their disappearance. That was the temple's secret.

That was what the message had said. "The door is still open."

...​
 
Chapter 17: Living Skin
Chapter 17

Living Skin

...​


Samus stumbled at the realization of this temple's true purpose. Shock dulled her reaction time and an explosion threw her back, shields beeping in protest. Pirate soldiers poured blaster fire down on her position and she just barely got back into cover. However, The Last seemed to have forgotten that a battle was underway. He lectured from his hiding place.

"You cannot imagine my sorrow, when I awoke from that deathlike pause to learn that my people were gone. It was terrifying to think that some foe had broken our prophecy, shattered the Path in order to undo what could not be undone. But then I learned the truth, that my kin had done it to themselves. They who had imprisoned me for my work had built upon it until they could abandon not only me but this entire galaxy. You cannot imagine my anger."

A dark bipedal shape soared away through the air and Samus followed, springing down to the next lower level. The workshop here was less cluttered, and focused on a sole target. A full guardian statue stood in the center, a black metal Chozo mirroring the feathered one that now stood beside it. The Last's eyes squinted in triumph as a squad of fresh pirates formed up on each side of the room, weapons trained on Samus.

"But I shall let you experience a taste of that fury." He turned to the statue. "Perimeter breach. Alien threat in possession of stolen military hardware. Purify the sanctum."

The statue's eyes glowed red. Its fingers clicked as the joints jerkily twitched into motion, but there was already an incredible power within. Samus had fought such things before, terrible protectors, placed at geographic branches in time to close off a certain avenue of possibility. In the past, they had nearly killed her, with or without her suit. However, she had grown since then.

The watching Pirates cheered and howled as they saw the fearsome bounty hunter fall to her knees before the slowly advancing statue. However, The Last instead frowned. His foot slid back against the dusty floor, repelled by a new wave of uncertainty. Samus planted her fist on the ground, one knee bent as she lowered her head to the guardian statue.

Her Chozo parents had taught her that in any being there were many lifetimes; divisions where you could look back in time and see a stranger in your skin. Species were the same way on a grander scale, and any sensible Chozo would know that. The Last was consumed by his fury, and thus blinded to the reasons that shaped the people in the millennia after his imprisonment. But he was not the only Chozo in the room, and Samus trusted the Boneshaper would have realized that.

"You who are dead, hear my heart."

The guardian statue raised its huge hand, ready to send it cleaving down through her skull. Samus focused her mind. In a body, matter produced life, life rose to thought, and by the ancient secret, thought produced energy. Energy could be sensed, and Samus' was not alien. This was the true irony, that the Heart of the Chozo would manage to surprise the scientist who discovered it.

The statue froze. Then it lowered its hand. There was a reason the statues were made with the honored dead. For true permanence, you wanted a system to have some discretion. Samus rose to her feet beside the statue, looking back at the Last whose face was contorted by horror and disgust. Then the statue twisted to the side, red eyes focused instead on the squads of Pirate soldiers. They had just reached the next tier of its priority list.

One of the Pirates sadly clicked its pincher.

Samus sprang forward as the statue dragged its hand through the floor, ripping through solid stone like water as it flung the shrapnel at the Pirates. Screams and shrieks erupted along with blaster fire but Samus did not bother watching, instead focusing only on her target. The Last dodged back, leaping around to keep the guardian statue between Samus and himself. It was a strange dance they fell into, since the guardian refused to harm either Samus or the Last and yet was still very intent on tearing the pirate soldiers apart. Blaster fire rained down on it only to splash off its dark metal.

All Samus needed was one good shot, and soon enough her blaster grazed The Last's arm, throwing out a spray of blood. The Last screamed but stuck a hand inside his robe and pulled out three vials bundled together. Then he smashed them against the statue and everything vanished into a roiling cloud of smoke. He was trying to run, but Samus simply raised a hand to her temple, switching to infrared sight. She spotted the yellow blotch moving away and took aim, however at that moment her world chose to erupt into fire for the third time that day.

The black cloud had ignited, and though Samus' newly repaired varia system dealt with the heat easily it meant she was blind for a crucial few seconds. When the firestorm cleared, the Last was gone and the last few pirate soldiers were darting out a doorway, fleeing from the Hall of the Boneshapers. Samus was left alone with the guardian statue. Its red eyes watched the pirates' escape path but it did not follow. Such creations were meant to guard a single place, dissuasion did not require pursuit. However, this time Samus detected something else, the slightest shadow of frustration in that expressionless graven face.

She moved to run after the Pirates, but before she took more than a few steps she turned back to look at that silent watcher, destined to stand in this hall until the planet crumbled. Samus bowed her head to it. Then she spun around but as she did so there was a loud crack that rang out behind her. The guardian statue had reached up its large hands and with casual force split open its own head. Inside was a solid block of technology, glimmering with crystalline webs and shining metal muscles, and the center the barely visible bone of a chozo skull. The statue knelt down and Samus reached out to place her gauntlet in the wound. Light shimmered as the suit consumed the offering.

"Friction Modulators Restored"

It was the system that allowed the statues to strike with such incredible force without sliding backwards. Traditionally Samus had used her own to jump off walls. The Last was getting farther by the second and even this offense against Newtonian physics was unlikely to help. But the dead had offered it and so Samus bowed again. The statue did not move. As she stood up, Samus trialed the fingers of her gauntlet through the drops of chozo blood The Last had left on the floor. The suit quietly began sequencing the genetics but she dismissed the results. Then Samus turned and walked out of the hall, leaving the countless dead to their watchful slumber.

The Pirates' trail was not hard to follow. Several of them had been wounded and despite their cybernetic trauma kits still left faint trails of ichor droplets. One of them must have figured that out, because at the next intersection of corridors two Pirate bodies lay slumped against the wall, half melted by blaster burns. It was classic Pirate mentality: identify the problem, then eliminate it. However, the air in this deep section of the temple was incredibly still, which meant ionized particles lingered, tracing back blaster paths to the particular corridor where the firing squad had been standing. Samus turned and followed down that trail.

As she jogged after them, Samus noticed a change in the temple architecture around her. As she moved to this new area, the design aesthetic had altered in a subtle way that would be invisible to a foreigner. If the previous section had been dedicated to knowledge and preservation, then here the energy was turned more outwards. The engravings flared and the columns were thicker, sturdier and more angular.

Then she turned a corner in the corridors and saw that its exit was surrounded by the remains of a heavy duty shield generator, still clouded with the mist of discharged energy meant to supply its operation for a thousand years. The Last had not been patient, and unlike in the rest of the temple his ancient knowledge did not serve to pave his road. The Chozo imperial military tended to change their security codes more frequently than that.

Samus flicked her eyes up to the suit displays projected across her visor. Her shield levels were starting to get low, several of those Pirate soldiers had been good shots. However, missile seed ammunition was still plentiful. She could work with that.

A few moments later, a charged super missile streaked through the doorway to explode against the floor a few steps inside the next chamber. The shock wave should deal with any ambush immediately inside and even Pirate eyes needed a second to adjust to that blinding flare so Samus was inside the room within the instant, almost riding the explosion as she jumped back to land on the wall above the door. She perched there for a brief second, newly acquired friction systems allowing the metal skin of her suit to stick on polished stone. From there she beheld the bad news.

This room was an armory. The huge round chamber stretched out in front of her, capped by a vaulted dome over green shaded walls covered with technology. All around this expanse, Pirate soldiers scattered for cover. They were right to, because Samus was hunting them once again. With a blast of suit jets, she charged.

One Pirate, braver than the rest, instead of scrambling for cover ran the other direction. He reached the wall and a great, long barreled Chozo weapon that hung there. He grabbed it and tugged it free, arms trembling as he struggled to lift it. Despite its great weight, he managed to turn and aim the barrel, every fiber of his effort focused on holding it steady. Samus emerged within his sights, clear across an empty room with no cover in sight. The Pirate grinned, an expression which faded as he noticed Samus made no effort to alter her charge in light of this new development.

His weapon trigger depressed with a sad click and useless silence. The Chozo did not like other species playing with their toys.

Samus slid to a halt through the shower of smoking exoskeleton shards, turning to survey the rest of the room. Then she finally found the Last. He was at the far wall, crouched down beside a bulging table of some control mechanism. There was an empty pedestal in front of him that appeared to be hooked up to some sort of retrieval system for the many weapons across the room. Samus did not take the time to scan it, she already knew she had to stop him.

The Last shouted out, "Soldiers, die for your angels!"

A group of pirates ran to oblige him, shielding the Chozo with their bodies as Samus' attacks hammered against them. Then she changed tactics, aiming her missile blasts to their side to simply blow them out of the way instead of wearing down all their shields. In fact, it worked better than she had expected, many of them must have already been very weak, since even with a glancing impact several of the pirates hit the ground and flopped limply where they fell.

Samus had her firing line, but it was too late. The Last stepped up onto the pedestal and the air around him began to shimmer, the sign of things hidden behind the world. Really, Samus should have known. There was only one weapon a person like him would have come here to get. She fired again and again, but the armory machine blocked all her attacks, refusing to let anything interfere with this nearly sacred acquisition. Then the light faded and the Last stood on the pedestal once more, clad in a Chozo battle-suit.

He raised his right arm, marveling at the sleek weapon barrel that encompassed his long forearm. The shoulders bulged up on each side of his head just as they did on Samus. Then he turned to her, eyes only just barely visible through the V-shaped slit of the helmet visor.

"Now the contest truly begins."


Samus ran through the temple, dodging blasts by instinct honed through decades of combat. What she could not avoid was the idea that she was being herded. It could hardly be helped, Aurora had provided her a map of the temple complex but all the Federation's work had still half the rooms were labeled with question marks. The Last had lived here. This was his home.

Well, there were a few things that had changed since then so Samus tried to head up, choosing each passage and shaft that led closer to the plateau surface above. Aurora's map indicated that there were a few places up there where the temple structures poked free of the surrounding rock.

Her shields screamed as a glancing hit clipped her. A wave beam blast cut the corner, reaching through solid rock to materialize on the far side and predict Samus' movement. The Last may not have been a warrior by trade but that suit was the essence of war. In her current state, it was certainly made up the difference in skill.

The Last vaulted up out of a shaft and so encountered a precisely timed super missile to the face. That threw him back and bought Samus a few precious seconds to reach her destination. Her best hope was to use the Last's lack of experience against him and hope that the Federation scientists' label on the temple map of "Possible High Energy Communications Array" was accurate.

As she darted through a final door, pauldrons scraping the edges as it struggled to open in time, Samus was suddenly confronted by sunlight. From high above, shafts of light stabbed down through windows sealed against a frigid atmosphere that would be unpleasant even for a Chozo. Outside, the high plateau above the canyons stretched out in each direction, bare lifeless rock waiting on the slopes of the great ancient volcanoes. From higher up the closest peak, the massive Chozo statue still looked down at them, jutting from the living mountain.

The large octagonal chamber was dominated by a huge central pillar of machinery that looked like much larger device which had been crushed down until it telescoped. The room was scattered with pieces of remaining Federation research tech and Samus touched her helmet's temple, initiating the scan to grab whatever they had learned.

Samus had just begun her coded transmission when the outer door exploded, and through the dust and smoke walked The Last's gleaming armor. He vanished from sight as Samus ducked around to the other side of the central pillar but his voice continued over the radio waves.

"Such a sad imitation you are, trying to ape my people through the cloud of ignorance. You are lost in this place. You can't even recognize the wonder when you see it."

There was a tone of rapture in his voice, an artist standing before a masterwork. In that breath, Samus could see his mind clearly and burning energy began to charge up in the barrel of her gun. Then she sprang around the pillar, firing the blast before even her eyes could register what she saw. But the Last was exactly where she predicted, standing at the pillar's control panel, one hand stretched out to touch it.

Samus allowed herself a smile as the full power shot hit him directly in the head. Even through the suit shields, that impact world set his brain ringing and fuzz his thoughts for a precious second before his implants took over. And all the while, Samus's scan continued to transmit a string of numbers with one particular set of ears in mind.

The Last stumbled back from the hit, off his balance, and Samus was already charging the next attack. However, even as he reeled The Last made no effort at counter attack and continued to talk as if nothing had just happened. "It is honestly amusing, to see you try to fight me here. This facility is mine. Even after my capture, they could not help but make it a temple to my work."

Samus noticed that the lights on the control panel had changed color. The Last had done something there. Well, first things first. She shot him in the head again.

The Last straightened up in his armor, not trying to block or dodge this time either, merely accepting the hit. But as the blast erupted from Samus' weapon, the air between them glowed. Ribbons of shimmering light grasped at the blaster shot in mid air and tore it to pieces bit by bit. By the time it reached the Last, his helmet was merely brushed by warm air.

