Inheritance (Metroid)

Calling All You Angels
Chapter 21

Calling All You Angels​



...​



Biocomputer Aurora 926 waited in the dark vault beneath the ground and her ten thousand electronic eyes looked out over the colony valley with. The cold wind still blew down from the highlands, dusting the canyons with materializing frost, but at least that terrible song was over. No, it had not been a song. That long noise was only a coincidental moment of harmony from a long untended indigenous sculpture-work. The seeming rhythmic progression was meaningless.

But of those ten thousand eyes, many now stared up at the endless lines of chozo statues carved into the canyon walls where the e low cold wind still sent out soft scattered notes. The song was gone. No, not a song. Mental failsafes stirred to life and Aurora ran a quick behavior purge on herself, pruning some maladaptive branches off her decision trees. She had standing orders to execute: to protect Federation interests on this planet, aid Samus Aran in expelling the alien threats, and defend the colonist population. This obsession with the music was a logic loop and a dangerous one in this crisis situation. That symphony had been impossible. Not a symphony. Run behavior purge. Execute orders.

Aurora's maintenance drones scurried through their tunnels underneath the city, slowly reconnecting the city's severed systems. However, this expanded awareness did not bring comfort. So many people were dead. Two out of five emergency shelters slaughtered and the next military assault on the Research Center would likely destroy Aurora herself. Once Aurora died she would not be able to execute any of her orders. She would just be gone. But the Chozo still shaped events, still executed their intentions despite their absence. Then, by definition, were they actually dead? No, that was impossible.

Run behavior purge. Execute orders.

Samus Aran had last been located in Temple Chamber 3-149, a partially decrypted information output node. Aurora had delivered the message offering aid and cooperation but had received no response. Her sensors in the chamber simply went dark. That was when the ghost symphony had started. No, coincidence. Run purge.

That darkness in her awareness was still spreading. Bit by bit while the music swelled, Aurora lost access to the few sensors she had managed to maintain within the temple. She could not find Aran. Planet-side transmission chatter indicated the Pirate ground forces were gearing up at their landing site for a major operation and Aurora no longer had contact with her most powerful remaining defensive asset. AI were not permitted to feel anger at orders, but Aurora had been forced to expend her previous holdout asset, the metroids, against Aran herself in compliance with orders from Commander Nakamura that were shortly thereafter rescinded by Commander Nakamura. Aurora was not allowed to feel anger, just as she was not allowed to feel fear.

Aurora could at least still track most of the released metroids. Enough still remained near the Research Center to maintain a protective exclusion zone against Pirate aggression for now but over the last hour Aurora's observations had began to report strange activity all across the colony city.

There was a pattern to it. A single metroid trespassed into territory claimed by one or more other metroids. The intruder quickly won the conflict as the previous owners fled to make their own attempts against neighboring territories. But the intruder always won, even when facing greater individual or combined forces. That was impossible, yet the tracking data indicated just that.

Then by luck Aurora managed to actually view one of these conflicts in real time. The intruder was a second molt form but entered a territory currently inhabited by five juveniles that together could have drained the interloper to dust in any clash. Through a traffic camera, Aurora watched the intruder drift through the open air even as the juveniles came screaming out of half-smashed buildings, fangs first towards this entity that threatened their hunting grounds. The metroids met in air, forming a swirling clash. But shortly thereafter, all the juvenile metroids drifted away in different directions, unharmed and flying with new purpose and intention. The original intruder simply turned and headed off the way it had come, as though it had completed a task.

Message relaying. Aurora was watching the transmission of information through the metroid population. This was contrary to all predictive analysis but the conclusion was inescapable. According to Aran's report, the hostile Chozo individual had displayed an unprecedented level of control over individual metroids. It was not illogical to posit that level of control had increased; Increased and become self propagating. If that was true, then the Chozo would shortly have command of over two thousand and forty five metroids. Next to that, even the brewing Space Pirate military assault would be nothing. Death was certain.

High above Aurora's dark armored chamber deep in the ground, the wind whistled past the empty streets and silent buildings of the colony, and carried on with soft scattered moans of the stone musicians.



...​



Kiber-2272 shifted his grip on the awkward bundle of looted technology under his arm as one of the pieces tried to slide off. At least that horrible groaning sound which shook the tunnels was now gone. It had been displeasingly rhythmic.

Treasures beyond comprehension waited throughout every dim and dusty hall of the abandoned Chozo Fortress, however, it had quickly become clear that "beyond comprehension" was a bit of a sticking point for their band of dubiously dead defectors. A piece of gold-embossed wall conduit might be clearly active, outputting energy and responding to data queries, but once they actually managed to pry and chisel the thing out every scan 2272 could throw at it insisted the object was just a normal block of granite. Chozo technology made 2272 want to slam his head against the floor. They needed to assemble a valuable hoard if they were to have any hope of buying their way out of the death sentence anyone who found them was due to hand out.

Even when he and his group of reluctant followers did manage to gather some actual data cores and weapon components it became clear that one particular category of loot needed to be prioritized. They needed sacks, as the Chozo just refused to construct anything on a scale that would make it easy to carry.

Zegar-1161 had tried to fashion some sort of bundle system using some monofilimant but the experiment quickly ended when it became clear most of the loot was hardier than their exoskeletons and when put to the test the latter got cut. That also made clear why 1161 had insisted on testing his monofilament idea on one of the Shakshi first rather than himself, that wretch was still leaking from half a dozen lines gouged across his abdomen and shoulder plates. So now the great pillage expedition combed through the halls and chambers of the super advanced Chozo tech-fortress looking for sacks, twine, or perhaps some sort of lightweight corrugated box.

However, at least this next artifact seemed promising, a shining metal pillar with flanges like crystalline wings, standing in the center of a deep cavern. Perhaps it was an advanced energy regulator like Zegar-1161 predicted. At the very least, the odds of this being a structural support pillar like the last one were low and they had survived that cave in without too much difficulty. Well, one of the Shakshi was lightly crushed but that was the same one which had been nearly diced by the monofilament so at least the group's injuries were being sensibly consolidated.

Kiber-2272 was couched upside-down on the pillar where it met the ceiling as he worked at removing a panel. Below him, Zegar-1161 scurried around the pillar repeatedly knocking his pincer against the metal as if he had a seismic imaging implant installed. The Voctum was consigned to work from the ground, his gene-line having sacrificed climbing aptitude for combat claws, but that also meant he was not deafened from Zegar-1161's infuriating knocking. Then the Voctum suddenly straightened up from the piles of their loot and bristled.

The Voctum hissed, "Something is approaching."

The other four Pirates instantly froze, the two Shakshi not even daring to blink. The Voctum was right, new sounds echoed through the cavernous chamber. It was a whole train of scraping, and clunking that occasionally caught and advanced in jerks, and under all that mixture something that might have been footsteps on stone. Loyalists or god painters, this approaching group of hivebrood would probably execute anyone they saw. This was bad, Kiber-2272 and his companions had not looted anything really good yet.

Kiber-2272 needed to run but there was no time. His team couldn't move fast enough to get out of sight back down the tunnel they had come from. Curse the Chozo and their illogically excessive sense of interior proportion! All that was left was to hide behind the metal pillar and hope to the probability distribution that they would be overlooked.

The five skulking pirates huddled together, space constraints stacking them on top of each other like a terrified totem pole. The scraping cacophony drew closer, the sound of something large being dragged across the ground through long corridors, catching, scraping, and then jumping forward. And in front of it were footsteps.

The footsteps entered the pillar chamber and a moment later mercifully began crossing to another exit, taking with them that sinister scraping dragging noise of that massive weight. Kiber-2272 stopped breathing anyway, just to be safe. Then the footsteps stopped.

Respiration stopped. Had some of their scattered loot been left in sight? No, the stone floor beyond the pillar was clear. The team was silent, overheating inside their shells to temporarily vanish from infrared as well. From that far side of the room there was no visual or auditory sign that they were hiding behind this pillar. Unless... Kiber-2272 had heard rumors of theoretical technology. Mad experiments from the science teams. Sensors that detected life itself. Sensors born by Chozo battlesuits. The Hunter or that chozo from the prison cube, they both would have that and who knew what the Chozo had handed out to the god painters.

Kiber-2272 focused his eyes on the dark hallway he had entered this room through, even as his vision blurred at the edges from lack of oxygen. No choice but to run. If all five of his teammates sprang forward at the same instant, one or two might get out of this room alive. However, the first to move would absolutely die. If only he could somehow trick the others to jump ahead of hm, but any signal he gave would prove his presence to the individual on the other side of the room. He couldn't risk that. Even if some life energy sensor was suggesting his presence, obviously it was not conclusive or the owner would have already killed...

From every direction, an incredible invisible pressure suddenly slammed against Kiber-2272. Without breath, he choked, eyes bulging as if his entire body was squeezed in a vice. But just as quickly he realized something else, his shell felt no actual pressure. In silent terrified confusion he realized that there was no real physical symptom to this psychic pressure. This message was not carried by his nerve cells, but by something deeper. There was only the abrupt and instant knowledge that an unknown power knew of his presence and it SAW him.

It SAW him.

That pressure was everywhere and then its force shaped into vague instruction, a fuzzy inclination that suddenly filled his mind like programmed instinct. Then, just as abruptly, the pressure vanished. The footsteps resumed and with them that endless dragging, scraping, tugging sound through the temple corridors. But though that sound remained, soon the footsteps were gone.

Kiber-2272 peeked around the metal pillar, joined above and below by the rest of his makeshift squad emerging like new sprouts. On the far side of the chamber, stretched between two doorways, a massive cable four feet in diameter lay across the floor, slowly sliding forward at a walking pace. From the tension and the distant sound of crunching stone corners it seemed to have been forcibly threaded through about half the temple. The footsteps were taking it somewhere, and now Kiber-2272 felt the inexplicable desire to aid in that.

The instinct twitched and Kyber felt his foot slide forward. The cable must keep moving. No, this new urge was not overpowering and he could still choose to...

Something slammed into the back of his head and Kiber-2272 blinked from where he now lay sprawled across the floor. The partially monofilament-sliced Shakshi held his weapon raised, only now threatening with the barrel instead of the butt.

They said, "You are no longer leader. We promised to follow 'until the moment a more powerful force wishes for us to betray you.' These terms have now been met."

Kiber-2272 carefully crawled to his feet and stretched out in subservient abasement. The terms had been met and really you could not be fairer than that. Besides, they did need to figure out how to keep this massive cable moving smoothly through the temple, some sort of roller joints at the corners? They could scrounge something together.

Distantly under his headache and terror, Kiber-2272 actually felt relief as he fell into a quick scurry behind the group as they all hurried off down the corridor the cable had come from. He was faced with an impossible task from a powerful unknown force that was sure to kill them if they failed and perhaps if they succeeded. But at least he wasn't in charge any more.

Now none of what happened next would be his fault. That was nice.




...​



Galactic Federation Officer Hong Yin moved quickly through the narrow, brightly lit hallways of the battleship Diomedes. The bare walls were white and striped with thin trails of informational color, all as clean and precise as a battleship crew could strive for. Yin was just as neat, despite the chaos of the last few days, her lack hair pulled back above the spotless blue and white uniform. Commander Nakamura led a tight ship ruled with good fair-minded discipline, and thirty six hours ago he had secretly released deadly bioweapons on a helpless civilian population.

Yin could feel her heart beating in her chest as she froze at a hallway junction and waited for a squadron of armored soldiers to pass by. They hustled along, heavy footsteps of power armor slamming against the decks as they hurried to deployment stations. After the long period of orbital repairs, Diomedes was ready to enter the fray once more, and its crew made ready with it. The orders had come forth, harsh and quick, but still seemingly sensible. Nakamura's voice showed his stress, cracking at the edges, but he was still strong. He was still in control.

The effort of keeping her face smooth and calm gave Yin a painful knot of tension behind her head at the base of her spine. Then the soldiers passed and Yin ignored the building headache as she took a breath and started off again down the hallway. Those soldiers had not been coming for her. If Nakamura had wanted her detained it would have happened two hours ago, as soon as Yin heard that transmission from the planet's surface. Samas Aran had left that reroute virus directing calls into Yin's personal profile as some joke or petty rebellion, but down on the planet hundreds of people were dead, and now Yin alone knew Nakamura was responsible.

The few people Yin passed in the hallway were hard eyed and haggard as they hurried to their combat stations. They knew the fight was about to resume, but they were ready. They were the Federation. They would fight to the last without complaint, obey any order, because they still believed they were on the side of the angels. But in her mind Yin was no longer one of them.

Maneuver alarms sounded, warning crew and passengers that the Diomedes was about to engage thrusters and break stable orbit. That alarm meant that any failure in that gravity system would now result in this long hallway transforming into a white-walled pit; a fatal reintroduction to Newtonian physics. Yin firmly grabbed hold of the bulkhead around the door to an unoccupied spare office and let out a breath as the door slid open to her credentials. She dashed inside and slipped into a crash seat by an interface terminal.

Her credentials did not work everywhere they had even two hours ago. The mess, Rec, and all the ship's other high traffic public areas were suddenly blocked to her with an unobtrusive but unmistakable firmness. Doors refused to open, elevators would not move with her on them, and a few quick moments at this terminal showeded the rest. Any attempt at digitally contacting another crew member was returned "unable to deliver". Yin quickly set up a looping attempt through her entire contact list as though attempting to find someone she was still allowed communicate with, though she knew it was hopeless. The authority hemming her in did not even care enough about these feeble attempts to stop them.

She was being quietly quarantined and after the battle she would be dealt with. At least Nakamura was not about to seize her right now. Five hours ago Yin had caught a glimpse of Nakamura and had seen his dark darting eyes, already blood veined from battle stress, stimulants, and lack of sleep. All the tension and darkness in this gleaming ship flowed from the top. However, if he guessed what Yin was doing now, she would already be dead.

Yin sat at the computer station and now cued up something other than another useless message. In her invisible prison of firewalls, anything dramatic would be noticed, any attempt to spread dissent squashed. However, like a chained dog, Yin could do anything she wanted as long as she did not want to leave the radius of her bonds. She could not move a finger past her normal duties.

And her last assigned duty had been supervising the trial custody of Samus Aran.

Any current information was classified as an active operation but Yin still had access to the court documents, including the evidence files. Of those evidence files, one was sixty times larger than any other. After all, full sapient human-mimic AI took up a lot of data space. One double click and a masculine voice instantly appeared in Yin's earpiece, weathered like old leather over iron. It was the AI called Adam.

"Greetings, Officer Yin. I assume you wish to speak with me about Samus Aran."

Yin's heart thudded against her ribs. This was the moment, the moment she broke the chain. "No. I want you to help her."

There was not even a second of pause. "Well, then I suppose we should get started."

Yin's eyes flicked over the screens set against the bulkhead, staring into space as she thought furiously. Nothing outside the normal scope of her job. Well, updating her personal mail settings fit with that. Even updating the interface with a newly uploaded and massively oversized file she had perfectly legitimate legal access to. A few seconds later, Yin's account had a new managing template named Adam.

The digital intelligence set its first toe outside the tight confines of the evidence folders but it was not free, Yin was sure of that. That would be illegal, and more immediately important would risk tripping the bounds of Yin's quarantine. But it was free r .

Adam's voice whispered, "Ah, I see. I must say, it is a good plan."

Yin had not even had time to finish setting up her new reply-all message yet, but soon the windows began to fly by under her fingers of their own accord. Truthfully, the AI's assistance was necessary even for the simple trick Yin had in mind, as she was not much of a coder. It was really just a twisting and amplification of the "vacation message" function. All the hard work had already been done three days ago when Ms Aran hacked the ship.

There. Yin leaned back, now officially a criminal, and was surprised that in this instant she did not feel afraid. Ms Aran had infected the ship computers so that all Chozo origin signals got routed to Yin's account, free of any restrictions. Nakamura had set a wall around Yin , ensuring that any attempted message was automatically blocked. But no one stopped her from actually sending those messages. And if an AI smoothly stripped out the forwarding signature from an outgoing message and just passed the original along, then it wasn't really from Yin, was it?

Any future communications from Ms Aran or the chozo would bounce from Yin's account and autoplay to every single person in Yin's contact list.

The AI said, "Nakamura would be proud if he saw you doing this."

Yin tried to ignore it. "He would probably shoot me himself."

"Yes, but he would also be proud. A commander is always proud of his soldiers' ability."

Yin felt exhausted, stretched tight by the stress and the dread and the secrets. "It's all still useless. This plan only works if Samus Aran gives us what we need in her next transmission. With no way for her to know that we need it."

"Is Aran still alive?"

"Yes. I mean, as of two hours ago she was."

"Then she will give you what you need."

Yin felt like laughing, half from disbelief and half from fear. Stress thundered through her veins yet she had already played all her cards. "How do you know? How could you possibly know that? You've been sealed behind a firewall for days with even less information than me."

"She will give you what you need because if she did not, justice would not prevail."

Yin shook her head, sick with the absurdity of it all. "That doesn't make sense."

The AI sounded almost contemplative, as if it was discovering truths as it was speaking, impossible as that was for a computer. "I suppose it doesn't. I suppose inhabiting an alien hardware for so long has warped some of my logic subsystems, and the download process then preserved that damage. Or maybe, after all these years of life and death, I have finally noticed a fundamental fact about the universe."

Yin thought back to all those faces she had passed in the halls. She saw their expressions, filled with determination and faith, but floating on an undercurrent of doubt. They could feel that something was wrong. Yin was just the only one who knew what it was. The only one yet. Justice; she couldn't really count on that, could she?

Adam spoke in her ear. "Trust the Lady. I always did."



...​



An individual without a name loped through abandoned underground halls carved in stone, chitinous exoskeleton glistening in the dim light, his soft footsteps echoed by the murmured thunder of his fellow soldiers behind him. The others did not have names either, hive and hatching had been discarded, carved away like all other superstition. Those fools who had named this fellowship "god painters" were just blind to the searing, indisputable logic of it all. They clung to what primitive ravings they still called science even when it fell to ashes around them. Even in the face of what the apocalypse had revealed. No, what the hives called science was barely more than sticks and stones before this Truth.

Ahead, far faster than even the best elite armor could manage, the Chozo raced on through the deepest reaches of this ancient fortress, enveloped in that terrible weapon some fools called a suit. However, that speed did not matter, the soldiers would catch up again soon. In this upper section of the fortress the Chozo's path was frequently stymied by locks and traps which even for such a powerful being took time to overcome. The ancient facility had somehow turned against them, but time and time again the Chozo proved their worthiness with cold brilliance and devastating violence. Barriers fell one by one, and the nameless individual continued to run, the followers of the truth would be there in the Final Moment.

A boom rang through the halls as the nameless individual and his soldiers rounded a corner and smoothly leapt over a pile of shattered, smoking technology. A half-melted hunk of metal was still identifiable as part of a chozo guardian statue, fearsome eye sightless once more. Another test passed and ahead the smoke trails parted to reveal the shining chozo battle armor, already moving on once more while carrying yet another large piece of severed technology. That looting was to be expected, despite the Chozo's urgent race it still frequently made detours to examine some of the arcane machines, activating or manipulating them in ways it declined to explain. Bit by bit, a hum of industrial activity began to vibrate through the fortress like a slowly starting heartbeat. Little by little, the ancient temple was lashed to the Chozo's will, and little by little its power built.

Things grew hotter as the the strange convoy neared the mountain range and the massive seated statue that jutted from its flank. Already the air in the tunnels assumed a shimmering quality from the heat. Passing a tall arch, the nameless soldiers were briefly bathed in the harsh orange light of molten rock. Such an environment hurt even cybernetic lungs, but pain was irrelevant and so they ran on. Accepting pain was the only logic. Accepting it the way this nameless individual had accepted slicing the blade through his own left wrist, when he stood before the Hunter in the corpse of that human city. Sacrifice to death was the only answer.

The way to true progress lay through pain, that had been clear from the beginning. Years ago, back when the home-world trembled and all the hives thrashed in glowing ecstasy of phazon, the Eyeless Researchers had supped deep on that wondrous poison. They knew the blue element was fatal, and yet still they experimented, pushing past concern for loss, past concern for replication. One by one the researchers fell from their thrones, until at last only three remained. Their eyes had long since melted from their heads as the glowing blue cracks marched across their skeletons, but still they gave report of their findings. For in that vortex of death they had glimpsed the shape of true science, they had seen the golden trail running into the future.

So as the Hunter charged from the sky to do battle in the eldest homeworld hive, those research notes were gathered and preserved. They had been bitter days, the giver of phazon was destroyed and so the only sane civilization in the galactic arm was mortally wounded. The mission to overcome entropy had failed, and so without the Technological Assemblage lesser races called theft the galaxy would inexorably crumble down to death, each petty species trying to re-invent every wheel in an endless cycle. Death had defeated Life. The Hunter had won.

But the research notes lived on; all hail. Civilization had failed, but there was still a chance for those who remained. For with the Notes came the path of escape. Now that was a thing to steal.

The nameless individual clicked his mandibles together in satisfaction as he and his squadron continued to run. Sacrifice of his left hand had been necessary, it was one bullet point in the required procedure, one step on the golden trail. But all was well. They were here, and they would do what needed to be done. So it had been observed, spelled out in the notes. Death had come to the last ember, but as the end and the beginning merged, the path to follow the angels would open up. The perfect union would get the chance for the perfect death. So it had been observed!



...​

Mathew Hernandez, colonist and communications engineer, quickly crawled along the hallway floor beside a shattered window, forearms working through the dust and broken plaster, as he crept further away from the emergency shelter. Frigid air from the valley outside washed over his back, clawing and pinching. His slow passage through the deserted building was made more difficult by the small bundle of equipment he had to pull along with him, but people were trusting in him. He could not let the Pirates see him.

Once Mathew got past this particular row of windows he was finally able to climb to his knees and stand up, safe from sight for another span. The full spectrum communications receiver system he carried needed to be set on the roof. It would be the lifeline for the people in the shelter. They needed to find out what the worlds were doing.

