So yeah, I’m not too happy with this chapter and it fought me the entire time it was being written, but I think that’s because it’s an episode-adaptation.
Interlude I - Chapter 18
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Stan was pretty sure he woke up two times before actually deciding to get up. And pilfered blankets or not, the floor was hard. Koji was gone, and so were Allura and Coran, but he saw a tuft of red-black hair sticking out from under one blanket and heard Jordan snoring away near one of the steps.
It looked so completely, utterly normal and part of him found that hilarious for some reason.
Yellow found that slightly concerning.
It probably was concerning, honestly.
Another thing they agreed on was letting the kids sleep. At least until Shiro was able to be awake too. Speaking of whom, the others were probably either getting breakfast or maybe down at the infirmary already.
He honestly didn’t want to go down to the infirmary, now that he was thinking about it, and didn’t realize that his attention had wandered to Eva again until Yellow had pointed out that she was fine.
…maybe staying on the bridge wasn’t the best idea either.
She was fine. She’d have those scars for the rest of her life, but she’d be perfectly fine.
Barring all the trauma she already had, anyways. (That mess was even worse than he first thought.)
The Yellow Lion did the mental equivalent of a heavy sigh, if a good-natured one. It was okay to be worried about how the others were doing, but right now it was completely unnecessary.
Worry later. First, taking care of himself. Which meant a shower first, because he never got around to it last night, and he really didn’t need Koji getting on him about that.
Though to be fair, yesterday was…not something he wanted to think about. Or think in general, especially after Things Went Wrong.
He was pretty sure he could be considered a mess too, at this point. Not that he hadn’t been one already, along with Koji. Jordan he couldn’t be too sure about, and Shiro…
If that weird hallucination or whatever on Bherna was anything to go on, Shiro might actually remember more of the last year than he was letting them know about.
And Stan was pretty sure that was something to be concerned about, on top of everything else going on.
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
Date: not known, probably should have checked a newspaper before we left Elpis
Location: somewhere in the Saphanei system
I’ve decided to start keeping a record of things that happen to us while we’re out here, in case we ever need to reference something that happened before, given that none of us have any idea how long we might be out here.
Yesterday’s rescue mission was wasn’t completely a bomb, given that we were able to rescue almost everyone held captive there and get them started on the way home, but there were some that were moved elsewhere before we could get there, Rick included.
That’s not even starting to cover us almost losing Eva. She seems to be doing okay now. Right now, we’re all in the infirmary waiting for Shiro to wake up.
Koji paused in typing, glancing at the sole active pod, before finishing with I’m not sure how we’re going to explain to him what happened on Epona-6.
“Is he doing okay in there?” Jordan asked. “It…it almost looks like he’s having a bad dream or something.” It did, with the expression he was making every so often.
“Sometimes the healing process can cause involuntary brainwave response,” Allura replied, frowning slightly. “Given the nature of his injury, I’m not surprised.”
Green agreed with her, in a way that implied that the Lion had seen instances of those injuries before, but she wouldn’t give any details on it. Instead, she pushed his attention to the others. Stan was aimlessly tapping two fingers against the pod, not-exactly glaring at the screen displaying Shiro’s vitals, while Eva was sitting on the floor away from the others, looking vacantly at the ceiling.
Koji bit his lip contemplatively for a few seconds, before going to sit next to her. “Were you able to find out where they took him?” she asked. From the corner of his eye, Koji saw Jordan glance over at them, whereas Stan just tensed; he knew already.
He sighed a little. “No. The only thing I could find was that they were brought to a transfer station somewhere in…ugh, I can’t pronounce the area it’s in, but it started with a Q.”
Eva seemed to shrink a little. “Oh.”
“But, I had an idea last night,” he added quickly. “If I could set up a facial-recognition program, we could run it through the next database we can link up to.
“Would that even work?” Jordan asked.
“It should. They keep image records.”
“Can I help with it?”
Eva’s question caught Koji off-guard for a second—even back on Alwas, she’d never really shown much interest in the computer half of all the work.
Then again, it wasn’t just Rick they were talking about here.
“Sure,” he replied, pausing at hearing a hissing sound from the pod; that was the only warning before the glass dissolved and Shiro stumbled out with a groan, catching himself on the side of it.
“Shiro, how are you feeling?” Allura asked, taking a step forward.
“I…I’m fine,” he replied slowly, blinking a few times before looking around. “How long was I in there?”
“Almost two quintants.” Her tone was a little sharper, but she didn’t elaborate.
Shiro nodded, still looking dazed, but only for a few seconds; he straightened abruptly, eyes widening, before stammering out “I remember—I remember how I escaped.”
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
And that was how, after finding the right parts to assemble an adapter, they all found themselves on the bridge, with a cable linking Koji’s tablet to a port found in Shiro’s prosthetic.
During that time, they’d given him a simplified explanation of what happened on Epona-6—that most of the aliens had been rescued, save for the ones that had been relocated before they could get there. Shiro had gone rigid when the bit with Spirit had come up, but he’d just given her a smile and a “I’m glad you’re alright.”
Not what she’d expected at all.
“I’m really not sure what I’m supposed to be looking for here,” Koji said finally, frowning. “Even with the translation program, it’s all a bunch of nonsense. Are you sure it wasn’t just some weird dream?”
“I’m positive,” Shiro replied, tone low. “Someone helped me escape.”
“And he was Galra.” There was thinly-veiled disbelief in Allura’s voice.
“Yes.”
“You know you cannot trust them—”
“Your father must have trusted them one,” Shiro interrupted, then turning to pin a glare on her. “Zarkon was the first Black Paladin, wasn’t he?”
Eva swallowed reflexively, sensing more than seeing the others processing that statement, coinciding with an attempted deflection of “That was a long time ago,” from Allura, who sounded (appropriately) guilty.
“Wait, what?” Jordan exclaimed, going pale. “You’re saying that—that creepy feeling we all got before Voltron fell apart was him?!”
“He was the one that took Voltron apart back there,” Eva clarified uneasily. “And he has Shiro’s bayard. I—I got a look at it then.”
“You have a reason for not telling us that, right?” Koji asked weakly, looking at the two Alteans. Coran looked like a deer caught in the headlights, whereas Allura averted her eyes, ears lowering slightly.
“I wanted to give you all a chance to bond with your Lions, without the history of your predecessors hanging over you,” she said, before looking at Shiro again. “You are the Black Paladin now, Shiro. Not Zarkon.”
“The Black Lion might have a different take on the matter,” Shiro muttered darkly.
“Not that this isn’t a fantastic subject to be on,” Stan cut in, pointing at the tablet’s screen. “I’m seeing a couple repeated symbols in there. Koji?”
Koji started slightly, also looking at the device. “Huh. Well what do you know,” he muttered, tapping a few keys. “I think we might’ve found those coordinates, Shiro. Now how am I supposed to…?”
“Leave that to me,” Coran said, stepping forward and bringing up a holoscreen. Ten seconds later the main display screen also lit up, showing a map of a star system. “Here we are—looks like it’s pointing to a location in the Thaldicon system.”
“Then that’s where we’re going,” Shiro asserted.
“H-Hold on a sec Shiro, are you sure we can trust this?” Jordan asked.
“It’s worth the risk. Someone helped me escape, and if we can locate more allies, especially ones that have already infiltrated Zarkon’s ranks, we might just have a way to start taking him down.”
There was a lengthy pause, before Allura conceded. “We can check the location, but I do not like this,” she said stiffly, turning to head to her control station. “I want all of you to get suited up, just in case. The Galra are not to be trusted under any circumstance.”
They were maybe halfway to their rooms (it had actually been something of a unanimous decision to keep their flight-suits there) when Stan muttered “Well that was a bombshell.”
“No kidding,” Jordan agreed morosely, shuddering. “Just when I was starting to think the whole weird alien mind-link thing wasn’t so bad, too.”
“Well, we’ll just have to work on figuring out how to keep him out of it,” Koji said, the attempt at sounding reassuring coming off as stilted instead.
“Koji’s right,” Shiro agreed. “It’s just another thing we’ll have to work on.”
Can we even do that? Eva asked Red while putting the armor on. The Lion seemed uncertain, but leaned towards it being possible. Maybe.
This was a new situation for them, too.
Returning to the bridge presented them with the sight of gigantic iridescent crystal clusters, starting out sparse and quickly coalescing into what might as well have been a wall’s worth of them. “Well, this is it,” Coran said, gesturing at the displays. “No sign of any sort of activity at all, living or otherwise.
“Can we get in there for a closer look?” Shiro asked.
Coran made a face. “I don’t want to risk bringing the castle any closer.”
“Why? Do those crystals blow up if you touch them or something?” Jordan asked. Eva could tell that he meant it as a joke, but Coran’s expression at hearing it said otherwise.
“Funny you should ask that. Those xanthorium clusters contain dense amounts of nitrate salts, so…yes, just poking one too hard would make it explode.”
“Are you sure this is the right place?” Shiro pressed, voice quieting.
“These are the exactly coordinates Number Four gave me.”
To the side, Koji frowned. “Maybe I mistranslated something.”
“We should move on,” Allura said stiffly. “There’s nothing here.”
“No,” Shiro insisted. “Let’s wait for a little while. Just in case.”
The princess gave him a long look before sighing. “Fine. But no longer than a varga.”
Eva stifled a groan. Guess this means we’re going to be sitting around for a while.
For ten minutes that felt a lot longer, absolutely nothing happened. Then an alarm she hadn’t heard previously started going off, with Coran hurriedly reporting with “There’s an intruder in the castle!”
“Wait, what?” Jordan exclaimed. “How could someone even get on? We’re in the middle of space!”
Allura, on the other hand, didn’t seem surprised at all. “I knew coming here was a mistake,” she hissed, bringing up a wall’s worth of security feeds, one of which was blinking red. “There he is—fifth floor.”
Shiro stood up. “Everyone, split up and have your bayards ready. Don’t take any chances.”
No chances. Wouldn’t going after some mystery intruder be considered taking a chance to begin with?
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
Jordan found the guy easily enough. That said nothing about catching him though—or rather, keeping up with him. Whatever this guy was, he moved fast!
Not to mention Coran’s commentary on it all sounded uncannily like something he’d hear in a sports game. It wasn’t entirely appreciated.
It also went to say that this guy played them all against each other, up until Shiro got there. After that, everything moved too fast for Jordan to really process it, ending seconds later with both Shiro and the infiltrator in a stalemate—the former having his active prosthetic inches away from the side of the latter’s head, and the latter having a knife that he hadn’t seen previously pointed at Shiro’s throat.
Five very long seconds dragged by, with none of them so much as twitching a muscle, before the infiltrator slowly backed away, lowering his hood. After that, his helmet/mask flickered before fading out (more weird alien tech, great!) showing that he was definitely a Galra.
Shiro promptly looked somewhere halfway between shocked and disbelieving, which was just enough to confuse Jordan enough to not do anything right away, and it was reflected in his tone when he asked “Ulaz?”
What.
Then Allura came in and shoved the Galra-apparently-named-Ulaz up against the wall, with an angry-sounding “Who are you?” Emphasis on up.
She only spared Shiro a sideways look when he clarified on who this apparently was, with Jordan almost missing the quiet “You’ve come,” from the Galra.
“Wait, this is the guy that saved you?” Eva asked, slowly coming up to stand next to Jordan. Stan and Koji were both still keeping their distance, with Stan still having his bayard active and in-hand, though Jordan had a feeling it was more for show than any real threat. (It wasn’t like he wasn’t doing the same thing.)
Of course, the hallway wasn’t a good place for an interrogation—and neither was the bridge in this case, or at least in Allura’s opinion, because they just went for the nearest lounge room instead.
“Okay, I get the whole being-cautious thing, but isn’t this a bit overkill?” Stan asked dubiously.
“I will not have some quiznakking Galra on the bridge of my ship!” Allura retorted sharply.
Ulaz didn’t seem bothered by it, or at least he didn’t sound bothered when he said “If I wanted to kill you, you would be dead already.”
Jordan tightened his grip on his bayard reflexively, and he saw both Eva and Koji take a few steps back. “Are your Galra threats supposed to win my trust?” Allura hissed.
“I'm not trying to win your trust. I’m trying to win a war.” Jordan had to give this guy some points—even with Allura up in his face, he was keeping his tone even. “And, because of Shiro, we are closer than we’ve ever been.” He turned his attention to Shiro directly before adding “Our gamble on you paid off better than we could have ever imagined.”
“Wait, you said we. There’s more of you guys?” Stan asked.
“Yes,” Ulaz affirmed. “We are called the Blade of Marmora.” After a brief pause, he added “I am alone on this base.”
“What base?” Allura still sounded hostile. “Shiro's coordinates just led us to this wasteland!”
“The base is hidden. Now that I know it is Shiro that has come, you are welcome to our outpost. It lies directly ahead of your ship.”
“Behind the giant crystals?” Eva asked.
“No.” Now there was a hint of something like…amusement? “Right in front of them, in a hidden pocket of space-time.”
A total of three seconds went by before there was a “A what?” from Koji, alongside Allura’s “Coran, are you hearing this?”
“The castle’s scanners are picking up on some sort of anomaly. I suppose it could be a cloaked base.”
Blue seemed dubious about it being just cloaked.
“Just fly straight for the center of the xanthorium cluster,” Ulaz said. “You will see.”
Allura bristled again. “You think you’re going to get me to destroy our ship just because you say so?”
“We came out here to find some answers,” Shiro said finally, turning to look at them all now. “Are we going to turn back now?”
“I’m not sure about this,” Koji said, frowning. “I mean—a space-time rift? That’s more science-fiction than anything.”
“I’m with Koji on that,” Stan agreed. “Something doesn’t seem right about all of this.”
“You know, I’m pretty sure the Lions would’ve been science-fiction to us before we left Earth,” Eva pointed out. Jordan looked back and forth between her and the mechanics, who both looked slightly chastised. She’s got a point.
“Ulaz freed me,” Shiro insisted. “Without him, none of us would even be here.”
The silence following that statement was an uncomfortable one, dragging on for almost a minute, before Allura hissed out a “Fine. Slow and steady, Coran. Head for the xanthorium cluster.”
“Yes Princess.” Moments later: “Uh…I think you all need to see this…”
The display screen on the wall flickered on, and sure enough, there was a base right in front of the giant space-crystal—but at the same time, while the base itself was very clearly there, everything else had taken on a blurry, almost-translucent effect. Blue’s confusion gave way to an appreciative shock, with Jordan himself blinking at it a few times before saying “So…another point to science-fiction?”
He was pretty sure he could see the exact moment Koji realized what they were looking at, opened his mouth and then shut it again, before just asking “How?”
Ulaz actually chuckled a bit at that. “If you’ll free me, I can bring you onto the base to show you. I have to send a message to the leadership so they know I’ve made contact with you.”
“Go with him, and keep an eye on him,” Allura said, scowl still present. “I’ll stay here with Coran.”
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
The closest Lion to where they had all been was the Red Lion, so they were all clustered in his cockpit for the short ride to the base. “That there is the is the gravity generator that creates the space-time fold that hides the station,” Ulaz said, pointing at the conical structure on top of the base. Eva looked about as interested as Stan was in it, though he didn’t miss the occasional irritated glances she was throwing at Koji, who was leaning so far forward toward the display screen that he was probably cutting into her view.
“Who designed it?” Eva asked, glancing back at the Galra.
“A reclusive genius engineer named Slav. His technology allows the Blade of Marmora to remain hidden while we work to take down the Galra Empire. Zarkon would do anything to get his hands on this technology.”
“So, this…Blade of Marmora thing,” Jordan started warily. “Is it just other Galra?”
“Primarily, yes. We have agents and informants from other species as well, though the number has been steadily declining as the war goes on. Not many would trust us now.”
“Which is why you need us?” Stan guessed.
Ulaz nodded. “With Voltron on our side, alongside the members we have working from within Zarkon’s ranks, we might finally have a chance to take him down.”
“How deep in it are you guys?” Jordan asked, after they’d disembarked the Lion.
He got another question as a response. “How do you think you were able to get away from Zarkon during your confrontation with him? Or steal the Blue Lion from Sendak?”
Yellow had an ah-ha moment at the first statement, which answered the question of why the wormhole-thing had gone from not working to working with no warning, the following chaos notwithstanding.
The second statement took a few seconds to sink in, with Jordan blinking a few times before giving Ulaz a dumbstruck look. “Wait, that was one of you guys?!”
It wasn’t until they’d reached what was probably a control room that Eva spoke up again, this time with something Stan had trying to scope out a good moment to bring up: “If you guys have people that can get at records—there’s supposed to be two more of us, but they got taken on Alwas. Could you find them?”
Ulaz paused in typing. “I’m afraid I only knew of two others from Earth being taken alongside Shiro. This is the first I’m hearing that they were any from your planet among those from Alwas.”
“Oh,” she muttered, looking down.
The Galra seemed to hesitate a moment before adding “While I don’t know anything myself, I do have some records of prisoners here. I can transmit them to your ship.”
“That’s better than nothing,” Stan remarked quietly, under Shiro’s thanks for the gesture.
“Yeah,” she mumbled, still looking distracted.
On one hand, Stan was about as curious about the space-pocket thing as Koji was—Koji was on the other end of the room, which had a better view of the device keeping the base hidden.
On the other, the lighting and narrow spaces on the base was reminding him a little too much of what happened on Epona-6. And it really didn’t help when an alarm started blaring for maybe the millionth time within the past however-long-it’s-been.
Or that the cause of the aforementioned alarm was the third appearance of the giant metal box that had last been seen on the Balmera.
“I thought this place was supposed to be invisible?” Eva asked, alarmed; she’d snapped to attention when the alarm had gone off, coinciding with a heartfelt “Oh come on,” from Jordan.
“It is,” Ulaz replied tightly. “The only way they could have found us is if you were tracked.”
“Or if you ratted us out,” Jordan accused, though he stopped short when Eva gave him a look.
“It doesn’t matter how they found us,” Shiro cut in. “We have to get back to the ship!”
“Wait,” Ulaz cut in, removing something from the computer desk that looked like an oversized USB stick. “This contains instructions for how to reach the Blade of Marmora’s headquarters. But do not go there until you have figured out how Zarkon is tracking you.”
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
“I knew he could not be trusted,” Allura seethed once she’d been brought into the loop about everything.
“It wasn’t him,” Shiro retorted sharply.
“How can you be sure?”
“It doesn’t matter how they found us now,” Coran cut in. “What should we do?”
Shiro took a deep breath, silently thanking the adviser. “Everyone get to your Lions, but don’t launch.” At the confused looks, he elaborated with “I don’t want us to fight that thing if we don’t have to. It might not have our exact location.”
It was a big might, but given how much trouble the last mech had given them, Shiro didn’t want to chance it unless there was no choice.
This one looked something like a floating torso that was mostly head. Or more precisely, mostly mouth, shown once it started drawing in the various floating crystals, which were then used as fuel for its weapon—a laser that had the larger crystals exploding on touch.
For a few moments, muffled explosions came from outside. Then the entrance to the space-fold rippled, and multiple lasers shot through, jostling the castleship. “Nope, he definitely knows we’re in here!” Coran exclaimed.
Shiro stifled a sigh. “Alright, in that case, let’s not give this thing any more ground than it already has. Form Voltron!”
The Lions came together smoothly, simultaneously with Shiro becoming more acutely aware of the other four—there was a lot of nervous energy, but given how much trouble the last robot…beast…robeast gave them on the Balmera, he couldn’t blame them.