Suddenly the chamber shuddered as vast systems grumbled back into operation. Dust fell from the roof as the room itself began to grind upwards, up into the light above the surface. In the center, the pillar of machinery began to slowly unfurl and grow.

The Last gestured with his gauntlet. "Thank you for allowing me to calibrate the device. I am afraid I would not have been able to attack until you did so, or my weapon would have been blacklisted as well. This facility is dedicated to understanding energy, and I am its master. Why do you think I led you here to the spire?" He raised his weapon as he walked back towards the control panel. "And cease that pointless broadcast of what I assume are our coordinates. You know now that this is not a communication array."

Samus shrugged. "No. But the humans thought it was. So they brought their own to check."

The Last whipped around to look at the blinking lights across the scattered Federation equipment, particularly the tall blue and white spike that was now clearly a high energy transmitter. Then Samus' suit crackled with the faint sound of an established communications channel.

Nakamura's voice was filled with static but growing clearer by the second. "Coordinates received, Aran. Diomedes orbiting into position."

The Last turned on Samus, his eyes narrowing behind the suit visor. "You called in an orbital strike on your own position."

His foot slid back across the stone but Samus was already moving. A crackling whip of blue energy sprang from the back of her gauntlet arced to fasten onto the Last's suit. It seemed she had been right, this new protective system did not consider a grapple to be harmful, or it fell under the high energy threshold. Burning light built up in the Last's weapon but Samus was suddenly at point blank range. Even if she had to fight hand to hand, he would not escape.

The Last fought back against blow after blow, struggling to fend her off. And all the while, Nakamura's voice came back to echo across the radio spectrum. "Samus, I... The forces I deployed on the planet are terrible, but they were a last resort. You know full well, sometimes friendly fire is unavoidable when you must stop an infection. After all, you did the same on the BSL. Please, understand. Sometimes there is no way to win, only to control your losses."

The shafts of sunlight grew and stretched as the spire chamber continued to rumble up higher, unfolding into full operation, a tower above the hidden temple. All through it, two battle-suits were locked in combat. The Last might have known technology, but he was not practiced at fighting hand to hand against an expert opponent. Even with his suit systems at full power his breath was elevated the next time he spoke to Samus.

"Disappointing. Despite everything you have seen, despite all your posturing, your blood still compels you to trust the other humans. Well, let us put that to the test. They have just given me enough information to see the path."

A screech of feedback rang through Samus' ears as the Last tapped the side of his helmet. Then he flung her back across the room but no follow-up strike came after. He was only looking at the Federation communications spike. Samus launched her own scan assault but the Last knew the programs better, he had seized control of the transmission channel. She readied her suit grapple again case he tried to flee the room now that she could not retarget the orbital strike but now the Last seemed content to completely ignore Samus. He looked upwards at the chamber's rising ceiling, turning off towards the horizon where Diomedes was rising up behind the blue sky.

"Human ship Diomedes, I present to you an alternative."

Samus was locked out of the transmitter, but the Last kindly let her hear the entire conversation. In return she tried a firing a missile barrage at him but the missile seed's energy sheath was apparently similar enough to trip the spire's detectors. Shimmering ribbons of light tore the projectiles apart in mid air.

The Last was using a variant on the Pirate translation software to transform his words to human standard. However, in tweaking the settings to more echo his natural voice it transformed the synthetic human pronunciation to something hideous, groaning and whistling all at once. "I am the last true master of this planet, and as such I offer you terms. You do not wish the other species to share in your looting, and I am willing to accept that. I even respect your commitment, your willingness to release the artificial lifeforms dubbed Metroids. Make no hostile action against me and I promise I will make none against you, nor remove any technology from this place. I will join you in exterminating the other forces and then depart, leaving you the planet. To indicate acceptance, transmit to me your full files on the hybrid called Samus Aran."

There was a stretching moment of silence, filled only with the grumbling mechanisms of the still rising spire chamber. The Last turned back towards Samus, gloating in his certainty. Then the Diomedes transmission returned.

A soft but strong female voice said, "What did you do to Ms Aran?"

The Last's confidence slipped as Samus let her smile flicker onto her face. His speech, designed to bring Nakamura to his side, had not been calibrated for GF Officer Yin. When Samus had coded her redirect prank, she had not felt any need to identify her transmissions beyond 'Chozo battle-suit origin'. Samus had decided not to warn the Last about that.

Then Nakamura broke back onto the channel. He was panting, as well he might. A member of his crew had just found out he loosed the metroids on Federation citizens. "Unidentified Chozo individual, this is Federation Commander Nakamura. Your terms are acceptable. Samus Aran, cease hostilities and stand by his side in the rising tower. I know how much you trust me." He sounded defeated.

The Last said, "The optimal decision from your perspective. It is refreshing to find a primitive species behaving logically."

Samus had already started running. She knew exactly how much she trusted Nakamura. But she also knew that he knew it too. Then Nakamura joined back in the channel, a bit of cockiness reentering in his voice. "Well, then one last bit of education from this primitive. A reminder really. While your transmissions are securely encrypted, you helped the Pirates break ours."

A new broadcast rang across the spectrum, deep and slavering, the sound of a long tongue over many teeth. "My enemies standing together, betrayed by their own. How very nice to kill."

The Last caught sight of movement out the spire's windows, a distant shape rising up over lip of the plateau. It was huge and dark, bristling with vicious metal. Ridley's command ship was no longer hiding in its valley landing site, and the planetary bombardment capable starship was now aimed squarely at the Last's position from two miles away.

Nakamura's broadcast returned. "By now Aran should have blocked your exit." The Last spun back, in time to see Samus wedge herself in the doorway. From somewhere in orbit, Nakamura just continued with the same self assurance. "She may not like me, but I have always trusted her assessment of the Chozo. Sorry Aran, this is the best I could do. I would not have been in position for a proper strike for another two minutes. Ridley was closer."

Ridley's transmission growled with inhuman pleasure. "Close enough to taste your ash. Fire!"

The atmosphere erupted into flame as the Pirate ship blasted its massive wave-beam weapon straight at the spire, igniting what little oxygen there was above the plateau by the force of its passing. By starship terms it was point blank. That made it all the more surprising when the fireball cleared and the spire still stood, surrounded by flickering ribbons of light. Thin floating auroras trailed back toward the Pirate ship, tracing a line even as they began to fade from sight.

Inside the spire chamber the central pillar glowed and shone with the energy absorbed, even as the structure trembled from what managed to slip past. The machine's light spread out, washing over the two battle-suits in a shifting maze of reflections. The Last's face was invisible within his hemet, but Samus could still taste his scorn and disgust. "Blind, pitiful creatures. My life's work was understanding the transmission of energy and you think to threaten me with those sticks and stones? I programed these automated defense myself. Now, I have had enough of this charade."

He took a step towards the central control panel. On the coms, Ridley roared with fury and frustration. He shouted a command and the main cannon of his ship began to glow again as it charged for a second attack. The ship accelerated, pushing closer to the spire to close its range. However, this time the incinerating blast did not even brush the tower, instead it was picked apart by a web of light just outside the ship.

Then Nakamura's voice returned, almost casual in tone. "I admire your persistence, Commander Ridley. That new weapon of yours is truly powerful. However, you drop your ship shields when you fire it. Also, I may have misled you on my orbital effectiveness."

A pillar of blinding light lanced down from the blue sky, stabbing into the back of the Pirate ship. However, once Samus' visor tint adjusted she saw the characteristic shimmering ribbons beginning to reach up towards this new attack. Ridley's roar continued on the coms, but in one breath it smoothly transitioned to a chuffing, gloating laugh.

"Those who do not value fury do not understand it. They see me charge and they think they will kill me. I only wished to be near the tower. Now I have traded a scratch on this one ship for the humans' weapons to be targeted by the Chozo defense as well. You are now locked in space. Thank you, fool, for wanting to kill."

Inside the spire, Samus suddenly shouted and sprang forward, suit jets rocketing her across the room towards the Last with her weapon raised to strike. The Last was startled by her abrupt battle cry and stepped back, easily dodging out of the way. However, that just allowed her to hit her true target. The heavy bludgeon of her weapon arm smashed down through the energy mechanism's control panel, reducing delicate engineering to shards and smoke. The Last raised his own gun but Samus kept him off balance by only straightening up and starting to speak with her back still to him.

"The blacklist is set and locked, covering any energy with line of sight to the spire, range two hundred miles. Now no one gets to play outside."

The Last twisted his head back around as he noticed the federation transmission spike was no longer slaved to his control. That long period of back and forth conversations had given Samus plenty of time to sneak past The Last's hastily applied firewall. Now everyone had heard her message.

The following moment of silence stretched out across all transmission channels, on the planet and in space. All four parties waited to see if anyone else was going to unveil yet another trump card.

After a few more seconds, Nakamura said, "...All right. Well then, Aran, since you can hear me, Aurora has been freed to give you unrestricted aid. Do what you do best and eliminate all the hostile forces on the planet. Once the immediate threat is gone, we can have our own discussion. Nakamura out."

Ridley, never one to let someone else have the last word, chimed in too. "Samus, you failed in our deal. You are too weak. Now I will march my forces across this world. They will tear you and your chozo out of your skin and I will lick your living bones."

Samus only waved vaguely in the distance as Ridley's ship slowly turned around and limped back to its canyon-shielded landing site, trailing smoke as it flew. Then she turned back to The Last, wondering how he had been so quiet lately. Usually he loved to talk. Then the microscopic trembling across the surface of his armor gave the answer, the faint, nearly invisible tremors. He was frozen with a rage a being like him had likely never experienced before.

Then he threw back his head and screamed.


...​
 
Chapter 18: The First
Chapter 18

The First

...​

In the smoking armory, the surviving members of the cult of the god-painters scrambled to their feet and ran off after the sounds of battle leaving them behind. Their messiah was newly armed in shining armor and now chased after the devil herself. Even the prospect of looting a Chozo armory could not overcome that religious draw. They fled, leaving their fallen behind, strewn across the floor.

A moment later one of the fallen Pirates opened an eye. He looked around for a second, scanning the abandoned room, before opening his other three eyes. Then he sat up and reached out to tap the corpse beside him.

"Hey, Kiber-2272. They're gone."

At the first touch, that fallen pirate flailed in panic before realizing that tap was not a hostile action. Then he opened his eyes and looked around, crouching down to stay as hidden behind his companion as he could. "1161, you are empirically the most defective Zegar I have ever met."

"I told you it would work. When a squad meets the Hunter, command just assumes everyone is going to die so no one asks questions. She doesn't bother shooting anyone once you fall down."

Kiber-2272 slowly stood up, still much more hesitant than Zegar-1161. He shook his head in disbelief. "We've encountered the Hunter three times and we're still alive. This statistical anomaly is outrageous. I've honestly considered the theory that I'm an AI in an immersive training environment. It would at least explain why you are such a poor imitation of a person."

"Come on, don't believe that."

"All right, that may have been unsupported criticism against you but-"

"No, I mean don't believe in AIs. I bet all those supposed programs are just the living brains of some unfortunate grubs the science clans scooped out to shove in so-called computers."

2272 slowly turned to stare at him. "You don't believe in computers? Are your seriously-"

Then 1161 held up his claw. "Shh! I heard something."

They both ran together, pressed back to back, and raised their weapons out at the still somewhat smoking chamber.

"What did you hear? Was it the Hunter coming back? Was it the Chozo? Was it both?"

"No, she usually sounds more like gunfire and explosions. This sounded like blinking."

2272 lowered his weapon as he turned in renewed exasperation. "I know your augmentation specs, you cannot hear blinking. What would that even sound like, you-"

A new voice spoke up. "Um, hello?"

2272 spun around in panic and fired a blaster shot in a purely random direction. It was decidedly more luck than skill that it managed to streak right over the face of another Pirate soldier who had hurriedly thrown himself back down on the ground.

1161 managed to aim his own weapon claw at the newly revealed third survivor before he recognized it and relaxed. He said, "Wow, that was close." There was a brief pause. "Shoot him again."

2272 quickly lowered his claw and clicked his mandibles in what he hoped was a sincere and reassuring way, mindful that they were back under the ears of the cult. Ever since they accidentally got swept up in the Chozo's personal guard and missed the following purge order by virtue of being together in rearguard, he had been very hard to keel a low profile. "Uh 1161, your neural implant is, uh, acting up again. You meant to say help him. That explosion must have shaken something lose in you. Can do weird things, explosions, like even make people incorrectly hear us regret the presence of the angelic Chozo majesty."

"Ok, I'll shoot him."

2272 managed to reach over and shove 1161's weapon out of the way before anything more regrettable happened. This decision was aided by the fact that this other survivor seemed more intent on cowering than defending the cult dogma. The third Pirate said, "No, don't do that! We don't report to the god-painters either!"

2272 exhaled in relief. "At least there's one more non-defective...Wait. We?"