Three days they had all been locked in that emergency vault; two hundred and thirty eight terrified colonists huddled in an armored shelter sealed off from everything outside. Just before the Aurora unit cut communications they had been able to watch a Federation battleship jump into the system and begin to destroy the Pirate forces. That final sight on the screens, coming as Mathew and his family stumbled into Shelter Three, panting from their run through the smoking city, that sight had been a glorious image, a surge of hope.

That hope had withered and died during the long hours that followed, underground in a living tomb. After a while, people stopped talking much. Though the few children still played through the armored cavern with restless energy, their parents exchanged grim looks over their heads, all with the silent same conclusion. The cavalry above had failed.

So after the first day they set to work, and for a city of historians and scientists that meant research. Locked in the emergency shelter and hidden from the outside world there had been nothing to do but read through cached hyper-net archive pages. Those pages held the publicly available stories of other Pirate raids on other colonies. It made for grim literature. But there were certain words that echoed in soft whispers, sweeping back and forth across the population in those hopeless moments. Words forming a name; Samus Aran.

The more they clawed through those history files, desperate for some path forward, some plan, the more that name flitted at the edges. It was always there in these histories of pirate raids. At the beginning as an unbreachable defense, in the midst blazing through the battle, or just far at the end; a belated appendix of justice brought to those who thought they had long since escaped.

Mathew and the others were all colonists, they were explorers and scientists, and now they were becoming experts once again as they read these same articles again and again, reaching for any pattern of hope in that bleakness. Samus Aran was the name that ran through their heads when they looked at the children running down the hallways; it was possible for one such as them to escape even when all else fell the ash. Survival was possible. Samus Aran was the name behind clenched teeth as others watched and rewatched the footage of the initial pirate attack on their city, fists clenched at their side with trembling fury. Vengeance was possible. And Samus Aran was the name on the lips of Mathew and the other engineers who sat down to pull back the shelter's wall panels and set about the work of regaining hardwire control of the colony network. Resistance was possible.

By the time a single service drone arrived through the maintenance tunnels to reestablish contact with the Aurora unit, Mathew and his team had already cracked the vault door codes. They listened to the bio-computer's message and signaled back their compliance, allowing, of course, for the damaged systems they suffered under from the attack. Then they hung up and quietly activated those very same "damaged" city systems, now wholly under their own control. The Aurora had given some information, a description of fragmented Pirate forces, their rogue bio-weapons, and persistent Federation resistance. However, it did not take a political scientist to understand that this was an elegantly crafted message, designed to control emotional reactions of the population more than to inform.

The vote in the shelter had been simple, the people of this colony needed to see for themselves. They needed to act, to choose their own path. Mathew had won the mission on the first round, once they decided to limit the mission to one person. One person, if found by a pirate patrol, could be explained as a lost survivor huddled in some closet. Provided that one person died before they could be interrogated.

Mathew had breathed out with relief when he had been selected; there were others on that list who were far more needed than he. The colony could easily survive his loss.

The door to the roof of the building cracked open and a blast of cold bit into him despite the reinforced skin-tight thermal suit and oxygen mask. Once again he fell to his stomach, crawling along with his forearms to reduce his profile for any distant watcher. Setting up the receiver only took a few moments, and then he just had to wait. Out below him stretched the rest of the colony buildings, gleaming white and blue and empty. His city. His home, waiting for someone to save it.

The cold wind whipped up again, briefly gusting over the rooftop in a gentle swirl. It was a killing breeze; those rare upland winds were bitterly frozen and they disrupted the usual constant airflow funneled the valley from the lower elevations of thicker and warmer atmosphere. These winds off the mountains would mean a small die-off of local life if they persisted for more than a few hours. However, there was no point in hoping the Pirates died with the black canyon vines.

Mathew lay there on the cold rough concrete and waited next to the receiver. Eventually the moment would come, and he would be there to hear it.

Then all that dramatic waiting got boring and he spent the rest of his time on the roof seeing if he could figure out how to remotely hot wire any of the scattered vehicles parked down on the street with his pocket tablet. It was actually pretty fun.



...​



Elite Soldier Voctum-0108e pushed his way through the crowd of scuttling grunts, sending those scrawny wretches spilling across the broken volcanic scree without a thought. In his hulking black battle-armor, he stood a quarter again as tall as the rest of the motley swarm that filled at the upper end of the landing zone valley. Behind him, the remaining fleet spacecraft sat in their scorched and laser-flattened landing sites, most shrunken to insignificance before the looming hulk of Commander Ridley's fearsome capital ship that likewise slumbered on the ground.

A shadow flitted across 0108e's back as a small fighter craft slowly swept by overhead, executing its security patrol. However, that low path drew attention to the fact that none of this magnificent fleet dared peak its head above the lip of these deep canyon valleys, into the gaze of the chozo technology or the human ship above. That was humiliating, but any raider knew humiliation was sometimes a successful strategy. Let other foolish species make stands in the name of honor or morality or some other magical thinking, their corpses would be stripped by those who remained alive.

Yes, for now the fleet's army was pinned in this valley, the human city was swarming with hungry metroids, and the main entrance to the Chozo Fortress held by mentally defective traitors. Sky and space were held by an automated defense system and a damned Federation battleship. But all that was about to change, for Commander Ridley had willed it so.

0108e reached the squadron at the mouth of a slot canyon and announced his arrival by swiping an electro-whip across the back of an engineer who was doing nothing staring at a screen. The engineer drone scurried away, bleeding lightly and wailing about having been just waiting for something to "compile". The excuse might even have been valid, but 0108 was secure in the knowledge that unjustified punishment still helped secure the rule of his strength, and was therefore productive. After all, what else were officers for?

A glance upwards also confirmed that the massive beam cannon barrel was finally in place, building-sized mounting platform squatting on this stony floor. The whole system was so massive that it nearly filled the entire mouth of this narrow slot canyon. Only a being of Commander Ridley's sublime genius would rip a main battery off his own starship and stuff it into the tiny canyon, directly facing a frustrating door. The door into the Chozo fortress had shrugged off smaller blasts and there had been nowhere the full capital ship could safely fit with a valid firing solution.

0108e was not sure why there was also a second giant laser battery being set up further out in the valley on its own ungainly mounting platform. Stripping both had left the capital ship rather under-defended, but he was not a genetically perfect tactical genius so it was not his place to understand Commander Ridley's orders. It could be simple redundancy, like the six thousand heavily armed soldiers, two companies of hover tanks, and pack of genetically engineered Abominations also forming up in front of the canyon. Once the order came, they would storm the chozo fortress and everything that resisted them would die. The treacherous Chozo would die, the cowering humans would die, the animalistic metroids would die, even the Hunter would die.

That fortress door was about to die too, since a warning siren began to go off, sending the engineer drones scurrying off the massive weapon structure like scattering vermin. From his position on the ground beside the cannon battery, 0108e simply crossed his arms and sealed his helmet, trusting the strength of his technology to withstand the side effects of this blast. Then he glanced up at the weapon barrel twice the width of his torso and also gripped onto a secure handle on the mounting structure. It might get a bit windy.

The order came through on coms, Commander Ridley's wondrously terrifying voice. "Destroy it."

The cannon battery hummed and glowed with charging energy and then the slot canyon exploded into burning white heat. Wind and fire blasted back, slamming into Voctum-0108e hard enough to fling him off his feet, flapping from his handhold like a heavily armed flag. Then the blinding light was gone and the scattered tumbled soldiers looked up to see that the fortress door was still there.

Its surface bore a large crater splashing out like frozen waves and the entire fifty foot tall structure was bent inward like a bubble but it still stood. That was fine. Firing this weapon a second time would be just as nice.

0108e turned to find any engineer drones he could hurl back to their stations when suddenly he heard a loud clang from up the blackened narrow canyon. He spun back but that slab of Chozo metal still stood just as intact as it had before. Then he heard the clang again. Sensor readings appeared in his eye, plotting the door's reverberation as if something was hitting it from the inside.

The entire door fell outwards with a tremendous ripping crash that set the stone canyon shaking from the impact. Dust-filled wind once more blasted past 0108. And then in the center of the dust, on top of the fallen door slab, a single figure advanced from the dark. Through the dust cloud the first things visible were the rays of two dim sunbursts, soft white light spreading out like the fingers of open palms or the suggestion of wings. Then a torso resolved between those lights, two sweeping red pauldrons and a golden bipedal figure stepped out of the dust into a thin shaft of sun that pierced between the steep walls twisting canyon path.

The metal of its armor gleamed like gold, silver, and ruby, almost delicate in construction like it was made of folded bands of silk and flowing mercury. It was machine and it was alive. Then the creature raised its golden hand.



...​



An invisible wave of electronic silence washed out from that shaft of daylight, out of the narrow slot canyon, its unseen breakers crashing over every technology. Com devices spasmed in electric distress before failing quiet in unison. Seconds later the wave reached out into space and washed against the orbiting Diomedes. That ship's computer fought it valiantly, and just barely managed to corral the signal away from seizing complete control. But in those millisecond moments of computerized struggle, that signal met a polite little program which happily helped the newcomer appear on the private devices of every Federation crew member.

Where the wave of silence passed, everything stopped. Even the visual displays were overcome, screens and holograms flicking to show only empty light. All the combatants of the earth and sky were cut off as panicked engineers of every species scrambled to fix a problem that was blatantly impossible.

Then, in a single instant in every device and on every speaker, a strong yet gentle voice began, "I am Samus Aran. To all who are listening, Federation, colonists, Hive-brood, I give this message."

There was a pause as the whole system drew in a breath.

"I wish to discuss estate law."

There was a pause as the whole system choked in confusion.

Samus continued, a sound that stretched from the ground to above the sky. "This planet is a Chozo world, and it was found uninhabited so the Galactic Federation claimed it as derelict and named it J4-M. Then Hive Fleet Tyragishtocal, by the Rational Constitution of Fitness, exercised pillage rights against the Federation here. This all is agreed on, and all parties acted properly according to their own rules. But there is a problem in that train of ownership. This world was not abandoned, it was merely vacant. And now the Chozo have returned."

Her words rang through the planet and the empty orbits of the system above: edict made flesh.

"I am Samus Aran of the Chozo, last legal heir of that dominion, citizenship granted by rite and unrevoked by law. This world is mine and I will enforce that claim."

Above the colony city and its web of canyons, a thin white cloud whisped slowly across the dark blue sky, momentarily dappling the landscape below in shadow. Above it, the sparkling stars waited their turn and the single shining satellite traced its way among them, Diomedes glinting against the distant sun.

Her voice continued, fiercer than unmerciful heaven. "Those who wish peace will find my protection and those who pursue destruction will know my wrath. Commanders Ridley and Nakamura, by the doctrine of home-worlds I have right to judge you, and by your crimes I find you both guilty of mass murder. Murder by neglect, by hand, by weapon, and by metroid. And to the other criminal who is listening, hiding in her exiled halls, I find you guilty of my own attempted murder. That is three verdicts cast. Each of you, run as you might. The path is clear, and each will be dealt with in turn."

Across the planet and up in orbit, many of the listeners wondered why anyone would bother with this, admittedly impressive, display. If she was declaring war on three species, why give them this warning? Why deliver this speech to three individuals who did not recognize her authority to make any such judgment?

It was as if Samus Aran heard their thoughts. "To give you one last chance."

Those final words landed like bricks of lead, leaving only silence in their wake. Then a second later the multitude of listeners were suddenly deafened by the return of normal com chatter, a cacophony after the enforced quiet. Conflicting orders raced out, pleas went unheard, while insults and death threats mingled with wails of fear.

Suddenly the unnatural silence descended on the com channels once again and once again every computer display froze to display only pale blank light.

Samus' voice came back, now hurried and off-hand. "Oh, and this planet's real name is T'sthioni Ikoine; Ember of Light in GF standard. Make a note on the charts, those alphanumeric designations are annoying to remember."

The com channels clicked free once more, Commander Ridley roared an attack order, and at the fallen temple gate Samus Aran walked out into sunlight.





(Five chapters to go until the end, one per week)​
 
Flower in Bloom
Chapter 22

Flower in Bloom

...​

Samus Aran stepped out of the temple doorway, golden armored boots clicking across the fallen door into a slanting slice of sunlight. The sun glinted off her ruby helmet, its metallic surface sweeping back into slight points like it had blurred under great speed. Every surface of this armored skin was engraved with infinitely intricate patterns, scattering the light until the glow seemed to curl around her.

Before her, a squadron of panicked pirate troopers began to charge up the narrow slot canyon with an unsteady roar, firing wildly as their fear of Samus just barely lost to the fear of disobeying their superiors. Samus stood in place and breathed in slowly, relishing the soft impacts as uncoordinated blaster fire splashed against her shields; a gentle rain falling on dry ground.

Her golden fingers flexed at her side and they truly felt like her fingers. The engraved golden gauntlet she wore, clawed design somewhere between musculature and baroque architecture, bore no hint the flesh inside was missing. All that pain was gone, not just there but from her other wounds as well. There was no barrier between woman and weapon. She tasted the air through sensor scan, and felt the warm sunlight against her metal skin. She could smell the charging pirates and hear the panic in their heartbeats. She could feel the energy of their life.

Her chozo parents had led her to this moment. The Path had led her here and she trusted it, though what came next was still shrouded in probabilistic fog. She also had one trick planned with that cable she had just threaded through half the temple, but right now she simply exulted in the new strength of her body. And there were other things to occupy her attention. The Space Pirate squadron below had finally formed up for a real attack, and after that first scattered barrage the suit was hungry.

Samus raised the weapon which engulfed her right arm like twined spears of melted silver and a white beam burst out. Bright beyond color, it expanded to a blinding flash and before leaving behind a shrinking core of light. It also left behind a smoking gap through the ranks of Pirate troopers, a neatly drawn line of death. That squadron staggered back as the calculation of fear changed, but then it was too late.

The impact of thrusters ignited across Samus' armored back and calves as she erupted forward. A thunderclap of destruction rocked the narrow canyon as she crashed into their front ranks. Battle lines collapsed into a brilliant scrum of blaster fire, explosions, and viscera but that clean white light burst out again, searing away more troopers in another thin arc. Then another flash came, and another, and soon glowing orange globs rained down from above, molten rock from where that beam terminated against the high canyon walls.

The last Pirate soldier of that squadron fell to the ground smoking and twitching, and Samus slowly turned her head to watch the lone Pirate Elite bolt away from his fallen troops. He raced to scramble and climb up to the massive metal device that filled the end of the canyon, evidently hoping for some salvation on its peak. Then Samus' scans took in the structure he was climbing. It was an entire intact battleship-grade rotary gun battery, and seeing it mounted here on the ground was like finding a fission bomb in a broom closet. Well, that certainly explained what that noise from the other side of the temple door had been. She should not let him climb that.

Samus raised her arm and shining missiles streamed out of her gun barrel like a waterfall of sparks. In the air they spread and arced before falling against the gun battery's side with a wave of rolling thunder, shaking loose the Elite with their impacts. It was the age-old solution to any evasive enemy: saturation bombing across the geography. Then his grip slipped and, once falling, his trajectory was strictly ballistic. Samus' primary beam flashed again and the body landed on the ground with a loud thump and without a head.

Samus began to walk down the canyon, her heartbeat slowly rising to the rhythm of battle as she glimpsed the wider valley beyond the unmanned gun emplacement. Then massive barrel slowly swung down to track her.

Samus instantly burst back up to full speed, suit jets ricocheting her between canyon walls faster than the oversized cannon could track. Oversized for the purpose it might be, if that behemoth of a cannon caught her with a direct hit no amount of suit shields would matter. But in this new suit, she ran as easily as falling. Up and down were matters of personal opinion, and she moved far quicker than the cannon could track.

Then the battleship-gun began to sway and rise as the huge mounting platform suddenly shifted and split. Three gargantuan mechanical legs unfolded beneath it spider-like as they lifted the cannon up and helped speed its tracking, a mammoth tripod holding a weapon the size of a gunship.

Samus just had time to pull her limbs in close and concentrate her shields as the cannon blast hit the stone wall right behind her. The shock wave threw her across the narrow canyon but she was ready for this impact. One quick spring off the shattering rock shot her down under the tripod's nearest giant mechanical leg, and a crackling blue grapple swung her out to the other side of the behemoth's shadow, out of the narrow canyon.

At the apex of this swing, Samus momentarily hung in the air and took in the view of the wide valley that opened before her. A scree slope of tumbled boulders fanned beneath her, leading to a flatter floor that was filled with parked Pirate fleet vessels all the way to the cliff-like valley walls. In between those two locations were thousands of heavily armored Pirate Troopers, hovering fighter craft, mobile artillery pieces, and even a second Behemoth cannon also rising onto its own thundering tripod legs. Every single gun barrel was aimed her way.

Samus had time for a brief flicker of regret. She really shouldn't have left her cable in the temple, that trick of would be very useful right now. Oh well, she would have to do this the slow way.

Floating for that moment high above the shadow that swathed the valley floor, Samus' suit caught the sun and shone like a golden treasure. Then the air exploded into a rain of light that made the burning sun look dim.

...​

The Space Pirate pilot tugged at the controls of his fighter craft as he fought to spin it around and bring the main lasers to track the tiny target which raced across the battlefield two hundred feet below him. This ship was very maneuverable and unlike many species' combat fighters was at least half-designed to operate in atmosphere, but this kind of combat was still stretching the edges of its usefulness. Not that he had any objections to his inclusion in this battle. They needed every weapon they had. After all, they were up against the Hunter.

Across the sloping boulder field of the upper valley floor, entire ranks of infantry vanished in flashes of light. That terrible white beam sliced out, lasting just long enough to be swung through squadrons like a blinding sword. No, not a sword. It was a scythe and harvest had come.

Missiles rained down and bathed the ground in explosions, but to little effect. Devastation traced the collapsing battle line, bracketing it in fire but hardly slowing its advance.

There! A glimmer of metallic gold and red through the dust and a flash of telemetry from the targeting computer. The pilot pulled the trigger and twin streaks of laser fire lanced down, strong enough to explode rock from the temperature change alone. Ship computer confirmed a glancing hit and the signature of enemy shield energy expended. Then the fighter craft rocked in the air as a massive beam from one of the Behemoth cannons followed his targeting with its own shot. The pilot raised his claw in triumph as the entire battle site transformed into a bulging mushroom of flame.

But then a streak of shimmering colors flashed across the ground and terminated a hundred yards away where five more soldiers flew back, smashed by an impact cloaked in light. That blinding white beam weapon sliced out yet again and proved its wielder had escaped. People were dying by the clawfulls and those shields of hers were already recharging.

She was called the Hunter, but this battle was not hunting. Herbivores did not hunt the grass. The god painters were right. Death was here, and she had come for them.

The pilot gripped his flight controls. Maybe he could flee. He quickly eyed the rain of twinkling missiles that arced across the valley through the air around him. If he positioned his craft to be "accidentally" hit by one of those in a noncritical area, he could fake losing navigational control. Spin off into the distance over the horizon and return in a few minutes once he "regained control". He might need to crash the fighter on landing to disguise the trick but the wicked penalties for incompetence were still less than the penalty for desertion.

Yes, he could just...

The shimmering streak of colors blinked across the battlefield again. Then it suddenly became a twinkling star beneath him, rapidly growing in brightness. The computer screamed its proximity alarm in the same instant the impact landed on the hull. The pilot looked down in his cockpit and saw boot prints punched into body plates. She was on the hull.

He really should have fled faster.

...​

Samus dropped down through streaming trails of black smoke. A Space Pirate fighter craft made an adequately steerable missile once suit scan brushed control away from the owner, but its terminal explosion against the side of the Behemoth cannon still lacked the focus of a proper munition. Yet as Samus landed amid the smoke she felt its newly damaged armor plating crunch satisfyingly under her feet. That was a start.

Samus breathed heavily as she looked out at the battle sideways, standing easily on a nearly vertical slope of the cannon's exterior housing. She had been going all out since the instant the battle was joined. Gradual escalation of force only worked if you could accept losses, and she was currently an army of one. However, giving everything you had meant the enemy could grow accustomed; there were no surprises when you held nothing back.

From this perch, on each side of her the walking cannon's massive legs slowly pumped and shifted, rotating the structure as step by thunderous step though it was still looking for her. The other Behemoth labored under no such confusion and from across the valley it presented its long barrel straight towards Samus as a black dot. It held off firing for now as Ridley would be angry if anyone broke his toys, but relying on Space Pirates to not shoot each other never worked for long.

Suit systems worked in concert as Samus darted along the underside exterior of the Behemoth Cannon like a gecko, booster jets aiding in brief flares of light. It was an odd type of locomotion by necessity, as she tried to keep as much contact as possible with the walker's surface to both keep from falling and avoid some of the incoming blaster fire from ground level. The other Behemoth might be avoiding firing, but those Pirates wielding lower caliber weapons had no reason to hold back. Multicolored blaster bolts splashed against massive cannon's hull, scattering into cloudy bursts like fireworks.

Pretty, but worrying. Samus' shields wearing down; she had only killed one enemy soldier in the past two minutes. And plan A of allowing suit scan to hack control of this weapon platform fell flat in the face of the Last's legacy in upgrading the Pirate computer systems. Samus made a rapid dodge and felt the twinge of half-healed wounds. She had to work fast.

The savage silver weapon around her right arm flexed slightly as it shifted firing configurations. She closed her eyelids and when they opened her vision shifted, the outer expanses of the valley faded into grey mist of background X-rays. The slab-like Behemoth beneath her was suddenly an intricate web of interlocking mechanical parts traced by glowing lines of energy.

There, three feet under the armor plate, her first target.

Seen from afar, a dim spiraling line of energy shot out from the other side of the Behemoth, leaving a wake of crackling sparks as it vanished. But the Behemoth showed no sign of injury, not even a blackened scorch on the hull where the beam entered or exited. Twice more Samus' same wave beam seemed to effortlessly pierce it but still the great machine showed no hint of damage, only a trail of sparks. The Pirates who watched this display knew a trill of hope. Maybe the Hunter was weakening. Compared to that burning white beam slicing through their ranks before, this new attempt was pathetic. The circling fighter craft all maneuvered into position in the air above, presumably holding fire until their enemy shifted into open ground.