They charged out of the space-rift, promptly dealing out a right-hook that deflected a laser shot upwards and away from the castleship, but that didn’t even seem to put a dent in it, with how fast it returned fire. They barely avoided colliding with a larger crystal; it was remembered at the last moment that they had to offset the inertia that was inherent to being in space.
They got three perfect shots in—but there wasn’t even a mark on the mech, which took advantage of the distance between them to draw in more ammo, and then they had to dodge again—
And the castleship was in full view, exactly the opposite of what Allura had said they would do. The hidden base was also in view, with one vital part of it now absent.
What started as shock-anger-disbelief quickly was replaced with bright, searing heat and something that wasn’t quite pain, more like a detached discomfort when the clusters closest to Voltron detonated, enveloping them in the resulting brief firestorm.
Can’t get distracted
Can’t let him reload
Maybe if they could stop it from taking in any more crystals somehow—the shield! But they had to find a way to keep it distracted first.
“Leave that to us,” Allura said; being fired on by the castleship definitely got the robeast’s attention, with it pulling in crystals, but not as ammo, instead crashing them into the barrier.
At least until the shield was jammed right in front of the beam’s emitter.
After that, it was simple enough to just fire the reverse-thrusters at full blast and recall the shield before the mech hit the largest crystal still (formerly) intact.
Did that do it?
One moment passed, and then two—and then it was only thanks to instinct that Shiro was able to throw the shield in front of them in time to block the laser, if only for a few more seconds before it fell apart and they were sent flying.
What’s this thing even made of?!
What else can we try?
“Hang on!” The sudden voice jarred them all into a moment of complete discordance, but not so much as the rest of Ulaz’s statement couldn’t be heard: “I’m going to take it down from the inside!”
But that would—
“Ulaz, no! Let us handle this!”
“Voltron is too valuable to lose! The universe needs the five of you more.”
The base’s gravity generator—or rather the ship holding it—vanished into the mech, and for one long moment, nothing happened. Then it just…started crumpling in on itself, before detonating, clearing a wide swatch of the crystalline asteroid belt.
What just…?
He did not just do that
“He did,” Shiro confirmed hollowly. He saved us.
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
The air in the ship seemed to have a charge to it, afterwards, and it wasn’t something Jordan necessarily liked. Shiro was off somewhere by himself; part of him wanted to go look for him, but what would he be able to say? He’d been in the boat of thinking Ulaz had sold them out, when he clearly hadn’t.
He wouldn’t have done that if he had.
Jordan shook his head a bit, continuing down the hall. He was pretty sure both Stan and Koji had gone in the general direction of the shuttle hangar—working on the Arrow was probably their way of dealing with steam—but he hadn’t seen where Eva had gone off to.
He had gotten a quick look at her face, though.
At some point, Blue did the mental equivalent of a thoughtful noise before going distant for a few seconds, before coming back with some directions on where to go.
If the Red Lion had any response to him walking into the hangar, it wasn’t shown, and Eva didn’t seem to notice; she was sitting on top of one of his paws, knees pulled up to her chest.
She did flinch when he pulled himself up onto the metal paw, with him thinking a bit belatedly to ask “Mind if I join you?” Eva shook her head a bit, and he sat next to her.
For a few minutes, it was quiet, before she said “Hey, Jordan? Do you think—we could’ve saved Ulaz?”
“Uh…” Jordan had to think about how to answer that one, and even then, he still wasn’t sure how to put it nicely. So he went for blunt. “Honestly? We were getting our asses handed to us back there. If he hadn’t…done that, I don’t think we would’ve walked away.”
There was a quiet “Oh,” from her, and he resisted the urge to smack himself.
“…how about we go find Stan and Koji?” he suggested, forcing a smile. “Maybe they could use some help with the Arrow.”
“Yeah,” she agreed quickly, doing the same before sliding down onto the floor.
When they got down there, though, Jordan had to take a few seconds to make sure his head wasn’t playing tricks on him, though that would’ve been proven wrong anyways by Eva saying “You guys repainted the Arrow?”
“Well, yeah,” Koji replied, sounding a little awkward. “I mean…purple. That couldn’t stay there.”
It wasn’t too much of a change, with the purple-orange having been replaced by red and blue, but he didn’t have that pang of unease at looking at the ship now.
Stan looked uncertain for a bit, before asking “You two haven’t seen Shiro anywhere, have you?”
“No,” Jordan grimaced a little. “I…kinda want to go look for him, but…”
The door chimed again, and it turned out they didn’t have to go find Shiro; he looked a little distant, but there was a sort of hard-set to them that had Jordan thinking he’d just gotten into an argument with someone. (Blue didn’t give any impressions aside from a sort of mental heavy sigh.)
“…so what’s next?” Eva asked.
Shiro took a deep breath. “First of all, we’re going to check through the entire castle to make sure there isn’t any kind of tracking device. Once we’re sure Zarkon can’t track us anymore, and only then, we’ll be going to the Blade of Marmora’s headquarters. We need all the allies we can get.”
Gonna say this upfront, this chapter’s a doozy, in terms of things that happen in it.
A huge thanks goes out to my beta for this, because I’d still be stuck on this without them. This chapter is something of a milestone for me, too, as it's one I've had planned out since I first started the fic back in ye olde days of '17.
PLEASE DO REREAD CHAPTER 15 IF YOU READ IT ONLY WITHIN THE FIRST THREE DAYS OF ME POSTING IT. YOU’LL BE EXTREMELY CONFUSED OTHERWISE.
“We’ll provide support from orbit,” Allura said over the comm. “And let you know if anything changes.”
“Thanks for that,” Stan replied, while Jordan focused on taking a few deep breaths. He thought Eva had seemed a bit distracted earlier, but now he knew why. Rick’s down there.
“So we know what to do, right?” Eva asked.
“Yeah,” Jordan replied. They’d spent almost an hour coming up with the plan, and while it was on the simpler end of the scale, he had a good feeling about it.
First, they’d all take out any fighters the base might have. Then, they’d all go on foot into the base—he and Koji would handle one half of the building, while Eva and Stan would look through the other, with all four of them freeing anyone and everyone on the way.
After that, it’d just be a matter of getting everyone to the castleship.
She’d also mentioned having seen two actual-Galra guards there, with a third named Lirax supposedly in charge of the place. Which meant looking before shooting.
Jordan knew that…well, that it was unavoidable whenever it came to Lions-against-battlecruiser, but he wasn’t too keen on the idea of actually taking anyone out himself. I’ll just…try to knock ‘em out if I see ‘em. Yeah, that’ll work.
Unlike the time on the Balmera, there was no fanfare to the four Lions launching, aside from a small reassuring purr from Blue. The sun was already up, so they had a clear view of the base itself—and they had a clear view of them in return, if how fast a swarm of fighters swarmed out of an opening in the cliff face below was anything to go on.
“Okay, so the building goes underground too,” Jordan noted.
“There has to be a map in the system,” Koji said. “I should be able to get in after a few minutes.” Rover was in the Green Lion with him—they didn’t have Shiro to get directly into any computers, so the drone was the next best bet.
The Red Lion moved first, a red-hued beam sweeping across in an arc and melting one-fourth of the fighter swarm in seconds. Jordan’s surprise at the speed of it didn’t keep him from having Blue freeze another portion, while the other two took care of the rest.
Then again, Rick was at stake here.
“Was that it?” Eva asked after a few minutes, suspicion tinging her voice, as the last of the smaller ships had been sent plunging toward the bottom of the canyon.
“I think so,” Jordan replied, looking at a side-screen—Blue running a scan wasn’t showing anything else. “Talk about bad security.”
“I don’t like this,” Stan muttered. “You sure they didn’t know you and Shiro were here?”
“I’m sure,” Eva replied, the Red Lion moving forward to blast down part of the wall surrounding the base, otherwise forming a nice landing area for the four Lions by the edge of the cliff.
There was no one and nothing on the outside of the base, and the front door couldn’t hold up against the explosive charges Coran had been very clear in explaining to Jordan in terms of how they worked. “That tower on the right side looks like it might have a control room,” Stan pointed out.
“Then we’ll take that side,” Jordan said. “There’s probably gonna be a lot of robots in here.” And then some. And speaking of robots, there was ten of them right behind the door, which all immediately started shooting, which meant three of them were ducking behind the wall again while Jordan shot back at them with his bayard.
They managed to bring the number down to four; the leftover sentries were steadily making their way toward them, once they’d found a gap in his shooting. Then he heard a loud bang, followed by the sentries falling back with holes burnt into them. A sideways look confirmed that yes, it was Stan’s bayard that did that. A shotgun? Huh.
Nice.
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
They decided to split up after that, with Jordan taking the lead. Koji had no complaints about that, looking back over his shoulder every thirty seconds or so. Given the alarm droning on, they definitely weren’t here unnoticed.
There was a total of two patrols they ran into on the way, both consisting of three sentries, but they went down fast.
Something felt weird about that, but it could also just be that most of the sentries had been in the fighters. This wasn’t a very large base, either—and it was the only Galran establishment on the whole planet.
Green was assuring that it would go fine. And then they reached the control room, which had two Galrans in it, who both froze and turned when they heard the door.
So much for fine.
Jordan moved first—the alien might not have registered it until it was about to happen, with how fast he’d moved in and punched him in the face. The other moved then, rushing at him, though he stopped when he saw the blue bayard pointed at him, slowly putting his hands up with a nervous smile.
It was over faster than Koji expected it to be, and it didn’t go down like…well, like part of him was thinking it would, which he was glad for.
“We got the control room taken care of,” Jordan reported, glancing at the two now-tied-up (the next room over happened to be a storeroom with some rope in it) Galrans before adding “It wasn’t that hard, either.”
“Well, that’s one good thing,” Stan said. “This side of the building’s like a maze.”
“Just give me a minute or two,” Koji muttered, attaching a cable between his tablet and Rover. “Have you found him yet?”
“Not yet, no. We just—” There was a pause, with blaster fire being heard. “We just found some more sentries, though.”
“Do you guys need backup?” Jordan asked.
A minute dragged by, before “We got it. There’s…really not as many of these things around as I thought there would be, though.”
“It could be that you took out most of them with the fighters,” Allura suggested. “But that is strange. A prison base wouldn’t usually be so lightly-guarded.”
“How’re things looking from up there?” Jordan asked.
“The alarm you’re hearing now is only for the base, and you got there before anyone could send out a distress signal, so it should be all clear.”
“Great, that just makes it easier for us,” Eva said. “C’mon!”
“H-Hey, Eva! Wait up!”
Jordan let out an exasperated sigh, rolling his eyes a bit, running a hand down his face while looking upwards as if asking Why?
Koji bit down a smile—it was a little piece of normalcy in the midst of all of this.
He still handled the tech.
Jordan was still their gunner.
Stan was trying to be the voice of reason.
And Eva keeps running off and doing whatever she wanted to.
The translation program missed a few symbols, but an otherwise-still-legible map came up on the screen. “It looks like there’s three floors to the building, not counting the hangar,” he reported. “I’m sending the map to you now.”
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
There was a stark difference between seeing the inside of the base and seeing it from ventilation grates.
For one, when they did find the cells, they were seen by some of the prisoners. Some of whom obviously recognized them, with all the gasps and whispers and staring.
“How are these things even supposed to open?” Stan muttered, glaring at one of the doors.
“There’s a code,” the alien inside whispered. Eva didn’t recognize her, and was pretty sure she wasn’t from Alwas. “I don’t know what it is, though.”
“Of course…” Stan paused, glare being directed to the corresponding keypad to the door, and his bayard flickered into form. “Gonna try something. You might want to stand back.”
The alien did as such, and one shot later, the keypad on the door was very broken, and the door slowly slid open.
If you can’t work with it, break it. A motto she lived by, so she approved of the action.
The alien inside came out hesitantly, wariness all over her features. She was humanoid, aside from having four pupilless blue eyes and gold-colored scales, long rabbit-like ears, a crest of white feathers on top of her head, and six-fingered clawed hands.
“Thank you,” she said finally, voice still quiet. “I was beginning to give up hope that we’d ever be free from here.”
“It’s nothing.” Eva said, not exactly paying attention. “There’s someone else like us here. Do you know where he is?”
The alien tilted her head to one side slightly, before replying “There is, yes. He’s not on this floor, though I think—”
Eva didn’t wait to hear the rest, instead turning on her heel to bolt toward the stairs, though she remained near enough for long enough to hear a startled curse come from Stan. Whoops.
She was halfway down the wide hallway that made up the first floor down when she heard a low “Just what is going on up there?” The volume by itself indicated that it was someone asking their neighbor, but it was the fact that she knew the voice that had her skidding to a halt.
“Rush?” she asked, happily surprised. There was a pause, before she heard a shuffling from one of the nearby cells, and then saw a glimmer through the space on the door.
“Is that Molly?” He sounded halfway between surprised, startled, and disbelieving, before laughing. “It is! How in Byrus’ name did you even get out here?”
“Long story,” she replied, smile just a tad wobbly, before glaring at the keypad, and then at her bayard—which she hadn’t realized she was holding until then. Okay seriously, how is this thing supposed to work? Red did something of a mental sigh, before pushing an idea that vaguely translating as imagining the arrow was there.
Well…it was something, at least. The object took its bow-shape seconds later, and she took a few steps back from the door. “I’m gonna try something,” she warned, before thinking back on how Prince Aikka used his bow. She felt a little silly in just pretending the arrow was there—but only for a second, because the next thing she knew, she felt a slight weight on her hand, in the form of a plasmatic red arrow. Huh.
Pulling it back took a little more effort than she thought it would, but there wasn’t much time between figuring that out and a broken console.
The door was practically thrown sideways, which didn’t match up with how nonchalantly Rush stepped out, stretching. “Ahh…it was pretty cramped in there, so it’s nice to be able to get out of it!”
Eva gave him a small chuckle but otherwise didn’t reply, her eyes wandering to the other doors. There were others from Alwas here too, and then some. So many racers...so many broken dreams and wishes. She felt a pang of sorrow, and her heart went out for them and their lost opportunities.
She may have wanted to win, and was more than willing to take them out to do it, but…it all got ripped away from them, and now they were impossibly-far from home to boot.
She almost didn’t notice that Stan had come after her as she was musing to herself, until she’d heard him saying “Think there’d be some sort of override switch up there?”
“Maybe?” Koji sounded dubious. “I’ll check. In the meantime—he should be at the end of the hall on the next floor down.”
“Jailbreak and a rescue mission rolled into one thing, eh?” Rush nodded. “I’ll get everyone else out. You two go find your friend. But just so you know, I think the warden’s down there.” His tone lowered toward the end. “I think he knew you were coming.”
“There it is,” Stan muttered, coinciding with a “Oh great,” from Jordan.
“I think we can handle one guy,” Eva said, turning toward the stairway.
The last floor was lit in the same purple as the other floors, moreso given the lack of skylights, but the first thing she heard was “So, the prestigious paladins finally grace me with their presence.” The source of the voice was at the end of the hall, with two sentries. “You’ve all caused a lot of trouble for me.”
“Have we?” Stan sounded partway between confused and disinterested. “I’m pretty sure we haven’t met.”
The Galran sputtered a bit angrily, while Eva stared hard at him for a few seconds. Then it hit her. “He was there when we left Alwas the first time,” she hissed. Stan glanced sideways at her, then at him again, simultaneously with Red providing a name—and the Galran lunging at them, while both sentries fired their blasters.
They both ducked out the way in time, with Eva focusing on the two robots. The first shot blew an arm clean off of one of them, and the second sent it down. The other robot went down on the first shot.
As for Lirax, he went down in maybe seven seconds after Stan hit him over the head with his bayard. Eva winced at the sound, though the low groan that followed indicated that the Galra was otherwise okay, if maybe unconscious.
“Well, that was sad,” Stan muttered, before asking “Koji, any luck with that override switch?”
“Uh, just one second…there!”
An alarm went off for three seconds before every door in the hallway slid open, and an even shorter pause before there was a veritable stampede of the now-former captives rushing to get out. Eva didn’t waste any time in going against the tide, ignoring Stan’s protest. “Rick? Rick, we’re…here?” She trailed off in a whisper at seeing the empty cell.
“He’s not in there?” Stan sounded confused.
“No, he’s—is there anywhere else in the building they might be?”
“There isn’t.” Koji’s words were clipped. “E-Eva, I think—I think Rick might’ve been part of the group that was moved out of this base before we got here. We missed them by ten minutes.”
“What?” she exclaimed, voice cracking slightly. “But that’s not—he was right here…”
There was a small, forced-sounding cough from somewhere behind her. “Eva, c’mon,” Stan said. “We better make sure everyone else gets out of here okay.”
She looked back at the empty cell for a few seconds longer, before sighing. “Okay…but do we know where he might be now?” she asked.
“I’ll check, but—”
She didn’t think much when she heard the footsteps behind her, first thinking it was just a prisoner who came back to see why they were still there.
She turned to direct whoever it was to follow the others; they were on a time limit, no matter how easy this was—and promptly felt her heart shoot up into her throat from sheer fear.
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
He hadn’t noticed the last remaining prisoner there, since they blended into the shadows. He was too preoccupied making sure there was no sentries coming to hurt and/or wrangle the released prisoners.
What Stan did notice was how fast Eva had gone blank-faced at seeing them. It was downright scary how all the emotion just slid off her expression. But only for a few seconds, because then something in her expression twitched—and then she lunged, swinging the bayard like it was a hammer instead of a bow.
The suddenness of it almost didn’t leave Stan enough time to react, moving to get between them. “Eva, what the hell are you doing that for?!” She didn’t answer, instead shooting an arrow off this time. The alien was able to get out of the way, thankfully. Whoever they were, their reflexes were insanely fast.
Completely matte-black save for a white mask-like face, Stan vaguely recognized them, so they had to be from Alwas. Creepy fellow, but who was Stan to judge? The outfit they were wearing though…it didn’t look like the one they were wearing while in the races. Stan shoved the thought to the back of his head as Eva got off another shot.
Creepy or not, it didn’t explain why Eva suddenly seemed hellbent on trying to kill them. He grabbed her by the arm, but all that got as a response was for her to shove him hard enough to make him stumble. “Stay out of my way!” she spat, the sheer hatred in her voice catching Stan off-guard. “I have to get rid of that thing!”
Well that’s never a good thing to hear.
The alien was making some arm movements as they dodged, and even Stan can recognize the universal signs for ‘Stop’ and…‘behind you?’
He didn’t even register what happened until a few seconds after it happened, only that he heard an abrupt choked sound from Eva, as well as something wet that did not sound good—and then the Galra saying “And that’s why you don’t take your eyes off your opponent,” as the purple-colored, blood-streaked blade vanished.
To the side, the Phil (now he recognized him) went completely rigid, hands reaching out as if to catch Eva despite that fact she was trying to hurt him. Numb horror now radiating from Yellow snapping Stan out of it to go to do something.
His first instinct was to check on Eva, who’d dropped like a rock now, but he had to dive out of the way of a sideways sweep of the sword.
“What did I just say?” the Galran taunted, lunging again. “I was expecting you to be smarter, or at least have more fight in you than whatever that pathetic display was.” The swing coupled with the emphasized word was way too close for comfort, enough for him to notice a few strands of hair spiraling away.
Stan tried using his bayard—but all that got was an elbow to the face that sent him reeling. This guy was fast! Stan could hardly defend himself, let alone fight back. He was being overwhelmed and while the Phil had moved Eva away, he had the feeling this bastard wasn’t above going after them again.