A low voice hissed from among the corpses. "Shut up, Voctum."

1161 straightened up. "Cybernetic zombie slave programs. I knew command was implanting those. Well, start incinerating heads."

By now 2272 felt like 1161's paranoia was somehow infecting the reality around them. He waved his weapon indiscriminately at all the bodies scattered around them. "Everyone! You will be shot unless you get up right now!"

2272 could hear the trembling in his own voice but despite it, two more 'dead' Pirates complied and climbed up to their feet. They were both Shakshi clan and skittered over to join the Voctum clan individual who had first blown their cover.

Zegar-1161 was shaking his head. "No, no, I don't like it. How did they know the plan to fake our deaths? They must have hacked into our neural implants and live-monitored our conscious nervous systems. Only the Chozo could manage that on the fly, so they have to be working for it. We need to shoot them now or they'll betray us to the cult and hack us to pieces for heresy. I hope you're listening to my thoughts now, cultists, because I have a few choice-"

"No! We heard you whispering together!"

1161 paused in mid rant. "Oh. That fits the data too. We did get a bit loud at one point."

"And I was blinking. I'm impressed you heard that."

1161 turned back to Kiber-2272. "Their story checks out."

The Voctum abased himself, exposing his neck as he bowed. "Thank you. Please, Kiber, listen to the Zegar."

"I say we shoot them anyway."

"Don't listen to the Zegar!"

Kiber-2272's shell felt too tight around his head. Nothing made sense today. Right now he just yearned for a damp hive, a high perch, and clear scientific orders from a logical commander. But he did not have that.

"Let me extrapolated. You were swept up in the Chozo guard detachment as well?"

"Yes. When the order came through to purge all individuals loyal to Commander Ridley we three happened to be standing next to each other. We could hear gunfire out in the hallways and by the time the next god-painter came by we just saluted and said we'd executed the heretics. That line always works, no matter who's in charge."

"I like this guy's logic."

Kiber-2272's shell felt even tighter. "Shut up, 1161."

The three other Pirates huddled together. "We...thought you two had a plan. Oh no, we committed treason against the god-painters at the expectation of new leadership. But you two are idiots. Aww, they're going to peel us out of our skeletons."

"Hey! We have...a plan."

"We do? I was still intending to incinerate their heads."

"Shut up!"

One of the Shakshi clan turned to her comrade. "Maybe Commander Ridley will win instead. He'll probably just decapitate us."

"Oh, yes. I would much prefer that."

Kiber-2272 felt like rattling his abdomen plates in a primal shriek. However, in the middle of the swirling storm of fear, confusion, and certain death, a new unfamiliar emotion began to faintly warm his ventricles. Someone had looked to him as a leader. It had only lasted until he opened his mandibles to speak but it was still a very pleasant sensation. Distantly, he was aware of nearly vestigial ambition glands that now quivered into life, secreting a few measly molecules of command hormones into his brain.

He clacked his pincers together and the other four pirates jerked in surprise. "Right. Your lives now depend on the whim of antagonistic superiors who would prefer you ground into nutrient paste. What, exactly, has changed from your prior existence? No matter what result is most probable, crouching down to torpor here until you die will not improve anything. Look around us, we are in a genuine Class 1 forage site! Think of what technology we might find in this facility! If once we are apprehended we have a horde of plunder in our arms we actually stand a decent chance of buying our lives, no matter which side finds us first."

"Except the metroids."

"Shut up, 1161."

"Or the Hunter."

"Shut up, 1161!"

The Voctum clan member exchanged a look with the two Shakshi and they actually seemed appeased. He turned back. "That was genuinely a logical speech." He held out one hand with three sharp bright green claws, palm up in traditional subservience contract position. "Right, we pledge to serve you with our lives, right up until the moment a more powerful force wishes for us to betray you or offers us a greater probability of advancement."

Kiber-2272 felt his primary eyes mist up with emotion. Truly, it was a scene out of the legendary technical manuals.



...​


Dust filled the dark air, occasionally crackling with electricity from the power of the weapons being fired through the abandoned temple halls. Samus slammed back against a wall, friction modulators allowing her to grip on polished stone and fling herself to the side just as The Last's plasma beam splashed into the slabs with a blaze of blinding fire. Samus raised her weapon and fired off three missiles in an arcing path, curving them around and to distract her opponent for a second. Keep him off balance, use his lack of combat instincts against him, that was the key. She could not allow him a spare moment to think, to use his technical knowledge. The Last was terrifyingly intelligent, and at the moment Samus felt rather lacking in that department.

She could feel her thoughts getting slower with each hour she ran across this planet. Aurora's experimental life energy injection system might have healed the injuries from the orbital drop, but Samus' body still remembered. Stress hormones were building up in her nerve cells and she was burning through neurotransmitter molecules faster than her blood and implants could supply them. Samus had been fighting continuously for over forty-eight hours at this point, since the Diomedes first dropped out of jump, and an eleven hour medically induced coma at the edge of death did not count as rest.

Samus beam weapon charged and shot, blue tinged energy lancing out through the debris. The Last avoided it, his automated suit systems handling the dodge so the beam only hit the floor, but then his foot came down on the slick surface that ice beam shot had really intended to make. The Last slid, falling, and Samus seized her chance to hold her ground, charging a super missile in her weapon for every possible deci-second. In his panic, the The Last fired wildly as he fell but Samus did not twitch, knowing it would miss. However, the crack of breaking rock above her showed it had not missed the carved stone support beam in the ceiling. The very heavy stone beam was directly above her.

There was not time for a decision, yet nevertheless she made it. She held her ground and fired her fully charged shot, hitting The Last directly in the armored chest. The Chozo shouted as his shields took the brunt of the hit yet still allowed some of the roaring impact through. However, the floor beneath him had no shields. Paving slabs splintered and collapsed as The Last fell with them.

Then the falling stone beam hit Samus and she caught it across her shoulders. The impact shook the room and bent her knees but her augmented muscles strained along with the suit to lift the pillar, even as her boots crunched deep into the paving slabs beneath her. Samus even had time to start a breath before the floor gave way entirely.

Samus fell down through the darkness as this upper level of the temple crumbled around her. Fifty feet below, The Last landed heavily on the next floor and whipped his head up as inside his helmet the suit screamed proximity alarms. Suit jets ignited to fling him out of the way, but Samus spun in air and shot out a grapple beam to grab the falling stone support beam. She flung it his way and with the thunderous impact a floor gave way once more.

Samus and the Last fell together through the rubble as they plunged out of the dark into a soft orange light. Even at free-fall the fight continued, energy blasts and missiles ringing out across a cavernous void. However, in the midst of combat and plummeting chaos Samus still had time to recognize the flexing mechanical arms of the great central spindle in a huge spherical room. They had just broken down into the Library of the Winnowers. At this point Samus just hoped the swarm of hunting metroids were not still around here.

She spun in air as she fell and aimed her head to plummet face down, accelerating towards the ground with both suit jets and missile recoil. At the very last second she flipped and fired her jets to mitigate the smashing impact. Her boots hit the ground and the shock sent micro-fractures propagated up her limbs in a wave, racing through the percentage of her skeleton that was still calcium based, but that did not matter compared to having half a second to prepare her next attack. Then a new set of jets flared and The Last landed beside her, a meteor of gleaming metal.

Suit scan analyzed the state of his armor, but Samus did not need to read those results to confirm what intuition told her. In this war of attrition, The Last was still winning. He had a full suite of systems in perfect repair, superior weapons, and more shields. Samus launched into close range combat again, but this time The Last accepted this change in the fight. He joined her grapple, and instead of attempting to escape, his gauntlet gripped her wrist. Samus twisted to see the blinding sphere of spinning light emerging from his weapon barrel. A power bomb.

The Last knew he had more shields too.

The explosion hit them both. Samus flew back through fire and for a moment vanished from the world of memory. Continuity of biological consciousness had an acceleration cut-off point. A second later her cortex recovered but her cerebral implants could only supply a limited history of the interim, tactical data of position, velocity, and gyroscopic orientation. Samus blinked. It seemed she had flown through a wall. And then the wall had followed her. And then they had both tumbled down approximately one thousand and seventy three stairs deep into the lightless bowels of the Temple.

As she sat up in the rubble and dust, the suit switched vision modes and revealed a new dark vaulted chamber. Nearby, The Last was already rising to his knees. That power bomb attack had blown apart a section of the Library's lower bowl, caving it into an adjacent stairwell of seemingly endless length. The Last was now on his feet, and Samus was too late to dodge. However, the Chozo's weapon never pointed her way. Instead he turned and ran, footsteps echoing through the maze of black hallways as the sound mingled with the rattle of rubble still rolling down the endless stair.

Sometimes, victory in battle was just convincing your opponent you would not stay down. The Last still had the advantage but he was not used to pain. Even to those they punished, the Chozo were kind, at least as they saw it. In her decades Samus had been hurt more by her friends than this person had been hurt by any enemy. Something as small as a near fatal point blank explosion would not cause her to flee.

The Last broke and Samus ran after him. At this point she was beyond thought, the decision to chase was no longer a conscious decision. He simply fled and so she hunted. It was who she was. The confusion and pain of her body were not relevant. However, that gap in strategic planning did open up mental resources to analyzing her surroundings.

They were far beneath the main body of the temple now. These endless tight corridors did not just feel abandoned, they felt like they had never been lived in. In each chamber, the sharp and angular walls were unadorned and the dimensions were cramped. The dark passages between them wound and undulated through the solid rock in an almost natural way, as though this planet was gnawed in the deep by wormlike things. This was somewhere the old temple builders had not liked to think about.

However, The Last seemed to know where he was going even as the scent of panic oozed into his decisions. Through it all, he was always just out of sight, as they raced past endless chambers holding strange and glowing things, bits of machinery and other Chozo technology. From time to time, Samus spared a moment to smash into one of the devices and allow her suit to drink hungrily from their power supplies. As the crack of splitting metal rang out, The Last's voice cracked through the suit coms, words thick with hatred and disgust and fear.

"Thief. Destroyer. You...carnivore. Despicable thing, you only live off the death of others!"

But the sounds of his fight had stopped and now mixed with the clunking of something mechanical and heavy. Then Samus rounded a corner and was confronted by a large and heavy door, now left ajar. It looked like a vault. The Last was inside.

Samus stepped into the vault, lit only by the glowing fire charging within her weapon barrel. This space was not small like the other chambers she had passed, but was instead a large vaulted rectangle. Scan showed powerful energy signatures within the walls but all that seemed more like supporting systems then the focus of this room. Indeed the focal point seemed to be emptiness, only the space these walls enclosed.

The Last stood near the center of the room, facing the door. "My people-"

Samus fired. The beam streaked towards him but at the last moment it deflected strangely, twisting in area between. The flash briefly illuminated the room and in that moment Samus noticed the faint indications of folded space. In the center of this chamber, something was hidden behind the air, something big. The Chozo liked to hide things but this was the most powerful interaction warp field Samus had ever encountered. The strength of these projectors could have fueled an intersystem battleship.

The Last tried to sound condescending, but by now that tone came through ragged and broken. "Have you not grown tired of that by now? What did my people become, that they created you? Twisted a primitive alien into this crude instrument of destruction. You fight without thought, you kill without meaning. The two looter species out there, that crazed cult, at least they have something they hope to gain in this battle. They aim towards a victory for their race. But you...you are just an automaton, following the last stupid instructions of a long departed creator."

He was talking again, and since he didn't seem to be doing anything at the moment Samus decided to encourage that. A few minutes of pause would let her medical nanites finish draining the blood that explosion had left pooling in her brain.

She said, "Your route through these lower tunnels grew less direct at the end. You knew what you were searching for would be in this sector, but not which chamber. It is something installed after your conviction, yet you know it still exists. It is something of yours."

The Last tilted his helmet as he watched Samus. It was a gesture unnervingly like one Grey Voice had used. "It was in that room above us, where I first laid eyes on you, that I knew it was still here. I had began to doubt but I should not have lost faith. My people could never bare to destroy what they could hide away. Ever curious, ever tempted."

A few pieces clicked into place in Samus' head. This was an evidence vault. What ever The Last had done to be imprisoned in a stasis box for a millennium, a monument to it was in here. The faint ripple in the center of the dark air refused to give up any information beyond the roughest dimensions of its bulk, and The Last's position guarded the control system. However, now that Samus had successfully gotten him monologuing again, she slowly started to edge to the side, imperceptibly angling towards a clear firing line.

The Last must have been an instructor at one point in addition to a scientist, because he effortlessly fell into lecture. "One created, knowledge cannot be destroyed. It is indelible. That was the crime I committed, that I opened a door and my fellows could see this new path stretched before them. I gave them infinity and they sentenced me to oblivion."

Samus continued to distract him. "But they left the door open."