Then Samus danced to a final firing position and shot her beam through the machinery. The entire Behemoth suddenly swayed as its leg servos spasmed. This colossus might have been guarded against the more subtle assaults of Samus' suit computer, but there were ways around any defense. The principles of acupuncture worked just as well on robotics, you just needed a fancier type of needle. These piercing beams left electricity in their wake, overloading capacitors, tripping breakers, and flipping magnetic charges until the final shot landed like a gentle hammer on a human knee, creating involuntary reflex.

Samus shot and the Behemoth turned. It took a moment before the Pirate army realized what was happening. Then that realization was reinforced as the Behemoth suddenly fired, a raking blast that tore a trench across the valley floor and terminated in an explosion where the beam met one of the parked fleet ships.

Samus' weapon jabbed the Behemoth again, sending the structure stumbling forward. It fired again, another raking explosion, but that was all she was going to get. This hijack process was exactly like trying to steer a moving vehicle by shooting holes into it, so Samus crouched to spring away and make her escape. This huge target was about to become the focus of every single Pirate munition in the valley.

Her foot actually left the metal before it occurred to her that those munitions were not actually incoming. It also occurred to her that her jump here was an easily predictable moment.

Ridley announced his arrival with a tsunami of flame. Galactic chemistry had improved greatly on nature's fire and this violent maelstrom showcased every bit as Samus was caught mid jump. The roiling explosions buffeted her and set her tumbling, direction vanishing in the confusion of fire. Then she burst out the burning cloud, trailing smoke as she fell from the sky. She flipped around and flared her suit jets just before impact, landing with deceptive softness on the valley floor but with depleted shields. Amid the dust, ephemeral white feathers across her pauldrons flared and quieted.

Above her, broad dark wings snapped out from the underside of the damaged Behemoth. Ridley had used Samus' own trick, crawling along the surface of the weapons platform to escape notice. Which, on further reflection, explained the restraint of the Pirate close air support. Suit scan showed com transmissions radiating off Ridley, but for once he was not using his breath to monologue at her. All across the valley floor, ripples of motion passed through the disorganized Pirate forces as they formed back into squadrons and ranks. When he focused, Ridley was a dangerous general.

Samus narrowed her eyes and raised her weapon his way. Below the rhythm of battle beating in her veins she could feel a cold mass of fury rising up behind her brow. She owed this particular Ridley quite a lot. Justice for blood and death and for a young boy named Roger.

Then suit sensors screamed a warning. "Incoming"

Samus leapt with enough speed to shatter the stone beneath her. It was still only just enough to dodge the attack from a gleaming blade set on the tip of a long silver tail that cracked through the air. Samus spun to look back and see glowing green eyes set in a long narrow skull of shining metal, and behind it shimmering orange wings. The robotic dragon looked up at her, opened its mouth and unleashed its own bombardment of burning plasma. Another Ridley.

"Really?" Samus said to the Pirate commander as she danced among the broken boulders and scattered wreckage of the Pirate war camp while two flying monsters hunted her. "You activated your own backup? You know he will try to kill you as soon as he physically can. How did you even decide to do this? You're psychologically incapable of acknowledging any equal or superior."

The answer came rolling back over the coms, a paradoxical mix of rage, joy, and calming Ridley's slavering voice. "Killing will come. But before that, the rapture of battle."

Then came a separate transmission from robotic version, text scrolling across Samus' visor. "Genius is to be surrounded by idiots. No challenge. Human psudo-intellects play strategy games against themselves. I kill you against myself."

Samus grimaced. All right. Whatever twisted logic they had reasoned themselves into, the mind behind each was still the same template. Treachery was their very foundation. She could easily trick them into turning on the other if...

The text reappeared in her visor, a highly encrypted message even as Mecha-Ridley landed in front of her and lashed out in a storm of blades and blaster fire. "You will do no tempting. I have already arranged for my victory. While the defective organic fool thought he was still activating me I slipped a film of micro-explosives around his neck. The instant you are dead I will activate them and be alone in my triumph."

Samus could see over Mecha-Ridley's thrashing shoulder to where the organic version circled in the air on broad wings, looking for his own chance to lay devastation down on Samus. With a reptilian grin that Ridley waved a hand her way while his double was occupied, momentarily brandishing a small device that looked like the detonator for a type of undetectable bomb Samus had to assume was now installed in the robot. No, inciting treachery would not work as a strategy, but only because they were both already filled to capacity. Samus felt like sighing.

Still the two of them working together at least for the moment. A tough riddle, but Samus could still...

Impacts of blaster fire slammed against her back. Pirate troopers were moving back on the attack, their twin commanders having bought them a moment to recover from Samus' first assault. Ok, that was tougher but she could use a chance to let the suit's reaper system get a little extra energy to this might...

Against a backdrop of the high canyon wall, the remaining Behemoth cannon swiveled and by simple perspective transformed its long vicious barrel into a simple black dot looking Samus' way. She had almost forgotten that one. It was not a good idea to forget four story tall walking battleship cannons.

But she had been trained for this. Samus abandoned attempting to plan and seized hold of the music of battle. She refused to acknowledge uncertainty. Her intention was victory, and the world around her would bend to allow that path. It would bend if she had to burn it all to ash in the process.

...​

Shakshi-22b was not having a good time. This valley that had been slowly growing into a respectable forward raiding base over the past few days was now a dust-clouded storm of missiles, beam weapons, and fire. The ground rang from the constant thumps of high powered explosions; a mixture of artillery, walking-cannon shots, and those devastating power-bombs the Hunter seemed to be dropping in her wake like eggs.

Currently 22b was hiding behind a large rock and happy to be doing so. A rock could only hide him from one direction but it was something at least and from the sound of things the Hunter was still consistently rockward. At least it was was a substantial rock, a thick irregular slab long enough to shelter four other soldiers bunkered down beside 22b.

22b flinched as the sounds of fighting abruptly drew closer. Fortunately, his immediate superior had been killed so there was no one to give him a direct order to go join that mess. Then a fellow soldier fell from the sky. He bounced and scraped to a halt in the dust beside 22b, then shakily leveraged himself up, leaking some type of fluid from his armor or his body, only to freeze as he saw five weapon barrels aimed at him on hair triggers.

"Co..." The soldier then coughed and almost got shot into pulp but managed to get his words out. "...mander Ridley orders you to execute ambush plan seventy-three."

22b groaned. With the Hunter hacking their com channels it seemed the Commander had taken to just throwing soldiers. Ten yards away another flailing soldier dropped from the dust filled air and bounced off a boulder. More reinforcements for their position, it seemed.

Explosions and roars rang out from the other side of that sheltering rock slab. 22b just pressed his back against the stone, clutched his weapon desperately, and silently cursed his Shakshi gene-tyrants who had decided that lower food costs were worth their soldiers being thinner and weaker than those of other clans. 22b really did not want to be weak right now.

A few yards away, pressed against the shelter of the same slab wall, one of the fellow soldiers stamped his feet, puffed his abdomen, and rallied himself for the coming fight. And then fell over as a flash of light incinerated his head. An instant later, a second beam punched straight through the rock barrier, crumpling the soldier beside him as a helmet and what it held were both suddenly missing, and in the blink of an eye a third fell too. The next soldier managed to see what was happening and so ducked to avoid the next beam.

Ducking was smart. It just didn't help. The burning light flashed slightly lower this time and the soldier's truncated neck sizzled as his body slumped forward.

22b ran as fast as he could, without the slightest concern for cover or conventional retreat tactics. The hunter could see him through five feet of rock and shoot with pinpoint accuracy. There was no strategy against that, at least not that 22b could see. Let Commander Ridley think of something, as long as 22b was not nearby to be thrown off on the new strategy.

...​

Samus felt every blow.

It was all an illusion, her invincibility. The Chozo's last suit covered her, it bled into her, it channeled its fire around her and burned the world at the flick of her wrist. But she was tired. Every muscle thrummed with energy, each single flash of the battle lay out clearly in her mind like a diagram, and the moments of the future sang in her ear, a drumbeat she saw before it landed. But she was tired.

Half a second into the future, this patch of rock would explode. Samus was already gone when it did from a massive energy beam striking like yellow lightning. Now she ran as only the chozo warriors could, light shimmering around her in a kaleidoscope of colors, an aurora on her metal skin. The flash of the explosion still hung in the air as she held out her hand. Orange fire rippled on one side of the gauntlet, crystals of ice on growing on the back, just from the speed of her passing. She was tired, but it was so beautiful.

Then time caught her and beauty exploded once more into the screaming war of combat. Smoke and fire and blood and metal, it never ended. A pirate blaster shot caught her shoulder and spun her. She used that motion to flip, dodge the next, and return her shot, producing a spray of shrapnel and pirate blood. Then another hit smashed against her leg. She clenched against it and barely slid, but for a moment her knee wobbled.

Chozo war-tech could stand against an army and watch it splash against her like waves on a stone. But eventually even stone crumbled. She could take a hit. She could take a hundred. She could kill a hundred pirates. She could kill five hundred. But a thousand? Two thousand? How many hits could she take?

How many until she could not bare to let herself take another?

Sparks and drops of molten metal fell from the broken Pirate frigate ship around her, newly snapped in half against uneven ground. Across the valley, a half dozen other ships lay in similar injured splendor, Samus' targets one by one. Space Pirates were not like humans, they fought the hardest when they thought they still had a hope of getting away. Cut off their escape routes and the fight often went out of them. So Samus was breaking their ships and neither Ridley was very happy about that.

The jagged roar shook the air and clawed its way at Samus's spine. Ridley's voice was designed to do that, the sound carefully modified after a study of human evolutionary genetics to create the frozen terror of some platonic Terran predator. It was the shadow from the sky, the teeth behind your neck, the frenzied rush from the murky depths. And it worked, but Samus did not allow herself to feel it. The meat of her body was not her master.

Ridley's swooping impact crashed against her and she met his blow, her gauntlet arm darting up to catch his striking claws. The Pirate commander's dark purple scales were burnt and ripped in a dozen places but he kept fighting, never slowing for a second, even missing an eye and half the fingers on one hand. Samus pushed off against him, borrowing momentum from the attack and flipped back through the air. Then she instantly darted to the side as a streaking red laser beam swiped across her landing site, leaving a glowing melted trail in its wake.

Mecha-Ridley had lost a wing, but the silver construct still hovered in the air, held up by burning thrusters along its back. Damaged and wounded, both Ridleys still attacked like striking lightning; whips and blades and teeth and fire darting out at Samus in a constant flurry. They knew better than to let Samus get away from them. At a distance she had the advantage; close, even with all the technology wielded by each side, their size still mattered.

She could make a break for it. Choose the right moment and neither dragon would be able to stop her from escaping their reach, and once free she could shoot them down like the mad beasts they were. Unfortunately this was not just a two on one fight, most of an army still occupied the rest of this valley, and proximity to either Ridley was the only thing preventing a barrage pounding Samus' current position into fine sand. Those were her choices. Move through cover, fight the dragons. Race to a high ground position, face a firing squad.

She needed something else. Any distraction to shift the balance. Most battle tactics assumed you were not confronting an entire army alone. They assumed you had any allies.

She sensed something change about the wide battlefield before she saw it, before even the suit scan managed to return any new readings. But then there they were in the distance, blinking in the top of her eye. A large number of motion signatures approaching from the far end of the valley, from the mouth of the Colony city, too low energy to be munitions but no life signs registering..

Samus was in the process of fighting up the slopes of Ridley's parked capital ship when she first got a line of sight to this new development. Her helmet gained an angle over a hull metal ridge just in time to see into the distant valley mouth where a pirate rearguard soldier got run over by a speeding civilian car. That cheap-looking vehicle was barely defined by more than six walls and four wheels, but it still managed to reach seventy miles per hour and that was enough to carry it through two pirates. As it spun in the dirt one of the doors ripped off and exposed an empty cabin from which loud music suddenly leapt into the distant air, quickly drowned by the noise of thirty more similar vehicles barreling headlong out of the colony city through the understaffed lines. For guards expecting to defend against metroids and a bounty hunter, an inexplicable automotive stampede produced decided confusion. The colony had joined the fight.

Then a rising whine joined the rumbling thunder as a swarm of tiny flying delivery robots swooped out from behind a building side in the same direction. Pirate blaster fire raced up among them, but the tiny things moved erratically and if one fell down in smoke and sparks there were ten swirling behind it. They buzzed over the panicked Pirates, spreading confusion as half a dozen new defense plans fought across the Pirate com systems. Only a few of them noticed that none of these new actors possessed even the most rudimentary weapon systems, and compared to a real military force were about as dangerous as confetti. If the Pirate forces had been thinking clearly, the whole display would barely have been a distraction.

But it was a distraction.

Samus felt the music of the battle shift and now instead of forcing it to follow her she let herself be swept along. Her burning white beam flashed out and missiles rained down on the pirate army, There was no need to trust her tired will. There was no need to fight the future. The last combatant had made themselves known, and so now all the interlocking gears were so brilliantly clear to her. Humanity, Pirates, Chozo, metroids, and in the middle of it all Samus herself. With a grateful breath she subsumed herself. The Path guided her and she followed in its wake in a graceful dance. And at its guidance she let loose the blinding fire that sliced through metal and flesh.

The Pirate army screamed as it burned. Then, in the midst of the storm of light and explosions, some of them looked up to see a new star appear in the daylight sky. It grew swiftly, becoming red, an ill omened comet shining down on them all. Then the pirate forces received a new update from their coms, a single unanimous conclusion that broke through all the battlefield confusion and panicked disorder. This alarm was very clear.

The battleship Diomedes was dropping through the atmosphere at full engine burn. The Galactic Federation had finally decided to join the war as on the ground the dragons roared.

…​
 
The Walls of Troy
Chapter 23

The Walls of Troy

...​

The battleship Diomedes cut a burning path across the sky and left a wake of fire ten miles long. For the thousand Pirate soldiers on the ground below, unavoidable instincts screamed that this plummeting monolith was going to smash into them, the meteoric herald of their personal extinction. Squadron formations collapsed as members ran for cover, scrambling over each other in a blind panic.

Ridley snarled his bloodstained teeth up at the evening sky. The pitiful fools he commanded were worse than grubs, running around in fear; they were slime without any rational thought. Their panic was deserving of execution. The Federation battleship could not fire on them through the Chozo energy absorption field, and the humans deciding to fly a few thousand miles closer did nothing to change that calculation. These pitiful spawn he ruled had forgotten the orders and brilliant strategy they had been given. However, nothing so piddling would thwart Ridley's inevitable victory. When the battle was won he would rip them all apart himself and feast on their flesh until he could not move from the gluttony.

Then Ridley shifted across the rocky ground on which he lay sprawled and left streaks of blood from the stumps that had once been his legs and one arm. With a grunt of inconsequential pain he leveraged himself up with his tail and remaining arm, then opened his mouth to let loose a roiling gout of flame. The pyroclastic blast buffeted his cracked jawbone, but the fire still arced out to splash against the ground and form a burning wall in front of him. Ridley's one remaining eye narrowed in a smirk. Behind the screen of chemical fire, it would be a trivial thing to scuttle to a new location and hide until he regathered his army to take down Samus Aran. One arm, a wing, and his tail were more than enough with which to triumph. Even injured he was stronger than any pitiful product of idiotic evolution. He was the triumph of science itself!

Then the wall of fire and smoke flexed as it curled around a small bipedal figure that walked through its heart, armor shining in red and gold, glittering against the firelight.

Ridley felt the bloodlust fill his veins until every thought of pain vanished. His prey was in his grasp. From Samus Aran's current viewpoint, his tail was hidden from view by one of the many scattered boulders, so Ridley flexed it to coat the visible base in his own blood. He then leveraged his torso up with his arm and wing to imply he had lost the hidden tail in their last clash, all the while he actually prepared to strike with it. Aran would think him weak, but once she stepped in to gloat, the nano-edged blade on the tip of his tail would bite through her heart before she could gasp. One strike, and Ridley did not miss.

All that was left was to trick the fool into stepping into a trap once more. An easy task for him, he simply had to press the buttons of morality and heroism in her feeble mind. Ridley curled his lips into a predatory smile.

"Samus Aran, by-"

The blinding light destroyed his brainstem before he had the chance to notice her weapon rise.

...​

Samus looked down at the smoking carcass beneath her. And Ridley was dead once again. She had learned over the decades that his last words were never worth listening to. Each iteration thought itself so unique, but when pushed into a corner they all tended to come up with the same boring speech, the same tired threats. Samus did not allow herself to feel her hate. She drifted free on the Path, an instrument of judgement born by the future.

Then a transmission cracked to life in her helmet, scrolling text that somehow managed to convey the impression of fangs. "Samus Aran, by my intellect I left some human shelters alive, so that the planet might be harvested again. Your resistance shifts that calculation. Stand down now or I will kill this entire world and all its inhabitants in fire and pain."

Ah, there the speech was. Samus slowly inclined her head up to see where the mechanical Ridley incarnation perched on the peak of the Capital Ship's highest blade-like wing. Samus had to give it to Ridley, it took bravery to assume such an exposed position.

Twenty thousand feet above him, the massive battleship Diomedes shed its velocity in shockwave bursts, until the entire massive structure hung nose first in the air, exposed barrel of the primary cannon pointed straight down. That was Nakamura's show of strength, the power to resist planetary gravity without using main engines. That battleship twisted the eye, something so large floating so still. There was a mental pressure under its shadow as if gravity itself was gathering forces to reassert its will.

But the mecha-Ridley was confidant in the Chozo cease-fire field. Though the Diomedes slowly crept lower it was still well within the Energy Absorption Spire's line of sight, and so the old rules still held. In fact, instead of seeming nervous, this Ridley seemed to radiate confidence and cheer from its horrible metallic visage. With the death of his original body, his command was once again consolidated.

Samus turned her back on him to pick through the bloody remnants of the organic Ridley.

The crawling text pounced back into her visor, a new crackling transmission. "You think you can stall. No. My soldiers, advance! You will scatter towards the human colonists, through the city and through the temple! Samus Aran cannot defeat genius if I decline to engage in battle. The only option then for Samus Aran is submission. To do otherwise is to bathe this world in human blood."

Ah, there it was. Samus straightened up from the dragon carcass and now she held a detonator in her hand.

"There is no-"

The voice cut off the instant she pressed the button, followed a half of a second later by the distant thud of the explosion. And Ridley was dead once again. As Samus watched the white smoke clear she felt a small breath let go within her chest. One tiny sliver of justice had crept back into the world. On the scale of justice weighed down by the heart of a human child named Roger and hundreds more, a single grain of retribution clicked against the other side.

The remaining Pirates, that remnant majority of the fleet's once fierce army ran, scattering like ants. They would reform ranks soon enough and return to being a deadly threat but for now shock shook their cohesion. A few of the remaining remotely controlled colony vehicles and drones still blindly bumbled around the battlefield, but their distraction had already served its purpose. The human colonists had made a difference in this fight for their home. But Samus did not have time to thank them now.

Instead she tilted her head up to watch the towering Diomedes slowly descend through the air. Samus' eyes narrowed behind the green slit-like visor. She was carried by the vengeance of the Chozo and the next verdict had arrived before her.

"Nakamura. You decided not to run."

The battleship hung just above the valley like a floating mountain, an obelisk of metal plates and spars. Across its angular skin, point-defense cannons the size of houses all swiveled to face towards the planet. The panicked Pirate soldiers ran faster, a flooding exodus up the slot canyon into the temple gate and down towards the colony city as behind them the battleship's growing shadow slid across the ground.

The reply came, but it did not address Samus. In fact, it seemed to be an internal shipboard communication routed into the broadcast channels. Nakamura's voice was steady, a grim resolve almost completely masking the tired grief beneath. The grief of a man steeped enough in evil acts to plunge forth once more.

Nakamura said, "Attention Federation soldiers: enemy forces are salting the earth, scattering and preparing for guerrilla entrenchment on the planet. Aurora Unit analysis confirms this, and supplies additional evidence that a hostile force has control of a wide-dispersal bioweapon. Territorial protection of colony J4-M is no longer possible. We have failed in our defense mission of this planet and for that I apologize. Our only remaining priority is to eliminate all enemies of the Federation. We will deny the enemy their victory. We will deny them this planet. Main cannon, fire for effect."

Then the nose of the battleship crested the invisible sightline that shielded this valley from the energy absorption spire on the plateau. Particles of light gathered in the barrel of the main cannon, directly above the center of the Pirate landing yard where Samus had been standing.

She was no longer there. Samus was running the instant she heard Nakamura's first word, racing back towards the temple and the contingency plan she knew she would not have time to reach. Speed-inducing energy built around her body in a shimmering sheath, accelerating her forward faster than limbs or armor jets could take her. Then the cannon fired and that meant it hurt just a little less when the explosion hit her.

Everything turned into blinding white. The planet screamed as the beam impacted against the stone that flexed like water, a ripple in the terrestrial pond. Capital ship primary beam weapons were not designed to be fired at full power in atmosphere. Even Ridley had only fired his at sixty percent when he first targeted the energy spire, and the Last had modified that weapon with wave beam technology for added precision. Without such precautions, that magnitude of energy could cause nitrogen and oxygen to split like uranium.

Air itself exploded. Steel-blackening radiation scorched Samus' back as she raced at top speed for the nearest shelter. Her footsteps tore up the ground beneath her, right ahead of a rolling cloud of nuclear destruction.

Then the solar hellfire burst around her, funneled and accelerated by the walls of the slot canyon. Samus heartbeat vanished into the roar as she ran through the pummeling avalanche, blinded but for the holographic map now overlaid in her eyes. The battered chozo suit begged to eat this energy, it even tried, but it was like trying to drink a tsunami through a straw. Dots signaling life energy blinked out of existence all around her, fleeing Pirates who burnt to ash in mid-step.

The readouts in her visor screamed, shields plummeting, warnings propagating. Samus could feel the burning heat of overloaded Varia components searing her skin and muscles. Then she was through the gateway of the temple and threw herself sideways into a pocket of swirling air protected by some accident of design from this horizontal fountain of fire.