They moved about the hallway, Stan trying keep himself between the Galra and Eva at all times while he tried to figure out how to get them away.
Eva was groaning in pain, he could hear it even over the clash of weapons. A swift turn that made the Galra trip a little let him see the Phil racer trying to put pressure on the heavily-bleeding wound.
Engine oil—a woman saluting goodbye—an explosion—
Stan gasped, stumbling in an attempt to stay standing as he was kneed in the diaphragm, but another hit, this time on the back, sent him sprawling on the floor, black spots flitting across his vision now. (What had that been?)
Dimly, he could hear worried voices over the comm, but it was all under the following “At least I’ll have you and the other two to deliver to Lord Zarkon. The brat’s better off dead anyways. Lord Zarkon was more than a little upset with her performance at Central Command.”
He was grabbed by the collar of his uniform and brought face level with the Galra scum preventing him and his team from leaving. The bastard that was the catalyst for them all being in this situation.
The one who hurt Eva.
“Consider it a mercy that she is dying by my hand. If anything, you’ll be thanking me—”
Stan didn’t remember what exactly happened after that. Or couldn’t, maybe. Just that some small part of him completely and utterly snapped right then.
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
“What’s going on down there?” Allura asked, voice tense. “Neither Stan or Eva are responding!”
“I have no idea but I’m going down there,” Jordan replied, tone icy, and Koji nodded stiltedly. What they both heard over the comms simply could not be good.
The fact that the impending-doom feeling he recognized from Sendak’s siege of the castleship had reappeared cemented that.
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
The first alien they’d freed had come downstairs to check on them, and had only looked for a second before rushing to a room at the end of the hall and coming back with an armful of bandages in hand.
Yellow was a distant, vague sense of something between hurry and slow the bleeding, to which Stan returned a semi-hysterical no kidding.
He couldn’t be entirely sure but he was pretty sure being impaled wasn’t good for one’s health, and Eva looked like she was halfway to being unconscious already, despite the alien’s urging to stay awake.
The amount of blood covering the floor definitely did not bode well.
He didn’t know what to do anymore at this point. Despite the Phil’s obviously-rising panic, despite the other aliens hurried whispers and glances at him to give direction, he didn’t know what to do.
The bandages were soaking through and Stan went to touch the wound and saw a small splotch of orange liquid splattered on his hands.
He was staring and—
SMACK.
Stan blinked in shock as his head was bent downward from the slap he received from the Phil, who was clearly at the end of his patience.
“The Lion—we need to go to the Red Lion,” He was able to blurt that out, and with quick nod the tall racer picked up Eva keeping her close to them as they quickly walked off.
(Eva was staying quiet; was that shock? Never mind the fact that she just looked confused by all of this.)
(He was pretty sure that wasn’t a good sign.)
The visible and audible shock/horror from the ex-prisoners was something half-lost in the haze, superseded by a blazing sort of fear that wasn’t, couldn’t be from the Yellow Lion.
The Byrusian went right to clearing a path for them, shouting for everyone else to clear a path to let them outside—and that was when the other two found them.
Jordan screamed something incomprehensible, running after the Phil, who was heading right for where Red was crouched with his ramp down already.
A touch on his shoulder made him jump, and he looked up to see Koji looking at him, face ashen with a look that was a clear-enough question in itself. The stare was returned, for a few drawn-out moments, and he thought he saw a morbid sort of recognition cross Koji’s face before he looked away.
Stan couldn’t remember what he did, but he was able to remember the sound.
And the should’ve-been-inconsequential detail that Galran blood was orange in color.
(It was a lot brighter than the red smeared over his wrists—)
He at least made it to the edge of the cliff the three Lions were on before being sick.
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
She should have seen it coming. It had been too easy, all of them coming back together again, Shiro’s druid-wound notwithstanding. Allura had felt her blood freeze when Red himself had all but voicelessly screamed at her to have a pod ready for his Paladin.
Though she hadn’t seen why herself yet, she could tell by the Red Lion’s hollow relief that they’d nearly been too late.
Allura took a deep, shuddering breath, banishing those thoughts. What matters is that she’s alive. She’ll be alright.
Coran was working with a few of the more knowledgeable freed captives to work out just what they were going to do with all of them. They didn’t have nearly enough shuttles to send all of them home, after all—and a majority of them had no knowledge of anything outside of their own galaxy.
Of course, that was saying nothing about how much of a headache getting through the blockade on their galaxy would be.
If anything, it would likely be phoebs before they could even start going through, if the restrictions were still as tight as they had been ten-thousand decaphoebs ago.
Allura looked up slightly when she heard a small cough from behind her. “Some good news, princess,” Coran started. “The Pokitaran—Aihe? A cousin of hers has some connections that can help the ones whose homeworlds are behind the blockade get home. It would seem that there are some gaps in the system.” He chuckled faintly, humorlessly. Those same gaps were how this all began, no doubt. “We just have to bring them to a drop point not too far from here.”
She sighed. “That’s a relief.” As heartening as it was for the castle to have some life to it again, even with their new supplies, they wouldn’t have enough to support an extended population for more than two phoebs. Then she frowned. “Have you seen Stan or Koji anywhere?”
“Well…” Coran hesitated, before saying “Last I knew, Stan was still holed up in his room. I think Koji might’ve gone to check on him again.”
There was a lengthy pause. “Coran, would it be possible to shift the infirmary’s priority to Eva?”
“Well, yes, though it’d mean Shiro won’t be back up for another quintant…” Realization crossed his face then. “Ah, you have a point there. The main console should have the option in there.”
“Thank you. I’ll do that—and I know this is a lot to ask, but I think it’s been a while since any of our guests had a decent meal.”
Coran grinned, saluting. “Leave that to me, princess!”
Jordan was there, sitting on the floor and looking blankly at one of the two active pods, but that didn’t surprise Allura much; he’d been beside himself with worry last she’d seen him. He didn’t seem to notice her come into the room, either—not until she heard herself gasp with dismay at seeing Eva.
She had been left in the armor’s undersuit, only because there simply hadn’t been time, and while the fabric hid the injury itself from view, she could see the tear in it. The armored pieces were scattered loosely around the pod. She’d been painfully aware that their Red Paladin was young, but this just made it even more obvious.
She looked smaller in there, somehow, especially compared to Shiro, who was in the next one over.
Then Allura heard a quiet, dazed-sounding “When’s she gonna be up?” from Jordan.
“By tonight, likely after dinner,” she replied, forcing her gaze to turn to him. At seeing his startled expression, she added “I thought it might do us all some good to have her awake again sooner than later.”
The gaze was kept steady for a few long ticks, before he looked away, with a muttered “Thanks.” Allura felt the Blue Lion paying some mind to the exchange, mostly uncertain, but also thankful.
Now for the reason she was somewhat glad he was still here. “Have you seen Stan at all?”
“No.” Jordan tensed slightly, before quietly adding “I dunno what happened down there, but…whatever it is, he’s been holed up in his room for a few hours now. I think—I know Koji’s gone to check on him twice already, but…”
Aihe had explained some of their former situation as well, and it just so happened to tie into that of the Paladins’, in that the warden, Lirax, was not only formerly a commander, but had also been the one to raid Alwas in search of the Red Lion in the first place.
The Pokitaran’s use of past-tense, alongside the Yellow Lion’s uncertain brevity regarding the situation, had been enough of an explanation as to what had happened. But when Coran had gone back there to ensure no one had been left behind, he’d reported injuries not matching up with the form the yellow bayard took—a mixture of blunt and cutting.
And that just didn’t make any sense.
Allura felt a slight mental nudge from the Blue Lion, allowing her to notice the sideways questioning look Jordan was giving her now. “Mind if I join you for a while?” she asked.
“Not at all,” he replied, turning back to the pods while she sat down. Then he said “I think—I don’t think it really hit me until now. How dangerous this all is for us.” It was Allura’s turn to look sideways at him, while he went on “I mean, the closest me and M—Eva got to getting hurt was when we had to go up against the Crog during the race, but this…” He stopped, taking a deep breath. “We didn’t get actually hurt then. Or at all, during the whole thing.”
It was after briefly wondering what in the world a Crog was that Allura suddenly felt startled, a realization hitting her with the force of a charging klanmürl.
Jordan didn’t look much older than Eva.
She’d always overlooked it somehow—perhaps it was simply that he had some military training that made him seem older—but seeing him like this? So vulnerable and open? It was like a mask had been ripped off.
Allura looked down, unsure what to say in response to that. It never failed to hurt her heart seeing children forced into war.
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
Everything had started blurring together maybe an hour ago, but only because there had been so much to do, and it was only now that Koji found himself with some free time.
The first thing he’d done was stop by the infirmary, and he’d immediately had to force away the memory of seeing the injury. It was an ugly reminder that the situation they were in meant people were going to go out of their way in trying to kill them, and being a kid didn’t exclude Eva from it.
Jordan hadn’t moved from his spot, though Koji had sort of expected that. What he hadn’t expected was for there to be someone else in there. More specifically, the last person they raced on Alwas. “This is some impressive technology you have here,” he was saying. “I daresay it puts what they have on Alwas to shame.” The large alien was subdued in his admiration, though.
Koji, despite having never actually met him, felt that was not a normal state for him. It just felt...wrong, somehow, for him to be subdued and quiet, compared to the first impression they’d gotten of him during their team’s race against him.
“Yeah,” Jordan muttered, noticing Koji standing in the doorway after a moment and adding “There’s still another hour or two.”
Koji nodded, hesitating before asking “You don’t—know what happened down there, do you?”
The pilot, Rush if he remembered right, sighed. “I wasn’t there. You might have better luck trying to ask Spirit. He was still down there when it happened.”
“Okay…do you know where he is?”
“The last I saw, he was heading down one of halls away from where everyone is staying. I’m not familiar with this ship’s layout.”
“It’s alright. We’re still learning it too.” The guest wing they were using was right between the hangars for the Red and Green Lions. Green herself had been somewhat of a background presence since they came back to the ship, at least until now; she pushed the idea of checking Red’s hangar.
It was when he got there that the detail of Spirit being the Phil racer came up. On one hand, it meant he didn’t have to worry, since they were friendly to humans. On the other, it meant communication might be a problem. But he wouldn’t know until he tried.
He was maybe halfway to the Lion when he saw that one of Spirit’s hands was against one of Red’s paws, and that the metal under it seemed to be shimmering slightly. There was some surprised realization from Green, implying some sort of telepathy. Well, that…might make things easier.
(Koji tried not to stare at the blood staining Spirit’s clothes, and tried not to think that the Phil was not looking too friendly at the moment; his feathers were standing on end and rustling slightly, reminding Koji of a cornered bird.)
“Uh, excuse me?” he started, which had Spirit turn to look at him, the feathers smoothing out just a bit once he saw Koji. “If—if you don’t mind me asking, what happened back there in the base? Or—what happened to Eva?”
The most Koji had gotten out of Stan earlier, before he’d stopped answering anything he said, was that she’d sort of…freaked out, and attacked Spirit.
For a few moments, Spirit stared at him, before looking up at the Red Lion, and then slowly holding a hand out.
In retrospect, Koji really hadn’t been too sure how the explanation would work, given that his only example of telepathy was the Green Lion.
One second he was feeling something that could’ve maybe been described as a mental numbness, and then it was like he was both somewhere and someone else altogether. Specifically, like he was looking through Spirit’s own eyes.
The fear crossing Eva’s face before it became worryingly blank. Her ferocious attempts at attacking Spirit, and Stan trying to stop her.
Her only stopping as Lirax stabbed her through.
Spirit desperately trying to stop the bleeding. Sounds of fighting in the background.
Recognition, fear, and guilt saturated the memories so strongly that it almost had Koji being sick then, with Green then providing a thin barrier with a faint, worried growl.
“B-But—why would she do that?” he managed to ask. Another load of memories came after another hesitant pause, somehow worse than the last, even with Green stifling the emotions this time.
It started as rushing over a star-racing track, definitely on Earth somewhere, with a star-racer just ahead—blinking in reflex when a few drops of oil flashed by, having come from the star-racer—and then the pilot frantically waving at him to get away.
The feelings of genuine confusion morphing into fearful panic, before finally settling into sorrow and regret.
Koji flinched as he recognized the pilot, too. Hollow realization came over from Green, as a memory of his own was brought to the forefront of his mind: two preteens watching a TV screen at home with awe, with Miguel cursing as he fiddled with the connection. Awe turning to horror, and the live broadcast cutting to a technical difficulties screen.
Something colder settled in him, witnessing someone’s death up close and personal. It wasn’t like Haxus—he wasn’t able to keep back the shudder at that comparison—because that…that had been a fight. What happened at the end of it had been unintentional, yes, but still a fight.
This had been nothing more than a horrible coincidence. One that Spirit still felt raw over.
He remembered to stutter out a thanks, before backing away and starting back down the hallway, Spirit’s gaze feeling heavy on the back of his head.
Eva had mentioned before they’d left Arus that Don was her father, but none of them had thought then to bring up the question of who her mother was.
Now Koji was just wondering how in the world he hadn’t even started to think that the one pilot who shared the surname could’ve been her.
First, there was something else he had to do. Or at least attempt…again.
The door didn’t budge this time either, so he just opted for sitting down and leaning back against it. “Hey, Stan?” he started. “You don’t have to talk, but I need to talk to you. This—this is major. And suddenly a lot of things make sense now and I have no idea why we hadn't made this connection sooner—and I’m rambling.” Koji brought his head into his hands and sighed, taking a breath to try calming down. The emotions of today mixing with Spirit’s was making him feel ill.
“Eva Wei, Don Wei, Maya Wei—Stan, she’s Maya’s daughter.” Shaky breath and continue, and don’t forget to breathe. “That’s why she went nuts down there. I think she blames Spirit for her mom dying. I can see how too, from our perspective it looked like sabotage a-and it wasn’t! That scandal that came from that all boiling down to an engine leak.
“Eva—she must have spent all the time thinking that…” He trailed off when Green prickled, voicelessly imparting a thought of her own on it all.
(The amount of sense it would make was chilling.)
There was a ten-second silence before a strangled “Oh,” came from the other side of the door, which was what prompted Koji to find the willpower to keep going.
“And do you want to know the worst part? I think she might’ve been there when it happened, too.” What felt like a few minutes dragged by, before Koji sighed, feeling exhausted all of a sudden. He added with a little forced hope in his voice, “Eva should be up soon. And…and you can’t stay in there forever, either. It doesn’t work.”
There was a quiet shuffling sound, followed by the door opening. “I guess you’d know that, huh,” Stan muttered, voice quiet and rough-sounding. His eyes were slightly red and he overall looked disheveled, but given everything, Koji couldn’t blame him.
“Kind of,” he replied, standing up. “Look, I don’t—I don’t know what happened down there, but whatever it was…she’s gonna be okay. There’s still at least another hour, and we’re definitely going to reach the drop point for everyone else first. But—but she’ll be okay.”
We’ll be okay, he wanted to add, but the words didn’t come. Stan gave him a long look, before saying “At least that makes one of us,” and looking down again.
Koji almost hadn’t heard him with how quietly he’d said it, and carefully replied with “You don’t have to talk about it if you don’t want to.”
“I should’ve paid more attention to Lirax.” For a moment, Stan looked like he was going to duck into his room again, but he didn’t. “If I hadn’t—”
“Hold on,” Koji interrupted, moving to put a hand on his shoulder. This was…familiar, in a way not entirely unwelcome. “I don’t—I don’t think there was anything you could’ve done to keep that from happening. If you’d done that, who knows what she would’ve done to Spirit?”
Stan froze for a few seconds, before sighing shakily. “As…as much as I hate calling that a good point…”
“Yeah,” Koji mumbled, before coming up with a subject-change. “C’mon—we should figure out where Coran put our tools from Alwas.”
“Good idea.” Stan paused, face darkening a fraction again, before saying “The orange needs to go too.”
What? “Okay, the purple’s a given , but why the—?”
“It needs to go.”
The intensity with which he’d said that made Koji flinch a little, and he nodded a few times. “Okay, okay. Complete re-painting. Maybe…red and blue?”
“Red and—” Stan stopped, blinking a few times, before smiling, alongside an amused ah-ha feeling from Green. “Yeah. I think that’d work.”
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
Coran paused to crack his back a bit as he finished cleaning up what was left of the dishes. Many of their previous guests had been grateful for the food and had happily thanked him. It was nice to be thanked once in a while, made everything worth it. No gift, no favor, no debt repaid could ever measure up to a genuine thank-you.
Putting the last of the dishes away, he went to start on making dinner for his Princess and her Paladins. Today had been…exhausting, to put it mildly. Coran was sure everyone would be famished and need a hardy meal to get some of their stamina back and rest well for the cycle.
One would think that, after all these years of war, he would have grown immune to seeing his friends hurt, but it seems that every new grievous injury just makes his heart seize more.
It seemed they got younger every time.
Humming to himself he didn’t pay much mind to the footsteps entering the kitchen until he heard someone clearing their throat.
He paused, turning to see Koji and Stan (part of the lingering tenseness wore away at seeing the latter) their armor since exchanged for nightwear.
“Good evening to you lads, what bring you to my corner of the castle?” he greeted.
“Well, we were hoping you knew where you put some of the things you got from Alwas,” Koji explained. “Me and Stan were hoping to take a crack at the Arrow again tomorrow.”
Coran thought on that for a moment. “Most of the things from the first floor are on the floor, though the box of…paints, I think? Those should be next to the wooden box with the broken latch. We didn’t get much of a chance to organize it all very much.” Coran smiled sheepishly at the boys.
“…box?” Stan sounded confused.
“Oh yes, a strange little thing. Reminded me of Allura’s jewelry box, only it had no jewelry, just a photo.” Coran turned back to his tasks, deciding on some of the spices acquired from their brief stop on Alwas. He hoped they would enjoy dinner tonight. Tonight’s dinner would likely be some trial-and-error on his part, but they deserved something at least somewhat familiar.
Another recollection on the photo came to him, having him add, “Now, I might be wrong, but I think Eva’s in it.”
A beat of silence, before Stan asked “Is the photo still in there?”
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
The first thing she felt was cold. Not the winter-night type of cold, either—more like an all-encompassing cold that superseded everything else.
Then she heard a hissing sound, followed by her ears popping, and then the next thing she knew someone had caught her when she’d slumped forward. “E-Eva?” she heard Jordan ask tentatively.
“Jordan?” she mumbled, blinking a few times before backing out of the grip, stumbling a bit when she bumped into something. “What…what happened?”
Jordan stared at her, face slightly pale, before asking “You don’t remember?” instead of answering the question. Remember? Remember what?
Her head felt fuzzy, and her whole body was sore, like she’d slept for too long and still woke up sleepy. A chinking sound reached her ears and she looked down to pieces of her armor littering the floor around…one of the healing pods?
Then it came back like a slap to the head, at the same time as Red mentally tackling her.
The attempted rescue mission. Rick not being there. Spirit. And—
“Wh-Whoa, hey! They’re—they’re not here. We dropped them off on some outpost on…well, the outpost was named Astera. They’re all gonna get home. Maybe not soon, but eventually.”
Eva stared at him for a few seconds, before saying “Oh.” On one hand, she was relieved on a deeper level than she thought humanly possible. On the other…the guilt was something between uncalled-for and wholly-expected.
Spirit had nothing to do with her mother’s crash.
It had been an engine leak.
That something so small had been what had done in such a famous star-racer pilot was almost unbelievable. Almost too cruel to be true, and yet it was.