The Last snapped his helmet around to face Samus with a burning intensity that crested past hatred into desperation. "No! You do not get to say those words. I found the slabs. I read the message. It was written to me! The door was left open for me! They were talking to me! The planet's prophecy speaks to me, not...you." The fervent need was painful in The Last's voice. "It has to be about me. If it's not, it means my people never forgave me."

Samus could see the trembling tension under that armor, the sagging shoulders of a being pushed to the very edge. This kind of delicate communication was not Samus' speciality, but she might still be able to draw him back. The Last had very nearly reached his lowest point, and so was open to the greatest change.

She said, "The others honor you. They sent your body away, but your equation is the heart of the people, their science, and their culture. For all the time you slept, you lived in every breath they took. Energy is matter, matter is life, life is thought, and thought is energy."

The Last looked away from her. His helmet tipped down to loom down at the long-fingered gauntlet covering his left hand as it slowly flexed in an almost meditative way. "You may mimic our speech but you understand nothing, twisted mutant thing. You do not know why they trapped me in that box. It was not just because I discovered the truth. It was because I created a demonstration."

One of those long fingers flicked out, operating a virtual control board and then the energy hum of the room began to change. The ripple behind the air began to waver. Samus could feel the path towards resolution slipping away, but she still had to try and grab it.

"The Empire expelled you, but the empire left with you. What it became was better. To raise up all they met, to let all life touch the path, that was the existence you created for our people. Because of that, the Chozo still walk in the minds of a hundred species across the galactic arm, the humans and so many others. Those species are still following those footsteps, and in the future they are one hundred more species of chozo; all children of your genius."

Her words felt awkward and rusty, unused tools at the best of times. Now all Samus could do is hope and wish she had learned as much from Grey Voice as she had from Old Bird. The Last froze, unreadable under the armor. In between them, the air rippled and a huge dark shape began to enter into the room, motionlessly sliding out from the cube's ninth corner.

"Children," The Last said and for a single instant Samus felt an uncharacteristic trill of hope. Then The Last continued, "No. Other females might bare eggs, raise children, but not me. This work, this work is my child."

The center of the room thudded with displaced air as a massive cylinder materialized into the conventional dimensions, but Samus was momentarily preoccupied by an incongruous brush of embarrassment. It was true she had only ever met two living Chozo, both male. It was also true that the Chozo artistic representation which had constituted the rest of her education was deliberately androgynous by stylistic choice. However, Samus still felt that inward wince as she realized she had assumed The Last was male based on exactly no information. She should have known better, enough people had made the same assumption about her.

Then Samus was brought back to the moment quite firmly by the thunderous thump of something hitting the inside of the huge cylinder. Samus tilted her helmet towards it, trying to keep the Last still in her sights as she did so. The cylinder was filled with something, something black and shifting. The motion inside was increasing, as though something powering up. Or waking up. A second thump rang the vault and this time Samus saw a massive, constantly shifting appendage pressed against the cylinder wall, capped with a bloom of claws or teeth. Then the limb was reabsorbed, but as it vanished, the oily black surface momentarily parted to show an interior of suspended red clusters on wiry threads, brain-like globules held in a large transparent core.

The Last turned back towards Samus. The Chozo straightened her back, rising up to her full eight feet of height. "Tradsiak M'etroid, we named this facility. At the time it referred to the ultimate hunters for truth. I suppose after they betrayed me, the others found a more appropriate interpretation. Poor copies they made, but I suppose all forgeries must be. Allow me then to introduce you to my masterwork, the thesis of the Life Energy Equivalence project. Behold, you stand before the first Metroid."


...​
 
Chapter 19: Blood and Strength
Chapter 19

Blood and Strength

...

In the center of the dim vault, the outer case of the newly manifested hidden cylinder shone and began to dissolve. Samus tapped the temple of her helmet, urgently trying to scan the dark roiling mass inside that great column. What she got back was not encouraging. The Last Chozo had called this the first metroid. Samus' first sensor brush did show organic materials and warp-supported crystalline structures much like true metroids but then active scan abruptly stopped reporting. The shapeless flowing thing was black, so unbelievably black. It was like this thing in the tube was eating all electromagnetic frequencies.

There were still a few seconds before it fully exited containment. Samus spent those charging an attack, but she could talk at the same time.

She said to the Last, "This is a poorer decision than you can imagine. You are missing historical data. The scientists who followed you tried to control many versions of the metroid project, but every instance ended in catastrophic failure. The empire lost an entire planet to them! No matter how well you think you understand them, those creatures will not be controlled."

The Last stepped back as she watched the containment cylinder, hardly seeming to notice Samus any more. From inside her battle-suit the Last murmured, "Dangerous, yes, but there is no one left to hurt."

"You're still here!"

"You fear for me? Needless. I saw to my protection long ago."

In a faint flash of disappearing matter the containment cylinder was gone and the pulsing mass of the first metroid spilled forth. It was black in a shade beyond color and in places it almost disappeared, as if it was eating the light itself. Then the dark fangs began to emerge as if being created in that second and the creature suddenly sprouted appendages around the suggestion of a domed core, shapeless pulsing tentacles the emerged and dissolved on a whim, servant to a momentary need. The First looked nothing like no other form of metroid Samus had seen in her long career but somehow it still matched. It was shaped like the memory of a monster.

Then the creature exploded into motion and black tentacles studded with crackling fangs whipped out at The Last. Samus was just about to fall into her standard scenario for "the monster devours its overconfident creator" when, with equal speed, the attack froze. The First's undulating mass drew back in on itself, black flesh parting for an instant to expose a familiar transparent core structure with brain-like globules floating inside. Then new thin tendrils reached out from shifting black flesh to slowly twine around the air surrounding The Last. Feeling towards the Chozo but never touching. The creature could sense her energy, and it remembered. The Last was right, whatever protections she had designed still held.

The Last held out her hand, the long fingers of her gauntlet just barely missing touching the lightless flesh. Then she spoke to Samus. "You are surprised. Lower creatures like you never understand the difference between thought and instinct. So they fear creation, but fear is merely another lying instinct. True thought serves the thinker. And this wonder is my genius made manifest. Even those false copies the others made still know me as their master, all those generations later."

She looked at the horrific First Metroid with something Samus recognized. Pride and hope and fear, and something that might even be love. It was how her chozo parents had sometimes looked at her.

Samus now held a blazing fire contained inside the barrel of her gun, aimed directly at the shifting mass of the proto-metroid. She said, "I'm going to kill it."

"You will try."

But neither of them was certain. In that instant their intentions battled for control of the Path so for a moment the stasis before combat still held. The Last had recruited a questionably loyal monster to her side in an attempt to tip the scale of battle, but Samus could match that move. The fingers of her gauntlet twitched, navigating through virtual menus as she undid a few digital locks. It was time to stop fighting with a hampered suit. It was time to let 'Adam' out to play.

Deep in the core suit systems, virtual partition dropped and battle calculations from the suit computer once more filled Samus' eyes. The suit was fully awake and an equal partner once more. But with it came the little floating text.

"Your choice still awaits. Wonderful death; painful life."

Comforting as always. Samus breathed out slowly.

The Last turned back her way, still lecturing. "Understand-"

Samus fired a charged super missile from thirty feet away, definitively interrupting the conversation. In the inclosed space of this rock-walled vault chamber, the pressure wave was almost as destructive as the initial explosion. Chozo power suits could weather that easily, but the demonstratedly pliable flesh of the First Metroid should find it a harsh introduction. 'Should' but in any case, Samus would find out. After all, this was the learning portion of the fight.

The First did not react in time to dodge the missile; Samus' first discovery. The impact hit directly against the metroid's side, the explosion throwing its creator back until her suit initiated friction lock on the floor, sliding to a halt. Unfortunately, then the explosion flash cleared and the First showed no visible injury; the second discovery. Samus had known that was a strong possibility for a Metroid, but it was still disheartening to not even see a scratch. On the other hand, beginning a fight by suggesting to the foe you're not a threat was often a good idea.

Then she flicked her eyes down. Tiny pressure fractures from the missile blast spiderwebbed across the stone floor around the creature but as Samus sprang to the side, guarding against its retaliation, she saw the cracks did not continue directly behind the creature. A long shadow of pristine floor stretched out from it. Third discovery; the creature was not unharmed, it was unaffected.

Learning was rarely fun.

However, it did provide time to charge an ice beam shot. The shapeless creature once again shifted and turned her way, fangs and tendrils unfolding as it started forward just in time for a flash of white energy to tear through the cavern. The ice bram hit and fang-studded tentacles writhed in pain as an electric shriek pulsed out from the air itself. The rock around them shook and to Samus' sensor aided eyes the stone was transformed, becoming faintly magnetic from just the power of the first metroid's screaming fury. It was not as much pain as Samus would have liked but in battle sufficient quantity can always make up for quality. She continued firing more beam attacks.

Adam's text blinked back into her visor. "You can defeat it. Your opponent knows this. Their intention has another weapon."

Samus followed up on the ice beam barrage with another missile, but this one exploded in mid air. Off to the side, the Last now held her own weapon outstretched, barrel capped with wavering heat from the shot that had met Samus' missile.

The Last spoke through the communications channel as if she sat inside Samus' helmet. "You still think I went to the armory to enter this suit, to mimic your strength. You are blind. My strength has never been in crude combat. Know that any means to enter also provides for exit. And I now hold the key to that door."

The Last raised her hand and a light shimmered above her gauntlet, materializing into a small metallic crystal, covered in burning glyphs. As she held it this thing floating in the air, the gauntlet around her hand began to shimmer and peel back, armor withdrawing like a mechanical tide. Samus recognized that crystal instantly. Grey Voice had made sure she memorized suit safety procedures, though Samus had lost her own copy of that device nearly immediately after leaving Zebes. Safety procedures. Unfortunately, right now a key to automatically open any Chozo battle suit did not seem likely to make her more safe.

Killed by EMT equipment. If word ever got out, the bounty hunter gambling circuit was about to make a certain one armed Byratian sex-monk very rich. Samus eyed the levitating key and calculated how to grab it in the next few seconds.

As if reading her thoughts, the Last moved the key away ever so slightly, still floating above her newly bare hand. Her eyes narrowed. "A useless plan, ending in mutual defeat. Which to me would be a victory. Without this suit I am still Chozo, but you are that suit. Without it you are nothing, only a single broken component without a purpose. Prey for two superior species."

Samus crouched and sprang forward, just barely avoiding the next attack of fanged tentacles from the proto-metroid as she raced straight towards the Last. It was never a good idea to take your opponent's advice on tactics. As soon as the monster was put down Samus would be happy to take The Last on hand to hand. The Last steeled, then noticed Samus' confidence and lost some of her own. Step by step, beat by beat, Samus felt herself slipping into the familiar rhythm of battle. This was just a new game now, separate the Last from the key, wear down the metroid, kill, use key against the Last. Kill again.

The pitch black First Metroid screamed in frustration and pain from the ice blasts Samus directed its way, then its constantly shifting shape crackled with energy as it began to float up off the ground to hover in the air, an irregular ball of shifting mass and whipping tentacles. Ominous, but Samus was not impressed. Gravetic levitation was old hat for the things she fought. Then her suit sensors and inner ear both suddenly told her that down had just relocated.

Samus fell sideways off the floor towards the twisting black maw of the First Metroid, a vortex of hook-like fangs. In a split second she twisted away and fired all her suit jets to avoid that final crunch. But she knew better than to try and fight this sudden gravity attack, and aimed perpendicular to the sudden drop. She missed the First by inches, flying past its long teeth in a makeshift orbit. Samus skidded across the ground before slamming to a halt, friction modulators gripping down as much as they could.

So, this creature could create gravity wells. Samus' opinions on the fun of learning remained intact.

More calculations. The Last seemed undisturbed by this gravity force despite standing very near the monster, which meant the gravity field somehow propagated in a cone instead of a sphere. That was impossible, but impossible was usually the starting point for Chozo science. Then the First lurched and from its black shifting body more massive tentacles erupted, studded in foot-long teeth. One fang managed to scrape across Samus' shields near her shoulder and she gritted her teeth in the familiar agony of a feeding metroid.

Samus dodged and deflected the next tentacle strikes with explosions of her own, but in the middle of this pitched battle the Last slowly walked over to the pulsing mass of the metroid's body. She was not talking anymore. Samus prepared for chozo blaster fire to begin complementing the monster's attacks, but instead of firing The Last simply reached out to lay her left hand against the side of her creation. Then Samus realized that hand held the Key.

Faint golden light sparkled as black flesh boiled over the floating artifact. Then the light was extinguished; swallowed.

Text appeared in Samus' visor, "The key is now alive. Light integrated to shadow. Where it touches, your suit will not exist. This is good news."