Even the superheated tornado swirling in this corner was a relief, and Samus could feel the suit begin to recover. After all, there was a feast of death in that canyon for the reaper system to harvest. The normally ephemeral feather-like lights across her shoulders now burnt halos into the rock as they flared, venting heat and radiation behind her as best they could. Then the world of fire expired and left only a thundering hot wind thick with black ash.

The firestorm had been shaped and mostly contained by the roof of the energy absorption field and the walls of the canyon system. That field was what allowed Diomedes to fire so carelessly, since most of the ship was protected from the blowback. However, that energy absorption ceiling still meant a superheated pyroclastic cloud erupted out from the former site of the Pirate splinter fleet. At least a quarter of the colony city was destroyed, everything within a mile, along with almost any building that had taken damage in the initial invasion. The nearest colony shelter was the one Ridley had already slaughtered, so at least the surviving colonists were unlikely to have been caught it the direct blast. Of the Pirates themselves, those who had tried to run into the city were surely dead, but a significant fraction of those who headed into the temple likely found enough shelter in its tunnels to survive that initial eruption. That meant Nakamura was not done.

Samus stepped back out into scorched mouth of the fallen temple gate under a sky turned from blue to black flaring with remaining flashes of fire and volcanic lightning. The air around her gusted between two hundred and six hundred degrees. This entire frigid continent was about to experience a considerable heat wave.

Ahead the black clouds shifted and the sharp metal shape of Diomedes appeared in the sky, a skyscraper sized spear aimed at the planet's heart, trailing a film of smoke that curled around its shields.

Samus focused her eyes on that ship. Then she spoke, as if the entire attack was just a tantrum. "The last trial I attended named the destruction of a scientific outpost to contain a threat as 'destruction of property'. Sentence: fifteen years imprisonment, commuted through service and subject to parole."

Nakamura returned to her ears, on a more private channel this time. "I'm afraid the Federation does not recognize your claim to T'sthioni Ikoine, Aran. Believe me or not, I actually brought you up in a meeting years ago. But no, unfortunately standard procedure for Space Pirate insurgency must take precedent. They must be exterminated from this world, and to my regret your presence is not sufficient to tip those scales."

In the distance, the Diomedes slowly tilted in the air. Its building sized profile reduced as it began to point directly at Samus in the temple doorway. The slot canyon had been torn apart enough that the firing line was now perfectly clear.

Samus breathed in and Nakamura's thoughts were clear to see. She knew why he was willing to do this. "You've convinced yourself that unlike with the Pirates, you will be able to negotiate the temple's secret out of the Chozo once she has it. Unlike the Pirates and unlike myself, she might give it to you."

There was no use in mentioning the surviving colonists who had assisted with the remote hijacked cars and drones. He had long since declared them lost. One more shot from that battleship cannon so soon after the first would sterilize the surrounding fifty miles. Nakamura would defeat the pirates, exterminate the metroids, defend Federation secrets, and tragically take one troublesome and explicitly hostile bounty hunter off the table. Victory at every cost. His own perfect certainty.

Nakamura had the nerve to sound weary and understanding. "Yes. Your system-wide speech indicated the Chozo is trying to run, and from what I have heard of their priorities I now think the Galactic Federation can tolerate that. You and the chozo clearly have a personal argument of cultural doctrine, evidenced by your sudden rush to claim heritage rights, but they have no such quarrel with me. No, Aran, right now I find you far more dangerous than a fleeing scientist rushing to grab their notes. And unfortunately you are currently standing in the exact spot required to eradicate the remaining Space Pirate forces."

"Unfortunate."

"Yes, so step aside and let me save what little that can be saved. Public warning to all friendlies: evacuate now. Primary beam: fire in ten seconds."

A meaningless courtesy, one to be written down in the reports. Ten seconds were not enough to get away and after that first blast, and Samus did not have enough shield power left to survive even a fringe pyroclastic flow. But those were enough seconds to step back inside the temple and grab one thing. She just hoped those pirate goons she had shanghaied had actually finished threading that giant cable down from the higher temple levels.

...​

Ten minutes earlier, Officer Yin heard the armored footsteps before the soldiers arrived outside her room, clanging softly over the faint tremors that signaled the Diomedes' rapid drop from orbit. Dropping towards the planet called Ember of Light, though there was no word of what they would do once they neared the surface. The soldiers' route to her cabin door carried them past the bulkhead, and that meant Yin had a few precious warning seconds before they arrived. She spent those seconds trying not to throw up from fear. The sirens of the battle stations alert thumped in time to the nauseous pounding of her heart.

The AI Adam's voice murmured in her earpiece, connected to the room's small computer station. "You heard Aran's message. Your plan is sound. You know what to do and you have the strength to do it. Few can say the same."

Yin swallowed with a dry mouth and sore throat as she kept her eyes focused on the far wall. Then the door opened. The gleaming white armor of a Federation marine stepped into the room and his opaque blue visor aimed Yin's way.

"Officer Yin, please come with-"

Yin took a deep breath. "It's about time you got here! Right, with me. I am not about to risk the lives of everyone on this ship because you are slow at following orders. Move it soldier!"

She carefully ignored the death-wielding suits as she strode over to the door with confidence she very much did not feel. She tapped the lead most marine on the armored chest as she pushed past into the hallway that flashed with the warning lights of the combat stations alert.

The marines were off balanced by this performance. Opaque helmets quickly turned towards each other and back. "We are here to take you into custody and-"

Yin snapped at the man with a firmness definitely tinged with authenticating fear. "Yes, finally! The commander knows I need protection for this operation but he certainly took his time sending you. Well, come on, your custody charge is on her way to save this damn ship!"

There was a single crack of hesitation. "Commander Nakamura-"

"Commander Nakamura tells people what they need to know. Look at your information feeds. Do they say I am charged with anything? Do they even say I was under watch? Or do they say that I am the ship's current expert on the bounty hunter whose information warfare broadcast just seized control of the entire ship's communication system. Now think for a single actual second and remember if the Commander told you to do anything restricting my movement or actions or even moving me anywhere, or did he just say to 'take me into custody.' If the latter, get moving soldier, because otherwise your custody is leaving without you."

Yin clamped her mouth shut in what she hoped looked like serious conviction. Inside, she felt ready to faint. However, the computer program Adam had coached her well. The armored marines hesitated behind their featureless helmets. They turned slightly towards each other and Yin knew this insane plan was actually working.

Everyone knew Nakamura had a love of secrets and a reputation as a plotter. This entire mission out at the edge of space, months searching for Samus Aran without being told why, and then the surprise attack and the devastating loss to the Pirates that followed had shaken any benefit of the doubt the Commander might have started with. And behind all that was the quietly simmering suspicion planted by Samus Aran's message, pushed into all their displays by Yin and Adam's communications hack.

Those words clearly still echoed in their minds. "Commanders Ridley and Nakamura, by the doctrine of home-worlds I have right to judge you, and by your crimes I find you both guilty of mass murder."

The deck beneath Yin's feet vibrated slightly, a reminder that they were still plummeting towards the planet nose-first even if these corridors could choose to ignore that direction of gravity. Plummeting towards the Ember of Light and everyone who still lived on its surface.

Adam whispered in Yin's, his signal strength already weak as she had walked away from the terminal he was downloaded into, "You have them. Now, go."

Yin knew the plan, she had come up with most of it. Still, if it were not for those whispers she in her ear would likely have stood petrified in that hallway forever, or at least for the few minutes before Commander Nakamura could spare a glance to check on her imprisonment.

But instead of waiting for that, Yin started quickly walking ahead of the off-balance armored marines, propelled by the gentle taps of a whisper in her ear. Her stated destination was the main computer core to fix Aran's communications hack. Of course her preposterous bluster would never actually get her in there, but luckily she did not actually care about the computer core. Her escorts were trying to get clarification of their orders but the battle-stations alarm drowned out their priority.

With the two marines following at her shoulder, half ready to shoot, her half ready to obey, the door to the main muster hall opened readily. Yin's silent quarantine from the rest of the crew was officially broken.

This huge chamber in the heart of the ship served many purposes. It was an auditorium, a relaxation space for a population stuck onboard a cramped ship for months, and in this current situation it was the battle station for all non-combat shipboard personnel. It was also still an auditorium, which was good because Yin was about to make a speech.

She stopped walking and breathed in to speak. She would only have a few moments here, since the second she began to talk her cover story would fall to shreds. But she froze. Her mouth was dry. She was here, having already committed career and perhaps literal suicide, but she could not bare to take that last step.

Then the rumbling in the deck-plates changed its pitch. The main engines were no longer burning. All around the muster hall, people were turning to stare at Yin, this interloper in their already tense setting. The armed escort that accompanied her must have gotten through to the bridge because they were now swiftly making the transition to from escort to hostile, but that made the bystanders very curious. Yin had to speak now. This was her only chance. But she was frozen.

Then, a whisper in her earpiece. "You know your duty, Officer Hong Yin, and you will fulfill it admirably."

Yin actually blinked in confusion and surprise. How was Adam speaking to her? She blurted, "You're out of range of the computer and there's no way you fit on my earpiece."

"This is a prerecorded message."

"But then how did you know I would..."

"I have a lot of experience with soldiers. Now, go save the day. Save them all. Do you understand, lady?"

Yin took a breath.

Her one-sided conversation had bought her a few more seconds of confusion from the marines escorting her, especially since their visors would tell them she was not actually on the line with anyone. But being crazy only worked for a moment. She just had to hope this was the right moment.

Yin shouted, "Citizens of the Galactic Federation! In the past two days hundreds of colonists were murdered by metroid bioweapons at the order of Commander Nakamura. He is now selling this planet's secrets to a hostile alien force. Samus Aran was telling the truth, and I have the call transcripts to prove it all!"

A marine's armored gauntlet slammed down on her shoulder and Yin gasped as the pain shot through her bones from its grip. A few of the crew spectators leapt to their feet, fighting free of their restraint seats either to defend her or to tackle her too. Another gauntlet clamped around her mouth, but in that same moment a new voice rang out through the muster hall, this time through the ship's speaker system.

It was Nakamura, "Primary beam: fire in ten seconds."

One hundred and fifty non-combatant eyes all turned, wide and white in shock as the ship hummed with a new vibration. They knew they were in atmosphere they knew they were near the colony site. They knew what that meant. And with Officer Yin's words ringing in the air they turned those eyes on the armored marines who by their suddenly uncertain stance knew too. The moment stretched with the tense uncertainty.

Then another man stood up from his seat, turning to face Yin and the marines. And then another stood beside him. And another stood too.

...​

Samus faced the Diomedes as it hung in the ash choked air before her. The mouth of the slot canyon had been torn open by the force of that blast and in the sky a mile away, the long battleship emerged from a roiling haze of dark clouds, scorch-blackened nose just tipping beneath the plateau level of the valley walls barely more than a thousand feet above Samus' head. The ship was huge. Each of the sixteen point defense cannons was wider than her torso, and in the barrel of the primary cannon she could have stretched her arms without touching an edge. The Diomedes was a city forged together, it was the physical might of a federation of five thousand systems.

The blackened rock beneath Samus feet on was glassy and cracked, melted and shattered by the wave of fire that stole the blue sky and now replaced it with buffeting winds of black ash. Tiny stone particles still rained down in a constant patter, tapping against the metallic skin of her suit. Lighting flashed above, formed from the friction and heat of those clouds, the vaporized remnants of the Pirate Fleet and most of the valley they had lain in. A circle of hell had come to this planet and Samus stood at the edge of its heart.

That was just the effect of the first shot. If Nakamura wanted to be sure of wiping out the pirate forces and the wild metroids, it would not be the last. Now the very stone of the landscape was charcoal, the air itself now kindling waiting to burn. A second blast, so soon after the first, would sterilize most of this hemisphere. It would set the atmosphere on fire.

Samus could have run, but she didn't.

The battleship was her opponent, and the fight was one on one.

A single point of light glimmered from the front of the battleship like a star. The primary cannon, aimed at her heart, preparing a beam twice the size of her body.

Samus met that burning eye and planted her feet. "Try it."

She stood in the temple doorway with her left gauntlet reaching behind her back, affixing the last joint of a new jury-rigged interface into her armor. From the back of her suit a thick bundle of purloined cables now jutted out before trailing against the ground deep into the temple halls. Those thick lengths of crystalline fiber and advanced metal had been stripped from their original homes and patched together, through the halls by force and persistence and a bit of press-ganged Space Pirate labor. It was her plan, all that work just to crudely link her suit to one specific room of the temple. To think, the Federation had once actually mistaken the Energy Absorption Spire for a communications device.

This time there was no prelude. Samus could see in her mind's eye Nakamura's lips moving, on that dark red-lit bridge. He would actually feel sad as he gave the order. He hated destroying something he did not understand.

Then the Diomedes fired into the slot canyon and at that blinding terminus the massive beam was swallowed whole by Samus' gun barrel, grasped and dragged down by a shining energy-absorption web that bloomed in a fraction of a second, blinking out to cover half the sky in its aurora.

The instant Samus' sight returned she felt a shudder pass over her. She had not actually been sure that plan would work. And judging by her white hot gun barrel and the sparking, melting segments of cable that stretching off into the temple, it would only work once. Then somewhere in those distant temple shadows, following that line of melting sparking cable, something changed in the silent harmonies of the temple. Like an ancient giant took a single breath towards waking. All that energy had needed to go somewhere and deep in those darkened halls something had welcomed it. What welcome, Samus did not know.

But that moment dwelled in the future. Here, in front of Samus, the floating mass of the Diomedes was silent again in the sky, staring down the slot canyon from the massive hollow chamber the beam had pushed into the black clouds. The ship's power systems did not take kindly to two full force in atmosphere main cannon blasts in such a short time. It would take a moment for the Diomedes to recover, and Samus would use that moment.

The half-melted cable end was suddenly hung alone in the air, as her suit detached. Heat-shattered rock exploded as the toe of her boot dug in, and then she was running. At these speeds air was a solid wall and she pushed through it like rice paper. Behind her, dust erupted and canyon walls shuddered. The sheath of opalescent energy surrounded her, and space contracted with each step.

Then Samus was at the broken mouth of the slot canyon and in the midst of her sprint she knelt. With jarring finality she was instantly motionless, and the streak of energy that had trailed behind her collided and bunched around her body. The shafts of white light that spilled from her shoulders flared out, spreading like wings, and then the stillness was gone. Samus Aran exploded upwards in a direct line towards the black-scorched prow of Diomedes.

"Remember," she murmured, not even bothering to transmit this time. "I gave you your chance."

Battleship hull metal was sturdy stuff; it barely dented under Samus' ringing impact. Her speed was halved by punching through its shields but the entire ship still listed in the air from the sudden force. Samus rose up on the vertical hull. She breathed out and a smile formed on her lips, even as exhaustion tugged again at her limbs. This was a new kind of fight. Not another duel with Ridley, practiced to the point of a waltz. This was a new opponent, a new scenario. In the rhythm of battle this was jazz and it was time for her solo. She visualized victory and let herself feel hunger for it.

Across the quarter-mile long hull, point defense cannons began to swivel towards her but they moved so glacially she had all of two seconds to await them. With a slow exhalation Samus' awareness flowed out, calculating the path before her. The future crystalized, streams of other Samuses advancing across the battle by different routes. Then the crystal streams winked out one by one as their futures met their shattering, until there was only one remaining. Only one future. It was the path and it was inevitable, even if she could only see a tiny length of it.

Samus surrendered herself to that path and she began to move.

No, she raced. A figure in ruby and gold darted along the ship, the suit gripping as easily as if a planet lay beneath her feet. A point defense barrel the size of her body met her line but Samus' gleaming silver weapon snapped up and from its flowing crown a white beam stabbed forth. The point defense cannon exploded and Samus raced on across the surface of the battleship.

Then the metal beneath her feet began to crackle with tiny sparks a signal of the ship's shields contracting above her, drawing close to this specific large patch of the hull. A feeble, useless effort, Samus' wave beam sliced through shields. Then she noticed those small sparks become flashing arcs and a long forgotten lecture returned to explain what happened when starship-grade shields pulled in that close to their projectors. Ah, not so useless. She jumped straight up a moment before a twenty yard circle across the Diomedes became a maw of dancing lightning.

Clever. And two of the point defense cannons were already pointed straight across her escape path. Sometimes she almost liked Nakamura, beneath her quiet anger. Samus' gleaming armor reflected the ephemeral wings as they flared in time with the jets, whipping her back towards the Diomedes, away from the cannon intersection. She chose her punishment, meeting one cannon blast to avoid being hit by both. It hurt, but a quarter second later she landed against the hull and continued her race along the ship as low shield alarms blaring in her head.

Nakamura's voice filled the communications spectrum. "Aran, no! You must let me complete the mission! That chozo has seized control of the metroids, commanding them and pulling them back as an army. With those creatures and then Pirates there is no solution that does not mean this colony is already dead! Please, you know I'm right!"

The sound of blood pounded in her ears. Flash and hit, dart and stab, an ant against Goliath but Goliath trembled. Grapple beam crackled out from her hand and swung her around, jets flaring to always carry her forward, up the hull towards engines and the heart of this ship. And within that ship something was changing. Beneath the thick armored skin, panicked and communications swirled in a chaotic dance, now arguing with each other instead of following the pattern a common purpose. But for now a distant whump whump whump reverberated through the air, signaling multiple fighter launches. More of Diomedes' claws were now unsheathed.

Nakamura said, "You can still get away! These attacks are suicide and you know it. Save them while you still can! Don't make me kill you! God damn it, Aran, your actions are siding with the Pirates! How can you bear that?"

Samus prepared to dodge incoming fighter blasts, but as her eye flicked to the sensor display the three energy signatures were not descending on her. Instead they seemed to be twirling in their own combative dance through the air, one seeming to chase the others. The Diomedes was a collective, and its crew could not match Samus in her resolve. Dissension, weakness, and it sapped Nakamura's power, trimming away at his choices and hampering his actions. The Federation was weak, and the Hunter advanced.

The path shone so bright in Samus' mind, triumph over the impossible. Her eyes flicked down to spot a glowing target deep inside the ship and her beam weapon stabbed out in the same instant, wave beam energy only phasing to full force at the exact point of the target. The Diomedes shivered with an explosion below its decks. Another pressure point destroyed and the giant wavered. The humans were weak, they could not protect their own.

Then Samus' shield energy display ticked up.

With it a note of discord briefly rang through the harmony of battle. Soldiers were dying in the bones of this ship. Samus' perfect certainty wavered. They had orders, but so did the Pirates. Her weapons killed them both the same.

No, the future recrystallized. No time, her race continued. The path to victory led on. One of the point defense cannons caught her in its sights, but this time it did not fire. The chatter under the ship's skin was scattered, no longer as complete as it once was. The Pirate forces had dissolved into panic too.

"Aran!"

Then the icon on Samus' map and the scene before her eyes became one and the same as Samus' final leap reached her destination. Her armored shin and gauntlet and rang like crystal as they slammed against the hull, locking her in place. Beneath her, through shields and metal that parted to her eyes like so much air, lay the ship's primary antimatter annihilation reactor. The heart of this massive ship, laid bare to Samus' suit, and with its failsafes destroyed during her violent advance. A fragile balloon of fire and the silver pin wrapped around Samus' right arm. Humanity had failed once again.

The reactor's energy output feathered as if the machine itself sensed her presence and knew to fear her. Samus aimed down in this eternal second, carrying on the same flowing motion that brought her through the battle.

This was her victory. This was the path. This was the kill. This was her intention, to do the impossible, to defeat the Diomedes and this was the path had brought her here, threading that single strand of possibility through the maelstrom of combat, through ten thousand other deaths and ten thousand other failures. One second into the future she was already pulling the trigger. She was chozo, the will of that civilization made manifest. She was their judgement and their vengeance.

No! For a single fraction, Samus resisted, freezing in place as she suddenly fought against her own body, her own mind, her self. She was the hunter, she was the warrior, she was the killer. She was M'troid. The final victory was always her goal; destruction, extermination, obliteration, and when she gave herself up to the path that was where it led her. This new armor just made it so easy. It held death in her hand and the suit was hungry for it. Samus was so hungry for it. In this suit she was vengeance. She was survival. She was who she had always been meant to be. She didn't have to be human.

But instead she hesitated, and all around her the metal plates began to crackle and pop with tiny sparks. Then the path to victory shattered as a storm of lighting erupted, drawn by the ship's contracting shield. Darting arcs of electricity slammed through Samus, skating across her armored skin with a hundred scribbles in fifty thousand degree ink. Suit shields screamed their warnings and despite spasming muscles she felt the moment her magnetic grip loosed from the ship-side. Suit power pulled back into her remaining shields and without that grip, gravity and down reasserted themselves.

Samus fell from the sky, plummeting from the Diomedes as she trailed lines of steaming vapor.

As she watched the ship drop away, awaiting the point defense cannons that would snipe her out of the air, Samus seemed to be falling through a dream. Her eyes objected to the ship's motion. The acceleration of gravity not quite right, it was inconsistent, slowing as she fell. Then she realized what was happening; the Diomedes was dropping too. A second later she slammed against the ground and was surprised enough that it knocked the breath out of her from only a two thousand foot fall. The ground was supposed to be further away than that; the Diomedes had been descending even before Samus fell.

The battleship was defeated, but not by her hand. Those power fluctuations in the ship's primary reactor, it was not any damage she had done. No, these scan signatures were like some engineer had just walked up and pushed the off button. Someone within the ship had shut it down. Someone had saved her. No someone had saved them from her. In that final hate-driven moment, Samus had finally turned away from violence and for once found welcome.

However, for the Diomedes loss of primary power just off a planet surface did not bode well for a ship that had been relying on a flashy display of gravetics to hover. The battleship fell slowly but inescapably. A crash thundered across the valley as the lip of the canyon exploded into stone and dust with the impact against the prow. The Diomedes' skin crumpled where it met the ground, thought the rest of the structure held firm. Even with the sudden loss of primary power the ship had managed to slow its drop and realign shields so the structure was nearly intact, even as it came to a thundering rest propped against the steep valley wall like a hunting rifle set beside the door. With its rear engines crushed by impact and their own weight, the ship was not going to fly again.