Eva numbly recognized the room’s layout once she started to come back to herself, made note of Shiro still being in a pod, and…and the second pod slipping back into its hatch in the floor, now that she wasn’t standing in it. Why had she been in it?
“Jordan, what—did something else happen?”
“I…uh…”
He didn’t get to answer, since Allura walked by then and saw her. “Oh, you’re awake!” she exclaimed, her shoulders slumping slightly in a way that enunciated the pure relief in her voice.
“Well, yeah, but what—”
Allura didn’t let her finish, coming forward to grab her by the arm and start leading her down the hall, saying “Come with me for a dobosh. There’s something I wanted to give you.”
“Okay,” she muttered, now directing a blatant feeling of confusion at Red.
The Lion’s presence went stilted, hovering between uncertainty and sheer relief, before suggesting that they go for a flight tomorrow and going distant, otherwise also not answering her question.
The hallway they ended up in wasn’t one Eva had been down before, ending with a bedroom that was definitely bigger than the ones she and the others had. It didn’t really occur to her that it was Allura’s until the princess opened a closet and started rifling through it, throwing various articles of clothing onto the bed while muttering “Now where did I put it?”
There was a vanity up against one wall, and the bed was definitely a lot bigger. The whole room was a weird shade of iridescent blue, and there was a mirror just like the one in Eva’s own room. That was as much as she got to look around before she heard a “Here it is!” from Allura; the princess was holding something sunset-hued in color with a gold trim, definitely clothing of some variety. “I wasn’t sure if you had anything like this in your closet, and I know this is too small for me now. Why don’t you try it on?”
“Um—okay but—what happened?” Allura froze, smile slowly vanishing. “I mean…why was I in there?” she asked, suddenly feeling uncertain.
“You were...injured rather severely,” was the response given. “You were in there for a few vargas. I don’t know what exactly happened, though.”
And that would explain why both Jordan and Red were acting the way they were. She took the piece of clothing—a nightgown by the look of it—before glancing at Allura again, who promptly turned around.
It was in working to get the top half of the undersuit off that Eva noticed the two parallel holes in it, one in the front and one in the back, but she didn’t think too much of it. Not until she saw the definitive cause for the holes.
She heard a sharp “Oh,” and didn’t realize that she’d been the one to say it until she heard Allura saying “Those are there to stay, unfortunately.” Her eyes were still averted, but she’d turned her head enough for Eva to see that she was biting her lip. “The pods can only do so much.”
It wasn’t even that big of a scar, being maybe an inch-and-a-half long, and she knew for a fact that she had one on her back too.
Looking at it made her feel nauseous.
How everyone was acting made way too much sense now.
Eva quickly put on the nightgown to hide the scar from herself if for a little while…and ended up getting tangled in the fabric in her haste, to the point where Allura had to help her remove it and put it back on.
The nightgown was a little too big, in that it was loose around her shoulders and went all the way to her ankles, but whatever it was made of was soft. “I-It’s—this is nice,” she managed to say, prompting Allura to look.
The princess looked solemn for a moment, before a genuine smile replaced it. “It does look nice,” she agreed, smiling gently. “Now, come on. I’m sure the others will be happy to see you.”
Jordan was in the dining hall with Coran, with the former poking at a plate of what was probably the last of the preserved fish and vegetables from Arus. Coran saw them first, with a greeting of “There you are, Number Five!” which had the added effect of making Jordan jump straight into standing, almost falling over with how fast he turned.
“Uh—Eva, you look—nice?” he stuttered out, face flushing slightly. There was a stifled chuckle from Allura, while Eva gave him a flat look.
Allura looked around, frowning slightly, before asking “Where are the other two?”
“Right here,” Koji replied, with both him and Stan coming from one of the other halls. Koji promptly stopped mid-step, stammering out “O-Oh, Eva! You’re—you’re up!” He took a few steps forward before stopping again, looking uncertain all of a sudden, before asking “H-How are you feeling?”
“A bit numb,” she replied, though the words came out more tonelessly than she wanted them to. Koji bit his lip, looking sideways for a second at Stan, who’d gone completely stiff.
He’d been there when it happened, and Eva looked at the floor when that memory came back up. Now that the shock of seeing the aftermath of it was starting to wear out, it was finally hitting her that she almost died back there.
“Guys, I—I’m sorry,” she mumbled, voice hitching slightly. “I just—if I hadn’t—”
“H-Hey,” Jordan stuttered slightly. “Eva, it’s not—it wasn’t your fault th-that…” He trailed off, alongside Eva hearing approaching footsteps.
Stan looked like he was going to say something before looking nothing short of uncertain, before glancing at something he was holding in his hand that looked like a photograph. “You should have this,” he said, holding it out to her face-down. She took it almost hesitantly, and turned it over.
Eva wasn’t sure how long she stared at the photo, just that it was long enough for her chest to start protesting with a lack-of-oxygen ache. It wasn’t the photo she’d held onto for so long, because that never left her room.
Couldn’t be, because this one had her mother in it. And there was only one other person who could possibly have had this in the first place. Which would mean…
He didn’t forget.
She heard voices, from both sides and from behind her, but nothing registered, not until she suddenly felt something warm around her, and it took her a few seconds to realize that someone was hugging her. When was the last time someone had done that…?
She may as well have physically felt something in her break then, because then it felt like she just couldn’t get herself to not cry at that point. It was all she could do to make sure she kept holding the photograph so that it wouldn’t be damaged now—and then she heard a voice from right over her head.
“I got you, d-don’t worry.” Stan, Stan was the one hugging her, and he sounded like he was crying too. “I’m sorry I couldn’t—I didn’t—do much before. Today…it’s not gonna happen again. Alright?”
Slowly she felt other arms wrap around her. “We’re here for you partner, you…you don’t have to hide anything anymore.” Jordan, he sounded like he was getting emotional now too.
And a third. “We’re here for each other now, like we should’ve been during the race. Like a team. We aren’t going anywhere.” Koji.
Slimmer hands covered the one she had over the photo.
“I know it’s hard to grieve, especially when you want everything to go back to how it used to be. But some things…some things, there’s no going back from. But that doesn’t mean our future is hopeless. We will make a better future. For all our families.” Allura.
A hand on her head, firm and gentle. “We may not have all wanted each other around in the beginning, but we’re learning the ropes. We will pull through, and we are not leaving anyone behind!” Coran.
Red was a solid mental presence through it all, and beyond him was nothing but sincerity from the three she was tied to now that were here—the fourth was there, beyond a haze, but she had no doubt that Shiro would be with them all the way through this too.
She finally knew the truth behind what had happened, and while she wasn’t ready to sort through that tangle of emotions just yet…she wasn’t alone this time.
This is the first post of a blog for a fanfiction titled “Starbound”, which is a ambitious project I (I will call myself Mod Author) started drafting out on a whim just over a year ago.
It’s a crossover between Voltron: Legendary Defender and Oban Star-Racers.
The former, you’ve probably heard of. (The show and the fandom are two EXTREMELY different things, with the show suffering from “fans bashing a show they say they like but hate that it isn’t going the way they want it to” syndrome.)
The latter is a 26-ep show that’s over a decade old at this point but an absolute treasure that I highly recommend watching, with all episodes able to be found on YouTube, and DVDs of it available on amazon.
This blog was primarily made so I could keep track of all the fic-related things better than what I can do on my main blog, take asks, reblog/shout about any theoretical fanart, and post previews of upcoming chapters.
Some full chapters unfortunately won’t work because Tumblr doesn’t do text coloring, but ones that don’t have any of that will be put here once I’m absolutely certain they won’t need further editing.
Basic gist of the story’s premise:
A chance event on Altea set up a bit of a butterfly effect, culminating into the final product of the Red Lion being hidden...somewhere other than what was originally intended.
Going with that, in order to avoid two Lions being hidden too close together, the Blue Lion was stashed away in a different galaxy from Earth altogether.
This went about as well as it did in VLD canon, except this time, it was Blue that Zarkon found first.
Red remained perfectly safe (barring one very close call) for about ten-thousand years on a planet called Alwas—and then, of course, everything went sideways when he was found again.
For everyone that had been participating in the pre-selections for the Great Race of Oban, anyways, with only the Earth Team getting a vague warning in the fashion of a certain missing space pilot crash-landing on the planet before everything figuratively exploded.
The fic is essentially going to be a novelization of VLD’s plot, of course with the significant alteration in four out of seven of the main team, some other plot alterations here and there, with the occasional original-content chapter sprinkled in to attempt to fix any plot holes/provide some lightheartedness.
There’s also the detail of me taking the foundations of both shows and sticking them into a blender.
Like humanity being aware of aliens in the OSR-verse. That’s a big one.
Also VLD’s S8 is going to be Completely and Totally Ignored.
-for the record, I do not own the concept of Ekkunar. I’m just borrowing it from a game I’ve played because it’s neat. Not going to say who though, because they have lost my respect.
-heavy references and a reiterated line or few from the first VLD comic ahead.
-there may be some inconsistencies with this and Ch12 regarding the Arrow. I intend to rewrite Ch12 at some point, though I have to get it to stop fighting me first.
Chapter 17 -
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
There wasn’t a tracking device on the ship.
Over the course of two days, the seven of them had looked through every single room, the mice had checked the entirety of the ventilation ducts, and the Lions had even done their own separate complete scans—and they’d all come up with nothing.
“Maybe it was just bad timing,” Stan suggested finally. “I mean, they’ve probably been looking for those Blade people anyways. We were just there at the wrong time.”
“That could be it,” Shiro agreed, a sigh in his voice. “But I still don’t want to risk it until we know for sure.”
“So what’re we supposed to do until then?” Jordan asked.
There was a pause, before Coran snapped his fingers. “I think I might have an idea. Princess, mind setting a course for the Karthulian system?”
The princess looked puzzled. “The Karthulian system? But why…” Realization replaced the confusion, and she nodded. “Yes, that would be a good place to start.”
Eva was officially lost. “Wait, what’s…there?” she asked, while they were all on the way to the bridge.
Coran just grinned a bit, saying “Now that would just spoil the surprise!”
Red wasn’t much help either. he had a guess on what the surprise was, but he wasn’t too sure about it; there was a sort of an edge to it though, which had her thinking that what the Lion had in mind was something he wanted to get around to doing eventually.
They didn’t set a course so much as they did wormhole there. Once the blue faded, they were greeted with the sight of maybe one of the weirdest looking planets ever, in that it looked like it was in pieces, with fissures that were both large and deep enough to have an orange glow visible from where they were in space. The surface was mostly green, with streaks of blue and patches of yellow-brown in places—and the pieces that looked like they had halfway floated away from the planet were, of course, almost entirely barren.
“I…have so many questions on how that planet even looks like that,” Koji muttered.
“No one’s certain, actually,” Coran replied chipperly. “Whatever fractured Ekkunar happened long before even my pop-pop was around, and the best guess anyone has for why the pieces haven’t just floated away is the planet’s magnetic fields. It also happens to be home to possibly the largest archival system in the universe…” He paused to bring up some screens, before adding stiltedly “Which currently appears to be in flames.”
Said flames were probably caused by the trio of battlecruisers that were still firing down onto what looked like a city carved right into a forest-covered mountain range.
“Looks like we’ll be giving Ekkunar a good first impression,” Shiro said, and Eva stifled a groan. More fighting. Great. Red gave a weird impression that started off as something like a chiding growl that turned into an awkward purr.
He tried, at least.
And they definitely took the first ship by surprise—or at least, Shiro did, with Black’s jawblade cutting right through the ion-cannon’s barrel. Eva kept her attention firmly on the swarm of fighters that had immediately turned their attention to the Lions.
It lasted a few minutes, ending with the last still-in-one-piece decided it wasn’t worth staying around. “Jordan, think you could use the Blue Lion’s ice cannon to put out those fires?” Shiro asked.
“Uh, maybe?” A pause. “Actually, I think she has a better idea.” With that, Blue dove towards where two waterfalls cascaded into a reservoir, vanishing into the water for a few moments before rocketing back up, tail arced like she was going to fire—but instead of a laser, it was a jet of water.
“Well that worked,” Koji commented once the fires were all out.
“It’s all clear Princess,” Shiro reported.
It made sense that the one clearing large enough for all six ships to land was mobbed almost immediately. “Uh…do we really have to go out there?” Koji asked uncertainly.
“Yes, we do,” Allura replied, her voice having a stern edge to it that had Eva rolling her eyes.
The crowd itself looked more curious than anything, maybe a touch disbelieving, and was definitely a lot quieter than she’d thought it would be.
“…can’t be, can it?” she barely heard one of the watching aliens say.
“Sure looks real,” another said. To the side, she saw Allura go from confident to uncertain in maybe three seconds, and Coran having sort of a pinched look on his face while he scanned the crowd—which promptly gave way to surprised glee when his gaze had gone to where the crowd had abruptly parted.
“Well I’ll be a wabble’s plonk!” he exclaimed, throwing his arms out wide. “Kythylian Mu!”
Eva’s first thought was one of the orphans on Bherna (Wayth, if she remembered right), in that he was definitely the same species—but he was also definitely one of the biggest aliens she had seen so far.
“Coran, Coran the gamblin’ man,” Kythylian greeted amiably, throwing an arm around the Altean. “How long has it been since you came around here?”
“Ah, just short of ten-thousand decaphoebs.”
“Ten-thousand,” he repeated, whistling quietly. “My, my. Where does all that time go.”
…and that had an implication that Eva wasn’t sure made sense. Jordan must’ve picked up on it too, given the face he made before exclaiming “Hold on a second, you two know each other?”
“Do we?” Kythylian repeated, snorting. “I don’t have enough scales for the amount of times I had to get him out of trouble in this quadrant.”
At that, Coran laughed nervously. “Yes, well, that was all a long time ago—now, Kythylian, if I may—this is Princess Allura, and these here are the new paladins: Shiro, Eva, Jordan, Stan, and Koji.”
“So I’ve heard,” the alien nodded to them before looking at Allura. “…you’re the spittin’ image of your parents, y’know that?”
If anyone else noticed the brief flash of pain in her eyes, nothing was said. “I’ve been told that a few times, yes. It’s good that we finally got to meet—my father told me stories about you.”
“I bet he did.” And then he looked at the rest of them studiously for a bit, before saying “Kinda scrawny, ain’t they?”
“Wha’—hey!” Eva retorted before Jordan could say something probably along the same lines.
“Well, they just started not too long ago,” Coran said, a touch defensively. “They haven’t gone through the full training regimen yet.”
Kythylian gave him a look. “Wait, don’t tell me—you wanna bring ‘em through the planet run?”
“Yes, actually!”
Now the alien grimaced. “I got some bad news for you then. Zarkon’s got all five of them on lockdown, ever since that stunt you all pulled at his central command.”
Coran’s face faltered, a delicate “Ah,” being his response.
“Yeah. Now, I sure as heck don’t like takin’ trips out to places for no reason, so here’s the deal: you all get free reign in the capital today. No tabs, no nothin’. It’s the least I can offer in return for clearing up that disagreement I had with the new commander for this quadrant. Now if you’ll excuse me, I was bein’ pulled in about eight directions a couple doboshes ago. Lots of important places were just on fire an’ all.”
With that, he turned to head towards an intact road with a lazy wave, the remnants of the crowd that had steadily dispersed taking the cue to return to whatever they’d been doing.
“So uh,” Stan started, voice a little stilted. “If you knew that guy from before, wouldn’t that make him over ten-thousand years old?”
“The Mudranni can actually live well beyond forty-thousand decaphoebs, if they are particularly lucky,” Allura remarked, earning stunned stares. Forty-thousand?!
Coran, meanwhile, had run a hand down his face with a groan. “Of course the traditional grounds would be watched,” he muttered.
“So what exactly is that planet run you mentioned?” Shiro asked.
“Yendailian, Bluve, Niloofar, Griezian Sur, and Talwar-Six,” the adviser listed off in response. “Those five planets have some of the most extreme environmental conditions in the known universe. The original paladins used them as a sort of training course.”
Red had gone full reminiscence mode as soon as Coran had named the first planet; Eva had the impression that Yendailian not only had a lot of volcanos, but was also what Red would consider a vacation spot. As for everything else: “It sounds fun,” she commented.
“Maybe for you,” Jordan said tightly, face pale.
“Oh come on Jordan, you’re getting better at it, right?”
“Well—yeah, but—!”
“It’s not like we can go out to any of them right now, what with Zarkon watching them,” Coran cut in, looking pensive for a moment before adding “That, and now that I think about it, we tended to have to wait for Bluve’s conditions to be favorable anyways. But no matter—how about we hit the archives instead?”
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
The archives themselves was something like a library crossed with a museum, actually, complete with a front desk headed by three gray-skinned humanoids that had cyan-colored geometric lines (tattoos maybe?) crossing their arms and faces, a crest of colorful feathers on their heads, and bright-green eyes; native Ekkuni, according to Coran.
Jordan wasn’t expecting one of them to actually squeal when she realized who they were, though, before the one dressed like they were in charge could even finish his introductory spiel on the place’s rules.
Beyond that…it wasn’t that the place was too boring, it was more of the fact that there wasn’t really anything for him to do there. Eva, Stan, and Koji were off looking for anything they could use to draft up a new engine for the Arrow, he didn’t see where Allura went—probably to do some diplomatic thing, and Coran…well, Jordan didn’t see where Coran had gone off to. Or Shiro, for that matter.
So he went back outside.
The glaring detail of one of the planet’s floating chunks being visible way off in the distance aside, Ekkunar was kind of like those pictures of high-altitude rainforests on Earth. Unfortunately, also like rainforests on Earth, it probably rained here a lot—like now, for instance. He was relatively close enough to where the Lions were when the downpour started to duck under Blue for cover, at least.
Blue herself seemed pretty stuck in memory-mode, offering an idea of what Bluve was like before Jordan could actually ask: lots and lots of snow with near-constant blizzards. Not something Jordan could consider an ideal place to be, but it seemed to be pretty high on her favorite-places list. Well—maybe we could go there one day. Just to check it out.
Blue purred in response, before pausing and directing his attention toward some movement at the base of one of the stairways cut into a slope. “Figures the weather goes sour after all of that,” Kythylian commented, coming to sit by Blue’s other paw. “’Least it’ll put the rest of the little fires out, right?”
“I guess,” Jordan replied awkwardly.
The alien chuckled, taking his hat off to shake it a few times, sending droplets flying back into the deluge. “Don’t worry, I don’t bite. Got a question, if ya don’t mind.”
“Go ahead.”
“Where’re you and the rest of ‘em from? I’ve been all over most of the charted universe, but I can’t say I’ve seen anything like you, aside from Alteans.”
He really should’ve seen that question coming sooner than later. And just saying Earth probably wouldn’t cut it, either, which means he had to think about how to answer it. “Well, uh…we’re from the same galaxy Ōban’s in?”
Before he could start berating himself for making the response sound like another question, Kythylian made some sort of clicking sound. “That explains it. Ya need all sorts of paperwork to even get an idea on what lives in that galaxy nowadays. And don’t even get me started on the black market that came out of that quiznakking blockade. Don’t get me wrong, gettin’ things to sell legally on this side of it is worth a pretty piece of GAC, but when somone gets it into their head to do it illegally, they really go out of their way to hide when they do it.”
Jordan thought about that comment for a moment. “So you’re like a space cop?”
“Ehh…” Kythylian made a so-so gesture. “Could call it that, I guess. Some quintants it’s a more of a headache than anythin’ else, but it’s my headache.” He paused, glancing up. “Got a few mixed feelings at seeing the Lions again, honestly. How much has Coran told you about Alfor and the rest?”