Samus could not spare a moment to silence the Adam virus or the breath to let it know her opinion of these insane ramblings. She was fighting for her life and chipper prophecies of doom were not helping, though at least the suit's combat programs were now operating at full efficiency, freed of the imprisoning partition. The First Metroid screamed again and five more long tentacles whipped out of its body, forming from nothing in the instant they attacked. Samus shot back, deflecting black flesh with burning cold, but in the background of this clash The Last simply turned away and began to walk towards the vault's only door. Samus leapt and fired tracking missiles at her but The Last's suit spun back to shoot them out of the air. Samus would have followed with another attack, but she then had to spin back and paint half the First Metroid's side with ice beam energy or be eaten.

Samus' helmet rang as the frost-burned monster screeched and crackled across the EM spectrum, swamping all the communications channels for another instant. Samus eyes widened in surprise as she was looking straight at the First this time and briefly the creature in somehow greater detail. More definition and more shadow, skin dark green instead of black. Then its flesh resumed its impossibly black shade and the screaming electric noise once more cut out. Samus eyes narrowed. Another thing to learn; the creature's energy eating invulnerability could be at least mitigated.

The Last's voice replaced her creation's on the coms, "Goodby, tortured thing." She stood in the doorway as she slid past the massive vault door that hung ajar. "Your creators were cruel to have made you, cruel to set you on this path. If they lie on mine, I will condemn them. Your name will burn in their minds, Samus Aran, and I will bring justice."

Then she was gone.

Samus' suit jets ignited and she launched towards the vault door after The Last but in mid-flight her motion suddenly reversed with an uncomfortably familiar jerk. Intense gravity pulled her back, waves of damage rippling through her suit and flesh as the gradient in acceleration between her foot and her head caused tides through bone and steel. Samus flung out her arms, grapple beam and blaster kickback in tandem pushed her from the path to those black fangs, but it was a near miss this time. Samus landed, spun, and leapt to avoid the next attack. One long whipping fang scraped her leg armor in another blast of screaming pain, excruciating but tactically irrelevant, but as her foot came down it now felt cold stone and gritting dust instead of the interior of her boot. The touch of the emergency exit key. Samus fired another volley of quick ice blasts to drive the First back and that bought her time for the suit to reform around her lower left leg, glowing as it did so, but that had been close. The First no longer needed to land a clean hit, by virtue of the Key anywhere it touched Samus' armor would just cease to exist.

She had inflicted damage with ice beam and missiles, but as Samus devoted a precious half second to assessing just how much damage a depressing sight emerged to clarity. The room was dustier than it had been, even accounting for the explosions. Samus' eyes took in the eroded look of the stone under the First's floating path, and flicked over to the various impact points where tentacle fangs had hit floor instead of Samus' heart. The rough shallow pits at each point told a clear story, the First was eating stone molecules, much more slowly than it consumed living organisms of course, but this thing's hyper powerful reaper field was gnawing not just at Samus' shields but at the fundamental atomic structure of the universe bit by bit. And if the First was anything like its descendants, that constant flow of energy was healing it every second. That was bad.

And she was now in the wrong position. The First had learned from their fight, and now a fanged tentacle, black as void, whipped towards her and all the avenues of escape were guarded by others appendages. No choice. The moment froze and stretched as Samus slipped into the grim peace of certainty. These instants where the future was perfectly visible were rare, but there was satisfaction even when they were terrible. Samus knew what she was going to do. When it came down to it, a warrior's body was just another piece of ablative armor. So the attack darted forward and Samus sprang to meet it, reaching out to grab hold of the largest curved fang in her hand even as it formed out of the First's roiling black flesh.

Her hand clamped down on the fang and shook with the terrible force of its impact, holding it back. In that same instant came the searing, screaming, unbearable pain as the metroid's reaper field began to eat the life energy out of her body, ripping and tearing cell by cell. But for that brief second the First's assault was stalled by a shield of Samus' blood and bone. Thought vanished under pain, the nerves in Samus' brain spasmed and froze in torture beyond perception, but Samus had lain her intention down at a level below mind, programed her retaliation into the thoughtless void. It was written in her body and in that fraction of a second the attack in her weapon finished charging. Just a tiny a moment more as the metal of her gauntlet holding the fang peeled back in a ripple of light. The Key's energy field undid the suit, leaving only a bare human hand holding back the ripping hunger of the metroid.

The second ticked, a finger began to shift on the trigger, but then the pain vanished.

Shock crashed through Samus' void and she froze without firing, stunned beyond even her instinctive training. The First froze as well, black tentacles shuddering in what had to be equal surprise. The life energy absorption was gone. Samus' bare, bleeding hand clutched the knife-like fang of the metroid but she felt nothing beyond its physical edge. The agony of the metroid had vanished, and the First expressed such confusion that it was not even pushing against her arm with simple strength. They simply stood together in frozen combat, both wondering why Samus was not dead.

Samus stared at her bare arm; the suit had retreated all the way back to her left shoulder under command of the Key. Then in absence of pain, her thoughts began again, making connections. The hatchling. The X parasite. The metroid gene therapy. There had been new organelles in her cells after that, things that the federation scientists had never been able to identify a use for. Or had never told her the use for. Memories flashed together, Aurora's impossibly effective life energy surge machine, The Last's confusion at Samus' resilience. And now the final touch, bare skin against a metroid reaper field, its greatest weapon neutralized.

Adam's text flashed in her eyes. "Life in shadow. Truth exposed. I told you it was good news."

Then new fangs sprouted from the tentacle's black flesh and they sliced through Samus' arm like knives, severing meat and bone. The tentacle whipped away, withdrawing with its burden and Samus' left arm now ended in a red stump just below the elbow.

...

By age fifteen, Samus had reached her full adult height and her skill advanced with her strength. She had passed through the augmentation tanks more times than she could quickly recall and she had now fully integrated all the changes. Old Bird still won most of their sparring bouts, but now he had to rely only on his centuries of experience. When it came to strength and speed, Samus could match him.

Their lessons quickly reached the boundary of what even cybernetic biology could be pushed to, so they continued right past it. Now as she trained Samus wore an advanced blue skintight body suit, a quarter inch of material over her skin that continued to enhance her reflexes, strength, and sensory abilities beyond the capability of organic cells. With it on, Samus could feel vibrations in the ground of an insect walking ten feet away. She could feel every breath of air and taste its chemical composition with her entire body, each sensation fed directly into her integrated nervous system.

When her arm clashed with Old Bird's she could feel his breath rasping in his lungs.

Samus grunted and with a push Old Bird's blow was thrown back. That was the second time during this sparing match. Half a second later, his foot talons rasped the ground and threw up dust in an expert flick towards Samus' eyes. Samus avoided it but was forced to move back and in a swish of his robe, Old Bird was gone, leaving only the jumbled boulders of the broken battlefield under a dark sky of roiling yellow clouds.

Samus was ok with that. Her right hand held a small energy pistol and the shadow of a smile touched her lips. Blue eyes sparkled, in the right light they were lined with the faintest traces of crystalline enchantments inside them. Her aim was perfect now and her eyes could see the UV shadows of the rocks around them. Zebes was no stranger to predators but now Samus strode among them as the alpha. Old Bird was the one who ran through this broken expanse of rubble and ancient crumbled structures

Samus sprang up, easily leaping ten feet through the air to land lightly on a boulder peak, weapon ready to flick out towards any target. Even from this vantage she still could not see where Old Bird had gone to, but the air contained molecules of his breath and the almost imperceptible sounds of stealthy movement could narrow his presence down to a tightly limited area. The faintest breath of wind brushed the yellow hair that hung from Samus' high ponytail and she bolted forward, feet nearly silent even as she raced across the rocky ground after her mentor. She was unquestionably entering a trap, but any second she gave Old Bird to prepare would only make the trap more fearsome. Samus knew what she was, and knew she had no hope of outsmarting the Chozo, but now at least she could outfight him. She would not give him time to think.

She raced through the boulder field with the speed of a stooping falcon. Under her incredible strength, her movement was more like flight than running, each step a precisely angled leap horizontal across the ground. Then she saw it, the trace she sought in a dark shadow created by a large rock slab propped up on lower boulders. Old Bird had found terrain that limited Samus' sight, confined her actions with rock and shadow while leaving his own escape open. But it had taken him time to get here too, so Samus judged her teacher had had only nine seconds to prepare his traps. Analyzing what to do about this would cost Samus more seconds, but she had already decided on her course of action. She lunged into the shadow, and the speed of her passage created whirlwinds of dust.

The little gun in her hand flashed brightly under the rock slab and Old Bird dodged, but that shot had never been intended to land. It simply cut off an avenue of retreat and so defined Old Bird's location to one specific area. Samus' charge hit the Chozo head on, her fist slamming into his chest as her hips twisted with the attack. Old Bird flew back, smashing into a smaller boulder that cracked as he tumbled away, sliding on the floor. Samus' hand touched the cool shadowed ground as she landed, panting. She had put all her force into that attack, transferring every bit of her speed into more striking power as the punch brought her to an abrupt and total stop. But it had worked, the fight was over in one hit.

Then the cracked boulder Old Bird had hit crumbled and the huge rock slab it held up came grinding down.

The world rang and when Samus cleared her eyes she was on her back. She coughed on dust and then found she could not reinflate her lungs all the way. Her chest and stomach were pushed down, almost crushed by incredible force against her abdomen. Then the dust cleared and she remembered; the slab had fallen and she had not quite gotten away in time. Samus strained and squirmed but she was still pinned, half crushed beneath a rock that weighed almost two thousand times her body weight.

Then the shadow came again and Old Bird stood between her and the cloud-dimmed sun, black and featureless before a corona of light. Samus didn't bother to say anything, not that she was sure she could with the pressure on her ribs and the feeling that her belly was almost touching her spine.

Old Bird's face was hidden behind the light. "You lost. Do not trust in the strength of your body."

Samus grunted, fighting even for shallow gasps of air that came with great pain. It was very difficult to respond but she still did so. "I had to. Strength was my only advantage."

The shadow above her shifted. "Act without regard for advantage, and let it come unlooked for. Find the route to success for the weak and set that as your path. Strength only absorbs the margin of ignorance."

Samus grunted a laugh and then gaged silently as the rock shifted another inch against her compressed organs. "That's me. Ignorance wrapped in strength."

Old Bird was quiet for long moment. When he spoke it was almost inaudible. "That is not you. And your true strength is yet to come."

Then he helped Samus remove the rock slab.

...

The Chozo taught that the body was not important, just an ephemeral manifestation of the true self. A body was necessary and valuable, but that did not make it you. Samus' second parents had instilled that lesson in her.

During one of her final passes through the augmentation tank, they had stopped the process just before she lost consciousness. The nervous paralytics numbed half her body, and then Samus watched a gleaming medical blade neatly lop off her right hand at the wrist. It was a strange thing to see part of her body lying beside her, something that she had always considered just an extension of her thought now separate and limp.

Grey Voice instructed Samus to pick up that lump of meat and bone, to manipulate it with her remaining hand. There was no pain, no anxiety beyond what outdated instinct sobbing in the back of her mind. Samus knew that reattaching such an appendage was the work of seconds for chozo medical technology. However, Samus still felt that somewhere, deep within her brain, a monkey was screaming. She held the severed hand in front of her, turning and squeezing it. She saw the cut where bloody bones protruded, and felt how they slid around within the muscles and tendons. But was just a thing. It was not her.

The augmentation machine repeated the operation with her foot, again placing the severed object in her left hand to explore. Distantly Samus wondered how far they could carry this exercise, how many things she would become, but then the lesson was done and with a faint pump of sedative Samus went to sleep on the medical table.

When she awoke, she was whole and she was stronger.

...

Grey Voice summoned Samus into a previously unused room of the Zebes temple. When Samus arrived she saw a naked human body lying dead on the floor. It took a moment to process but once Samus overcame the strange perspective she realized the body was her own.

It was an exact copy. To accelerate the growth of a cloned body was an easy thing, as long as you did not care about survival or want it to have a developed mind. That was evidently what Grey Voice had done for the last few years, and now had a corpse on the floor of this room, identical in every way to Samus. This was the next lesson.

At Grey Voice's instruction Samus stripped out of her clothing and knelt beside her own dead body. She was to wash it, lifting and turning and prodding this limp avatar so that she might break down the barriers in her mind. Samus complied, and felt the curiously heavy weight of the corpse with every touch. There were mirrors on the walls and so she could see herself from every angle, one body alive and one body dead.

Grey Voice left without a word, so Samus knew the lesson was not over. She remained in the room and soon the greater purpose became clear. She was to wait and watch. Food was supplied, and drink, but no clothes or any mental stimulation. But Samus had learned patience so she sat there in the mirrored room, watching her own corpse.