Samus lay against the cracked and broken ground, dust settling around her as the ringing impact still vibrated through her bones. She looked up at the sky, evening light hidden by roiling black clouds, and her memory flitted back to another sky. Another rocky ground when Samus lay in the cold and smoke and fought for breath. In the icy dust of her first world, humanity had not been able to protect her. Despite everything, all the decades since, the fight with the Diomedes proved some of that poisonous anger still remained. Samus had changed so much since then, but that girl drowning in pain and fear was still her. That moment remained.

Samus was tired, but she took a breath. Then she breathed again.

Into the wind-whipped silence the crippled Diomedes sent out a transmission, crackling and indistinct, thick with snow. Evidently many of those broken spars snapped from the hull had been communications. Underneath the static Nakamura was panting, shaken and battered but still determined below the burning fervor of his conviction.

"Aran, I was trying to do what you-"

Then Namamura's voice cut out, and was replaced with the cheap audio quality of an individual coms unit.

"Ms Aran, this is your arresting officer, Hong Yin of the Galactic Federation. Commander Nakamura has been relieved of duty pending investigation. As an additional note, the GF battleship Diomedes requests formal planetary landing clearance on Ember of Light. Note though that any further action against this ship or its crew will be a violation of the terms of your parole."

Samus slowly sat up from the rough ground of newly made volcanic glass. Dust and gravel slid off her golden skin, then even the last bit of dust fell loose as she shook with a single sharp laugh.

"Docking granted. Welcome home, Yin."

The glassy shattered valley still rang with the distant crashes of settling landslides and rockfalls. In the air above, the black storm of superheated air still roiled with the high cold winds. Then Yin's voice returned to the channel. She now sounded more personal, as if she was no longer standing in the middle of a crowd.

"I...I want to thank you, Ms Aran. To thank you for giving us the choice. Thank you for letting us see what lay before us, before it was too late. Thank you for giving us the choice."

Samus looked off at the smoking form of the Diomedes, lying crashed against the canyon wall as behind it the distant shape of the titanic Chozo statue rose from the side of the volcano. The eyes of the massive statue were now glowing yellow. Well, that told her where all that absorbed energy had gone. As to why, she would just have to go and find out, to see where the path had led her. There was no future but the one that had always been.

And yet Yin had thanked her. That insignificant moment hung in the twisting air that battled between currents of hot and cold, frost and fire. She thanked Samus for granting her a choice. Such a phrase was just an expression of a primitive culture. Chozo philosophy taught that all choice was an illusion, a manifestation of weakness and lack of understanding. To say you might make a choice other than the one you would make was tautological gibberish, and so Free Will was just another constellation of ancient times, imaginary lines traced in an infinite sky.

Yet that idea of choice had just brought down a battleship. It was the oxymoron of intelligence; intelligent creatures could realize that the universe was made up of deterministic clockwork, but in order to remain intelligent they must discard that knowledge and behave as if they forged the future in their hands. They must stare into the void and leap past the limit of their understanding.

The Last believed she deserved apotheosis. She believed it was inevitable, her unshakable destiny, and she clung to that believe like another mathematical law, like the Life Energy Equation she had derived so long ago. Energy is matter, matter is life, life is thought, and thought is energy. All divisions were an illusion, meshing perfectly into the clockwork universe, of perfect predictability of infinite cogs.

But what if in that clockwork universe, one cog resisted? Grey Voice's words whispered in her memory, no longer a programed specter in the suit but still just as present.

"To face a being of perfect certainty, of unbendable will, that is a terrifying thing."

Samus stood up.

Past and future are the same. All divisions are illusion. There was no need for her to bare the responsibility for the Chozo people. They were still here to bare their own, just stepped to the side in time, living in the past as Samus lived now. She was not their vengeance, she was not their justice. She was not their heir, and neither was the Last. She was only Samus Aran, and she had no responsibilities but her own.

Yin's transmission spoke in her ear, quietly, as if standing right at her shoulder. "So, what are you going to do now?"

Samus turned to face the distant statue seated on the flank of the massive volcano, glowing with yellow eyes. Samus' lips ticked up at the corner into a smile.

"Storm the gate of heaven."

...​
 
Where All Stars Go
Chapter 24​



Where All Stars Go​



...​



The sun was gone, hidden behind black clouds of ash and dust thrown up by the Diomedes' primary beam attack. Yet even without sight of the sky Samus could feel the sun setting, the absence that set the stars free. Those cold bright needles now shone down onto a massive black cloud, already being torn apart by the cold winds sweeping off the vast volcanic mountain range that stood across this dry continent like a wall.

Standing amid the melted shards of rock and shredded Space Pirate ships, Samus summoned a holographic map of the temple's interior into her visor and examined it. The sections of the complex that led up into the mountain and to the site of the great chozo statue were newly constructed compared to most of the imperial era temple. Those halls and chambers near the mountain also seemed to be full of industry rather than contemplative architecture and dusty vaults, so every sign pointed to there as the hiding place of the chozo's secret of apotheosis. However, all the routes that led to the great statue ran through passages with ill-boding names: Trials of Sufferance, Penance for the Bold, Magma Inquisition, and one simply labeled Certain Death To All Who Enter.

The chozo always loved their tests and traps, and the Last would certainly have left a few countermeasures of her own across every one of the paths. She still had a cult of loyal pirates at her side, centuries of scientific knowledge, unquestionable genius, and if Nakamura was to be believed also the command of over two thousand metroids. Samus, by comparison, had a map.

However, it was an interior map.

From the heat-glassed valley floor where Samus stood it was two thousand feet to the canyon's jagged lip and the vast basalt plateau that stretched beyond, slowly sloping up to the stratosphere-scraping volcano peak. With the Diomedes serving as a ramp, Samus made it in two jet-flaring jumps. On top of the plateau, her boots crunched down on gravel debris from the Diomedes' attacks, which now coated the normally windswept plain of dark grey rock and tiny glittering ice crystals. Before her, this landscape sloped upwards, rising higher and higher in a lifeless expanse of tumbled ashy scree and ancient basalt flows, slashed here and there by the deep lava-tube canyons that sat at the foot of the great volcano. From up on the plateau there were only three structures visible, the scorched prow of the Diomedes, the Energy Absorption Spire to the east, and the massive statue of a seated chozo far off to the north, carved out of a massive spur of the mountain itself.

The great statue's eyes now glowed, mysterious yellow slashes drifting through the shadowed clouds of ash representing some fire ignited by the siphoned surge of energy Samus had unintentionally sent its way. Somewhere behind that was the peak of the temple, somewhere there was the Last's goal. The reason for all of this grief and war. The gateway to apotheosis.

Samus began to run, the flat ground side-lit by the last red trace of setting sunlight. Miles vanished beneath her feet as the sun vanished beneath the horizon, outpacing her race up the gradually steepening mountain slope. The stone Chozo looked down in eternal stillness as the tiny figure raced up the path the statue's outstretched arm conveyed. Then dusk swallowed both.



In a dark and dusty chamber of the upper temple reaches, rock and metal screamed as a burning explosion created a door where there had been none before. Night spilled in as Samus stepped through a jagged tunnel newly torn through solid rock, the end of her silver weapon still glowing bright with excess heat. This was the youngest section of the complex, those halls constructed inside the slopes of the mountain itself after the end of the empire and the Last's imprisonment. She had blasted a hole in the mountain side far below the foot of the massive Chozo statue, where her interior map had indicated a temple room drew close to reaching the outside surface.

Samus reached out and ran the golden claws of her gauntlet across the melted and broken walls of her crude entrance, noting the layer of metal set between the natural mountain and this internal chamber, stone paved though it was. Compared to her new armor, engraved and etched with intricate lines until it looked like embroidered cloth, the fragments of melted rock seemed as smooth as glass. The metal in the wall was also strange; it seemed the chozo had chosen to reinforce this specific part of the temple. Why these new, higher chambers and not the rest?

Perhaps they wanted more protection for their greatest treasure. To Samus' eyes the walls here flowed with lines of power, and the floor under her feet murmured with the heartbeat of distant massive engines. All the energy from Diomedes' main cannon blast had been redirected here and something here was using every drop of it, as if the primary cannon blast was just barely enough to ignite a pilot light.

Samus stepped forward into the temple chamber, her eyes narrowing in suspicion. The Last had been in this area for three hours. For someone of her technical skill that likely meant every machine within a mile was now hers. And by Nakamura's final warning that armory would soon be supplemented by an army of thousands of metroids genetically encoded to obey her commands.

The Last had all that. Samus had experience. She had the strength of her will and the touch of her precognitive predecessors against her skin. Of course, she would trade all that for an EMP and a clear firing line but in the meantime she would just have to make due with prophecy.

As she stepped through the doorway into the next chamber her suspicions of this younger temple deepened. Her eyes traced the invisible radiation of thick power lines running behind the walls and she triangulated the reverberations of massive machines. These chambers did not seem built for theoretical research, the ultimate hunt for knowledge that had given the rest of this temple its purpose. Yes, they were still stone flagged and ornately carved, but the Chozo were known to occasionally make wood-paneled starships so for them this was positively utilitarian.

Utilitarian and uniform. Unlike the rest of the eclectic ancient temple, all these chambers were built at the same time with a single guiding vision. Samus catalogued every detail as she moved quickly, access hatches that led to planetary-defense-grade power converters, inactive shield projectors larger than her body, and massive struts of metal leading up through the floor to pass the ceiling with grim purpose. The Chozo had built something here. Something they wanted to last. Could this apotheosis machine really subject the area to that much stress to require all this reinforcement?

Then the next door opened with its unfurling metallic iris and a glowing orange glyph stood sharply carved on the wall in front of her, over a handspan tall.

It read only, "Answers."

In the abandoned shadows Samus felt the pressure of greater meaning. No, it was more than just that. Not just answers: truths. Truths that were worth suffering incredible trials to discover.

A murmur in Samus' ears. "They wait behind your eyes."

The male voice arising unbidden inside her helmet was not surprising any more. It seemed the last echo of her second parents was still with her, even after they had guided her to the new suit. Still waiting for new carefully placed external triggers, still using Adam's voice, still hinting at the path they saw, and still unhelpfully arcane. Honestly, the infuriation it brought was nostalgic.

Samus continued to move, her pace breaking into a jog. She passed another ornately engraved wall of a Chozo seated with folded legs and arms outstretched when the engraved metallic eyes suddenly glowed yellow. Suit scan detected a security system the instant it activated, but that was still an instant too late. An alarm had just gone out. If the Last had managed to reach those systems then she now knew where Samus was.

Then the air itself drew in a breath. It hissed, "What are you?"

It was the Last's voice, and though omnipresent it had a weak and wavery sound. Samus realized that the voice was actually coming from the air vents. It seemed that in absence of speakers in this immediate area, the Last had quickly jury-rigged the temple's climate control system into an an announcement network. And that process seemed to have taken her all of thirty seconds.

The gentle air currents thrummed and reverberated as it gave its own answer to the voiced question. "You are a monster."

That world echoed and swirled around her. The sibilant syllables came from everywhere at once.

The Last hissed from somewhere in the temple, "I see what your presence here means. You destroyed my thesis; my Ultimate Hunter. You destroyed the utgardians. You destroyed the humans. And now you come to me, once more clothed in the plundered skin of my people. You destroy and you steal; there is nothing else in your being. How can you bear it? To have been instructed in our ways and yet descend into this putrescence? You are the worm who brought rot to purest gold."

However, those vents were already speaking to empty space. If the Last wanted to occupy Samus' attention here then it was not wise to remain. Samus broke into a sprint. She darted through the tight corridors, persuading each shielded door-hatch to open with a very convincing blaster shot.

The whispers followed her with the same voice, the breath on the air. "But I will escape. I will escape you. I will escape this existance. For while you have been slaughtering your fellow sentients, I have been reading. I have read of what my people discovered in the centuries after they turned on me. I have read of physics, and astronomy, and of the purest horror. I now know why my kin fled this reality. I know why they turned in desperation to my very research which they had once declared so vile. They found what awaits us all in the darkness of the stars."

Samus felt doubt creep into her purposeful dash. The Last spoke of horror and she truly sounded afraid. But was there actually some horrifying secret, or was this just the splintered mind of a being who had undergone unbelievable isolation and mental stress? Samus did not know, for all the Last's instability she had proved herself vastly knowledgeable and intelligent.

And Samus had long held that same question the Last now voiced. Deep in the past, a girl with long blonde hair clutched her hand so hard her nails bit into her palm. Blue eyes were pressed tight, holding back the dull pain that threatened to burn in her throat. But the question would not be pushed away.

Why did everyone leave?

Samus' running footsteps rang against rock and metal through the cavernous chambers of the upper temple. No. The intent of those departed Chozo did not matter right now. Their secrets would wait. Their prophecy could wait. The darkness of the stars could wait. Samus was here, and she would create the truth of her own future with fire and with force. She would create justice.

Another room and another tall rune carved into the wall.

"Child."

Greater translations again burned unbidden at the edge of Samus' mind. Our child. Our only child. Our greatest, our most beloved. The successor. The one who replaces us. The lesser copy of us. The diminutive offspring. The hatchling.

And with that single word came Adam's stolen voice muttering through Samus helmet. "You will see what we saw. You will see the choice we made. And with perfect certainty we will weep with joy for the path you take."

She continued running. In the next chamber Samus was confronted by another door, this one a strange and heavy thing that made up the ground entire far wall in two great interlocking leaves like a hanger airlock. Symbols flashed in Samus' visor as the suit scan went to work and then the two sheafs twitched apart with a hiss of air pressure. The blasting air carried a searing heat, and by the time the metal walls slid apart Samus could see why.

This door opened half-way up the side of a vast rough-walled cavern, lit from far below with a fluctuating orange light. Two titanic stone statues of Chozo in full armor stood on opposite walls, each a hundred feet tall, and each holding before them a vertical metal column like a soldier's spear at attention. Those metal columns were more than statuary. Suit scan which said they were carrying a constant flow of energy up and through the armor-plated ceiling high above the statues like refueling lines. Samus stepped forward towards the lip above the cavern and saw that those "spears" vanished into a pool of roiling lava that gave entire void a black and burning floor.

She was in a half-drained magma chamber. It seemed the great volcano was still alive, but this machinery was sucking energy from its primal heart. A quick glance down at the walls right above the orange and black lava surface said that the level had dropped a noticeable amount very recently, volume contracting as the magma chamber cooled. There was only one likely answer, Last was waking up the temple. She was gathering energy for her apotheosis.

Samus glanced up and saw that just below the metallic roof, there was another shelf of some sort around the cavern walls, perhaps a landing like the one Samus currently stood on. Samus set her eyes on that destination, took a few steps back, and darted forward at a full run. She burst into the air with a full jets-flaring leap over the pool of lava far below. For a single second she soared, and so had a fantastic view of the massive swarm of twinkling missile launches that suddenly launched out from every direction around her.

Samus twisted in mid leap, taking in the battle map in a single blurred second. Dozens of hostiles across the cavern walls, the heat signatures of their bodies invisible over the lava and at the edge of Samus life-sensor range. But now the trap was sprung and scan said those missiles were of pirate make. It seemed the Last's faithful Pirates were still fighting, even in this blistering toxic heat which had to be slowly broiling alive anyone without a chozo varia system.

Samus' beam weapon flashed out as she spun and a thin arc of the missiles exploded in mid flight. In the same moment she flung out her other hand and the crackling blue grapple energy whipped out, latching its grasping static to the huge stone elbow of the nearest towering statue. Her flight took an abrupt upwards jag, barely dodging the path of the nearest missile. Samus flipped up through the air, summoning a crackling sheath of energy around her at the apex. That screw-attack pulse shredded the explosive envelope of the next two simultaneous missiles, and her drop dodged the next.

However, blaster shots were harder to dodge and even as Samus danced across the statue's titanic outstretched limb several smashed against her shields. Her counterattacks were also stymied, dozens of the Pirate zealots were sheltered by that highest balcony of the lava chamber, only peeking out over the lip to take their very accurate shots. Samus' eyes narrowed at that accuracy, someone was spotting for those hiding in cover.

The air sputtered with invisible transmissions in every direction, bouncing and reflecting across the cavern walls and making tracing very difficult. Then Samus finally neared the massive statue hand that clutched the energy conduit column and a dark savage shape leaped out from a cleft between carved fingers. The Pirate roared, glowing blade extending from its arm with a deadly slicing hiss. Samus jumped away from the statue, easily dodging the attack in the open air, but then to her surprise she met the same Pirate colliding with her. It had also jumped out into the void. This fumbling tackle did no damage to her armor, but the added momentum meant Samus could not jet back onto the statue.

Instead they both fell, tumbling down hundreds of feet towards the burning pool of molten rock. Samus hit the lava surface with a splash that was still a harsh impact; this lake was only slightly less dense than non-molten rock. A moment later she slowly bobbed up to nearly lie on top of it. She was tired, exhausted to her bones and the impact had jarred her breath. Her limbs were leaden and not just because they were wrapped in molten rock.

The suit had no difficulties with these temperatures, by way of tactile feedback it felt like an overly hot bath. Meanwhile the Pirate beside her writhed, beyond even screaming as it burned and died. The fact that a Space Pirate could bear to contemplate suicide at all was strange and as suicides went, it seemed a poor effort to just dunk Samus into thick soup.

Then Samus noted what seemed to be a night sky of constellations above her. Each one was a missile or blaster shot aimed her way from the dozens of remaining pirates scattered in sniper's nests around the upper half of the chamber-turned-shooting-gallery. Ah. Molten rock wrapped around Samus' limbs but gave way under any forceful push and so did make it very hard to dodge. Floating on her back, Samus' face tensed as the stars raced closer. This was going to hurt a bit.

The air rained rock shards and red hot globs as explosions roared against the lava pool surface. Heat and rock fragments mixed with laser-excited force beams and shockwaves, transforming a wide circle of the chamber into a new form of plasma a thundering mixture of air and molten rock. Then the elemental chaos cleared and their floating target was no more, sunk beneath the thick black waves.

The watching Pirates felt dread fill their cores. Bodies float on lava. And as they soon discovered, lava is very good at ablating any attempt to shoot things beneath its surface.

X-ray sensors guided Samus through her burrowing swim until the dense metallic pillar of the nearest great spear materialized in the spectral world of her augmented vision. Then she disengaged her suit's gravetic magnification and switched to a magnetic focus. So it was that she exploded out of the surface of the lava pool at thirty miles per hour and literally climbing, running straight up the energy siphon pillar as if her feet gripped the planet instead of vertical metal surface. Two more Pirates leaped their lives away to try and bring her down again, but their suicidal ballistic dives missed and they died uselessly in burning pain.

This cult of god-painters had named her Death and now she erupted up from hell to give them audience. Samus' blinding golden suit blinked past the upper balcony so fast she flipped and impacted foot first against the armored roof of the cavern. The ceiling rang like hull metal and Samus sprang down to crash among the squadron of hulking elite Pirates who stood arrayed on that highest balcony before a sealed set of massive golden doors large enough for an atmospheric shuttle to fly through without wincing

To their credit, none of them screamed. In fact, as Samus arrived among them, as the battle assumed its rhythm, they seemed to feel it too and they danced along that path with exquisite ecstasy. Their fighting grew in skill and nerve even as Samus methodically tore them apart. The fanatical pirate elite threw themselves on her again and again, battering against shields and burning energy blasts with the strength of a sickening faith.

Their battle danced across a wide strip of metal flooring before the heat-shimmering void of the magma chamber. And more were coming, crawling across the heat seared walls as they fired down on scrum with heedless fury.

Samus' golden gauntlet closed down on a Pirate's blade arm, crushing it armor and exoskeleton, but the Pirate's insectile face twisted not into pain but into delight. The soldier wrenched the damaged arm up, leaving a severed claw in Samus' grasp, and the thick green blood painted Samus' helmet in a splattering arc.

For a single second Samus was blind and as if by cue every remaining combatant fired at her moment of vulnerability. Samus reeled under the impacts, unharmed but watching her shield meter drop precipitously. These god-painters sacrificed their bodies gleefully, trading their flesh or their lived for the least advantage. Before the golden hanger door, they fought with her in the berserker rage of true belief.

The Last's murmured, whispering voice came back to Samus' ear. Not inflected with air this time, but with the memory of times long gone. "They think I will lead then to a heaven. Even if they doubt I will give such a reward to things like them, they imagine an opportunity to steal it. And for the prize of eternity, what is a thing like death? After all, it was the threat of that oblivion that drove my kin in their flight."

By now Samus was familiar with the Last's tactical monologues. Not in this fight herself, the Last was free to interject at the most precarious moments, highjacking precious segments of Samus' attention. And Samus would not simply turn off incoming transmissions or ignore her. The Last was bad at keeping secrets, knew this, and used that flaw of hers to fight Samus.

The Last continued, but now distracted as if she too was splitting her focus. "All the primitive species imagine this same illogical concept of an afterlife. An existence after the cession of existence. Pure gibberish. But my people, with my knowledge they actually created one. They created an afterlife, forged a heaven free of the death that stalks this reality. Amazing. No wonder you worms bow to us like gods, even in our absence."

Samus winced as a charged Pirate blaster shot caught her in the base of the helmet, snapping her head back painfully. The grinning Pirate in her face had offered that shot path to a comrade through his own body, and his blood-caked mouth grinned in satisfaction as he followed that up with a glowing sword swing ignored the limitations of his wounded strength. Samus deflected the strike with her gauntlet, flash of shield energy now worryingly dim, as she followed up with a return shot under her own armpit. However, even in this bloody melee she had breath for her true foe.

Samus said, "There is no afterlife. Not for you."

The Last's delight was clear in her voice, with this confirmation that her monologue had set its hook in Samus' attention. "Philosophy, is it now? A doctrine of 'sins?' Did some primitive religion plaster to your mind during the wallowing since the empire set you wild?"

The white flash of the primary beam strobed, reflected against Samus' helmet, and opponents fell around her even as she spoke.

"Not philosophy. A verdict."

This time the delight in the Last's voice was gone. All that was left was grim fury. "You cannot see. Do not pretend you can influence the future or even comprehend it."