“Barely anything, actually,” Jordan said, feeling apprehensive about the maybe-opportunity.
“Huh…can’t fault him, really. Probably still feels like yesterday to him.” The alien looked distant, before asking “Y’all at least know who the old Black Paladin was, right?”
“Yeah,” Jordan drew the word out, feeling himself scowling more than thinking about it. “Found out at the last possible second.”
Kythylian grunted. “Lemme guess—he’s still got the bayard?”
“As far as Eva saw, yeah.”
“And that’d be the itty-bitty one, right?”
Jordan opened his mouth to make a retort on her behalf, and then considered the fact that Kythylian was definitely taller than Rick at full height.
“Looks like the rain’s clearin’ up a bit,” Kythylian said abruptly, glancing at the sky. “There’s a thing or two I have to talk to Coran about. He’s still at the archives, right?”
“I think so.”
The alien stood, stretching a bit, taking a few steps out in the direction of the path back up towards the building, before stopping again, turning to say, “Y’know—I don’t wanna steal Coran’s thunder or anything, but if you want to know what the old guard looked like, there’s a holo-display doohickey in the central room.”
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
“I think this might work, but…” Stan said finally, trailing off. To the side, Koji was frowning slightly, staring at the draft they’d put together for the possible new engine for their star-racer.
In theory, it looked beautiful. But in reality?
There was simply no room in the Arrow II as it was now to even put the necessary equipment for converting the crystal’s energy into something useable, which would mean having to attach an extra compartment somewhere onto the ship—which by itself was dangerous.
On top of that, the fuel tanks would become nothing more than dead weight. And that was saying nothing about how in the world they were supposed to overhaul the hyperdrive.
“Honestly, I don’t think we can even take most of those things out of the Arrow in the first place,” Koji admitted, shoulders slumping. “It’s all too integrated.”
“So what do we do, then?”
“I’m not—”
“Couldn’t we just build another one?”
It took all of Stan’s willpower to not curse at Eva’s sudden words, having not heard her come up to look at the draft too. “Uh, well, we could,” Koji said, stuttering a bit. “But to do that, we’d…huh.” He blinked, brow furrowing. “Actually, we might be better off just doing that.”
Build another one? Stan repeated silently, scowling for a moment—that’d equate to just giving up on the Arrow II. Then again, they did just come to the conclusion that they wouldn’t be able to apply most of the upgrades they had planned out to begin with.
That, and knowing how poorly the materials the Arrow II was made of held up against everything else used in the galaxy, or at least that they’d seen back on Alwas…
There was a sudden commotion from the second floor that jolted him out of his thoughts, sounding like something falling over followed by Coran shouting “Sorry!”
Stan kept the glance up level for a few moments before looking back at the draft with a sigh. “Okay, so maybe that would be the easier thing to do. But where would we even get everything?”
Koji shrugged. “We could probably get a few more things from those defunct shuttles, but not much.” No taking parts from the Arrow II, in other words. Stan wasn’t going to argue.
Time to ask Coran if there were any other storerooms with things they could use, then.
Shiro saw him coming up the stairs first, stopping short in whatever he was saying, which got Coran to turn—he barely got a glimpse of a somber look before it was replaced with a cheery smile. “Ah, Stan! Did you need something?”
“Uh,” he mumbled, feeling like he’d just interrupted something important. “It—It can wait.”
“Don’t worry, Shiro and I had just finished up drafting the new training regimen. Don’t want a repeat of…uh.” He coughed, and Stan had to try extremely hard to suppress a flinch when he realized what exactly he had been about to bring up.
Shiro side-eyed Coran, before asking “Has Jordan come back yet?”
“He went out?”
“So did the princess, I think,” Coran said, looking thoughtfully back down toward the entrance to the building. “Ah wait, there he is! With Kythylian, too!” I guess it’s a good thing we got that draft finished.
Coran paused when Kythylian made some hand gestures at him, nodding almost imperceptibly before heading downstairs and vanishing off into another room with him. Jordan, on the other hand, looked around the room a bit before settling on looking at the darkly-colored small desk toward the back of the central area of the building.
Eva got to him first. “Hey Jordan, guess what? We’re going to build another star-racer!”
“That’s…neat,” he said awkwardly, glancing up at Stan with a confused look for a second, before looking back to the first thing, then to the side at the main desk. “So uh, how does that holo-thing work?”
“Is that what it is?” She turned to look back over her shoulder, curiosity written all over her face. “I’m not sure—but I bet we can find out!”
Have to wait for Coran to get back anyways, Stan thought, shaking his head before following the kids. Eva was already making a face at the controls, which looked a bit like what was on the castleship’s bridge, if simplified by maybe half.
It didn’t help that he still couldn’t read the language it was coded in—Ekkuni, probably—but Yellow could, dubiously letting him know what keys to push to bring up a list.
There was a span of two seconds before Jordan hit another key, and the only warning Stan had was Yellow doing the mental equivalent of taking a deep breath before the platform in front of the desk lit up.
It took a bit for him to realize just what he was looking at, in that the first thing he recognized was what looked like the hologram of Allura’s father, if a few decades (or the Altean equivalent of that) younger. The second thing were what he and the three others were wearing. (There was one missing, but Stan couldn’t fault whoever put this together in leaving the last one out.)
“Is that…?” Eva started uncertainly.
“Yeah,” Jordan mumbled, blinking. “I mean, same armor.”
“What are you guys looking at—oh.” Koji cut himself off with a stifled flinch, maybe from however the Green Lion reacted. “I guess it’d make sense for a place like this to have something like…this,” he said slowly, coming up to look at the screen, Shiro a bit behind him.
Stan had a suspicion about Alfor having been one of the first Lion pilots, but this confirmed it—and while he couldn’t be too sure, he also had a feeling that Eva might’ve guessed at it a little more specifically beforehand.
Details were a little hard to read, given the whole blue-hologram detail, but Yellow’s first pilot had been a big guy, at least Rick’s height.
Same went with Green’s being the shortest of the four and…well, kind of reminding him of a deer in some ways, and Blue’s looking like a humanoid something between a shark and a manta ray, obviously partially aquatic.
Yellow had gone about as distant as…as Coran looked right now, whereas Kythylian just made a huffing sort of sigh before saying “Still feels like it was yesterday, don’t it.”
Stan was pretty sure he and Koji hit the off key at the same time, with Jordan stuttering a bit, though Coran just shook his head with a sad smile. “No, no, it’s fine. I’m honestly not sure if we have any pictures of them on the castle.”
“I already knew about Allura’s dad being Red’s first pilot,” Eva started hesitantly. “But what about the other three?”
“Blaytz, Trigel, and Gyrgan,” was the response, Coran’s gaze going more towards the ceiling. His voice wasn’t quite resigned, more reminiscent with a touch of weariness.
“You said something about Trigel being the one to come up with the blindfold-dive,” Koji pointed out.
Kythylian guffawed, the noise startling all of them and earning a glare from one of the archive’s staff. “That sounds like a thing she’d do. She wasn’t nearly as bad as Alfor though.”
Somehow that conversation resulted in Kythylian corralling them all to a nearby restaurant, before he and Coran really started going on about things the old paladins had gotten up to.
It was when they were maybe halfway through a story involving a case of mistaken identity that happened on some planet called Veldin involving a rogue mercenary and a politician that Stan got his second scare of the day, in hearing Allura say “Is that what really happened there?” from behind him. She was smiling, though there was a pinched look to it.
“Well, uh…yes, it was,” Coran stuttered a little at first, before going fully resigned, and then curious. “I was wondering where you were.”
The smile went drier than a desert. “It occurred to me that we likely wouldn’t have any use for the tax records in the castle’s archives.”
“Ah, no we wouldn’t.”
Koji, ever the perceptive one, picked up on the impending mood switch and changed the topic back to its original track. “It kind of helps, hearing about things like that. That they messed up now and then too.” It sounded about as awkward as he looked (not that the others would probably be able to see, but Stan could kind of feel it) but it was a sentiment Stan agreed with.
Kythylian waved one hand a bit in a gesture that lost context probably between species. “Kid, that’s all heroes are in the end. Some story could start as some guy clearing out a nest of yeilphars and somehow turn into him taking out a pack of Zarellian hellcats without a scratch.”
“Is that something that actually happened?” Eva asked.
There was a snort alongside a smile and fond headshake. “Maybe. Look, give it a few phoebs, and I’ll probably be hearin’ stories about you kids that won’t include all the panickin’ and improvisin’.” A glance up at a clock on the wall got a mumbled curse. “Look, I gotta jet back to Mudranni or the missus is gonna want my head on a pike, but I got one last warning for y’all.
“That little show you put on at Zarkon’s central upped you to top-priority public-enemy status everywhere the empire’s got a strong foothold. You three should still be safe in civilian areas so long as you’re not in armor,” he gestured at Eva, Koji, and Stan. “You, they got a good shot of, so you’re gonna have to watch it everywhere there might be a bounty hunter,” a gesture at Jordan there, who gulped visibly. “And you especially have to watch it.” He leveled a stare at Shiro. “Gladiatorial matches get broadcast.”
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
Coran seemed way too eager to help in planning out the theoretical Whizzing Arrow III more, but that just added to the amount of distraction the activity was to the whole intergalactic-public-enemy status they had now.
That definitely wasn’t a thing Koji would’ve liked to have heard, but he supposed it was better to have heard it then in the form of a warning then finding it out the hard way. Definitely better than finding out the hard way, he corrected himself with a small shudder, briefly glancing back at the Arrow II.
It would be considered a very early retirement for a star-racer, but then again, the Whizzing Arrow line weren’t meant to be star-racers in the first place.
…and it didn’t occur to Koji until that moment that he’d gotten used to the Green Lion showing interest and/or giving input on random thoughts until it didn’t happen. She’d seemed distant ever since seeing the holograms, actually.
It was strange, finally having both a name and face to put to Green’s first pilot instead of having to just piece together little bits of information.
To the side, he saw Stan look up suddenly, before saying “Remember that…weird thing that happened on Bherna? While we were fighting that thing?”
“Uh-huh.”
“I think I know what that was now.” That statement was considerably quieter, with his face paling slightly. Koji caught on after a few seconds.
In retrospect…it made sense. A frankly-horrifying amount of sense. Shiro’s knowledge in close-quarters fighting had to have come from somewhere, and he knew from seeing firsthand that he was on a completely different level than where Jordan was at. (That was saying nothing in comparing him to the rest of them. Koji was actively dreading the next time Allura threw the robot at them.)
Shiro had taken Kythylian’s words with only a barely-noticeable flinch, a shudder felt mentally, and was either still on the bridge or maybe on the training deck.
He actually wasn’t sure about what Shiro did during their downtime, so that was probably another thing they had to work on fixing. “Think he’d mind helping out with all of this?” he asked.
Stan shrugged a little, before saying “I was gonna ask the same thing, except with Jordan.”
Koji thought about that for a second. Jordan had disappeared pretty quick once the two of them and Eva had got started with looking for references on how to put together the type of engine primarily seen in this part of the universe, but he honestly hadn’t really thought about it until now. (There was a brief moment of thinking back to that awkward conversation on Arus.)
“Well, he’d probably want to help with getting the turret put together?” It was a guess, honestly. And that was another thing—the turret wouldn’t need its own battery anymore.
Stan muttered that same thought, before asking “Where are those two, anyways?”
“Uh…”
“I think they’re with Shiro on the observation deck,” Coran piped up, reminding Koji that he was still there. Suspended up near the ceiling to get at a series of wires, yes, but still there.
That wasn’t as surprising as Koji felt it should’ve been, at least in the case of Eva. She seemed to almost have a sixth sense on knowing when someone needed help.
Coran yelped alongside Allura’s voice suddenly being on the intercom: “Coran, I think one of the castle’s barrier-emitters was damaged during the fight for the Balmera.”
There was a groan from the adviser. “Roger that, I’ll put it on top of the list.”
Koji exchanged a look with Stan, who nodded a bit, before asking “How damaged is it?”
Coran stilled. “Ah, you’ll have to ask the princess. The castle’s hull is pretty sturdy, so it probably just has to be reset.” A pause. “Oh, I see what you’re asking. If you could do that, it’d be appreciated.”
“It’s nothing,” Koji said, standing up. “Where is it, anyways?”
“You’ll have to ask the princess. There’s quite a few of them. You may as well get suited up on the way there, since they’re outside the castle and, well, we’re in the vacuum of space at the moment.”
In retrospect, he should’ve seen that coming too.
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
If anyone’s wondering, the offscreen conversation between Coran and Kythylian can be summed up as “I don’t want to hear that any of those kids ended up getting killed because of something you chose not to tell them.”
Stan hadn’t noticed it until that moment on the training deck.
Or maybe he just hadn’t consciously noticed that everything seemed just a little less quiet, the blatant addition of the sentient robotic lion that was Yellow notwithstanding. It was more out of the others coming through painfully clear at times that he was even able to tell them apart so fast.
Koji was pretty much a half-written book for him already, with how well they knew each other. Stan didn’t have much doubt that it went vice-versa, either. Though while he knew Koji had some…well, confidence issues, to put it one way, he didn’t think it was as near-constant as it seemed to actually be.
And that was just one of the facets that he probably wouldn’t ever have ever seen at all when it came to the others.
Jordan in particular could be loud at times, but at the same time, under that…Stan really didn’t want to use the word shy, but it was the best word for it. That wasn’t even touching when he was in the Blue Lion; then he was nothing short of an anxious disaster.
Molly was the polar opposite, and by that he meant in general. He barely noticed her more than half the time, with how she was hiding herself from them. Whether it was consciously or not, he didn’t know. He didn’t know a lot of things about her, actually, when it came in comparison to the others.
And then, Shiro. Shiro was kind of like Koji, in that he had a tendency to downplay things he was good at, but instead of insecurity it was more of a complete no self-value sort of thing. And that wasn’t even touching the fight-or-flight instinct that was never absent.
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
Molly telling them all that her name was actually Eva was one thing, and her telling them that their standoffish team manager was her father was another. Though now that Stan thought about it, they had the same short temper.
It coincided with her becoming just a little more noticeable over the link, that he was able to catch a few things now and then from her—the first thing was a bone-deep relief that he recognized all too well, and a muted wonder at everything that only a kid could have—but there was a tenseness to everything seemed to imply that one wrong move would send her right back into hiding.
Stan didn’t really remember much of anything between then and shoving Coran down to try avoiding what had apparently been another drone like Rover, but sent by Sendak as an explosive. He didn’t remember it, but he had a couple burn scars on his back to prove it had happened.
Well, and a few smaller scars where shards of the crystal that had initially been powering the castle had embedded themselves into his skin, but maybe it was better he didn’t remember those getting taken out.
On a completely different note…now it was Koji that seemed more withdrawn. The guiltily-furtive glances he’d been giving Stan during the whole explanation left him with a pretty solid idea on why.
Koji didn’t give any sort of indication on if he was right or not, which meant he was probably right.
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
The problem was that when Koji didn’t want to talk about something, he simply would not talk about it. Or even hint at it. It was kind of impressive, really, and would’ve been in this case too, had it not have obviously been bothering him so much, which made it a lot more worrying.
By that point, Stan had more or less figured out how to tone out everyone else. He’d also noticed that physical distance played a part in how noticeable they were over the link—but he’d also known beforehand from Eva that if someone wanted to hide, they’d hide, and there was pretty much nothing that could be done about it.
The Exception to that rule was when the Lions were put together. If the link in its base state was something like a dripping faucet, when Voltron was formed, it was something more like an open fire-hydrant.
There was no ignoring it.
Eva went from being in the background to being at the forefront of things, and Stan was left with a newfound appreciation for her might-actually-be-instinct piloting skills.
Shiro and Jordan both might as well have been laser-pointers with how focused they were on the task at hand—not even the latter’s usual anxiety-associated-with-piloting was there at the moment.
Stan was also left with a reinforced concern for his brother.
He’d gradually noticed it more over the span of the time spent on the Balmera’s surface, but now it was obvious in that Koji just seemed…detached, from everything. Sure, he was focused enough on what was happening around them to interact with everything, but beyond that? It felt like he just wasn’t really there—and that feeling lingered afterwards, all the way up until he’d woken Stan up at some ungodly hour of the night and just broke.
These events are set during/after the events of Chapter 16.
Chapter 16 -
“Just to make sure I understand all of this,” Horace began, trying to not let his irritation at the matter show. “Two more L-vessels crashed on Elpis.”
“Yes sir.”
“And then you lost them.”
Commander Delmas at least had the decency to look ashamed for a moment. “Yes sir. We’re still looking into the security breach.”
“Good. Were you at least able to learn anything about the one you were able to bring to the base for study?”
“Not much. Nothing we have here was able to get it open, and we’ve cross-referenced every single dictionary, both human languages and alien languages, but there’s nothing even remotely like the symbol that was on the green one. But one thing we did find out was that…well, that the material they made of doesn’t exist.”
“Come again?”
“Or, well,” she stuttered slightly. “It does exist, since it’s what the L-vessels are made of, but it’s nothing on the periodic table, traditional or extended. The research team wasn’t able to figure out what they run on, either. The best guess we have is that they’re solar-powered, and even then, there are doubts.”
That was…interesting, to say the least. “What about their pilots? Anything on species?”
She smiled faintly. “About that. The base’s security footage didn’t have anything, unfortunately—they got set on loop somehow—but an inquiry into the nearby town was another story.”
An image came up, clearly from the security camera of a simple convenience store, but it was who was shown in the image that had the president’s attention. He quickly brought up the file on the Great Race, just to make sure he wasn’t simply seeing things.
He wasn’t.
“Not a stunt I’d expect from two mere mechanics,” he mused. It was a strange mixture of irritation and relief, the former because they’d impeded on government business, and the latter because if two of the team were alive, it meant the others might be as well.
Then again, he’d already had that suspicion when the team he’d gotten cleared to send out to Alwas had reported no sign of them at all whatsoever. Not even their star-racer could be found, whole or in fragments. (The second one, anyways. The first was located in a state of beyond repair in a junkyard on the planet.)
If he had to guess, one of the others had been piloting the red one away from Alwas then. Horace understood why they hadn’t come back to Earth then, or simply landed on Elpis—not with the unknown vessel tailing them.
But why not this most recent incident?
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
It was unfortunate, what had befallen Captain Lirax, but perhaps he was better off having perished, than living to report yet another failure involving the paladins. The same could not be said of the two subordinates of his. They would be punished, upon their return to Central Command.
But perhaps it was not a complete loss, the druid mused, gazing at the two vials now held in hand. One contained a few strands of hair, and the other a small sample of blood.
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
She’d waited until both Lance and Hunk were guaranteed out-cold before opening up her laptop. Katie grimaced when she saw the email from her mom, which she decided could wait until after she was finished drafting the first outgoing piece.
It had taken a bit of nosing around on Commander Delmas’ computer in the middle of the night—a perk of being in charge of all military operations on Elpis was that her computer had a signal strong enough to reach the extended internet—but she’d found out a little more information on who Stan had wanted her to contact.
A little more information than she’d expected, if she had to be honest with herself, along with an honest incentive to plant a little computer-worm of her making into the system.
The surprising part to the information was that it turned out that the person Stan wanted her to contact doubled as his and his adoptive brother’s employer and foster parent.
That wasn’t all, either.
Katie wasn’t sure what the Great Race of Ōban was supposed to be, but the level of security on things even mentioning it put the clearance blocks on the Kerberos Mission to shame.
And that by itself piqued her interest.