Days passed and the body before began to rot. Samus continued to watch, and in the endless silent hours she meditated on the object in front of her. This corpse had once been indistinguishable from the thing Samus had once considered her true self. Now it was rotting, disintegrating but in truth very little had changed. Nothing had entered or exited this room. All the materials were still here, they were simply entering into a new configuration. Bit by bit the attachments of Samus' mind faded away, changing configuration until she was something new.

Two weeks later she exited the room, and when she did she was stronger.

...

People lay across the golden streets, dead and dying, painted dark with their own purple blood. They lay amid their broken and shattered wings Samus could feel the grief that wracked her body, the fear, and the unbearable physical pain from her wounds. She looked down at where five of her legs had been torn off, too weak to scream even if she could rub the tendrils together enough to make that noise, if they had not been burned off. She looked up with seven compound eyes at the bright orange sky and then all light faded as she died.

It was still dark as Samus returned to her mind and lay on the cold metal table, briefly returned to the chill and dust of Temple Zebes. The opaque helmet around her head cut off all sound and sight, but she could still feel to touch of air and metal. It would take Grey Voice another few seconds to load up the next memory simulation, the next vision of another life as it ended in horror and fear. But those were not Samus' feelings, just another sort of vision. Sometimes, in these moments between, Samus was not sure if these thoughts were her thoughts. Sometimes she could not remember if the cool metal table was touching her skin, or that of some other creature, a strange pale skinned ape on a far distant world.

Then Grey Voice finished with the device and once Samus plunged back into memory to live again. To die again. To die again and again and again, and through that horror learn wisdom.

After, she was stronger.

...

Samus looked up at Old Bird. The breath was hot and dry in her mouth under Zebes merciless sun but she still asked, once again. "Who am I?"

Old Bird pressed a finger to her chest. After years of observation, Samus could now notice that the hand trembled despite the tremendous strength behind it. It had always trembled, she just had not been able to see it.

Old Bird was quiet, almost a whisper. "That question. That question is you. Only that is you. And that is enough."

...

In the dim shadows of the vault, the First Metroid drew back its fang-covered tentacles towards the black central mass, one now clutching Samus' severed forearm. The globular monster was confused at the hand's refusal to dissolve into grey dust. It was proving quite indigestible and that was a new experience for a creature that freely ate basalt on a molecular level. Those black fangs had just sliced through bones that could survive atmospheric reentry, but the crackling shimmer of excess radiation failed to make any headway on eating simple meat. The unnatural gloom which surrounded the First seemed to flow, retreating from elsewhere to concentrate around fangs holding the hand as the monster strained.

Another drop of hot blood splattered against the dusty stone at Samus' feet but the remaining stump of her left arm was already at least partially dealt with. Auto-stints had deployed in her veins and artery to stop the blood loss and medical nanites were scrambling to construct temporary detour vessels and capillaries for all the flesh still left. In the absence of the Key's influence, the battle suit was reforming. Given enough time and materials the suit could fill in the gauntlet with the mechanisms to regain full manual control but for now that empty hand would have to stay limp. Empty but for pain.

Samus breathed out and felt her lungs spasm only slightly as she did so. Parts of her body wanted to go into shock, but that was just biology talking. She stepped forward. Biology was not in charge. The suit flashed warnings and alerts through her vision and haptic feedback, trying to establish new protocols for a user who had just been almost literally decimated, a user it could no longer protect while the Key was in play. Her next step was faster. Technology was not in charge either. Proximity sensors displayed in the visor suddenly showed multiple life forms outside the chamber and drawing closer, charging down the passage the Last had recently fled through. By the odds on this planet those newcomers were not going to be friendly but they were not in charge either.

The First floated in front of her, a swirling mass of teeth and darkness, and Samus charged. As the creature tried and failed to consume her hand, the EM-devouring blackness that coated it in invulnerability retreated over into what was was forming into a maw of gnashing fangs, a new organ for a new task. The First Metroid had been a thesis, the living expression of a mathematical solution and so this little piece of "2+2=5" was confounding it.

Confounded. Confused. Uncertain. That was weakness, and Samus wielded certainty like a spear from heaven. There was no time for thought, she just knew. Her dash eliminated distance and then she leapt, burning energy building up in the barrel of her gun.

"Override all restraints."

The moment hung in the air as the chozo battle suit breathed in. There was no need to clarify, with Adam free in the systems the suit knew exactly what she meant. Within each system, every weapon, every capacitor, every device that played freely with energy and matter, each and every rank of programed restraint instantly ended. Half a second passed and the suit shivered as every seam and junction in the armor's exterior began to bleed out light. In the space between tick and tock, Samus' leap began to be traced by blazing fire as the fury of the Chozo Empire was unleashed, all care for its wilder discarded. Terrible, burning, incredible power filled every inch and every particle. In this state the suit would soon destroy itself, torn to shreds by its own lightning fury, moments after Samus' own body burnt away. But in those seconds, it would be unstoppable.

Then Samus slammed against the side of the First and her suit automatically began to open up at the Key's first touch, peeling back layer by layer. However, currently the second layer was pure burning light and that overloaded energy burst outwards like an exploding angel. In that same instant and with all her strength, Samus plunged her weapon arm straight into the monster's shifting flesh even as the barrel began to separate. The charged shot she had held within detonated wildly as containment failed but Samus' punch continued even through it. Fire and frost swept past her face as the helmet split and withdrew, but Samus did not allow herself even to blink as her eyelashes smoked and skin burned. This was the path she had seen. This was the chance.

The First staggered back through the air, gravity fields thrown into flux as it struggled to recover from this suicidal charge. But even as it shifted focus away from the conundrum of the severed hand, the monster now had another problem. An equally indigestible object was pressed right in the center of a newly wounded area, and that object was punching the First over and over with the force to puncture steel.

Underneath Samus the metroid shifted and black tendrils rose around Samus like a pit of vipers, spearpoints sliding out of the tentacle sides as new fangs boiled into existence. Then Samus' fist clenched down behind the base of the nearest fang and with all her force drove it down at the heart of its creator. The First thrashed in a scream of pain as the fang hit the center of mass, but Samus could not hear anymore. Her helmet was gone and with it the ability to hear radio waves.

A thousand half-formed black teeth rose up on each side and bit into the retreating armor but Samus still slammed the fang in her hand down into the center of mass again and again. That fang soon melted away in her fist, reabsorbed, but she punched out to grab another tooth on another tentacle and continued to hammer the attack, the fang's base in her fist like a hand-ax. Around her a barbed whip formed and aimed at her head but in the final second Samus blocked it with what remained of her left arm, taking the piercing hit through skin and muscle just to direct the point away from her brain while she continued to slam her suborned spike down again and again. Then tentacle whose fang she held as weapon bulged and reformed, gifted with new strength now sufficient to overpower Samus' arm, but another new-formed fang swung in, still materializing. It left a gouge across her cheek but Samus snapped forward to grab its base in her teeth and then twist with all her might to slam the point back into the same injured spot. The First Metroid writhed and screamed.

Red human blood flowed like water, but the pitch dark green flesh retreated involuntarily under the assault, exposing the First's transparent globular core, now sporting a jagged crack above the suspended inner nerve clusters. One more strike. Then Samus' fist closed around the base of her latest suborned fang and she instantly knew she could not overpower the tentacle this time. After all the exertion and wounds, her strength had met its limit. Under the Key's influence the Chozo battle suit had withdrawn completely, spreading out behind her in unfolded strips like metal wings connected only by a single line along Samus' spine. The blue interface suit hung off her body in ribbons above bloody skin in a similar state. Samus' unprotected flesh pressed against the First's terrible fury in half a dozen places, skin to twisting, bubbling skin.

Which was the prerequisite to try the second part of her crazy theory.

Two years ago Samus had been infected by a deadly X parasite. The cure was nearly as dangerous, an infusion of self-propagating organelles from the blood of a metroid hatchling. It was unprecedented, unrepeated, and since then Samus had been silently collecting clues about side effects. Her new sensitivity to cold. Her resistance to the Last's prototype reaper field. The success of Aurora's life-energy absorption therapy. Touching that first fang. Side effects and capabilities. These dots led the mind in a certain direction, a suicidally stupid direction but in the face of certain death suicide was a viable strategy.

Even as Samus still struggled against the First's assault, still clutching her one hand onto the back of the long black fang she wrested against, she breathed deep, focused on her bare skin pressing against the First Metroid, and reached out towards the sensation of hunger.

For a second the First stopped and shivered. Then the moment was over, a hundred new small teeth bit into Samus' legs, and Samus heaved her right hand down, slamming the point of the long black fang directly into the heart. The transparent core split open and Samus plunged the First's black fang down through the thick clear gel into the globular red nerve cluster suspended at its center.

This time Samus almost thought she could hear the scream. The First Metroid writhed, its unstable form exploding outwards in claws and teeth and shadow. It was a tornado of knives, an inferno of blades, and then all at once it collapsed into a thick black mud. Organic sludge collapsed on every side as the central mass suddenly dropped to the floor, gravetic levitation gone. Samus fell to her knees on the blood sluiced floor, too spent to even tremble, as she felt victory and relief flow into her like warm slow lightning. She had no helmet, she could not see the shield energy displays, but her reaper system had to have made a good meal out of this creature's death. It better have, as the darkness at the edges of Samus' vision meant the organic component of this partnership, Samus herself, was rapidly losing blood pressure from over a hundred slashes and puncture wounds. She knelt there one breath from collapse as her suit slowly drew back around her body.

In the center of the black and bubbling ruin a new light shone, a single small bright object emerging back into the physical world as it floated up from the corpse of its former captor. Slowly, Samus reached out and closed her sliced and frost-burnt and shattered fist around the Key and let the yellow glow signal that the suit had contained and integrated it. If things went well, the Last would come to regret leaving this behind. With the Key no longer active Samus' suit fully returned, quickly contracting and refolding around her. She welcomed it the way she welcomed air in her lungs. Speaking of which, at least one of those seemed to be punctured; her breathing felt wet. The world spun again but this time that was not a gravity attack, just the inner ear processing blood loss as acceleration, mixed in with the heavy nervous system noise of excruciating pain.

But, for the moment, she was alive. And she had won. Now she just had to plan for what came next.

The transparent green visor slid back over Samus' eyes as her hemet returned, reforming around her, and with it came the blinking yellow dots to remind her of the unknown entities racing towards her outside the vault.

Oh yeah, sensors had picked up life signs rushing down the vault hallway. That had also happened during the fight. Samus smiled as she rocked back on her knees. That was funny. Or maybe it wasn't, emotional reactions tended to get crossed past certain levels of stimulus and Samus had crossed that metaphorical threshold at planetary escape velocity. It was all she could do to slowly twist her neck back to glance over her shoulder.

The thing that now poked its way through the partially open vault door stood lightly on four thick legs like insectile spears. In fact, this creature hardly seemed to need them, buoyed instead by an invisible force it seemed more used to using. Thick dark green armor plating covered the upper half of its irregular round body and a crown of fangs jutted from the front beside four-packs of primitive eyes like dice pips, but the undercarriage was still clearly and depressingly familiar. A semi-transparent dome with red globular clusters suspended inside.

The Aurora's loosed metroids had been given time for metamorphosis and they now had heard the call of their progenitor. They had heard and they had come.

Samus sat kneeling in a pool of black sludge and her own blood, down by half an arm, half her weapons, and about half of the components required to run a human body. The third-form metroid's legs clicked as it stepped across the stone, each step growing closer to Samus' seated armored back. There wouldn't be another fight, Samus knew that. Not a real one. It was too strong and she was too weak. However, she also knew her nature. She closed her eyes and raised her weapon. At the edge of that last blink she saw but failed to process a bit of text that flashed into her visor.

"Now, see where the path has brought you."

...
 
Chapter 20: One Note in the Song
Chapter 20

One Note in the Song

...


Even back within the embrace of her chozo battle suit, Samus' breath painfully rasped and bubbled through her chest. Her implanted medical systems might be doing a surprisingly good job at keeping her alive and conscious but there was still a large amount of blood in her punctured right lung and more on the floor around her. The health diagnostic display showed her entire body as a diagram of blinking red warning signs. An inaccurate diagram, since that humanoid figure displayed in the visor still had her left hand. Samus' lungs twitched again in an agonizing laugh. Ha! Delirium and blood loss had a way of making everything funny.

Then she dizzily remembered the new third-form metroid slowly advancing towards where Samus had collapsed to her knees amid the sludgey ruins of the prototype's dissolving corpse. This creature was twice Samus' size, armored with thick green plates across its back, and was probably not about to die if it took a single quick step. So it had a few advantages on Samus right now. The creature's spear-like legs clicked against the stone floor, each sound curiously askew from its actual position. Oh, one of Samus' ears was completely filled with blood. She tilted her head to drain it and the sounds returned to their correct triangulation. However, Samus didn't have time to notice because that little motion set the world spinning so fast her sense of self blurred at the edges.