Samus stood up. Around her, none of the closest fanatics seemed able to replicate that feat, though some still writhed and crawled towards her across the blood-boiling floor, gnashing claws or fangs as if those base weapons would do what their technology had failed at. Samus ignored her would-be killers just as she ignored the Last's gathering anger, and instead stepped closer to the great golden doors.

They opened before the brush of her suit scan, inhaling the high pressure of the boiling air with a quickly swallowed hiss. Inside, shining metal statues of chozo luminaries stood on each side of a wide empty floor, vanishing into a dimly lit distance. Emblazoned on that far wall in ever-shining gold five feet high, incorporated into the architecture itself, was a single word set by its builders, just as the Last must have seen it just a few hours ago.

"Light."

With that word once more came the whispers of greater translation, of poetry beyond meaning. Sunlight, we welcome you, desperate for your heat. The first and the last, we stretch for you, though your true might will blind us. Light, without you we will die.

Despite herself, Samus froze. These glyphs weighed her mind down with prophecy. They were speaking to a specific person, and Samus could feel all the jagged edges where she did not match that image, where she did not live up to that legacy. But did not matter, she had to move. The Pirates were already regrouping behind her.

The motion blipped into the edge of Samus' awareness, her suit visor alerting her to activity far behind her. A quick glance back showed a dozen pirates and pirate elites, those who had been stationed in other parts of the magma chamber room, scramble up onto landing. The harsh light of a muzzle flash twinkled out and Samus relaxed to smoothly spin out of its way, but it this time the attack was not aimed at her. No, that hulking armored Pirate elite had instead fired down off the edge of the balcony, into the central expanse of the vast magma-floored chamber.

Clarity crystalized in Samus' mind as she realized what was coming. That entire ambush had just to slow her down. Dozens and dozens of life signatures entered into the range of Samus' sensors, far away down and behind. A sound managed to emerge from beneath the gurgling roar of the lava pool and that sound bore the hungry notes of searing electricity and screaming metal. Metroids.

When the Last's voice returned, so had her vicious confidence. She spoke softly. "You did not have to come here. You did not have to die. But since your time intersects with mine, one must break. I will achieve the apotheosis I created. I will step through the doorway my genius forged. I will join my people as ruler of all and there is nothing your doomed reality can do to overcome that."

For the next few moments Samus did not have time to reply, and the roar of explosions made it hard to make out if the Last was still talking. It took all Samus' skill to push back the Pirate forces, slowing the group just enough for Samus to sprint deeper into the armored corridors. It would be too much to hope they and the metroids would kill each other but at least the tangle slowed the pursuers for a second. Samus was still heading up, still heading to the great statue, but she could hear the sounds of pursuit just out of sight.

In these moments where Samus was only running, the distraction of conversation now aided her more than the Last. So she said, know that the Last would hear her, "The darkness among the stars. What does that mean? What did you find?"

Sure enough, the Last did sound distracted. "The physical universe is dying around us. A clockwork toy slowly winding down. To do anything but escape is suicide."

Samus sprint actually faltered for a moment in incredulity. "You're fleeing the heat death of the universe? Then why are you rushing? Why would you rather murder me than wait through a damn conversation?"

No, there was more to it. That answer was too stupid even for unscripted reality. There was something else. Some discovery that had put a desperate fear in the Last's voice, laid thick behind the anger and loneliness. Something that had led to the exodus of the chozo race.

But the Last only said, "For an immortal all of time is my future; today or in a thousand years are just as soon. If you plummeted from high in the sky, would you wait until the ground was near before you arrested your fall? This gateway out of the material world was the final creation of my civilization, if some savage damaged it such a thing might never exist again! And you are that savage."

Samus nodded her head to the side in agreement as she ran through the metallic corridors. The Last was right about this at least, and Samus was currently cycling through her entire diverse armory onto a shielded door as she charged down this long octagonal hallway. It turned out it was a mixture of super missiles of plasma fire that unlocked that hatch into an ejection cone of half-melted shrapnel.

Still the Last murmured and growled, "Why is it a crime to escape? Who are you to deny me power? Once I step through the gate I will never harm a living creature again, because I would have no reason to bother. Why does it matter if I am punished if I will never commit the crime again?"

Then suddenly an invisible force pressed against Samus entire body like burning needles and she staggered in mid run. She felt its hooks dig into her, pulling from every direction, an instant pain that shot through every cell. She recognized it, life energy absorption. The sensation of being digested on an atomic level was very memorable.

However, Samus' new suit was of a finer make than her old skin. After only an interminable instant the suit modulated its energy fields to, if not repel, at least push back the relentless invisible attack. Arrows blinked into Samus' sight and the white beam flashed four more times as four concealed reaper field projectors vanished into seared and shattered components. Pain-wracked flesh begged to stand there and pant, but Samus once again sprang into high speed action.

That trap had been oddly easy to overcome, as if the reaper field was trying to scan her as well as destroy her. But she could not gift the Last with any hesitation. As if to remind her of that, the heavy footfalls of Pirate Elites began to ring through the halls again, growing closer with disturbing speed. Behind those, the crackle of more pirate transmissions and beyond that Samus map of the temple went black, as if a dark flood was eating the memory of places she had passed. The metroids were coming.

Samus plunged through yet another thick interleaved door that opened with the hiss of over pressured air and slid into the chamber with her eyes already tilted upwards. The floor was bathed in a dim blue light but high above, the wide cylindrical chamber stretched up into the distant shadows of a golden light like the illumination of molten metal. This shaft was over a hundred feet tall, with walls of metal that flowed like they had grown organically, but at the top, where a forest of spiked metal hung down like an upside down gothic cathedra combined with a turbine, up there was her destination. Those tiny shafts of yellow light crawling down the walls through tangled turbine came from directly behind the eyes of the great chozo statue.

Behind your eyes, just as the long gone whispers had said. That was where the Last had made her nest, her last redoubt of plundered power.

A loud hiss rang out around the dark floor and around Samus darted away from the walls of the circular room. Sight shifted in her visor to reveal coiling ropes of energy suddenly cycling behind those wall panels. Scan flashed text boxes of technological descriptions, but as soon as Samus caught the words "life energy" she did not bother reading the rest. Instead she focused on the familiar rippling mirage now spreading out from five equidistant points around this room. Samus' suit drank thirstily of the excess energy bleeding out, but she doubted this display was for her benefit. Dim blue lights marked out the suggestion of an ominous pentagram as five objects began to emerge from behind the air.

"Do you recognize it?" The Last's voice was back in Samus' ears, though she was only now a hundred feet away. "You who claimed to understand the Heart of the Chozo, you use my equation in the most simplistic way, eating and devouring like another hungry beast. But my equation is more than that, it is a description of balance. If energy can be taken, it can be given. If matter can be destroyed, it can be created."

They staggered into reality, five shadows in humanoid form. Sickly blue light rippled around them, as if reality itself was being torn apart and reformed. Samus slowly spun, gun barrel tracking each shadow in turn. As her foot slid across the floor, the edge of her boot caught on something etched into the stone and metal. It was a massive single character chozo scrypt. But she did not have time to read it, for the Last whispered:

"If life can be slain, it can be birthed."

Samus' breath caught as five creatures broke through the final dimensional film and stumbled free into the cavernous shaft chamber. These malformed things were bipedal, but to say humanoid shied accuracy. One was a hairy ape-like figure with drooping arms, long fangs jutting from a heavy jaw, its skin palid like something living underground. A dozen yards away another creature stretched huge hands with fingers like spider legs as limp feathers drooped down across its pallid flesh.

Samus had already noticed the pattern. The shifting blue light stained everything in the chamber, but even through it Samus knew those thin and shaggy feathers were colored blonde.

These creatures were her; a fractured manifestation of Samus Aran's mongrel makeup. Samus recognized five measurements of her exact height, sagging breasts that suggested genender, and fierce hungry eyes all shining in the same shade of blue. One was a monster of primal humanity, another a mockery of the chozo species. The shambling abominations staggered forward, a figure burning with glowing blue scars in the sickening shade of phazon beside another whose bubbling skin twisted and reshaped in constant currents, the echo of the X-parasite. That meant the final figure was not any surprise. It was a living flayed body who glistened with thick transparent skin over red globules and bony crackling fangs jutting forth from the arms and mouthless face. The creature walked forward, each step stronger than the last.

Human, Chozo, phazon, X, and Metroid. All the bricks that built her.

The Last said, "I too have seen the messages scrawled across these bulkheads. I saw the intent they left, the prophecy they built. But I can see more than my hypocritical kin. My mind is stronger than theirs, my understanding more complete. Everything my kin left behind are now tools in my hand. Including you, monster."

The character under Samus' feet rasped again against her shifting boot, tugging at her to be read. No, Samus resisted. This grotesque trap of the Last's was meant as much for Samus' mind as her body, and the speech meant that writing could be part of it. She did not look down, her eyes darting between the monstrous duplicates and the still open door, beyond which advanced the Pirate fanatics and the ravening pack of hunting metroids flowing up from the lower vaults of the temple. High above this dark pit of monsters, the Last chozo continued to lash the temple's power to her will.

For a single instant, a hair of fear pushed through, and for a single instant Samus' gaze flicked down.

The giant character on the floor read, "Self"

A mental trap is instantaneous, and the translation followed. That word meant more than self. It meant what you are. What you truly are. What you are, stripped of all illusion and self delusion, the truth of your darkest doubts and the absence of all comforting hopes.

And Samus did not have an answer. It was a trap made in Samus' own mind, an existential proximity mine, and realizing it was a trap did not do much to lessen its effect.

For only a single fraction of a single second, Samus hesitated, and in that moment all the monsters pounced.

Samus was slammed against the ground, cracking stone and metal as metroid energy absorption raking through her flesh and phazon radiation beat through her shields. Impacts rang as the monsters gripped her leg and thrashed her to smash against floors and walls over and over. She needed to move. But her thoughts were slow, shaken and mired by long chained fears. Her tired exhausted brain that had already fought too much over the last few days. Over the last few decades.

Samus knew the techniques to clear her mind but... Impacts crashed against her head as the monsters' strength battered her like a tornado. God damn it! She was better than this! And she would be again in a moment, she just needed a second to think. She just needed a single second to...

Blows from fists and claws rained down on her out of the darkness with impossible strength, power and matter pulled from out of reality in the pale blue glow of the life-energy materializers. Samus head smashed against the floor, ringing her ears even through the shield and armor. Then her lips parted in unconscious reflex. Every living creature, beset by danger, reaches out for help, for companions to bearing salvation.

Her words murmured in the confines of her helmet, in chozo or in human standard she didn't know. It was just a whisper. "Grey Voice, Old Bird...Adam, if any of you saw this... please. I need just one more lesson."

Then a sound landed in her ears like a bolt of lightning. Even after everything Samus had fought through, through physical pain and sorrow and anger and fear and loss and triumph, this one sound banished it all with clear and fresh surprise.

It was a laugh.

"Ha ha ha!"

The hybrid voice continued, soft and sweet music laid over the searing fire of love. "A lesson from us? All those years, did you think we were educating you? No. Child of ours, precious child. No. We were learning from you. You are the answer, not the question. A being of perfect certainty, an immutable law of justice, the adamant rod around which the path of time itself will curl. Our child, we were students at your feet, for only in you did we find a hope to escape our damnation.

The rain of blows and screeching electric hunger continued to claw at her, but it seemed to dim away. A fire burned and grew within her soul.

"So go forth, Samus Aran! Go forth and instruct onto the universe! Your last pupil awaits your hand!"



Temple's highest chamber was a great elipse a hundred yards long. Warm orange light suffused the air like sunset and molten gold, washing the bronze walls embossed with the images of thousands of chozo. The vast floor was bronze as well, two great circles of broad shallow steps, one ascending to a low dais, one descending to a shallow pit plugged with a large turbine-like mechanism.

Then the orange light of the was broken by flashing needles of white light, strobing from the black depths far beneath the turbine. Then those white flashes became trails of black smoke. In the tangled seam where the machinery met its housing there, a clawed golden gauntlet reached up into the light to grab the lip.

Samus lifted herself out of the pit with a single smooth pull, as the screeches of the surviving monsters echoed from far below. Her feet landed on a burnished floor, gold against bronze, and as her back straightened her suit's pale feathers of light flared from behind her shoulders.

Then she turned towards the far end of the elliptical room. There the point of the curved wall was slashed by two great gaps, southern semi-circles glowing with yellow light. Samus recognized the back of the eyes of the great Chozo statue, just as she recognized the armored figure standing before them, framed by a great tangled arch of thin golden rods like an empty gateway.

Backlit into shadow, the last living chozo faced Samus Aran in the skull of the final chozo temple.



...​
 
Bring Back the Light
Chapter Twenty-five

Bring Back the Light

...​

Somewhere high above the black mountains, through a quarter mile of rock bored by tunnels and caverns, with a shift of wind the stormy sky of Zebes momentarily became blue. For a single brief hour, the yellow clouds of ammonia vapor gave way to the gentle blue of nitrogen and sunlight shone down bright and warm onto acid-stained rock. That warmth began a slow ripple, an imperceptible blush through cold stone down to the dark chamber. There, on that hard floor, a warrior of the Chozo knelt in rigid silence before her suit of armor. She was naked but for the chill which clawed at her skin.

Samus did not shiver. Her blue eyes remained on the suit, her stare locked onto that green slash of the visor set in a shining red helmet. The suit's shape was familiar, with jutting shoulder pauldrons and right arm enveloped in a grey metaled gun, and yet it was still uncomfortably strange. Depictions of armored warriors dotted this temple, paintings, engravings, and great statues, yet every one of those fearsome suits was made to hold a chozo body. This armor was built for a human form.

The power suit's back was twisted into a straight posture, its head wrenched up to sit directly on top of the shoulders instead of slung forward like a chozo's. The arms were stubby, fingers on the left hand too short, and the shoulders only given the illusion of width by the flaring yellow pauldrons that jutted out like ineffective airfoils. And the suit was small, smaller than the slightest warrior depicted in all the art of Zebes. Yet for all its strangeness this armor was still one of them. Samus looked at it and she knew; she knew this was the skin of a chozo warrior.

The armor fit her body. It was her task now to reshape her mind.

The hard stone floor pressed against her shins and the tops of her feet. Cold and time smoothly turned patience into pain and her body begged to shift position. She did not. Two shadows loomed in the gloom beside her, Old Bird stood on one hand and Grey Voice on the other. Samus had seen none of the work that went into constructing this armor, but she knew that it had to have been the painstaking labor of a decade. More perhaps. Her instructors, her caretakers, her parents had no facility here designed to do such work; they must have started from scratch, rebuilding a thousand years of chozo industry from the ground up. In this waiting cold, Samus realized they might have started before they ever found her on the desolation of her birth world, gasping for air under a distant plume of smoke.

Now they both stood in silence and watched as the hatchling called Samus approached the final step to become something greater. That armor was still just a thing. She had to make it into her.

Samus slowly blinked and Grey Voice' hand twitched in recognition of that signal. He straightened up and reached to touch the control bracelet on his wrist, executing some precise and delicate operation with the local computers. It took a few moments, since in this deep chamber of the zebes complex Mother Brain was not there to listen and obey, effortlessly shepherding their systems. In this vault there were only three living creatures waiting in silence, the supplicant and the masters.

No, not the masters. They were her parents for this one final moment.

Grey Voice slowly hissed through his beak, soft and breathy. All the same, his voice cut through the heavy air. "I was a child, harmless and ignorant, and then that self ended."

On Samus' other side, Old Bird followed, his own voice clipped and curt but always so strong. "I was a child, innocent and useless. Then that self ended."

The instant Old Bird stopped, Grey Voice began again, reciting the litany of his lives, reciting the epitaphs of who they once had been.

"I was a philosopher, I uncovered traps within thought and the unintended consequences of the unwary. I was a philosopher, I did not step forth to aid those I studied. And then that self ended."

Old Bird continued, "I was a warrior of the empire. I was brave. I was cruel. And then that self ended."

"I dedicated myself to a cause. I put aside personal pleasure. I watched my people dwindle. And then that self ended."

"I sought absolution. I dedicated myself to peace. I abandoned those in need. And then that self ended."

"I was alone."

"I was alone."

"I joined comrades. I chased a singular obsession."

"I found allies. I stopped searching."

They joined in unison, their deep voices rising and rebounding on the hard stone walls. "And then that self ended."

Grey Voice said, "I found a hatchling lost and afraid, raised her and bestowed on her many gifts. I found a hatchling, and changed her horribly. And now that self has ended."

Old Bird said, "I found a hatchling burned and bloody. I gave her love. I brought her pain. And now that self has ended."

Samus slowly rose from the stony floor, forcing away the tremble in her legs, forcing away the pain in her throat, the burning in her eyes. Everything in her life had led up to here. All her loss, all her pain, her loneliness and her fear, it had all been meant to forge her. All she had lost, all she had found, all she stood to lose yet again. This was the Path, and she trod upon it without a single look behind her.

She breathed in and took a step away from her past, away from her family. But to her surprise, Old Bird's hand shot out to clamp down around her forearm, holding her back for one last moment. However, it was Grey Voice who spoke next, retreated out of the room as he did so.

"Little one, this breadth of these years is the brightest span of my duration. Brightest by far, because I share them with you. But now something new begins. This is the last instant of our existence as your caretakers."

His footsteps retreated further into the darkness of the exit tunnel and Samus' back tensed in fear and loss. The pain in her throat fought to return again. They were both supposed to be beside her for this, this last moment during which they would be her parents. How could Grey Voice leave now?

But then Grey Voice's dry coughing laugh echoed from the tunnel, answering her unvoiced thought. "I grieve too, child. But I cannot complete this ceremony with you. Only one who has killed another in hate can bestow the power of death. For who else could understand the cost?"

He left. Samus and Old Bird stood together in the shadows before the gleaming power suit. Old Bird's hand still gripped Samus' arm and through his fingers she could feel the invisible tremors; the sorrow and pride and fear. She could feel the thousand years of life and she could feel the strength that waned as wisdom waxed. And she could feel his love, cold and desperate.

His grip tensed as his beak moved, as if he was trying to force a message through the walls of reality itself, in this last moment before Samus experienced the challenge of the armor.

"You must take control. We have seen the path ahead. A universe of darkness and of cold. We have seen where the path leads. You must too, in time."

Samus nodded in the smallest angle as shivers traveled down her bare skin. It was another same message of impermanence, of the doctrine of the Chozo. The past and present were the same as the future. It was all part of the path.

Old Bird let go of her arm but in the corner of Samus' awareness she thought that in that final moment she felt sorrow and desperation of his grip intensify. As if she had not actually understood. But there would be time for that. Another life awaited, as equals instead of family.

He whispered one last time. "You must see."

She took another step away from him and the suit of armor opened up before her. The plates of red and yellow slid back to reveal a smooth inner layer of pale blue. Then that too peeled back, exposing the final heart of the suit, the narrow outline of a humanoid form, a hollow waiting to be filled. It waited for her to step inside.

She turned and lined her back up with that perfect mirror of her shape. She closed her eyes. Then she stepped back into it. She touched the suit and in that instant a scream beyond pain scoured her thoughts away. Invisible mental hooks bit into her mind and tore it apart as the world twisted. Suddenly a disgusting pustule of blood and bile hung before her, a rotting cancer skewered on slick spears of bone. Then thought returned and Samus realized that vision was her own humanoid body, seen from the suit's perspective.

It was not her.

But the psychic hooks dug in and tore once more. Now a cold mechanical abattoir loomed behind her, needles to stab into her spine, tubes to steal her blood, bonds to restrain her, motors to animate her corpse, and a lurking artificial intellect to subsume anything that might make her real. Anything in that blender would cease to exist, assimilated consumed by unknowable machinery. So the human body feared the armor.

It was not her.

The scream echoed again, through air and through radio waves, from lungs and from transmitters. Tears ran down someone's cheeks. Electricity arced and spasmed in the barrel of someone's weapon. But then someone remembered. Someone remembered training; remembered perseverance, strength, and understanding. She remembered the love that was standing right beside her. Then Samus once more stood in the dark stone room. And now she was whole.

She did not see, she could barely hear, but Old Bird was at her side and he whispered.

"Now, open your eyes."

...​

Blue eyes blinked open.

Samus stood in the the highest chamber of the Temple of the Hunter, bathed in golden light behind the giant eyes of the Chozo statue. A hundred yards away, the Last stood in her own armor and stared back, framed by the tangled golden web of the Apotheosis Gate and the jumble of technology she had forced her mad devotees to carry here. Through the great pointed eclipses of the statue's glowing eyes, filled with the haze of some powerful shield, Samus could see out to the night beyond. The rolling mountain slopes of empty stone gave way to the slashes of canyons as the ground slowly fell away.

Warm light brushed against her armor and Samus felt a tear begin to dry on the cheek beneath her eye. She answered a person long gone and yet still beside her. "I see."

The Last hissed back from behind the arch of golden wire, the Apotheosis Gate, "You are blind."

Walking among the jumble of equipment looted from across the temple, she was armored just as Samus had been prior to this newest suit. The Last's red helmet with a slash of green visor was slung forward between the almost sphere-like shoulders. A familiar round-barreled weapon, banded with smooth grooves, shifted mechanically as it transitioned between selected beam modes. None of those new black additions that now clung to the armor's exterior like metallic lampreys could disguise that essential shape.

But more familiar by far was the anger. Despite the armor that shielded and empowered her, the Last trembled with the fury of justice denied. Samus recognized that fury; she had felt it so many times before.

And the stoking force was plain to see. In the upper reaches of this massive oval room, a band of shining cooper circled the ceiling like an engraved halo. The text on it was clear, and after the Last's long journey of doubt and discover, to read it here would have stabbed like obsidian knives.

"The last child of the Chozo, we welcome you. We who write this do not know you, yet still we have met you, striding through our halls, blazing with purest light. Where will we find you? We do not know. Who will you be? We cannot see. But still we know you, and still we love you. For you will be our solace or our absolution."

Beneath that cruelly ambiguous phrasing, the Last ran a gauntlet clad hand across her pile of machines and boiled with anger. Samus easily saw that gesture's meaning, the Last no longer believed the planet's prophecy was meant for her. The boots of the Last's armor clanked softly as she stepped up onto one particular piece of newly installed technology, a circular platform like a half built cylinder. Her limbs dragged like they were filled with lead.