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
He’d resigned himself to it, when the final thread had snapped after the fifth round. His pawn had been chosen, and the centuries he’d spent nudging fate in the necessary directions had all been for naught.
It mattered little, in the end, upon having reason to reflect further on the nature of the Lions. In simply being present on Alwas, the Red Lion had provided him an alternative.
One that needn’t require a pawn at all, but an accomplice.
He simply had to be patient for a while longer, and let the victor become complacent.
It would not take long for that to happen.
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
She wasn’t sure who’d suggested it, in the end, but all of them sans Shiro were gathered on the bridge, in the midst of a haphazard mess of blankets and pillows taken from various empty bedrooms. Allura and Coran had gone along with it, curious about the human concept that was a sleepover.
Eva also wasn’t sure what exactly woke her up just then.
She sat up, blinking sleep out of her eyes, before looking around. It definitely wasn’t a blanket being stolen from her—by the look of it Koji had taken one of the ones Stan had been using this time. They and Allura were off to the left, as were the mice.
It wasn’t a sound, since she’d since figured out how to filter out Coran’s whistly snoring; he was somewhere by the main console, just in case.
Then she noticed the lack of another sound she’d gotten used to, and looked further to the right to see Jordan staring up vacantly at the crystal. “Can’t sleep either?” she asked quietly.
He started a bit, visibly biting back an exclamation. “Eva? Why’re you up?”
She paused, thinking it over for a minute, before saying “I’m not really sure. It—it almost feels like I…missed something. And you?”
He shrugged. “Dunno. Just can’t sleep, I guess. I’ve been in and out for the past two hours.” He looked back to the ceiling, expression going blank, before making a small, short sound not unlike a nervous chuckle. “Actually, now that you mention it? I kinda—kinda feel like I just…dodged a bullet, or something.”
She frowned at him. “Really?”
“Y-Yeah.” He shuddered a little. “Don’t know why.”
Red had gone pensive in the back of her head, like he was pondering something, but when she directed a query at him, he shrugged it off before suggesting trying to go back to sleep. It wasn’t a bad idea, either.
“You doing okay now?” She almost missed Jordan’s question, which she had to think about.
Yes, she felt better after that emotional outburst, but okay would be a stretch. She’d spent the last ten years thinking she knew something, and then found out she was wrong. Her memories of what happened between her and Spirit before…then, were hazy at best, and everything after that was a painful blur, but enough things were clear.
Rick hadn’t been there when they’d gotten back, and that was that. They’d just have to keep looking, for both him and her father. And Prince Aikka, too—Allura had mentioned seeing G’dar on Alwas before she’d fallen asleep.
“I will be,” she decided, stifling a yawn. To the side, Koji mumbled something incomprehensible, which got a quick smile; she hadn’t taken him for one to sleep-talk. “We better get back to sleep. Shiro’s gonna be up tomorrow morning, isn’t he?”
“Yeah.” Jordan paused, before saying, “Hey, uh, Eva? I was wondering if—” He stopped when she looked over at him again, puzzled, face flushing faintly before saying “Never mind,” and turning away with a quiet “Night.”
She looked at him for a few seconds longer before echoing the statement, the sensation that had first awoken her now forgotten.
Though something else hit her seconds after, eliciting a quiet “Oh no,” from her.
“What?” Jordan asked, apprehensive.
“How…how are we going to tell Shiro what happened today?”
Eva wasn’t sure how long she kept staring, until a breeze startled her out of it. She didn’t bother with taking the slow road this time, instead jumping down and using the jetpack to slow her fall—and doing that was actually kind of fun, though the adrenaline rush probably had something to do with it.
She didn’t waste time in explaining why she was rushing either, when she’d come around the last curve Black’s front paw created: “I have to get a closer look at that place!”
Shiro stuttered at looking away from the now-present campfire, startled, before shooting it down. “No! Not by yourself,” the last bit was added when she started to protest, standing up, flinching with a hiss before moving his hand to his side. It wasn’t before Eva saw why he did that, though. The phantom-pain in her side suddenly made sense.
“You have a—uh,” she stammered out, pointing for a second before part of her realized that would probably come off as rude, gluing her arms to her sides.
Shiro glanced down at it. “It’s just a scratch.”
“I’m pretty sure scratches aren’t supposed to glow!” Whatever had made those purple-glowing “scratches” had cut right through his armor’s undersuit, and the skin around them had a bluish-black hue to it that probably meant something bad.
“It’s way too dangerous for you to go there by yourself,” Shiro insisted, taking a step forward—and promptly stopping when a growl echoed throughout the canyon, before looking up at the Black Lion.
“Besides,” Eva went on. “They might have some…some first-aid kits in that base. They probably won’t notice one gone.” Shiro looked back at her, and the standoff lasted for what felt like hours, before he sighed.
“Alright, you have a point. You can go—as long as you tell me why you wanted to go there in the first place.”
Eva bit her lip. Should’ve seen that coming. Well, so long as it helped sell the point… “They have some aliens there—a-and Rick’s down there too.”
Shiro’s eyes widened. “Did you see any other humans?”
“I…no, I didn’t. But maybe—maybe there’s more inside?”
He nodded slowly, before saying “It might be a better idea to wait until it gets darker before you go too close.”
“I’ll have to find a way to cross that canyon first,” she said. “But that’s a good idea.”
The second good idea was, instead of climbing the moss and vines again, to use the Black Lion as a sort of giant, lion-shaped stepstool/ladder. She leaned forward a little at Shiro asking, thankfully, which let Eva keep a good-enough foothold until she could get to the ledge above.
The ravine stretched on and on to the right, but to the left she could make out what looked like a natural rock bridge crossing it. “Now how am I supposed to get over there without it taking forever?” she mused, glaring out at it.
Red wearily surfaced in her head, pointing out the smaller vehicle in his cargo bay, and Eva promptly facepalmed. Shiro didn’t ask anything when she came back to get into her Lion, at least.
Dusk was coming quickly, with the sky going from hazy white to muted orange over the time it took for her to reach the rock bridge. During that time, the sense of trepidation that had sprung up the moment she’d realized that she hadn’t been seeing things had only gotten stronger, and by the time she had to stop her speeder by a rock overhang because it was still too light, Eva felt like she could hardly breathe.
“C’mon Eva, keep it together,” she muttered to herself at getting out of the vehicle, leaning back against the rock. “You just need a game plan now.”
For a moment, she wished Jordan was here—he probably would’ve known how to do this. But she had no idea where he was, or Stan and Koji for that matter.
Her Lion’s presence flickered again, with some concern. “I’m okay,” she muttered, before asking “How about you?” He went contemplative for a few seconds, before giving a few impressions; he was just over halfway done with repairs, but would need some more time to recharge.
Eva didn’t say anything in response to that, instead sitting down in the shadow cast by the rock. If she had to be completely honest with herself, she’d never really put much thought into the whole mind-link thing, aside from when it was an all-encompassing detail. It hadn’t been much more than another little problem on a whole stack of problems.
Now that most of it wasn’t there, she couldn’t help but feel like its absence was something more like a black hole.
Red purred then, relaying a scan’s results—the Blue Lion was roughly one galaxy away from them, which meant Jordan really wasn’t that far away at all. She smiled, looking up toward a few clouds drifting past. “Thanks Red.”
There was probably another two hours or three before the sun was fully down, and Red had circled back on his report to the bit on recharging, giving a thinly-veiled hint which she scowled at. “But I’m not—”
She tried to stifle the yawn that decided to happen right there. She really did. But it was still noticed, and he was pushing the idea of unconsciousness not counting as actual sleep.
Eva groaned, slumping to the ground. “Ugh, fine. Just…just wake me up when it gets dark.” The Lion purred again, and she shut her eyes.
Don’t worry Rick. I’ll find a way to get you out of there. Somehow…
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
Three stacks of stone weathered smooth by both time and environment, with worn engravings in two languages for two, and one for the last, stood by one another on a cliff overlooking the sea below.
Terlar had been one of the castle’s cooks, and the one who always had set aside a basket’s worth of juniberry tarts for her whenever he made any. Even after the war had started, he’d managed to greet everyone with a smile.
Merla—and she’d had to ask Mariposa to translate the engraving for her—had been one of Allura’s closest friends, even after she’d started her training to be an alchemist.
And even though there was only faded colors to the stones to set them aside from the other two, it was otherwise a humble grave for the last queen of Altea.
Allura wasn’t entirely sure how long she stayed there in silence, just that only a soft rain starting was enough to stir her from her thoughts. “I’m sorry,” she murmured, standing and brushing dust from her outfit. “I hadn’t meant to stay here that long.”
“It’s alright,” the native replied, sliding off of the rock she’d been sitting on. “It’s nice getting away from everyone else now and then.”
Mariposa went off in a different direction when they’d neared the buildings that had been meant for the race teams, shortly before the rain started picking up. Thankfully, Allura spotted Coran waving her over from inside one that had its doors left open. “I’d been about to go looking for you before the sky opened up,” he said once she’d reached the safety of the roof. “It was a hard bargain, but we can get a few of the storerooms on the lower floors cleared out while we’re here!”
Allura frowned slightly, confused—those storerooms were mostly spare scrap parts and old electronics, and she last remembered Alwas as being willingly non-technological. Coran’s smile looked slightly more forced when she mentioned it. “That did come up, yes.” He coughed, before adding, “It would seem that recent events have a hand in them starting to move away from those practices. It won’t happen quickly by any means, but it’s going to start.”
That wasn’t surprising either.
His tone turned to something more gentle when he asked, “Where are they?”
Deep breath. “There’s a path leading along the cliff. You can’t miss it.”
He nodded, before looking more into the building. “Now, I can’t be entirely sure, given the rain, but the marks on the door kind of look like our paladins’ racing ship.”
Allura looked at him for a moment, silently thankful for the subject-change, before briefly stepping back into the deluge to see that he was right—it did look like the ship, if only from the front. “This must have been where they stayed during the competition,” she said, looking toward the stairs before making a decision.
There was a fine coating of dust over the furniture up the stairs and in the room in the back, as well as on the computer screen in that same room. Coran followed her up, not saying anything, though she could practically feel the questioning look.
“Do you think they’d appreciate having some of their things waiting for them on the castle?” she asked.
“Well, who would turn down having a piece of home out in space?” Coran smiled, a soft melancholy edge to it.
“We better find some rags first, then,” she said, starting toward what she believed to be an elevator. “It’s a little breezy even with the rain—we don’t want dust flying everywhere when we move everything.”
This would hopefully be a nice surprise for them to come back to.
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
Waking up felt weird. Weird, partially because his head felt like it was full of cotton balls, but mostly because he couldn’t remember falling asleep to begin with.
He was definitely still underwater—there was still the telltale movement-resistance when he tried sitting up, along with that motion in itself being kind of awkward.
Then Blue mentally hit him like a tidal wave, alarm and concern being first and foremost. “H-Hey, I’m fine,” he stammered out, frowning. “Just…really, really confused. What happened?”
She didn’t know either. Just that he’d gotten all hazy once he’d gotten close to the one major settlement on this part of the planet, and hadn’t responded to anything she’d done. Jordan groaned. I knew I had a bad feeling about this…
“So the stories are true, then.”
He stifled a flinch, and turned toward the source of the voice. Standing by the doorway (or not really, since it looked like this was more of a cave system) was an alien that more than likely had gills, since he didn’t have any sort of gear. He had a few features that made Jordan think of a manta ray, though he was humanoid and had two short antenna on his head, and was mostly a shade of something between navy-blue and charcoal.
“I’d heard that the Voltron Paladins could communicate with their Lions over a great distance, but I never thought I’d be able to see it in action,” he went on, smiling just enough to show off sharp teeth.
“Uh…”
The alien paused, and then facepalmed. “Ugh, where’s my head…I’m Isond—unofficial leader of…well, of the remaining free people of Plegia. And you are?”
“Jordan,” he replied slowly. Blue helpfully supplied that Plegia was the name of the planet, but now her touch had something of a hopeful shock to it. You know this guy?
A pause, before a half-negative. She knew the species, and was relieved that they were still around.
Isond was watching him again, more contemplatively this time, before saying “Since I heard you wondering, we got you out of the palace. Luxia had some pretty tight security on you, too.”
And the confusion was back. “H-Hold on a second, I don’t even remember getting near the city!”
Now the alien grimaced. “Just like everyone else that doesn’t go prepared. Come on—we’ll explain things to you. Don’t worry about walking, we’re far enough down for it to be more like the surface.”
The tunnels were lit by some kind of glowing algae, with a few spots of seaweed here and there. There were a few side-caves along the way too, one being full of weapons and another looking like a kitchen of sorts. Not to mention one filled with, for some weird reason, nothing but jellyfish.
“There’s not many of us left, unfortunately,” Isond was saying. “There’s myself, two other Nalquodians, and three Plegians. Those three are the ones that got you here.”
“Plegians—you mean the mermaid people?”
“I’m not sure what this mermaid you speak of is, but they’re restricted to being aquatic, if that’s what it means.”
Isond motioned to a larger side-cave, the occupants of which looking up as soon as they noticed the movement. “You’re awake! Excellent!” one of them exclaimed, throwing…two of his tentacles up. “Now we can get to planning the big mission!”
“Now, now, Blumfump, we have to go through explanations for Jordan here first,” Isond said. “First of all, I believe introductions are in order. You know me already, and I just mentioned Blumfump there.”
“Plaxum,” a cyan-colored Plegian spoke up. “And that’s Swirn.” The third, spotted one made a slow hand-motion, looking bored. The two Nalquodians—one orange and the other brown—introduced themselves as Maiph and Ruta.
“Okay, so what the heck is going on here?” Jordan asked. Isond had said something about them being the last free people, and that didn’t have a very good implication.
Isond frowned. “That’s what we want to know too. A few phoebs ago, things were fine, and then, one quintant, I suddenly found myself at some of the volcanic vents some ways away from the city. It’s likely that I had been caught up in a tidal current, but the main thing is that I didn’t remember anything between that and coming-to there.”
“The same thing happened to me and Swirn,” Plaxum spoke up, Swirn nodding a bit.
“We were out on a hunting trip when whatever this was started,” Maiph said, crossing his arms. “We saw everyone acting weird from the cliffs overlooking the city, so we just stayed away.”
“And I got abducted by those two!” Blumfump supplied cheerily, pointing at Plaxum and Swirn, who gave him unamused looks.
The latter rolled her eyes, before asking “What’s the last thing you remember?”
Jordan thought about it for a few seconds. “I was following someone to the city. And then…” He paused, trying hard to think of anything other than the haze for a few seconds, before giving up and finishing “And then waking up.”
“Exactly.” Blumfump nodded like he’d just had something proven. “I’m telling you, the queen has something to do with all of this!”
“But we don’t know for sure.” Isond crossed his arms, giving the Plegian a pointed look. “And infiltration is out of the question, given that we only have one form of immunity to whatever it is happening that’s altogether too obvious. Things had been looking pretty hopeless…”
“And then Maiph and I saw the Blue Lion crash through the ice,” Ruta said softly.
Jordan stared at her for a few seconds, before standing up straighter at realizing where this was going. “Uh, h-hang on a second. I just started at this whole paladin thing not too long ago. I’m not sure if I—”
Isond interrupted with a wave of his hand. “Anxiety is one’s worst enemy. If you go in thinking you won’t be able to do it, then you really won’t. So you just have to think otherwise.” Blue jumped onto that idea, and Jordan nodded a bit after a few seconds.
“Now, if we’re done with all of this,” Blumfump said, a little snippily. “With the Lion, we might finally be able to rush in there and grab the queen!”
“If only because that’s our only lead on the cause, since she’s still in command of everything,” Maiph said, before stepping over to look at Jordan more closely, muttering “Maybe that murang-colored one’ll fit.”
“A murang what now?” Jordan asked, lost again.
“Jellyfish,” Plaxum supplied, shrugging. “It’s…well, we’re not really sure how or why, but for some reason they block whatever’s causing all of this. Just a warning, they sting a bit. And you might have a reaction to it.”
“Uh…” That really didn’t sound like a thing he was looking forward to. Hey, uh, Blue? Any chance you’d be able to block…whatever’s going on?
The Lion went distant for a second, before giving a sort of mental shrug leaning towards a yes. She couldn’t be too sure, but she was aware of some sort of signal coming from somewhere in the city, and she just had to add a filter for it to her shields. Whatever it was, it wasn’t a machine causing it.
So long as it meant a jellyfish didn’t have to go anywhere near his head. Then Jordan processed that last piece of information. Wait, you mean it’s not a machine?
Denial. It was definitely a living thing causing it. Blue just wasn’t sure what it was, though.
Isond looked thoughtful at that information, having just shrugged at the information of the jellyfish not being required, before they all started out toward where Blue was. “That might simplify things, in the end. Easier to take a living thing down than a machine, since those can be rebuilt.”
To the side, Swirn fidgeted a bit with an uncomfortable look, while Maiph tightened the grip he had on his spear.
Thankfully, Isond changed the subject. “The Blue Lion told you that, didn’t it?” Jordan nodded, and the Nalquodian chuckled. “The Lions really are marvels. I’m just glad I got to be part of the generation to see their return.”
“Wait, what do you mean by that?” Jordan asked. “I-I mean, I thought—most people think they’re just fairy-tales.”
Isond just shrugged, smiling. “The Lions are a part of my people’s history, actually. In fact, my great-great-great-great-great grandfather was the paladin of the Blue Lion, in his time.”
Jordan promptly tripped on a rock, and Blue did the mental equivalent of a spit-take. “Wait, seriously?”
He nodded, looking distant now. “It’s part of why we’re refugees here on Plegia. Nalquod is pretty deep in Galra space, and after what Zarkon did to Altea…well, I suppose it’s safer to not take chances in situations like that.”
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
Her and the other two on her team getting transferred to the Garrison base on Elpis in itself had been a blindside. Honestly, part of her had a feeling Iverson only suggested them to have the commanding officer here deal with them instead.
It wasn’t all bad, though. If anything, though, it just let her pick up on even more alien radio chatter. (The warning notice they’d gotten before the actual transfer had also been what finally prompted her to send an e-mail to her mom back home. She hadn’t gotten a response back yet, probably because of the distance, but she was not looking forward to it.)
She’d known as soon as someone had called in two unknown spacecraft crash-landing on the mesa a few miles from the nearest town that something big was happening—especially when all cadets were told to stay in their dorms. Not like she’d listened to that, though. She’d just gone up to the roof instead, computer in hand.
The level of excitement everyone was showing meant it probably wasn’t anything Crog-related, which was a relief because Lance really wasn’t as good at flying things as he said he was yet.
The security passcodes here were a little trickier than the ones back home, but they were still no match for Katie Holt—and for a few seconds, she just stared at the security feed. “A lion?” she muttered, squinting at it. It was bright-yellow and built like a tank, had four legs, and both a defined head and tail.
It also didn’t look like anything in the books, though to be honest, giant robotic lion wasn’t anything like how a typical alien ship would look, or at least her definition of an alien ship. It was enough to get her to bring her other gear out from the hiding place she’d set up for it all.
The first thing her listening device picked up on was the communications between the base and the crew still at the crash site—that got filtered out after a few seconds.
The second thing she got was only recognized as French because it was the Coalition delegate’s native language. Katie didn’t recognize the voices, either—and one of the sources was close.
She stood up on her toes and looked around, squinting at everything. There was nothing out of the ordinary, at least until she looked up at the cliff overlooking the base.