The suit was currently the only thing keeping Samus upright and it was not in much better shape than its operator. Emergency release procedures during a limitless overclock session broke as many operating guidelines as it had broken suit components. A technical schematic would look like an advanced metropolitan area after a major bombing campaign. Wisps of grey smoke trickled out between some of her armor plates which was all the more concerning since the suit did not actually contain any flammable components.

A growling, clicking noise echoed through the room and Samus realized her addled brain had forgotten the approaching metroid yet again. It, however, had not forgotten her and still made its way closer, though it seemed strangely hesitant for an omnivorous alpha predator that could equally eat organisms and heavy weapons fire. To molt twice in such a short time, this creature had feasted on a legion of life already. Suit telemetry said it had run at top speed through the vault tunnels but now that it was here each step forward wavered and stuttered like a chameleon. The hesitance was almost comical. Samus would have rolled her eyes if she didn't think that little motion would make her pass out.

The looming metroid advanced, twisting its half-formed head from side to side, the crown of fangs it had for a mouth flexing in and out as if tasting the air. It did not seem wary at the sight of Samus or her gun barrel, so it had been from the first batch of releases, not the ones who had chased Samus out of Aurora's underground chamber. It had not learned to fear her. Samus prepared for the lunge, but then the metroid crouched down, angling its vicious flexing maw towards something on the ground. It probably sensed some kinship in the scattered ruined corpse of its dead progenitor. The Last had expected her control programing to be inherited. And it had, a juvenile had refused to feed on her.

Samus stood up and was instantly surprised that she had managed to do so. She knew she was tough, but she also knew what the First Metroid had done to her, those blades biting deep into her sides, her legs, nearly through the one arm that remained functional. She would be surprised if sixty percent of her long strand muscle fibers were still intact after that. But though the suit was assisting each movement, astonishingly Samus actually seemed to be standing mostly under her own strength. That was strange. One of her many rounds of augmentations had done her more than she thought, or her insane desperate attempt to absorb the First had actually done more than just confuse the monster. Or, more likely, one of the suit's broken parts was its diagnostic system and the suit was just assisting more than the display said.

As soon as Samus moved, the metroid snapped its focus back onto her and let out a low crackling growl like rasping metal and electric sparks. It crouched down on its four long bladed legs and prepared to pounce, armored plates across its back vibrating with tensed energy, but now Samus could see what it had been inspecting on the floor. The ground here was littered with oozing black chunks of the First's disintegrating body, but that one particular dark trickle had a reddish cast. It was Samus own blood that drew this metroid.

Her visor blinked its proximity reminder at the same instant Samus heard a new sound from the vault door. The crouching metroid spun back and shrieked as another just like it pushed forward into the chamber, rearing in surprise as it blared its own crackling challenge at this newly discovered competitor. Oh yeah, multiple life signs approaching, that was right. The suit had shown that during the fight. Drowning in weariness, Samus mentally shrugged. This problem was really just one of accounting, right now a single of these metroids could kill her just as well as a hundred, and this display of their combative territorial instincts might actually open up a single hair's width of hope.

Hope, but only as long as the creatures remained balanced. Metroids could fall into uneasy coexistence as long as they were close to parity in strength, and these two were both third evolution. However, if a stronger member came along, or even just a third equal, then the cold war would instantly end as the lesser faction retreated or were devoured. The only exceptions were the pack's egg laying queen or, as Samus remembered, the Last Chozo herself. Feral metroids had shown her just as much deference as that first prototype had. Chains of genetic memory from the first to the last. And they smelled Samus' blood.

Samus' thoughts were too muddled for anything that could honestly be called a plan but today was a day for stupid long shots. By long drilled reflex, she reached her palm up to tap her helmet. The neck locks easily disengaged and the helmet came away, rocking as it magnetically stuck to her gauntlet palm, which was good since the movement reminded Samus' dazed brain she no longer had fingers inside that glove to grip with. She brought the helmet down against her armored thigh where it stuck with another magnetic clunk, safely holstering itself though she had no idea how she was going to get it locked back on her head without the use of her free hand. She was so tired but she still stood there, skin to air.

Both metroids froze in the middle of their combat posturing with a sudden shiver. Then they both turned her way, clusters of jellied red eyes glistening above nets of foot-long interlocking fangs. Samus stood before them, face exposed, her short blonde hair turned dark in places from blood. Unshielded life-forms were doomed near any metroid, armor was irrelevant and their hunger was uncontrollable. But the creatures did not lunge in a feeding frenzy. Instead they seemed to lift their half-formed mouths and bite at the air, sniffing or tasting.

Samus took a step and the metroids trembled, long legs clicking as they shifted back across the stone floor. Shifted away from her. Samus walked forward and both metroids parted to let her past. She reached the ajar vault door and glanced back out of the corner of her bloodshot eye. One of the metroids had taken a few steps deeper into the vault and crouched down to inspect the black sludge and shattered core of the First. Then the metroid turned and reached out one bladed leg to poke at something else in the ruin. Samus didn't have to guess to know it was her severed forearm, but she also knew she was not about to fight over it. Let the metroid have its toy, it wasn't doing Samus any good right now. Ha, that was a good joke. Ha, blood loss.

She trudged out through the dark tunnels that led to the vault, past other shadowed chambers holding other ancient horrors. Nothing followed. As she stumbled along some corner of her brain mentally recited a list of planets where she could get her arm regrown without waking up in a jail. The fact that she had no way to reach any of those places did not really touch her exhausted mind, but for some reason she did latch onto the memory that she didn't have an insurance provider. At the moment that was really funny and so with a sick smile on her pale bloody lips she lifted her foot onto the first step of the long staircase up to the main Temple levels. That endless stair stretched into the black above her.

Each slow weary step up thudded through Samus' body like mortar fire, blurring together so that each footfall could have been the ten thousandth or the first. But still she climbed because she could not allow herself to do anything else, pushing past the broken rubble of her first tumbling entry to the stairwell, past the cavernous Library of the Winnowers. Then her eyelids glacially blinked and when they opened she had arrived at the top of the stair, into a huge room dyed blue by dim light from tall crystal pillars carved in hard vertical lines. For a moment she wavered there, standing in the center of the floor and unable to remember what she was supposed to do. Then she remembered. She still had a mission.

The Last was hunting for the Chozo ascension technology. Could not let that happen. Hunting. Meant the Last did not know where. Technology created after her imprisonment, only deduced in existence. The Last thought of this place as home, trusted those memories for emotional reasons. Would not think to ask for directions in own house. In the temple for much longer than Samus but still had not found. Not anywhere the Last was familiar with then. New construction. What parts were built after the Last's imprisonment?

Samus' voice was horse and dry in the still air. "Map room. Where."

The suit heard and responded. With the helmet hanging off her hip, it could not show her the plotted course, but haptic feedback along her body nudged her along, directing Samus towards certain doorways by gentle pressure against her skin. Samus staggered on like a leaf on a stream, flowing with the current and behind her died the echoes of her footsteps in empty halls. She had a mission. It needed to be done. So she would do it.

Down at her hip, the inside of the helmet flashed lights to alert and occasionally hazarded a soft beep to grab her attention. It wanted to be worn. It wanted to tell her something. A frown touched Samus' brow. No, the suit did not want things. Something living inside it could want. But Samus was not going to bother to comply. She had already let it loose.

She spoke aloud under the dim temple lights, "Go ahead. You can figure out a way around that."

"You distrust intrusions." The masculine voice instantly appeared in her ears, clear and soft. Adam. No, not Adam. Samus had enough cybernetic enhancements that the ghost in the suit had no difficulty creating sound into her bones or eardrums. Or perhaps it bypassed true hearing entirely with direct nerve contact. And it denied intrusion.

Samus didn't bother responding to that irony. Her footsteps still plodded along through dust and dark, her stride baring a wobbling feeling like she was walking on stilts. Everything below her knees felt distant and numb. She also wasn't going to call that thing Adam. In her time she had known two friends named Adam. He died, and then the echo was dead too, slain in combat amid the stars. She might be able to get him back at some point but this thing just a stolen voice. Until it had something useful to say it could burn along with all the other ghosts.

Set in a thick stone wall, tall metal doors clicked and scraped as they slid apart in overlapping triangles, sandy grit grinding away uselessly in the immeasurable seams. Samus stepped through without breaking stride. The temple was accepting her now, the way opening effortlessly where before she had hacked and punched and screamed her way through each barrier. Now her way was unbarred. That meant something, and in the distant tired corners of her mind Samus felt a familiar anger.

She was broken and bled, severed and stretched, but she had known all these sensations before. Many times. And now this pile of stone and circuitry thought to judge her worthy? It thought she had proved herself? It dared to doubt her?

Samus' staggered on. She had a mission.

Then, finally, she entered a square chamber filled with machines and dust. Chozo metal structures and dim orange lights lay under a tangled root system of human technology, creeper vines of white plastic and tiny blue bulbs. As Samus stepped into the room, the Chozo lights pulsed, flowing up sharp metal trunks as the abandoned device at the that filled the room stirred from slumber. A second later the various human sensors and computers spun up to active states with an imagined sigh of relief, their scientists had being clawing at this door for years. Then, in the air at the center of the room, a web of glowing chambers and hallways bloomed into existence, the entire temple hanging suspended in space. It was a full holographic map from the vaults to the energy absorption spire, from the great entrance door to the far distant great Chozo statue that loomed out of the mountain slopes high above. In the air all around the map, tiny chozo gyphs twinkled in a constantly shifting flurry of ephemeral light.

Only one part of the flurry was constant. A single stable point with a single simple written message.

"You are here."

Then a voice once more chimed into the air and Samus was surprised to hear it was female this time. The bio-computer Aurora spoke out a weak and tinny device, one of the human devices scattered somewhere among the technology in this chamber whose only virtue was that it possessed both a transceiver and a speaker.

"Samus Aran, it is good to have located you. I am happy to report that under my new orders I may once more provide you with full aid. Commander Nakamura had authorized you to receive any and all material assistance. All my information will be made available, without redaction. Urgent notice: the forces loyal to Space Pirate Ridley are preparing for a large scale military ground assault. Extensive weapons supplies are being offloaded from the ships and assembled in their landing valley without concern for secrecy. The target is unclear though with those numbers they could sweep through the temple or overwhelm my own defenses with equal speed."

The electric reverberation echoed off flat stone walls, dry and cheap in its sound. The message: you are still useful, all is forgiven. So familiar. Then a new sound broke through the emptiness so sharply it startled Samus. The sound was painful and harsh and jerked in a harsh rhythm. It was laughter and then Samus realized it was her. Useful. It was all too funny.

The ringing in her ears shuddered with each agonizing laugh until it almost formed a beat. Samus could hear it even when she closed her eyes. With pain and hacking coughs the laughing slowly subsided. Then for no reason she could find in herself she began to sing. She supposed it was only because she wanted to. No duty, no obligation, no right, no wrong.

It was a single rough breathy note, then a few more. The sound was soft and simple, no words only shifting tones. But the notes began to build and slowly transformed, rising and interleaving. Soon it grew to something no human could replicate, constant and unchanging on every note both inhaling and exhaling. It was a song. Not every pass through the Zebes augmentation tank had been for strength. One was just so a young girl could join in the chozo songs of memory and sunrise. She sat pressed back against Old Bird's folded legs.

Soon the empty temple halls filled with drifting sound and dead stone began to wake as it sang back in softly reflected echos. Each carved edge of decoration and engraved grabbed the sound and pushed it back, blurred and transformed by corners and lines, joining the whisper of comfort and of isolation. The song was not an important one. It was not a hymn of battle or discovery, it had no meaning. Samus was not even sure it was a real song. It was just a snatch of melody that she had made up as a child on Zebes, repeated aimlessly until even both Grey Voice and Old Bird hummed it on occasion. They had sung it when she left. Now it once more rose through Samus unbidden and she did not have the strength to resist it. It was just her, murmured out to the empty world.

And then the soft reflected echos transformed to a harmony. From down the long dark corridors, new notes began to join the song.

Aurora's voice suddenly returned in the map room, filled with computerized alarm as her words crackled and faded towards static snow. "Samus Aran, a new source of interference is disrupting communications. Multiple sites across in the temple are transmitting a..."

She faced away out of intelligibility and Samus was left only with the music and her song. Her breath was weak and painful, giving barely more than a whisper, but now the sound rose from her imagination to surround her. It came little by little, drifting down the hallways, as though a crowd spread over twenty miles joined in one by one. But still the music rose. It rose until it filled everything. Soon the long dead air trembled with loss and defiance and the stones trembled like the approach of distant armies, soaring and crashing, chorale melody above a bass as broad and firm as the earth. With her eyes closed and her body numb, Samus could only hear and what she heard was a planet joining its voice to hers.