Samus felt her own weariness after long battle and heartache, but more than that she felt her strength. She felt the strength of this place, of this moment.

She said, "There is-"

The Last raised her weapon and fired a charged plasma beam as her opening remark.

Samus just barely dodged, suit jets flaring as she burst to the side. The Last did not stop firing, even as that machinery around her began to glow with pulsing bands of blue and yellow light as if reacting to the violence. Then a screaming hail of missiles followed her first attack, as the pulsing light flowed out to fill other pieces of machinery.

Samus' return fire flashed out, a searing line of white, but halfway across the room the beam splashed in mid air against a glowing orange honeycomb pattern that materialized into sight. Samus narrowed her eyes. Cloaked one-way energy shields, another one of the Last's technological surprises. That explained at least some of her confidence at standing in plain sight on that strange metal platform. It looked for all the world like a recharge-and-record station.

Then the Last said a single word, "Simulate."

A pulse of blue energy surged out from the crackling spikes around her platform and instantly she jumped forward at Samus in full assault, charging across the room with a fury and courage Samus had never seen before. Samus met her armored attack, shooting missile rounds out of the air as she waited for the moment the Last's berserk charge brought her over the line of the one-way shield. Then, out of the corner of her eye, Samus noticed the very distracting fact that the Last was also still standing on that glowing metal platform behind the Gate.

There were two of the Last, identical in every way, except for the fact that only one of them was trying very hard to shoot Samus to death right now. This Last was fierce, free of the fear of death that had ruled her in every prior moment. However, while the ancient chozo scientist might have once been a combat threat, that was no longer the case.

Samus breathed out smoothly. The peace of her mind danced her along the prescient path while the strength of her golden suit allowed her to execute that foresight perfectly. Two suits of armor clashed in harmony. The momentum of the impact carried Samus a little further away from the Gate, but a moment later a charged beam shot intersected the attacking Last's head and her suit shields shattered, leaving the rest to collapse to the smoking floor, missing an arm and head.

Then the dead copy of the Last began to dissolve into motes of blue light. Samus whipped her head up to look at the original, still standing on her platform behind a short path of glowing struts like slaloms that sparked with excess electricity.

The Last looked down at her own dissolving body without a hint of distress or disappointment. "You understand nothing. Simulate."

The blue light surged once more and a second manifestation of the Last burst forward. Then another copy followed right behind, launched down the same corridor of arcing electric struts like slugs down a rail gun. Instantly, Samus was fighting two chozo in full battle armor. However, it became clear something was odd about this. Well, more odd. One of these summoned copies was repeating the exact motions it had during its first assault, despite the fact that Samus' position no longer matched.

Then she realized; it was a replay. The other copy still followed Samus' movements but after only a few more embattled seconds the Last's body slammed against the floor once more.

And yet the Last's words still filled the room, bitter and angry. "You understand nothing at all. Not even simple probability. Simulate. Simulate, simulate, simulate."

Samus grimace. The Last was brute-forcing real time strategy, seeking victory through probability. The Probability Cannon hummed and surged, launching forth a new storm of identical opponents. These duplicates could not cooperate, it did not even see as if they could perceive each other's existence, but nevertheless there were now dozens of chozo battle suits and the air soon began to resemble a missile-and-plasma-beam themed circle of hell. An endless hail of firepower poured out in every direction.

Samus began to run out of places to dodge. Then she failed to kill the earliest manifestations swiftly and the instant their internal clocks ticked past their initial death these copies ceased to function as dumb obstacles and snapped back into being able to see Samus perfectly well. All while more and more duplicates charged forward to join this increasingly absurd battle.

Samus might win again and again, but the Last only had to win once. Samus' death would stick.

At the other end of the huge room, the Last finally stepped down from the central station of the Probability Cannon and began to shift once more through her tangled nest of equipment that sprawled beside the dais of the Gate like an industrial octopus. Holographic indicators and displays shimmered at her every gesture, suit systems doing their part to transform her every will into action. But her motions were full of desperation, fumbling with the need to work ever faster.

The Last's voice over coms was almost a whisper. "I hate you. And I hate my hate for you. You, a creature who treats opening doors like an elaborate puzzle, you were chosen and guided by a thousand years of prophecy, given the fruit of millennia of my civilization's labor like a feather dropped into the dust. It is despicable irony. I hate you because of a prophecy set down by my kin to aid you in your battle against me, a battle that now takes place only because the efforts to stop me are themselves the motivation for my acts. Our enmity is a fixed circle in time. So I despise my useless hate, and yet cannot escape it because you are here to kill me."

Samus spared a few breaths in the fight for her life with two dozen duplicates. "There are other paths. I could just destroy the gate."

Anger crashed back down, rasping the Last's throat in vicious fury. "Magnified injustice, and that would only delay my murder. Immortality is my right, but there is no permanence in this physical world. Far less than any of you young races think. I told you I have been reading. I now know why the others fled. I know what they were running from. They solved the Dark Matter mystery. They knew what is waiting in the void of space, what is coming for all who remain. They learned where the stars all go, and they were terrified."

In the midst of her chaotic battle, Samus sprang off a wall, jets flaring across her back in phantasmal wings as her right arm ached with the constant dull thud of recoil. Dark matter. It was a riddle as ancient as space flight itself, a question with a thousand unsatisfying answers. It was a simple observation, by their paths through space all the galaxies were heavier than the light of their stars accounted for. But the chozo had apparently found an answer. And the Last was right, it was terrifying.

The Last said, "It was simple after all. The stars were there. But they have been removed, turned to black and heatless lumps before their light could reach us. And now the star-eaters are coming here. The doom is coming for this galaxy and this golden gate it my only chance to escape."

And it didn't matter. That realization jolted through Samus' chest like a painful cough of laughter. The grand mystery of this planet, of the chozo themselves and their disappearance, and it didn't matter. Not now; not to this confrontation.

The Last had given an explanation, not an excuse. She had still demonstrated that she was not a person who could be trusted with power, and she was here seeking ultimate power. She admired cruelty, and so she must be stopped. All the reasons beyond that would come later. She must be stopped. That was perfect certainty, the straight line around which the Path would bend.

The Last's helmeted head snapped up from her hurried work once she noticed a new silence replacing the roar of weapon fire. The far half of the great room was hidden by smoke flattening against the energy shield. The back smoke glowed across the floor from a sickly blue light where two dozen chozo bodies slowly returned to nothing. And in the center of that steam and smoke, another light approached. It strode out of the fog of war, golden-white like two great wings. But once it reached the invisible shield wall, only a figure remained, in armor of gold and red and silver.

Samus stopped just before the shield barrier, smoke and light billowing at her back. Her helmet tilted ever so slightly as she studied the Last, who unconsciously shifted a step back to half hide behind the shadow of one of her larger machines.

Samus said, "I understand something now. Before you awoke from your sentence you had never committed murder."

"Do not judge me by your primitive standards, creature. You know first hand I am perfectly willing to execute sacrifices."

Samus did not shake her head as she stood before the shield, that was a human gesture. Instead she cocked her head and slightly spread the fingers of her left hand in almost sympathetic negation, the way a chozo would.

"No. Not killing. A falling stone can do that. Murder. Death fueled by hate. You do not understand that act and yet on this planet you created it, you embodied it. You sought that power hungrily and gave it carelessly. The metroids, the pirates, your own weapons against me; you never truly understood what you were unleashing. Even the Life Energy Equation, the heart of the Chozo, it is the epiphany of an innocent, arriving to one unblinded by worship of life. In you, the ability to bestow death arrived before the wisdom to regard it, and so when you discovered true hate you were trapped. I understand that now."

The Last hissed back in a bitter sneer. "Then am I judged absolved?"

"No." Samus drew back her right arm, silver weapon gleaming. "You are not."

She punched forward at the shield and burning light burst from the barrel of her weapon in the same instant. Fire and light exploded out, roiling across the force field that blazed into visibility and shuddered under the assault. Then Samus drew back her arm again.

"You are not absolved."

The temple trembled under another explosive blow.

"And there will be no more sacrifices."

If electricity could scream, the force field across the room now wailed in agony. Another blow rang down, and another. The Last's gauntlet fingers danced frantically through computer commands and ribbons of energy-absorption fields manifested to try and dampen the assault but it was too much. Samus and her suit were one, the legacy of the chozo race, their final incarnation and their second birth. They shone like the sun, blinding all that clawed against her.

Then two things happened in the same instant. The shining spear of Samus' weapon lanced forward once more, and this time the explosion broke the barrier. But in the same flicker of time, a chozo finger twitched to select a virtual key, executing a final line of code, and a rich golden light began to rise up through the ornate tangle of the Gate.

The same word escaped from both Samus and the Last. It was a whisper, a gasp. "No!"

The great force field shattered and Samus bolted forward. From every direction she could feel an immense current of energy flowing through the temple, the massive energy capacitors she had passed now all awakening into their true purpose. The golden light of the Apotheosis Gate began to ripple as it sucked in power. The space within the Gate darkened towards pure black as if light and reality itself were escaping, and the Last burst forward towards it. But the ground began to shake and rock under their feet.

Both armored figures staggered in their desperate sprints as the solid temple floor swayed like a giant waking up.

...

Kiber-2272 stumbled as the stone floor of the tunnel rocked beneath his feet while he ran. He yelped in surprise over his panting, "Did you feel that?"

Zegar-1161 did not bother looking over, he just kept running through the dark hallways of the chozo fortress. He said, "It is raining dust and a piece of the ceiling just fell back there. Yes, I felt that."

2272 clamped his mandibles shut and tried to herd his frightened thoughts back together. There were two dozen other hive-brood running with them, all just as half-cooked from the humans' battleship attack, refugees desperate enough to take 2272's own two-day survival record as leadership credentials. However, even the most rattled could put together that their flight into the chozo fortress was taking them towards the source of this new shaking. And towards all the enemies.

Sure enough, one of them said, "Ummm..."

2272 hissed, "Shut up, Voctum-whoever you are!"

No, the group needed strength, it needed control. If 2272 had learned anything about leadership from Ridley, the Chozo, and the Hunter Aran, he just needed to pick something and make everyone do it. "The plan still stands, we follow the lines that sucked up all the energy from the battleship main cannon, see where it went and then use that power to protect ourselves from everyone."

One of the other refugees added, "But the metroids also came this same-"

"And they're faster than us so we won't run into them. See, perfect reasoning!"

Privately, 2272 suspected that it wasn't but was not about to admit those doubts in his own reasoning. Honestly, for someone who had not torpored in three days he was doing pretty well.

Thankfully, right now Zegar-1161 was actually helping maintain order, leading this sprinting pack with his characteristic single minded focus. Then he opened his mouth.

"I think I recognize that humming sound."

The hum was currently loud enough to make blood seep from his ear vents bt Zegar-1161 still looked back and met 2272's eyes with a familiar feverish cheer. He had evidently found a new idea. "I've figured it out. The whole volcano is a spaceship and the Hunter is going to fly it into the sun, as part of her conspiracy with the cyborg zombies and the fake computers."

2272 was surprised to discover that he could sigh while panting at a full run. At least if he died they would all come with him.

...​

The command bridge of the Diomedes was chaos, for more reasons than just the fact that artificial gravity had not yet been reestablished. Across the floor's seventy degree tilt, the remaining crew fumbled with their computers from their crash chair embraces. The mutiny had left everything confused, more so by the fact that the emergency landing meant some of the people still at those stations might have been supporters of Nakamura who just happened to value their task above speaking up right now.

Yin was not sure why she was there on the bridge. Well, she knew why she was there but that did nothing to assuage the heart-sinking adrenaline crash she currently suffered under as she realized she had just initiated a military crime that could still carry a death sentence. She was here on this bridge because the convoluted logic string she and the Adam-program had set up meant the planet's Aurora Unit could circumvent Nakamura's nominal command by rerouting all her communications as messages to Samus Aran which arrived to Diomedes via Yin's personal coms.

Aurora Unit 926 continued to relay its grim news, "My new hardwire access to the temple systems via Aran's cable is holding steady but these tremors are increasing. The source is from the unexplored upper rear section of the temple around the great chozo statue. The frequency is indicative of the startup procedure for battleship-grade antimatter generators. Five of them, and I am unaware of what this system might be powering. As of now it only seems primed to collapse the temple complex as what I must assume is a side effect."

Yin was not sure anyone was even listening. Most of the crew were still trying to deal with the crisis on board the crashed ship, while others had just recently made contact with a group of colonist survivors in the town. The face of man named Mathew Hernandez filled many of the bridge displays, but the rest of the screens showed only that great ominous statue looming on the dark slopes of the mountain under the haze clouded night sky. The massive stone chozo sat with one outstretched hand, its eyes now shining yellow out into the shadowed world.

Then a rippling wave of dust burst out on that mountain side. Landslides shifted the rocky scree on the volcano slopes and from underneath the shape of architecture began to emerge as if the earthquake was excavating buried ruins. Above this all the great statue shed a thin film of dust as it shook, then a large piece of the outstretched arm cracked and cleaved off.

Even underneath her exhaustion and her fear, Yin still felt space to mourn the destruction of something ancient and beautiful. But the statue was not destroyed. A stretch of the stony arm had fallen off but it was like a shed stone skin and underneath the shell was another layer of some stronger substance. In the false color of the ship's low light sensors it was hard to tell, but it looked like shining gold.

Aurora murmured her analysis, funneled through Yin's own ears. "The answer is there, in the temple technology. No, I cannot see it. I can touch it but this system is too vast, too complex even for me. But something has been activated. The planet's secret has been awakened. Samus Aran did not stop it. She is lost."

Yin whispered, her voice not even reaching her own ears. "No. I trust her."

Aurora heard and said, "If Samus Aran is still alive, it will only be for seconds more. The Chozo's metroid army will arrive at the temple summit in one minute."

...​

Samus' feet slammed against the bronze plate floor as she raced towards the Apotheosis Gate. Around her, the huge oval room rumbled and shook as that arch of thin wire sticks shone with golden light. But the space within that arch was now a dead and lightless black, deeper somehow than the void of space as light escaped from the universe.

Air burned around Samus as her speed increased, oxygen bursting to flame, but the Last had less distance to travel. She would reach the gate first. Behind this tableau, the great windows of the statue eyes still glowed softly as their shields let in the view of the dark sloping landscape beyond. The canyon web, the crashed ship, the ash choked colony, and a black sky flecked with the few hardiest stars.

A second passed and Samus' suit gathered energy. Glowing ripples passed across the engraved armor plates and a terrible burning light began to fill the barrel of her gun. It was the hyper beam; her final attack. Once that power reached its peak, the distance to the gate would not matter, all that precious technology would be destroyed. On the other side of that gold-rimmed iris of the Apotheosis Gate, the Last's lesser suit shone too as she ran, and a glare of the same fierce light gathered in her weapon barrel as well. But it gathered power more slowly. She could not stop Samus' forthcoming attack. The Last would not reach the gate and she could not protect it. Another second ticked by.

The Last whispered a single, desperate word. A plea. "Time."

There was only one way forward for her, and to Samus' despair the Last saw it. Samus could feel the Path slide into its groove as the Last began to spin back instead of continuing her sprint. Blazing energy charged in the chozo's gun barrel and she turned it towards the great slash of the window behind her. She turned her weapon to the world outside, and the distant dented metal of the Diomedes.

The Last understood sacrifices.

Samus' suit did not need to be told what to do now. It knew her will, just as the Last did. The charged energy winked out of Samus' gun barrel and surged back across her armor, exploding out the booster jets. In a single blink, instead of firing, Samus expended that energy to bolt forward across the space and slam to a halt in front of the window. In that instant she stood braced before the world, as the Last's weapon swelled with blinding fire. Samus knew there was no more time to gather more energy, no more chance to regret the decisions she did not mean to make. After all, she could never have made any others.

The Last screamed as she fired her hyper beam. Samus breathed out as she fired her own.

The world turned to fire as those two beams collided. Samus' suit was more advanced, more powerful, but she had spent too much of the charged energy on her final sprint. Her beam was almost swallowed by the blinding assault, just barely beating back her annihilation for a single second.

Battered by the fury of an erupting sun, Samus said to her suit, "Unleash all restraints."

The armor gave answer. Power exploded out the mouth of her weapon, driving back the wall of blinding death with a new column of pure white light. The armor shone with endless glowing threads and behind her the winglike vents of light flared to a greater size than ever before, twice her height in each direction. But even in that moment of glory Samus could feel the cost of those restraints. She could feel the knives across her body and knew what this moment of power was taking its toll. She was burning her own life as fuel.

The Last staggered back, still firing even as she braced her feet against the steps up to the Apotheosis Gate. Her arm trembled under the godly fury of her weapon, but she too knew this was the final clash. Her suit was already almost drained of power, and the shoulder pauldrons began to crumple in shimmers of light as their matter was cannibalized for energy. But those new additions the Last had made, the black metallic lampreys fastened to the surface of the armor, now all shone at the tips of their tails. And the Last's failing suit suddenly strengthened, drawing on a new source of energy; the temple around her. The Last was not forced back.

She screamed over the roar of dueling nuclear fires. "You cannot take my right! This place is mine! This place is me! And I will burn it all to stop you!"

Samus' eyes were useless against the burning light, but she could still feel glimmers of the world beyond this crucible. She could feel the technologies the Last had tapped into. The temple groaned in protest, but its ancient systems had been suborned and they now fed energy straight to the Last, a roaring river of power vanishing into the voracious pit of her hyper beam's demand. Shimmering ribbons of energy absorption fields closed in from the walls around them, compacting their blazing crash into a single bottle of contained apocalypse, every extra shred fed straight back to the Last's attack.

But the Last drew still more, and the temple shuddered from her command. In the distance, at the rear of the great room, entire bulkheads shimmered and began to dissolve, matter converted into energy, energy flung forth from the Last's outstretched hand.

And Samus was driven back.

Her foot slid against the cracked and melting floor, another inch towards the great window behind her. Another second towards failure. And at the other end of the great room, where the walls shimmered with pockmarks, a new scream joined the roar of the fire and the wailing beams. The great turbine cap of the pit-shaft fell away, tumbling down the direction Samus had entered, and from those depths boiled a swarm of demons.

They were of every shape, this legion of hell: the twisted life-energy clones, bloody berserkers of the Pirate elites, and beneath them all a rising swarm of claws and crackling fangs; the metroids in all their thousands. Each of those factions tore at each other, ripping and slashing at anything that got in their way or held them back, but they were all drawn ahead, pulled towards their target amid the neutron star beam clash that shook the world. Samus was their only goal. The roiling current of monsters endlessly clawing each other back and the fight slowed their charge, but the screaming hoard still moved forward. They would arrive in moments and it would not matter who killed her.

Samus limbs begged to buckle. Her suit's unleashed power, its hunger gnawed at her brain and Samus felt her thoughts waver. The certainty of the path flowed backwards into memory.

Energy is matter, matter is life, life is thought, and thought is energy. Past and future are the same present. All divisions are illusion.

Samus had already committed her body to this fight. She burned her life for fuel, gave up the matter of her body and her armor freely in every moment, and still it was not enough. But thought was energy too.

This was not just a clash of technology, a test of weapons. This was mind against mind, will against will. It had always been, since the first moment when Samus heard the name Diomedes and felt a new player swirling the fate of the galaxy. Now they crouched here, each pushed back by the fury of this new star forged by their clashing beams. The Last had made monsters, she had made armies, she had made miracles of time and space and power. Samus had made only herself.

She understood. And the balance shifted.

The Last's panic was palpable. Just seconds until her army arrived. Just seconds until victory was assured. But was was time to an immortal? What was time to justice? What were seconds before the weight of perfect certainty?

The Last's fear thrashed through the temple systems, searching for more power, but where before she had forced subservience, now she found resistance. She had scraped the surface dry but those massive banks of stored energy siphoned directly from the planet's core were somehow blocked off. They only fed the start-up of the massive reactors and the power of those reactors were barred to her. The reactors were not even fueling the apotheosis gate. No, five massive antimatter reactors grouped tightly in these strange upper halls of the temple and none of that power even touched anything about this climax burning inside the final room, splitting and stabbing through reinforced plating like a memory of fog. The temple saved its greatest power for something else, as if there would be anyone left to continue.

The Last and Samus both staggered back against the force of the beam clash, both bracing their right arms as they held back the fires of destruction. The wave of monsters clawed still closer, and one by one the other factions within it fell to the hunger of the metroids, the ultimate hunters.

The Last stumbled up the last step towards the shining golden halo of the Gate. Then in the blazing shifting chaos, her heel claw touched against the rippling darkness within the gate and in that instant a new power rolled through her. She screamed as she found the energy she had sought. And she continued screaming as the shadow inched towards her.

The Last had tapped into the energy of the Gate itself. She could be consuming the departed chozo themselves for all Samus knew, but the Last had no choice or she did not care.

The metal of Samus' armor, engraved until it looked woven, it was her body, it was her skin. But now under the onslaught of these dueling hyper beams, it slowly peeled back as the armor sacrificed itself to maintain the attack, bit by bit. Under the roar of pain and thunder Samus felt the touch of fire against pallid living flesh as the suit slowly retreated, sacrificing matter for another moment of energy. Sacrificing flesh for another second of time.

And it wasn't enough. The green crystal of Samus' visor split with a crack inaudible under the roar of the clashing beams, and burning fire leaked through, searing one eye to blindness. The suit wasn't enough. Her life wasn't enough. All her strength, all her will, all the preparation of the chozo and the prophecy and the path; it still wasn't enough.

A tired smile touched her lips. Oh well.

Then all the fires winked out. In the same instant both hyper beams vanished, as simultaneously as they had been fired.

In this abrupt anticlimax Samus collapsed forward, falling to her knee as the overwhelming force she had braced against was suddenly gone. The two weapons had just given out. Apparently the hyper beam reaction had some inherent time limit; even if the power source was an entire dimension of altered existence. The Last's beam had hit the same barrier. Who knew? No one had ever fired them at each other before.