There, on a ledge, was a glimmer of white. A closer look with binoculars showed that there was someone up there, and that the uniform they had on was accented in the same shade of yellow as the lion-ship. Her grip tightened on the binoculars, and she let out a sharp breath. Bingo.
Against what would probably be better judgement, she shoved everything sans her computer back into its hiding place, and made use of some conveniently-placed pipes to get to the ground.
An unknown alien craft inexplicably shaped like a lion, that might just be piloted by a human? It was so absurdly out there to begin with, but that in itself meant it could be a lead.
There were a few times she tripped over rocks or tree roots in the darkness, but there was enough light for her to avoid any of the big drops on the way up the cliff.
She was out of breath by the time she reached the ledge, almost stumbling to a stop, and the supposed-pilot froze as soon as he noticed her—and he was definitely human. There was a pause, before she dimly heard a concerned “Que se passe-t-il?” from the other person.
The pilot hissed something equally-not-understandable back, and then Katie remembered the oh-so crucial detail that she didn’t know French. Well…maybe he knows English. “Are you the pilot of the—the lion?”
He froze, eyes darting from side to side, before saying something else to whoever he’d been talking to, and slowly nodding. So he did understand her.
“Is there anyone else out there?” she asked next, a hopeful note in her voice. “I mean—do you know anyone named Sam Holt? Or—or Matt Holt?”
He stared at her, (there was recognition in his eyes there) biting his lip, before going glassy-eyed for a few seconds. Then, slowly and with an obvious accent, he said “Not…not directly. Shiro does.”
Katie stood up straighter. “Shiro? As in Takashi Shirogane? He’s alive?!”
“Y-Yes?”
“I knew it!” she shouted, punching the air. “Is he here too?”
“I—no.” The pilot swallowed. “I don’t know where he is. We—we were split up.”
“Oh.” She hesitated a moment, before saying “But you’re not alone here. You were talking to someone.”
He made a weird choked sound, and she heard the second voice say something that sounded like a name.
Name. Her palm promptly met her face, before saying “I’m Pidge.” Not her real name, of course, but her pseudonym—her brother’s nickname for her. Better safe than sorry.
The pilot kept giving her a wary stare, until the person over the comm said something else. The stare was maintained for five more seconds after that before he sighed, saying “Stan.” Then he asked, “What are you going to do?”
“Me? Nothing. Don’t have a reason to. I mean—you’re trying to get back to your team, right? And you can’t do that as long as your…lion is in that base.”
“…right.”
“So here’s the deal. I help you get the lion, on one condition.” Stan nodded, prompting her to finish, “You give me information. I want to know everything.”
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
In retrospect, they were freakishly lucky that the one person that found them—a cadet, if the uniform was any indication—was willing to help them. Stan personally had been against telling this kid anything, but Koji had pushed for getting any sort of help because they needed it—especially after she’d (that was a guess purely on voice, but Stan wasn’t going to make any assumptions) mentioned being able to knock out the base’s security in three minutes flat.
It also really helped that Yellow had enough English figured out to help Stan sound out words. He was pretty sure he’d gone and butchered a few pronunciations, but the explanation was taken quietly, with only a few nods here and a few questions there.
“So let me get this straight,” Pidge started. “You were originally on a planet called Alwas for some interplanetary star-racing competition, and then these…Galra aliens barged in looking for part of a superweapon called Voltron, which the lion in the base is part of.”
“Yes,” he replied. “It was the Red Lion on Alwas, though.”
“Right, and there’s…what, five of them?”
“Five.”
“And the only reason you knew it was there was because of Shiro.” Stan nodded. Honestly, he really didn’t want to know what might’ve happened if Shiro hadn’t been there to warn them.
Pidge stood up from where she’d sat down. “Well, that’s definitely a better explanation than what the Garrison put out.” She rolled her eyes with a mutter of “Pilot error my ass,” before adding “You and your friend have some sort of distraction in mind, right?”
“Well, sort of?”
The idea was for Koji to rush in with the speeder to get back into Green, and then pretend to be threatening. Just to get some of the scarier people away from the base.
He coughed a bit after explaining, before adding “I’m not—I was just a mechanic before…this.”
Pidge shrugged. “And? It sounds like a solid plan to me. Everyone’s been on edge lately—it’s been radio silence since a few weeks ago, after…after what happened on Alwas, I think. Shouldn’t take too much to get everyone cleared to fly a fighter in the air.”
“How do you know that?”
At that, she smirked. “I have some of my own gear. I can get signals from halfway across the galaxy if I really wanted to.” Cue falter. “I picked up on a few SOS calls when all that happened, I think. I mean—it’s what they sounded like. I couldn’t understand a word of any of it.”
That made sense, in a scary way. Stan glanced up at the sky, noting a few clouds moving in, before saying “Hey, Koji? I think now might be a good time to start that distraction.”
“Alright, I see why. Here goes…” The last two words were muttered, and one minute that felt more like an hour dragged by, before an alarm started sounding from the base, followed by the Green Lion racing by overhead, soon followed by a cluster of aircraft that had previously been parked near the base. Stan heard a quiet gasp from Pidge; her eyes were fixed on the Lion flying around in a wide arc.
“They are pretty cool,” he said, though the Arrow still had its own special spot in his opinion.
“Yeah,” she replied in a mutter, blinking, before sitting down again and opening up her computer, with another alarm started going off shortly after. “Now just give me a minute, and the security cameras will all be off. You would not believe how fast a fake halogen leak would get a building empty.”
“Actually, I think I could,” he replied, seeing people file out below. Then an idea hit him. “H-Hang on a second. Do you have something I could write on?”
She side-eyed him before tapping a few things into the keyboard, before turning the computer toward him, showing a blank document. The address was down on it in seven seconds. “The manager there—if you could…let him know me and Koji are okay, I’d—I’d appreciate it.”
“So long as you keep an eye out for the rest of the Kerberos mission out there.”
“We’ll do that. We’re looking for some people, too.”
They split up at getting closer to the base, Pidge heading off toward where everyone else was while Stan went for the nearest doorway in. Like Pidge said it would, it opened automatically.
A left, two rights, and then down a staircase, just like she said, and then he found himself at a large room with an equally-large hangar door taking up the ceiling space, with Yellow being laid out in the center. He perked up at seeing him there, happily reporting that he’d fixed his jaw-hinge. “I’ll get that barrier-crystal fixed when we’re out of here,” Stan muttered, running in, before reporting “Alright, I got Yellow.”
“Okay, think you can get out here so we can go?” Koji asked in response. “They’re starting to shoot at Green.”
Nothing was said about leaving the base, so Stan went the straightforward route—having Yellow plow through the hangar door. And boy did that set off some alarms.
The first thing was rushing to pick up Yellow’s speeder and the supplies that were crammed into the aforementioned vehicle, and then it was just them both heading up and away from Elpis.
It wasn’t long before the aircraft following them had to bank away, not being meant to reach the upper atmosphere.
Koji sighed when they were a safe distance away, saying “Kind of wishing I thought to…I don’t know, write a letter to send home or something before all this.”
“I know what you mean,” Stan agreed. “Though I did ask the kid if she could get in touch with Miguel. Let him know we’re okay, at least.”
Koji frowned over the screen. “You sure she’ll do that?”
He shrugged a bit. “Honestly, I’m not sure, but…she asked if we could keep an eye out for the other two that had been on Shiro’s team. She knew their names, so maybe she knew them.”
“So, a trade-off.”
“Yeah, something like that. Now, I have to fix this barrier crystal…think you could figure out where exactly the castle is?”
“Probably? I’ll get on that.”
Reaching the crooked crystal took some stretching and arm-twisting, but it was eventually put back into place. At the same time, he heard a muttered “You’ve got to be kidding me,” from Koji.
“What? You figure out where they are?” Stan asked, getting up.
That got a weak laugh. “Yeah. They’re on Alwas.”
“…I’m sorry, what.”
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
The plan was for Maiph, Ruta, Swirn, and Blumfump to keep the guards busy, while Isond and Plaxum stayed in Blue’s mouth, the latter armed with a slingshot and what was essentially underwater puffball mushrooms, and the former with a sort of lasso fashioned from a very sticky plant.
It took all of seven minutes for them to have Luxia after getting to the city. “Okay that was…way too easy,” Jordan said, leaning back a bit in the chair. Blue had brought up a camera showing the entryway—she kept some water in there so the Plegians could breathe.
Luxia blinked a few times, before looking up, confusion written all over her face. “Wh-What’s going on here? Isond? Where are we?”
“You don’t know either?” Isond looked some weird mix between disbelieving and relieved, while Plaxum was frowning in a way that was somewhere between disbelieving and suspicious. Jordan himself was leaning more toward relieved himself. Contributing to a regicide wasn’t really something he’d been looking forward to. “Luxia, what’s the last thing you can remember?”
“The last…” Her brow furrowed for a second, before she paled. “That—that thing that crashed through the ice. I-In the gardens!”
“The thing in the gardens,” Isond muttered, before his eyes widened. “Wait, that sounds familiar! I think we both went to look at it and then…and then…” He trailed off, fins drooping, at the same time as Blue mentally tensing.
“What thing?” Plaxum asked, sounding doubtful. “How do we know that’s not a lie?”
“Uh—I think that proves it,” Jordan pointed out, with Blue helpfully opening her mouth for them to see too. There was what looked like a garden in the city below, and either it was just him, or it was moving.
More precisely, the centerpiece of the garden was uncoiling itself from the rocks, showing itself to be something less like a plant and more like a giant…snake-worm thing, which screeched loudly at facing Blue, showcasing rows of needle-like teeth.
“A mind-controlling sea monster. Great,” Jordan muttered, thinking quickly. True, it being the thing controlling everyone was a guess, but with everything else he knew about this, it honestly wouldn’t surprise him if it was true. “You guys might want to get somewhere safer—and get everyone else out of there! I’ll keep it distracted!”
At least, that was the plan. Jordan really did not expect that thing to move nearly as fast as it did—it twisted out of the way of all three shots Blue fired off at it. How am I supposed to hit it if it keeps moving like that?!
Blue suggested freezing it, but that only worked for maybe ten seconds before it used its own tail as a hammer to free its head before coming at them again. “Okay now what?” he asked, yanking on the control sticks to keep Blue from getting tackled by it.
They definitely had to keep the thing away from the city. Jordan had an ugly suspicion on why it was hanging around and controlling the people here, and Blue was agreeing with it, but they needed some way to make sure it couldn’t hurt anyone. Maybe if we could trap it, Jordan thought, looking around. Blue saw the cavern first, using her tail-laser to blast the entrance open wide enough for her to get in.
Through the crevice was an open cavern, with enough gaps in the top for teal-hued light to filter down—it had been nighttime when they’d crashed, that was why it had been so dark—and when Blue turned, the sea-monster wasn’t there. It followed us, right?
Jordan got his answer three seconds later when it slammed into the Lion from above, wrapping around her and roaring right in front of her face, which gave him a way-too-clear view of its teeth—a few of which seemed to have splotches of something mercury-silver stained on them that he really hoped wasn’t blood—
Blue fired, a fresh wave of anger going into it, and while the thing shut its mouth right before the shot went out it was still sent reeling. Whatever this thing was, it was controlling everyone around just so it could get free meals.
Whatever it was, it had to go, and Jordan agreed wholeheartedly.
But how? The thing moved too fast to shoot at, and freezing it didn’t work. Hitting it head-on probably wouldn’t do any good either…but the thing that just showed up on a side-screen might work.
Jordan wasn’t sure what exactly Blue was suggesting, but he definitely heard whatever it was activating as soon as he’d hit the screen. The Lion shifted slightly, and Jordan could see the tip of whatever it was materialize with a blue flicker—and then he heard it.
To him, it was just a faint whining sound, but to the sea monster, it was obviously something a lot louder, with how it started trying to get as far away from Blue as possible—at least until it slammed into the back wall of the cavern hard enough to dislodge more than a few rocks from the ceiling. Oh. Well that’d work!
A few laser shots (with one landing on the sea-monster’s face again for good measure thanks to it being pinned) and a collapsed cavern later, Jordan looked hard at what was left of the area after the dust had settled. His instructors always told him to not go overkill in shooting things, but in this case, it was warranted, and Blue agreed.
“I don’t see anything moving,” he muttered, looking around. “Did we do it?” A pause, before an affirmation, eliciting a sigh from him. Then she pulled his attention toward the screen that had stayed up above one of the side-consoles.
Jordan couldn’t read any of it since it was all displaying in Altean, but Blue provided the basic idea for what it was saying. The thing currently on her back had just been used as a sonic-cannon, but it could also be a sonar, radar, scanner, or even as an amplifier for signals. “So—we can use it to find the others?”
The response to that was essentially slow down, followed by a reminder. “Oh, right,” he muttered sheepishly, with Blue turning to start back toward the city after putting her radio-gun (Jordan couldn’t think of a better way to describe it) away.
They went toward the largest gathering of people, who all moved to make room for Blue. Isond was at the front of the crowd, with Luxia and the others. “We heard the noise from here,” Isond said, wincing a bit. “Is it dead?”
“Well, it’s under a bunch of rocks now, so I’d think so,” Jordan replied. There was a visible response of relief from most of the aliens present at that. He hesitated, biting his lip before asking, “So uh—is anyone…missing?”
“Some of the guard aren’t accounted for, and we can’t find any of the garden’s attendants,” Luxia replied, sounding weary. “We’re not going to find them, are we.”
“I…no,” he muttered. “What was that thing, anyways?”
“A baku.” Isond shuddered slightly. “I thought they would’ve been eradicated—they’re not picky eaters, and they can survive on land as well as in water, so I’d assume the empire’s had its share of having a few set sights on some colonies of theirs.”
Blue growled—this was her first time having fought one, but she’d heard about them from the others. You mean the other Lions? And if that didn’t bring something else pressing to mind, Jordan wasn’t sure what would.
“H-Hold on a second. You guys wouldn’t happen to have any sort of…long-range communicators, would you? I’m—we don’t know where the others are.”
“I’m afraid not.” Luxia frowned. “We haven’t had anything like that for a very long time. As far as we can tell, Zarkon doesn’t know we still exist, and we’d rather keep it that way.”
“…oh. I mean, I get that, but—” Jordan cut himself off. Talking wasn’t going to get him anywhere here. They didn’t have anything, end of story. Which meant they were probably going to have to pick a direction and fly in it, and hope they didn’t run into anything ugly.
That got a purr; it was one option. The other was that they could start in the direction of the next galaxy over, where a long-range scan reported both the Black and Red Lions as being in. Shiro and Eva.
“But you have to go find your team?” Isond guessed, smiling.
“I—yeah, I kinda have to go now, so uh—”
“Ah, don’t sweat it.” The Nalquodian clapped him on the shoulder, hard enough to make Jordan stumble a bit but not enough to hurt. “You and your team got saddled with one hell of a mess, so getting back together is important.”
“He’s right.” Luxia swam forward a bit. “We’ve all lived in hiding for so long, hearing that there might finally be some hope of being able to reach out again is heartening. You will have Plegia’s full support, should you ever need our assistance.”
“And Nalquod’s, even though we’re all living here until further notice.” Isond grinned briefly. “I don’t suppose you could fit getting us all home eventually into your schedule?”
“I’ll—I’ll have to go over that with the others first,” Jordan replied, managing a smile before stepping back toward Blue. Blue herself was set on that idea, purring audibly when he reached the cockpit. “Yeah, I guess that wasn’t so bad,” he said, turning her to start toward the surface.
Blasting through the ice was no problem, and it was just open space around Plegia in all directions, a few rings encircling the planet aside. Blue had a fairly solid ETA to where Shiro and Eva were to be about forty minutes, if she didn’t slow down and nothing tried bothering them.
Ten minutes later, she started seeming smug about something, and Jordan took his focus away from the space ahead for a bit, asking about it—she didn’t give a direct response, of course, instead giving a vague impression of steering.
What about the steering? He had both handles forward, like everyone else did…wait.
“Hold on. You mean—I’m flying?”
The smugness turned into a happy affirmation. To be more specific, he’d been flying since they’d left Plegia.
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
He’d already known that the castleship was big, but seeing it near the pits really put it into perspective. Or what was left of the pits, anyways. Most of them looked more worse for the wear.
The sky was overcast in all directions, a sticky wetness to the air implying that it had been raining on and off. Though that the grass had to be soaked didn’t stop Allura from running over to where Green and Yellow touched down, despite the fact that she had her dress on. “You’re both alright,” she said, looking relieved.
“And you are too,” Stan pointed out. “What the hell even happened back there?”
“If you’re referring to the wormhole, I’m not entirely sure—but Zarkon’s witch had to have something to do with it.”
“When you say witch, you don’t mean like the magic-type, do you?”
Allura didn’t reply, and that coupled with Green going tense at the mention had Koji assuming yes. He forced a cough after a bit, saying “What about that thing the Red Lion did? With the…was that a railgun or a plasma cannon?” He lowered his voice at the last part, looking at Stan, who just shrugged.
“It—it’s something between those, actually,” Allura said, blinking a few times in surprise.
“Okay, so what’s the deal with it?” Stan asked. “One second it was there, and the next it was gone.”
“I’m afraid I don’t know much,” was the given (and admittedly expected) response. “The most that the original paladins were able to learn was that it had something to do with the aspects of the Lions themselves.” Allura’s tone took a turn for the stilted at the end, and Green was being silent on the matter. “It works in a way similar to your bayards.”
In the distance, Koji saw a small group of Scrubs stumble to a halt at noticing them, staring with obviously-startled looks, and he made himself look away. “Of all the places you could’ve ended up, though,” he said, trying to smile.
“Of all the places,” Allura agreed, mirroring the expression. “Coran and I had just finished moving some of the mechanical equipment from your housing area here into the castle.”
“You—oh.” Koji blinked a few times, surprised. He and Stan had been planning on asking if they could bring their things from here with them when they left.
Some of the aforementioned tools not being there aside, the pit was otherwise exactly as they’d left it, if noticeably dustier. Stan had wordlessly pointed out the half-collapsed housing tower, which had Koji wondering if anything of Rick’s or Don’s would even be salvageable.
Eva’s room (compared to what they had on the castleship, it really couldn’t even be called that) had been cleared out already, as had Jordan’s, but it looked like his own room and Stan’s hadn’t been touched—aside from the dressers, which were emptied already.
Another once-over of everything confirmed that yes, he really had forgotten to take his spare glasses with him when they’d first left Earth. I guess I’ll just have to make these ones last, he thought, starting to gather some of the smaller objects scattered around the room into a box.
The nice thing about the lingering clouds meant that it wasn’t as hot as it could’ve been. It also meant that he could keep his focus on the sky instead of on the ground, because if he looked at the ground there was still the odd chance of him noticing that they were being stared at on the way to the castle.
“They definitely remember us,” Stan said once away from the buildings. The contents of the box he was carrying was basically the same variety of what Koji had packed away first, which probably explained how they’d ended up heading out at the same time.
“Honestly, I’m kind of hoping no one says anything,” Koji replied at the same tone. Whether it was just because of the fact that the reason that the souk was halfway burned out and obviously still being put back together was something linked to them now, or that he and Stan were probably the only part of a team that had been on Alwas to come back, he felt guilty for it.
Stan seemed to sense what he was thinking, and stopped to elbow him not-quite-gently. “You really think there’s any way anyone could’ve known that we’d get dragged into some science-fiction fairy tale?”
“No,” Koji replied, almost laughing at how Stan had described it. It honestly wasn’t that far from the truth, and that earned a flash of mock offense from the Green Lion.