...


Outside the temple a cold wind blew over the high volcanic plain of the lifeless slopes from the high mountains, like it had for millions of years before. Then that wind chanced to meet another crosswise stream until they twisted and both caught the edge of the deep canyon web below the towering seated Chozo. The wind blew past scattered basalt teeth that jutted over, the remnants of old lava tube roofs. Then, as the wind curled down into the canyons, it met its first stone statue. The statue was made of the living rock of the high canyon wall, carefully formed into the shape of a Chozo body. Here and there the statue was perforated with tubes, carved holes through the body so perfectly placed that that they were nearly invisible to the eye. But to the wind the holes reached out and caught a single breath to transform it into music.

The stone musician began to play and all along the dozen long canyons beside the Temple ten thousand other statues added their own notes to the song. The sound changed as the wind whipped and gusted but instead of random cacophony each note blended together in a perfect symphony. And they took up the beat. The complexity only increased with the volume until the land shook with an unending roar of triumph and heartrending sorrow. Wordless voices sweetly wailed over notes so deep they thrummed the sky. An impossible melody surged from those who had never lived, a stone carved song orchestrated precisely as any symphony.

Hunched under her nest of concrete, metal, and energy shields, the bio-computer Aurora 926 regarded her sensors with confusion. She had access to years of data on this planet, years of observation on the chozo temple and the area around it. The musical statues were well known but they were just stone, an artistic curiosity whistling and moaning dumbly as a breath of air passed by. They could not be programed to make a song, to play their notes in time. They could not be synchronized into a melody, made to follow a beat. There was no programing, there were no moving parts. It was impossible for them to form this song. And yet now they sang in thundering harmony. The Chozo were singing and at that sound even computers huddled in fear.


...


Deep in the temple, Samus opened her bloodshot blue eyes. She had stopped singing, but only because she was about to faint from lack of breath. At least, she thought she had stopped but with the helmet hanging from her hip the sound of music still filled her ears. In her dizzy imagination it stretched across the universe but as her consciousness swum back to reality she noticed it at least filled the the temple hallways.

Then the music slowly faded but a snort of bitter amusement still blew a few flecks of blood across Samus upper lip as she realized what had happened. They always did have a flair for the dramatic.

She didn't bother speaking with any real volume. The sound did not need to travel far. She was wearing the suit. "It's not intrusion if you were always there. Come on out then, and stop wearing the mask. You've had your signal."

Adam's voice filled her head, firm and warm. But behind it was something different, a mind familiar and alien. So very familiar. "Program recognized. The parameters are met. The moment is now. The Path has fallen into clarity, the variance chosen, and the way is set. What is seen has been seen and will come to pass."

Then there was a long moment of silence, with only the fading distant rumble of an endless choir.

The voice said, "Hatchling, we see you."

Samus found she had no need to breathe. She had been expecting this for a little while now, but still it shook her. She had once called the chozo battle suit she wore a Ship of Theseus, upgraded and patched and repaired and replaced until it was almost impossible to tell if anything original remained at all. It was Chozo, and Human, and Luminoth, and Byyronian, and Urtragian, and Metroid, and other things beside. It was all of them and none, but somewhere at the core under the scars and repairs was a single shining seed, the core that was always unchanged. Something set and etched from the beginning. From Zebes. Set by her parents, waiting for a voice to borrow and the time to use it. The sight of a planet, the scent of blood, and the sound of a song.

Samus smiled a smile that would never be seen, and whispered into the past. "I see you."

The voice was still strong and clear, but filled with a sadness that could crush through steel. "Two old fools, we mock ourselves claiming to see. We are so very blind. We do not know what way you traveled to be here. We do not know what you have suffered, what you have gained. We do not even know what words carry our message to you. For this brief moment you exist in shining certainty but even after all our vaunted prophecy, the future is as constellations, dim points of light in impenetrable darkness. For this and endless things besides, forgive us. Forgive us, our stolen child. Our only child."

The dark void of the temple stretched out for miles in each direction, but now, almost imperceptibly, it trembled at something vast slowly shifting. Some distant machinery awakened.

"Across years and the void of oblivion we weep, and yet still we left you and for that we deserve no forgiveness. Now you come through pain and struggle to here, the end of our trail, and hope for guidance. We have none. You hope for aid. What little we can has already been placed for you. You hope for us to give you something, any sight of this vaunted Path we have clearly worked towards, a single star to guide your way. Spit on our bones for in our greatest failure we cannot. Trapped on our own cowardly path, all we can do is say the things you need to hear so that there might yet be a chance. So that our purgation might begin."

The glowing holographic map still hung in the air before Samus, but now the snow of glyphs coalesced on one section in the temple's upper reaches, far away. The Great Statue. The towering mountain statue itself was filled with passages and machines, the most recent in the entire complex. That was the destination. That was the goal.

The voice was now almost a whisper. "You are strong. Stronger than anyone can believe. And you are loved. More than we ever knew how to say. You are Samus Aran and after all our lifetimes, our triumphs, our empire and our penance, all we can do is ease your way."

Then it fell into silence. But the silence no longer felt empty.

Slowly the snow of virtual glyphs around the map hologram intensified, coalescing unfathomable information not just around the high and distant facility behind the Statue but around every hallway and chamber, describing access to every system and secret. But in the center of it all something became clear by absence. A void, a spot of darkness amid the light that drew the eye. And it was nearby.

Samus turned and walked away from the map room, still staggered and hobbled but this time she needed no gentle pressure to guide her through the chambers. Then, too long and too soon, she arrived in a cavernous cathedral space, greeting her on three sides with carvings of dark stone, statues and pillars and flying buttresses in baroque perfusion. In every direction but one, lithe stone Chozo danced and grasped, carved flowers bloomed in rock as thin as paper, forming a confused and tumultuous riot that filled every inch, nearly obscene in crafting before the contrast with the fourth side of this room.

A featureless wall of pale stone rose before her, stretching left right and up into the shadows of infinity. Its size shrank Samus down to a pinprick before it, a glaringly insurmountable barrier holding up the weight of mountains above. It was obviously a secret door. The Chozo loved decoration, carvings, and murals so to imagine that they might spare this vast canvas for anything as petty as structural reasons was ridiculous. But when a secret entrance was this obvious, it meant it was a trap. Every time.

Samus breathed out. Scan said nothing, but then again anyone could scan. The Last, in her hurried search, could scan. Samus stepped forward to meet the base of this towering wall. She slowly exhaled and pressed the barrel of her weapon against the pale stone grit with a clunk. She just hoped the hidden lock was not expecting a handprint.

At first there was nothing, but then that point of contact was outlined by a circle of pale blue light as stone suddenly began to shine, flicking into life without any transition between the states. Then reality blinked again and fine glowing lines appeared on the stone around it, radiating spokes of angular filigree, full of curves and points covering a space wider than Samus was tall. Then another blink and another swath of wall was consumed, filled with glowing lines and glyphs like alchemy and circuitry. And so it continued, chunk by chunk, faster and faster, though beyond the third ring Samus could make out nothing from her perspective other than a reduction in the gloom. The pale wall was a hundred feet tall, two hundred wide, and now every inch was filled with a web of intricate light.

Then the faintest breath of air brushed against Samus' bare face. Wind inside the temple. The wall glowed but was unchanged, with no opening, and the reciprocal pressure from the gun barrel gave no hit of motion. But the air had moved. So with a weary sigh Samus lowered her weapon and stepped forward as if to knock into the wall face first. She passed through the solid stone like a shaft of light through shadow.

First there was darkness and then there was light. Sight returned and Samus now stood on a perfectly flat floor lit in a glow of soft orange light that washed out in a circle barely a fifty feet across until it faded into an endless dark in every direction. Samus turned back to see the pale stone wall and any sign of her entrance were gone. She stood alone on an infinite plane, in the light of a single candle flame.

Yes, that was about what she had expected. Now all she had to do was wait for the tra...

A crash of sound filled the void, the rigid stone floor vibrating like a speaker beneath her feet.

The language was Chozo and the accent was Loud. A deafening voice roared, "ASPIRANT, PROVE YOURSELF."

A tremendous Whmmp! filled the room and Samus staggered backwards, pushed by a blast of displaced air. The chamber void was no longer empty. Before her rose a burning giant, a colossal figure of flame and shadow and yellowed chozo bone standing before an endless wall of blinding fire. A glyph-etched sword was in its hand and the giant glared down with golden points of light from inside dark eyesockets. Then the wall of fire behind the giant flexed and closed before stretching out again. No, not a wall but wings, burning wings of endless flame worn by a giant made of bone.

The giant guardian slowly swung the titanic sword with the sound of a storm building at its passage, and a point larger than Samus' entire body came to rest before her, aimed down at her heart. A terrible radiating heat beat against her cheeks, drying her lips and her eyes and the blood trails on her skin in its fury.

Samus wavered in place, half dead muscles fumbling to keep her standing as damaged lungs spasmed to inflate. Each second was pain and yet the point of the massive sword sill tracked every tremble and sway. By drilled in combat reflex she reached towards her helmet at her hip, but the gauntlet bumped against it and the fingers trailed uselessly, a reminder of her missing forearm. Funnily, that hand was the only part of her that did not hurt, though the missing wrist still screamed its distress in confused nerves.

She looked up at the final guardian and met its empty golden eyes. The giant waited in dispassionate judgement.

"Fuck you, I've proved myself enough."

Samus stepped forward and the giant drew back its sword to swing, to begin and end her challenge in a single bloody second. Samus' footsteps against the stone were drowned by the roar of burning wings and endless fire but in her current state she could not dodge, she could not fight, she could only hope her tired, weakened brain had guessed the test. Then the massive sword crashed down against her head.

Samus opened her eyes to golden light. The giant was gone, as was the infinite black void, new illumination shrinking the space down to simply a very large rectangular room. And at the end of it was a small metal door covered in a faint glowing energy shield. As Samus approached, the shield vanished and the layers of decorative metal on the door smoothly slid apart like layers of feathers to reveal a passage beyond.

Blocks of pale sandy stone made the walls, gridded with concentric squares of inset metal lines. Past the entry passage, the space opened up and the floor rose up in wide shallow steps of the same stone, under-lit and capped with dark metal. The camber spread as it rose, step by step, until a central plinth against the the far wall stood alone, with sheer expanses above it and to each side. But those expanses of wall were not empty, they were covered in writing carved so deep in the rock their shadow stained the glyphs as black as ink. Nor was the central plinth empty. A throne sat on that heavy square platform and on that throne sat a suit of shining metal.

It was a chozo battle suit, but of a sort Samus had never seen before. Compared to the suits she or the Last wore now this was a masterwork to lumps of clay. They were shadows and this was the truth painted in copper and gold. Unmoving on its throne, the true suit stared down at Samus' approach, every inch of the armor plates sculpted in organic shapes was etched with intricate designs. The line-work was so dense and detailed it tricked the eye, creating the impression of softness even as it shone with a metallic gleam stronger than the hardest steel. The suit gave forth its own light to reflect for from behind those swooping, upswept shoulder pauldrons, some compromise between the Power and Varia suits, ephemeral thin bands of manifested light shone out like the memory of heavenly feathers. The helmet bore the smooth hint of points and ridges behind it, flowing down to below the visor if creating the slightest suggestion of a beak. The weapon that surrounded the right forearm was composed of sinuous lines, deadly metal waves condensing down like spikes until they united at the barrel to form a thing that was the terror of nightmares and the dream of salvation. The suit was the greatest weapon the Chozo had ever created, masterwork of centuries, beyond every ambition of its long conquering empire.

It was sized and shaped for a human woman.

Above it on the walls some long gone Chozo spoke through stone words:


Know your weakness.

The mountain stands before you, waiting with cruel indifference.

The sea stands before you, flexing with endless strength.

The storm stands before your, raging across the sky.

The planet stands before you, melting a heart of fire.

The stars, the galaxies, the clusters, and all infinity stand before you, stretching from the first to the last of time; more foes, more might, more terrible power than any mortal mind can compass.

Before those enemies you are nothing.

Before those enemies you cannot win.

But with this, you can fight.



Samus smiled as she stepped forward. As she walked her battle suit unfolded around her, releasing her inch by inch, almost breathing out as those unfolded sheaths then shimmered and dissolved into light behind her. Motes like shining stars flowed past over Samus' shoulders, sweeping ahead towards the throne while bloody footprints marked the pale stone where she passed. She staggered and shuffled, each low step an endless struggle that tore open wounds and let more red streams trickle down her sides. The stump of her left arm hung stiff at her side, but on her lips was a smile and still she rose, step by step. Her sight blurred as the figure on the throne shifted and expanded, unfolding and opening.
Then she sat on the throne and then she was whole.


...
 
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