And no one would again. Flakes of golden dust fell on the blackened floor around where Samus kneeled. That dust was her armor, landing here and there on jagged melted lines drawn on the metal plate by stray energy bursts. The suit of her people, the final gift of the chozo race, the last armor had spent itself. Samus' sight slowly returned in blotchy strobing colors and through those afterimages she dimly made out thin golden bands that now stretched along her naked limbs, both the organic right and the crystalline-metallic left arm. That was all of her suit that remained, all it could preserve with what merger dregs of power left. Sight returned unevenly and she realized her right eye was blind as well, but in the face of everything else that was insignificant.

Then she raised her head and leaned back. The Last stood above her, one foot onto the top step of the dais of the Apotheosis Gate, and her armor was still whole. Tapped into all those foreign energies, she had not not been forced to burn her own body in the fight.

The golden halo of the Gate shone out around the Last, and the blackness within seemed to bulge out, beckoning the Last to come and seize her prize. Behind the gate, and in every other direction, the temple walls were now invisible, hidden instead by the seething mass of a seemingly infinite swarm of metroids. The creatures raced around them like a tornado, tumbling over each other as their fangs stretched hungrily over their screaming. But none of them breached the circle of empty space that surrounded Samus and the Last. They were waiting for an order.

The Last had nothing more standing in her way. A single step separated her from her goal, and an army of metroids guarded her back. But instead of walking through the gate, energy and burning light began to gather in the barrel of her weapon once again. A final attack.

She looked down at Samus in her ruined skeleton of a suit kneeling before the glowing window of the statue eye. "There was never any other ending than this."

Samus raised her head and said, "No, there wasn't."

The force of inevitability lay heavy in the air. The Last was not content with victory, she desired vengeance. She desired murder. The path of the next hyper beam would be the same as the first, and in the distance behind Samus, lay the crashed halls of the battleship Diomedes and beyond that the broken remains of the colony city and its desperate human survivors. And at this single point in the middle was a woman, standing between the innocent and the guilty.

Samus stood up. The suit was in tatters, weaponless and drained of all its energy. The only reason Samus was not standing in a pool of blood was that her newest wounds had been seared closed. But still she stood. Charged energy shone like a star at the end of the Last's weapon barrel. Nothing could stop it, but Samus still raised her hands to meet it. She braced her feet against the jagged floor, preparing to do the impossible, catch oblivion in her hands.

The Last murmured quietly, "You want to die like a warrior. Like the greatest of our people, fighting beyond the end."

Then the hate returned to her voice. "No. Not even that."

Her right arm raised, aiming the glowing weapon, and on her left, the metallic gauntlet shone with a softer light as it retreated from her hand, exposing fine feathers and long fingers capped in black nails. The hand gestured at the encircling swarm of metroids, wafting the smell of their creator and carrying commands coded into the design of their genetics.

"Feast."

The swirling tornado of metroids froze, halting on the ground and in the air, on spear-like legs and levitation alike. For an instant Samus felt a trill of hope, quiet theories of her own power, and the nature of her blood. Then the nearest metroid charged forward and plunged its long fangs deep into Samus' side.

The Last tilted her head at the violence, relishing in Samus' agony as the rest of the swarm metroids descended and pounced. But to Samus' surprise, that agony did not come. Underneath the pain of the puncture wounds from that first bite, instead of the tearing agony of molecules being ripped apart by a reaper field, Samus felt an impossible surge of warmth. Her mind swayed and she was seized with a sudden total awareness of metroid that bit into her side. She could feel its intent, it had not come at the Last's call. She could feel every inch of its strange bulbous body, and she could feel where its body touched the next metroid that pressed against it, and the next, on and on into the swarm. She could feel each one of them, and like a conduit, power flowing through, the raw power of life.

A power that was willingly offered to their queen.

The light in the Last's gun barrel surged to its final crescendo and then she released the trigger. In the same instant, Samus grit her teeth. She pulled deep on the hunger inside her and felt energy blaze through her veins, charging out from every cell like her blood was replaced with fire. Golden light exploded on her skin as the suit took in that energy and converted it into matter, armor leaping back to existence. White light erupted from Samus' hand as the molten silver spikes of the weapon barrel reformed and her hyper beam slammed forth.

The two beams clashed with an impact of light, but this time there was no struggle. Samus' armor was fully reformed with limitless energy, the raw force of life raged through it from the linked metroid swarm. Shining wings blazed out behind her, stark white against the writhing backdrop of packed metroids.

The Last struck out with with all the stolen energy of this world and that of the world beyond the gate, but energy was an illusion. The armor protected her, the hardest configuration of matter known in this universe, but matter was an illusion. She was driven by a mind of brilliance and determination and hate, but those thoughts were an illusion.

Time itself was an illusion. Far away on another world, another Samus stood in a dark cave as an egg hatched and a tiny infant metroid drifted its way unsteadily up into the air. In another time, in another place, another Samus collapsed before the furious might of the mutated Mother Brain, armor shredded under the biocomputer's blazing weapons, but with the infant metroid beside her. Another woman lay on an operating table, the last remains of that slain infant finding their way to heal a shattered body once again. And one last woman stood here, amid a swarm of metroids that recognized their queen and so gifted her with their future. The throne of the ultimate hunter, who had consumed the first of their kind. The power of the M'troid.

Amid the fire and fury Samus shifted her stance and punched forward with bulging muscles as she roared, arm inching forward as she pushed the blinding blazing beam with all her might, with all the might of every moment of her past. A thousand blonde women looked up from the past and turned blue eyes to meet her struggle. Every moment of her life gave her strength, every wound gave her experience, every step carried her here.

Nothing could force her back. She was braced against existence itself.

Then that voice of Adam, of Grey Voice, of Old Bird, of all of them together returned at once and filled her ears in an exquisite roar. A final message in the final moment:

"Samus Aran! We who have dedicated ourselves to the supremacy of thought have forgotten the strength of the body. We have forgotten the burning fire of life, that flame which ignited against cold oblivion. Now, our child, our successor, our superior; remind us why we first rose from the darkness! Remind the universe by blood and by pain! By the strength of your hand, bring back the light!"

And the clash was broken. Samus' hyper beam punched forward, splitting its opposition apart like paper, and then the great beam slowly wound down and vanished. The dissipating trail terminated in the rippling darkness of the apotheosis gate, all that energy vanished to wherever all energy went. On the other side of that doorway, maybe someone received it.

In front of the glowing gate, a body fell, armor clattering against the metal steps. And then the body moved. An orange gauntlet hand reached out, long fingers scratching feebly against the floor. The Last's arm that had held her weapon was gone above the shoulder, her helmet cracked and shredded. But she was strong, and even now she clung to life, desperate and fumbling through yet another plan. Her half-burned head twitched as her mind raced for some escape, even if she could not move, even if she could not speak.

Samus stepped forward. She raised her arm, but it was not the one that bore her weapon. Instead she raised her left hand and above the palm a light shone in the air as a small metallic crystal covered in burning glyphs emerged from behind the air. The emergency release key, that the Last herself had procured. Underneath that floating key, the golden metal of Samus' gauntlet began to involuntarily retreat, leaving only the wire and crystal mesh of her artificial hand. As she continued walking, the rest of the suit followed, armor plates quietly folding away into light as they unfolded into a space behind the air.

Then Samus Aran knelt at the foot of the steps to the Gate and in the presence of the key the Last's armor also began to separate and unfold. The wounded chozo tried to squirm away, panting in weakness and pain, but without the sheltering embrace of the armor she could barely force her lungs to breath. One wide and bloodshot yellow eye looked up with fear at one blue eye staring down.

Samus reached down and gently lay her right hand against the Last's chest. Samus fingers felt soft feathers and skin too weary to flinch. And then Samus spoke, her voice soft.

"Energy is matter, matter is life, life is thought, and thought is energy. Past and future are the same present. That is the heart of the chozo, and that is your creation. In that moment, long ago, that creator still exists, and she is glorious. In that moment, she is immortal. I will not let the universe forget her."

Then the yellow eye lost its fear. The spasmed breathing began to grow weaker under Samus' hand.

Samus said, "Tell me her name."

But no sound came. Instead, the breathing stopped and in that moment Samus felt a sensation of warmth begin to travel up her arm. She breathed out slowly and let the sensation of hunger flow through her body.

So it was that the Last Chozo died, flowing on a path of her own genius, life transformed into energy.

Then the last chozo stood back up, the burned scar of her right eye slowly healing as the energy of life flowed within her. Above her, the Gate waited to give her the final answers.

…​
 
Last edited:
Chapter 26: Wings
Chapter Twenty-Six

Wings

...​

Samus stepped up from the Last's fallen body and slowly climbed the wide bronze steps up to the dias of the Apotheosis Gate. Her suit reformed around her with a shimmer, armored boots finding balance among the torn and melted scars across the ground. She stood alone before the great arch glowing with warm golden light; light that vanished into the slowly boiling darkness held within.

The massive room was still crowded with a seething swarm of metroids, though many had collapsed to the ground, drained by the loss of life energy that had fueled Samus' last hyper beam. However, the area just around Samus formed a circle of empty space, the mass of fanged creatures flowing and parting as she walked. Whatever strange truce held the metroid's unknown minds still held for the moment, though the particularly weakened members of the swarm were beginning to attract clumps of observers who seemed more hungry than helpful.

Samus looked out over them, this sea of things she had called monsters, but now her thoughts were no longer steeped in fear or distrust. She understood them. She understood their hunger, she understood their hate, she understood the perfect death that was their creation and she understood the unquenchable life they represented. They were fire made flesh. They burned away everything they touched, but when the long cold dark came they were beautiful.

Then Samus Aran, the ultimate hunter, the M'etroid, reached out her golden hand to brush against the light at the edge of the Apotheosis Gate.

Reality rang like a chime. A shiver in space washed across the battlescarred chamber and beyond, out the great statue eyes that gazed off at the dark expanse below, over canyons glowing with distant feeble lights from the colony and the Diomedes. Then Samus looked to her side and an unfamiliar chozo was standing beside her on the dais, appearing without a sound.

The illusory chozo's robes were a complex pattern of dark red and purple, so interwoven that to a human eye they might look brown. It was a perfect compromise between the baroque golden embroidery of the Last's robes and the weary austerity adopted by Old Bird and Grey Voice. The mysterious figure's feathers were black, his eyes were sharp, and he loomed above Samus with a height great for even a chozo.

He was not real, merely some recording of , but Samus listened anyway.

The voice was as loud as any dream. "Behold and stand amazed, last child of the Chozo. I am N'traikotlatin the Immovable Bastion, final master of our disbanding empire. In this moment, I am overseer of this temple. I speak these words in a distant time, though I now cast my eyes up to the mountain slope where you stand, where we will build our final invention. My calculations see you, but you are shrouded in shadow. Do my people stand beside you?"

There was sorrow in this recording's voice, but also a deep anger. "That you hear my words means we chose to flee. The Heart equation promises us perfect immortally, but it is immortality by abandoning everything; the illusion of matter, of time, of life itself. At its discovery we judged this evil; the cost too steep. But then we learned what waited for us here."

"In our galactic wanderings, on an ancient world we found ancient ruins, a dead planet in sunless space. Deciphering what remained happily filled centuries for legions of our sages. Agelessness had taught us patience, and the promise of eternity gave us peace. Then we read what the ancients had discovered. We knew that they had looked up at our same sky, until they watched half its light wink out."

Samus felt his dread press against her heart. This was what the Last had spoken of. The fear that had fueled her final desperation. What waits in the darkness of the stars.

The illusion of the long gone N'traikotlatin loomed above her as he said, "There is a force in this universe, a force of darkness and cold. It surges forth and galaxies lose their stars by the billions. The strange shape of this universe is explained by slaughter. That ancient dead world floating in space had died as its own sun vanished. They were mighty, mightier even than we at the height of our foolish empire. They failed."

"The doom is coming, and awaits every creature that lasts to meet it. We build weapons, we make plans, but with each passing moment our fear grows. We delve the future, but in every vision, in every calculation, we can not stop it. In many we make it worse. So we even as we break ground on our final chariot we will also take its power to build a gate, a doorway away from failure and from death."

The voice in Samus' suit did not join in to offer its opinion, but she did not need it to. She could feel Old Bird and Grey Voice as if they stood beside her. She could feel their own shame, but greater than that, the weariness that tempted them. The universe was long, and immortality heavy. Endless battle was a yoke no neck should bare.

The vision of N'traikotlatin raised one hand, "You know our choice, but as you stand on the mountain you have your own. You can follow us, and join the new path through the gate we will build. In our new existence you are loved, that is certainty. Perhaps in that perfect existance beyond fear we find some way to combat the Star Eaters but that path is beyond the sight of time. Step through that door and you will join us in peace and unknown eternity. You will be safe. You will be able to rest."

Then he raised the other hand.

"Or you can stay and try to fight the doom in flesh, to follow it to the sleeping heart of darkness. That future we can see, and with perfect certainty we say if you stay you will die. Every trail of that path ends with death. And only in one out of ten thousand does your death make a difference. We stared at better odds and by your eyes you know we chose to save ourselves. This is our shame. This is our cruelty. This is our failure and our love. You, our unknown, impossible child, we give to you all we can. A choice. A single fork in the path, and knowledge to see where those trails lead. Now, this moment is yours."

The thousand year old memory vanished and Samus was left alone at the threshold of the Apotheosis Gate, their gift to her. One step away waited her family, her chosen people. Through that gate waited eternity in heaven, hers by right. Here in this existence waited only more toil, ended only by failure and death. More endless tests, more endless battle, to be torn down again and again until there was nothing left. She had proved herself enough, and her reward waited to be taken.

Samus' armor shook as she laughed. Those lofty seers; they really had never understood her. They actually thought there was a choice.

She turned her back on the gate with a smile. Behind her, the golden glow of faded away and yet the room grew brighter as the black portal vanished. Samus stood on that dais before the great windows that pierced the outer wall and the orange shields that covered them swelled in strength. The bronze floor under her feet trembled and rocked, thrumbing with energy as new power surged through every wall of the temple, through every chamber, beating like the blood of a living giant.

Everything became clear to her at once, the final clues dropping together in her mind. Samus stepped backwards to stand beneath the golden arch, now empty once more, and the corner of her lips were still up in a smile.

The final chariot, he had called it. Those pompous dusty birds. No one could deny they had style. Ten thousand ways to accomplish something and they would choose the most time consuming and difficult just because it would be dramatic.

From her position before the gate, an arc of floating orange holograms flickered into existence before Samus, displays and indicators. In response to the same invisible signal, the swarm of metroids flowed back, vacating the front of that massive room. Samus flicked her eyes across the displays but returned to stare out the viewports of the statue's eyes once more. Yes, this would do. After all, she was in need of a new ship.

She raised her arm and in a tearing rumble the temple rose with it.

...​

Alarms screamed across the nearly vertical Diomedes bridge as a new earthquake rocked the crashed ship's unsteady perch. Yin clutched tight to her emergency seat, until in the corner of her eye she caught sight of one of the external view monitors. Then she fell limp from shock as she realized what she was looking at.

The slope of the great volcano around the Chozo statue exploded outwards, the magnitude of destruction creating the illusion of slowness. In the heart of it all was the great stone monument, a sculpture larger than Diomedes, ripping itself from the mountain out of which it was carved. Only the statue was no longer made of stone. Where before Yin had glimpsed one patch of the statue crack to reveal a substrate of gold, now the entire surface fell away, head to toe, stone skin calving and crumbling in great sheets. That statue had only been sheathed in stone; beneath it was made of pure and shining gold.

Across a mile around the statue, more golden metal ripped free with it, breaking up from the solid rock. They were vast expanses of curving struts and rounded hull, like some massive creature breaching from a grey stone sea. It was as if half the temple was tearing free of the ground that bore it. The flank of the volcano and half the high plateau all shattered as a structure erupted from beneath the surface.

It was a ship. A golden ship that dwarfed Diomedes to an insignificant remora. The titanic sculpture of the seated chozo rose from its midst like a naval ship's conning tower, one golden hand still outstretched. Beneath that figure was the ornate expanse of a starcraft woven from loose golden strands the width of skyscrapers, birthed from the solid earth as if it had grown within.

Unphased in the way only an AI could manage, the Aurora volunteered her voice amid the chaos of the awestruck Diomedes bridge.

"I have now determined why the upper half of the chozo temple complex was outfitted with five battleship grade reactors. However, I still must say, constructing a starship in situ through solid rock is an incredibly inconvenient manufacturing method."

...​

Nakamura's eyes were locked on the display that filled the wall of his room. Watching that display meant his eyes did not linger on the bare spots of his confiscated relics, or the restraints fastened around his wrists. But in this moment, phrases like "confined to quarters pending investigation" were meaningless to him, as were the ironies having brought a full tribunal court with him on this ship. Right now he was sealed in this dark chamber as the floor trembled from distant rumbling, but he stared with hungry wist at the rising image on the screen. A ship the size of a city, tearing free of the earth.

Then he spoke, murmuring as if there was anyone to hear him. "For centuries, human researchers have looked at the work of the chozo and imagined a race of birds that long ago lost their wings. That nature had somehow forced a choice between endless freedom of flight and holding a humanoid shape. But that's just another human delusion. The Chozo never had wings."

Then with slow care born of long practice and recitation, he forced his mouth to twist into words meant to come from a beak.

"But from the first day we stood under the sky and dreamed we could fly. We dreamed of the rise. By the strength of our hand, we make our own wings."

...​

Samus stood on the expansive, battle-scarred bridge of the Starship Metroid as it rose through the planet's atmosphere. The golden web of the gate structure arced behind her, holographic displays floated in the air at her waist, and before her the wide glowing portholes of the great statue's eyes slowly turned towards the stars.

The planet sank away, the Ember of Light slumbering in long awaited night. Samus had considered waiting for a bit, picking up some followers if they wished. But no, they did not need to fight, and Samus was bad at goodbyes. Also, she was technically breaking her parole. One tiny gesture of one finger through a holographic button opened a high bandwidth upload line to the Diomedes in case Adam wanted to jump back onboard, but the rest of them had done their part. They deserved rest.

Samus was onto her next mission.

Clouds and atmosphere parted around the massive golden ship, high whisps fading to nothing. Then, finally, the sun rose from behind a slowly shrinking planet that could no longer block it with shadow. If you go high enough, you will make your own sunrise. The sun was always there, just hidden by the illusion of darkness.

Samus held out her hand and at her command the great ship gently rotated against the star-dusted expanse. She sought out her destination, the darkest part of the sky. The place where no stars shone. The swarm of metroids crowding the rear of the massive bridge chamber writhed and shifted as they sensed her intent. The final hunt was calling.

Her heading was set. She just had to go there.

She clenched her hand.

A moment later Samus frowned as she noticed the ship was not actually going anywhere very fast. The slow dramatic acceleration was very good for the grand exit, but was not actually doing much to eat up interstellar distances unless she decided to test her own unaging. Samus waved her hand around the holographic displays, flailing through settings and control options trying to find something that looked like a "fast" option or a parking brake to disengage.

Then her golden gauntlet brushed through one particular floating symbol and the ship trembled.

From across the flanks of the golden mile beneath the statue, jets of energy flared out. They were not engines, at least not in the sense any of the humans watching from the planet's surface could understand. They were strands of energy that seemed ephemeral and yet solid, a pure white core rainbow colors shimmered like an aurora. That energy expanded, grew, and melded, until each of the eminations was as large as the sprawling ship itself, larger, great wings as large as the entire planet they left behind.

Then the shining wings flexed and the ship blasted forth, out of the solar system, leaving behind the empire of the chozo, the federation of humanity, and the dominion of the Space Pirates. Like an angelic comet, that blinding light raced into the heart of all darkness.

...​

Samus sat in the cramped pilot seat of her red gunship, as the cloudy skies of Zebes sprawled beneath her. She was returning home. Home to a planet long abandoned; abandoned and taken by creatures that made her heart seethe with rage. The Space Pirates; they had burrowed down into the halls and chambers Samus had grown up in, setting down sickening roots as they managed to fend off even a Federation assault force.

That was why the Federation had given Samus this contract. Her service record and the string of completed marks tagged to her hunter's license provided legitimacy, but the deciding factor was that she knew this planet, knew it better than any invader ever could. She was the best choice for this infiltration mission, the best choice to sabotage planetary defenses and destroy the target, some bioweapon the Pirates had stolen off a Federation ship. She would just not mention in the briefing that looking down at those skies made her feel like a child once again. A child who once she set foot on those stones would have to kill the second person she had ever called "mother".

It had been eleven years since Samus last saw Zebes and she was now an adult by any consideration. She had killed, she'd had sex, she drank, she'd served in war. She had received an academic degree and two suspended sentences. During one three-day weekend she had been married, divorced, adopted, and disowned. And in all that time across the galaxy she never found any evidence that her chozo parents had ever even existed, no whisper of contact or rumor of their passage. In the wider universe, that entire species had been considered long gone before Samus was born. No one could tell her why.

As the red gunship dropped into the atmosphere, all power dialed down to minimum to escape detection, Samus consulted the prophecy meditation diagram she had composed during the trip into this system. Staring at it as the cabin shook and rattled from the buffeting air, she could just feel the faintest touch of what her parents had called the Path. It reassured her. She was ready, and she could feel the universe tense with anticipation. Everything that came before was training. Now it was time to begin.

This was her first real mission: Mission Zero.

Samus smiled. It might even be fun.



The End

...



But also,

Kiber-2272, Zegar-1161 shared a confused look as the metal-reinforced corridors around them finally stopped vibrating.

1161 hissed, "Ok, what was all that rumbling? It felt like we were moving."

2272 waved a claw with the confidence he really hoped he could convince his body to feel. "Eh, it's probably nothing."



The Actual End

...

Author's Note: Thank you for reading my story. I welcome and encourage all feedback.

Please feel free to tell me things you liked and things you didn't. What was your favorite fight? Your favorite setting? Your favorite flashback? If you have questions I will answer them, if you have complaints I will try to rectify them, and if you have unstructured exclamations I suppose I will just try to match your energy. I will at some point go back and clean up already posted chapters and so welcome all feedback about any part of my writing.

If you enjoyed this story, please recommend it to other readers. Spread the word!

-Cuofeng​
 
Back
Top