Well, you and the other four are making me have to rethink how the world works every other day, he remarked silently to her. Her response was something impishly prideful and it didn’t translate into words.
They passed Coran when they were almost to the castleship, who both greeted them enthusiastically and informed that he’d put most of the mechanical tools in the shuttle hangar for them, along with a few other assorted things that had been in the pit’s hangar.
Koji decided, upon getting to his room in the ship, that it’d be easier to just leave the box on the desk in there for now, and figure out where to put things later. There would be one more trip back for the rest of the things in the pit that were his, and then maybe one or two more for other things still there that they could use.
On the way back toward the main lift, Stan stopped again, looking into the hangar while they were passing it. Koji frowned at him. “Stan?” He didn’t reply, instead just pointing at the Arrow, which was also just as they’d left it. Then Koji noticed it too.
For a minute, neither of them said a word, until Stan muttered “The purple needs to go.”
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
Eva woke with a jolt, stumbling to her feet and looking around, heart pounding. Then she noticed Red’s presence receding, and remembered what led up to her falling asleep this time. She murmured a thanks, before looking at the sky, now a dark shade of reddish-purple flecked with silvery-white.
It didn’t look like this planet had a moon, or maybe it was just a new-moon. Either way, if this wasn’t the best time to infiltrate a Galra base, Eva didn’t know what was.
Now how am I going to get in there? Just walking in through the front door wouldn’t be a good idea. Red fired off some sarcasm at that, earning a muttered “No duh Sherlock,” from her. “D’you think they’d have…I don’t know, a maintenance entrance somewhere?”
Probably not—but there might be a ventilation duct somewhere she could use, and there was one side of the building not blocked by a wall. And just her luck, there was a vent duct there. With a conveniently-shaped rock formation next to it, to boot.
Getting the cover of the duct itself off took a few minutes of trying to use her bayard as a crowbar. The spiked end of the bow was just fine enough to get between it and the wall of the building, and it eventually popped off. Of course, it couldn’t be all good luck for her: the vent was choked with dust, and it was narrow. Sure, she could fit, but it was a tight fit.
At least the dust could be ignored by means of a sealed helmet.
The first room of note that had a grate over it was what looked like a supply closet, though all it had in it were cleaning supplies. I guess even these places need janitors.
The second grate was above a lounge room. Which had two actual-Galrans in it. “I’m telling you, this quadrant is the pits,” one of them was saying. “Nothing ever happens out here!”
“You said it,” the other one agreed. “Captain Lirax doesn’t help with it either.” Lirax? That name sounded familiar—and Eva hadn’t realized she’d made a sound until she saw both of them tense, and she quickly moved back as quietly as she could manage.
“You hear something?” one of them asked.
“Thought I did…probably just that fan malfunctioning again.”
“Yeah…” Footsteps, and then a door activating.
Eva sighed heavily, whispering “That was close,” to herself before moving forward again. The next duct, which wasn’t seen for the next three minutes, she had to suppress a flinch when she saw the bright-orange alien that seemed to be sleeping. She didn’t recognize the next one either, or the one after that.
The next one she did recognize—not that she was happy to see Grooor again. He didn’t notice her, and she wanted it to stay that way, so she kept quiet. After him was a Scrub, then another alien she didn’t recognize, and then…he was sitting in the back of the room and the lighting really wasn’t the best, but she recognized him in moments.
He tensed when she knocked a fist against the duct cover a few times quietly, looking up while blinking a few times tiredly—oh hey he had green eyes—before squinting up at her. “Hey Rick,” she greeted quietly, feeling herself smile more than anything.
His response was for his expression to cycle through confusion, concern, disbelief, before just going slack-jawed for a few moments. “Little Mouse, you never cease to amaze,” he breathed, before standing up. “Glad as I am to see you in one piece, how did you even get here?”
“It’s a long story,” Eva replied, moving so that her arms were crossed in front of her so she could rest her head a bit.
“Well, I’m definitely not going anywhere, so I think we have time.” The remark was dry, with no snideness intended, though it still had her biting her lip.
“Okay, so it started when Shiro crashed on Alwas—or, well, a really long time before that, actually,” she stuttered a little in correcting herself at Red’s behest. “The reason they hit Alwas so hard was because they were trying to find something that was hidden there.” Rick didn’t say anything, just quirking one brow a little, so she went on with “It…it was a weapon. A ship.”
“I take it you and the boys found that ship first.”
Eva nodded, before smiling. “Would you believe me if I told you it was a giant metal lion?”
Rick stared at her for a few seconds, before saying “To be honest, that reminds me of something I saw in an old book back on Alwas. It mentioned some sort of fire-guardian. Must’ve taken a shine to you.” He paused, visibly frowning. “Hold on. If you’re here, where are the others?”
“They’re…well, Shiro’s not too far from here, but I—I don’t know about everyone else. We got split up after…um…” After they all did something nigh-on suicidal? More specifically for her and Red?
“Things got crazy,” she said with a sigh.
“Don’t sweat it Molly, life’s just like that sometimes.”
Oh. Right. That.
“Actually, Rick? There’s…there’s something else I should probably tell you.” A few seconds passed, and she tried taking another deep breath. C’mon Eva, you did this once already, it really shouldn’t be that hard—!
“How about you start from the beginning?” Rick suggested. Red agreed with the idea. So that was what she did. It took the better part of maybe five minutes, with a few intervals of having to stay quiet for a bit when a guard patrol passed by, but there otherwise weren’t any interruptions.
“Eva, huh?” Rick sounded thoughtful, before saying “You know, Don told me he had a kid while you and Jordan were out, before everything went south on us.”
Static. “He did?”
“He didn’t say much beyond that.” She heard a sigh. “Before you ask, no, he’s not here. We got split up pretty early-on.” Had it not been for the gauntlets, her nails would’ve been digging into her palms. I think I saw that coming, she thought.
“Honestly, you telling me your end of it fills a few blanks,” Rick went on. “That was really brave of you to come out to the others like that. And three of ‘em, you barely even knew then.”
“It wasn’t that bad,” Eva muttered, glancing sideways.
“And that Voltron thing. I heard some of the guards talking about it—sounds like you’re all raising hell out there.” And now her whole face felt warm. Great.
She heard Rick chuckle a bit, before saying “You said something about Shirogane getting roughed up earlier? There’s a storeroom with medical supplies further down the hall—they might treat us all like trash, but they don’t like it when we get too roughed-up.”
“Okay.” Eva paused, vision blurring for a few seconds, before saying “And Rick? I—we’ll come back here for you,” while pretending that her voice hadn’t cracked. “I promise.”
“Don’t worry about me Little Mouse,” he said, smiling and giving her a thumbs-up. “You take care of yourself first.”
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
Shiro wasn’t sure how much time had passed before Eva finally came back with a medical kit obviously taken from the base in hand, just that it was at least two hours after the sun had set. The wound in his side had flared a few minutes ago, the heat emanating from it becoming painful enough to have his vision blurring, but it had settled once Black noticed and stepped in. Her response was something concerned to the point of frustration, vaguely referencing the castle. I’ll be fine, he thought, opening the kit and identifying the antibiotic.
“Do you need any help?” Eva asked uncertainly.
“I’ve got it,” he replied, unscrewing the cap and pouring some onto the wound. In retrospect, that hadn’t been the best idea—especially given how much it burned. “Stings a bit,” he admitted at seeing the younger girl’s expression.
“A bit,” she repeated.
“Alright, maybe a lot.” Shiro took a deep breath, ignoring the probably-a-laugh feeling coming from Black right now, before asking “Were you able to talk to your friend?”
Eva froze for a second, before nodding. “Yeah, I was.” She took a shaky breath before saying, “We’ve gotta get him out of there.”
“And we will. But not until we’ve regrouped with the others.”
She kept a level gaze with him for a few seconds before sitting down by the fire, hugging her knees to her chest. “Did you—you didn’t hear anything from anyone, have you?”
Shiro turned to look up at Black, who went pensive for a few seconds. Then the pensiveness turned into welcome surprise, right as both their helmets’ comms crackled. “—iro, Eva, can you—?”
“Jordan?” Eva exclaimed quietly, jumping to her feet again. “Jordan, where are you?”
The cadet laughed over the comm, still broken up by static, but otherwise legible. “Heading toward—now,” was the response, getting clearer as he went. “Blue says—should be there in five minutes.”
Five minutes. The Blue Lion must’ve ended up not too far from us, then, Shiro thought. The odds of that were small, with how large the universe was, so they lucked out there. “Actually—Jordan, have the Blue Lion stop by the nearest planet to this one. We’ll meet up with you there.”
“Sure…wait, why?”
“There’s a Galra base on this planet, and I’m not sure how well-armed it is.” Shiro looked sideways at Eva as he spoke, and she just shrugged a little, looking slightly sheepish. “I don’t suppose you’ve heard from the others?”
Jordan sighed a bit. “Not yet. Uh, but Blue’s got a—well.” He paused. “We have something that might be able to help with that. How hard did you guys crash?”
“What happened to you?” Eva asked in turn.
“Blue went right through some ice into an ocean.”
“Then you got off easier than we did.” Definitely easier—Black’s mental eye-roll gave the impression that out of all five of them, the Blue Lion was the best at maneuvering in the water.
While the two kids were conversing, Shiro was putting a gauze patch over his wound. Seconds after it was in place, Black purred. She was mobile again, at least, though her weapons weren’t back online yet. “Hopefully we won’t need them,” Shiro muttered, wincing while standing up. “Eva, can the Red Lion fly?”
“Huh?” She looked up at her Lion, before saying “Yeah, we can fly. We’re…going now, huh.”
“We can’t risk staying here,” Shiro said gently. “To be honest, it’s a miracle that they haven’t noticed us yet.” It really was. Actually, it was almost strange that they hadn’t been noticed yet.
“But we’ll come back for Rick, right?”
“Once we’re all together again,” he reassured.
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
Jordan had known he was getting close to them before they were in communication range, by means of some of the mental white-noise coming back. With it had come a weird ache in his side that Blue had side-eyed in a concerned way, though she wouldn’t clarify on what it was, aside from it not being from him.
The small brown planet he and Blue had stopped by had a moon and two rings, was uninhabited, and called Epona-5. And Jordan had been the one to pilot her there all the way from Plegia—he hadn’t freaked out or anything this time, either. And they all kept saying I couldn’t do it!
Blue purred, giving a prideful impression, before drawing his attention to the space facing away from the nearest sun. He saw the Red Lion first, being the one speck of color against the darkness of space, and the console beeped before two screens appeared. “Am I glad to see you,” Eva said, slumping in the seat a little.
“You’re telling me,” Jordan replied, smiling. “So that thing I was telling you guys about? Blue’s got a secret weapon.”
“Really?” Shiro looked curious. “What does it do?”
“Er, well,” he stuttered a little. “It’s actually kind of a multipurpose thing, but she thinks we might be able to get in touch with the others with it. I mean—it can amplify radio waves.”
“So it can boost a signal.”
“Yeah.”
Shiro nodded. “It’s worth a shot. Give it a go.”
Blue brought up the device readily, earning a surprised “Oh wow,” from Eva. Jordan eyed the screen, thought Hope this works, and then tapped it. He heard the device charge up before doing its thing, and a few minutes dragged by.
“Did it work?” Eva asked.
Jordan glanced at the ceiling, feeling a bit anticlimactic, and Blue reported that their location was definitely received by the other two Lions; the castle wasn’t included to be safe, in case of there being a Galra ship or base between them. “Yeah, it did. We’re gonna have to wait for them to come to us, though.”
“Well, a little more waiting isn’t going to hurt any of us,” Shiro said, wincing a bit while putting a hand to his side—which either Jordan was just seeing things, or there was a sizable bandage over it.
“You got hurt back there,” he realized.
“It’s not as bad as it looks.”
“Shiro, it was glowing,” Eva exclaimed. “I don’t think that’s supposed to happen!”
No, it was not supposed to happen, and the level of worry Blue had now was putting Jordan on-edge. C’mon guys, wherever you are, can you hurry it up?
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
It had taken the better part of two vargas, but the pit that the paladins had used during their tenure as participants in the Great Race of Ōban was, for the most part, cleared out now.
Stan and Koji had both come back looking perturbed by something, and had been moving with a driven purpose when it came to collecting the rest of their things, though when Coran had asked Koji, he’d just mumbled something about paint and the racing ship.
All that was really left now was clearing out the specified storerooms on the castle—the princess had already started on that, with assistance from a few of the locals. Coran himself would be going to assist them, after one last thing.
The building’s elevator stuttered on the way up, but it reached the third floor, and the sight that greeted the adviser was that of a disaster area. What had once been the fourth level of the building had collapsed into the third, leaving the floor strewn with debris. He’d still have to try to reach the last floor, in case there was anything left up there, but first things were first.
There was an intact closet with some fairly-colorful clothing articles against the wall, and a mostly-intact desk lying in the center of the room, though the same couldn’t be said for a device that looked like it had been built into the aforementioned furniture, with how frayed wires were sticking out.
The same also could not be said for the drawer, which had been thrown out of its place entirely, leaving its sole content to be half-crushed under a plank of wood. Though he knew it wasn’t his place to pry into the affairs of whoever it belonged to, the pale edge of a single photograph was both hard to miss and a source of curiosity in itself.
It was a simple picture of three humans, but Coran recognized one of them as Eva after a few ticks—much younger and barring both the red dye and tattoos, of course, but still her. Which meant that the other two must be…
He sighed quietly, before tucking the photograph into one of his pockets. He still wasn’t entirely sure why she’d hidden her identity from the others at first, even during the race, especially given that her father was involved, but he had a few vague ideas.
Hopefully the photograph that her father seemed to have kept would give her some peace of mind.
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
It wouldn’t do anyone much good if he was seen now, so watching from afar was really the only thing he could do. In all honesty, he shouldn’t even be away from Ōban at this point—but fate had a tendency to be tempting like this. “Well, she hasn’t changed much,” Satis mused, watching the Altean princess directing a small band of Scrubs moving various scraps of metal. Something of a mental eye-roll came from the Yellow Lion, while the Green gave a reminder of a ten-thousand-year stasis. “That’s true, that’s true.”
He sighed. It was a real shame Molly wasn’t here. It would have been nice to be able to talk to the girl one more time before…well.
Satis had been correct in the nagging suspicion he’d had of having to deal with some awkward questions from the other finalists, regarding the matter of there being only six when there should have been nine, but the race was progressing smoothly.
It wasn’t shaping up to be much of a competition, in the end, but he supposed that was just how the cards of life were dealt sometimes.
He likely wouldn’t be around to see how this all ended, but that fell along the same lines.
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
“I think that’s everything,” Allura said, turning to look at Stan and Koji. The sun was beginning to set, shading everything orange, and the clouds had finally cleared. With it, the castle was a few storerooms’ worth of items emptier, though the contents of one had simply been replaced.
“It feels really weird being here again,” Stan muttered, looking toward the small crowd that had gathered near where the two Lions were. Koji nodded slightly.
Neither Lion had raised their shields, but they may as well have with the distance. Then again, they may as well be a folktale come to life.
Then both of them mentally perked up, the Green Lion reporting a set of coordinates almost immediately. At the same time, there was a blurted “They heard from Jordan! A-And Shiro and Eva are with him!” from Koji.
Relief swept over Allura like a wave at that. “We’ll wormhole there as soon as Coran’s back,” she said, looking around. She couldn’t see the adviser anywhere, but she knew that he was in the general vicinity of the building.
“You’re leaving?” Allura hadn’t realized Mariposa had come up to them. The Scrub didn’t look disappointed, however—if anything it was a searching look.
“We are, yes,” she said. “Is something the matter?”
“Not really.” Her grip on the staff tightened before she added “My cousin was one of the pilots who went missing that night. And it wasn’t just pilots who disappeared either. A few of the townsfolk did too. If you find them out there…”
Allura smiled. “Don’t worry Mariposa. They’re out there somewhere. When we find them, we’ll make sure they get home safe and sound.”
She saw Stan and Koji exchange a glance to the side, though neither of them said anything. Coran returned a few doboshes afterwards, holding an armful of clothing. “This is all I could get out of the third and fourth floors,” he said. “The furniture’s unsalvageable, unfortunately.”
“That’s alright,” Allura said, while Stan moved to take some of the articles. “Are we set to leave?”
“That we are, princess!”
The departure from Alwas wasn’t nearly as monumental as that from Arus, once the Green and Yellow Lions had returned to their hangars. “So where did our three errant paladins end up, anyways?” Coran asked.
The Yellow Lion replied with an image of a smaller solar system, in a quieter corner of the Galra Empire, distinguished only by the name of its star, Epona. The sight of the star was the first thing to greet them on the other side of the wormhole, and directly before them were the other three Lions. A series of screens was prompt to appear on the main display.
“Took you guys long enough!” Eva exclaimed, though there was a tinge of relief under the irritation in both her voice and expression.
“Apologies for the wait,” Coran replied, nonplussed. “That wormhole scrambled the castle’s navigation systems. That had to get a reboot before we could go anywhere.”
“What matters is that we’re all together again,” Shiro said tiredly.
Allura frowned, coinciding with the Black Lion making her unease known. “Shiro, you look pale. Are you alright?”
“It’s nothing.”
“Says the guy with the glowing gashes!” Jordan remarked sarcastically.
“She injured you back there.” Allura felt cold—she’d seen what an untreated druid wound could do before, before all of this. “Shiro, you have to get into a pod. Now.”
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
Coran had gone right to making sure Shiro made it to the infirmary, with the rest of them meeting up on the bridge. “You two alright?” was the first thing Stan asked.
“I’m still a bit wet, but yeah,” Jordan replied. “Me and Blue crashed on Plegia—it’s an ocean planet.”
“That sounds familiar,” Allura mused. “I think my father went there once. How are things there?”
“Well, uh, they’re kind of in hiding, and there was some sort of brainwashing sea-monster there, but we took care of it.”
“A…a what?” Koji sounded as baffled as he looked.
“Long story. What about you guys?”
The mechanics looked at each other, before Koji said, “Elpis.”
Eva waited a few seconds to make sure she hadn’t misheard him, muttering a “What?” when she realized she hadn’t.
“Yeah, I couldn’t believe it either.” Stan shook his head a little. “We both got some stuff while we were there, too.”
Jordan stared at them, before saying “Okay, that settles it, you guys are awesome.”
“It’s really nothing,” Koji tried deflecting. “I mean—it’s things we might need out here.”
“More supplies are always welcome,” Allura said. “Which we should have a few phoebs’ worth of now.”
“Wait, where did you and Coran end up?” Eva asked.
“Guess,” Stan said, trying to hide a grin. “Here’s a hint: we got some of our stuff now too.”
She thought about it for a second, though Red beat her to the realization, the baffled sense of irony making the answer obvious. “Wait, Alwas?”
“Alwas,” Allura confirmed, though her smile faltered slightly. “They weren’t exactly welcoming at first, but we have a few storerooms’ worth of basic supplies now.”
“What about you and Shiro?” Jordan looked over at her now. “You haven’t really said anything about where you ended up yet, aside from the Galra base.”
“About that.” Eva swallowed apprehensively, clenching her fists. “We have to go back. They have prisoners there.”
The princess slipped right into serious-mode at that. “How many?”
“I don’t know, b-but—some of them are from the race.” That got the other three’s attentions.
“So next up is a rescue mission,” Stan said. “We’ll just have to wait for Shiro. How long should that take?”
“I don’t know,” Allura replied, ears lowering slightly. “Druid injuries…they become infected quickly, and heal slowly. It could take anywhere between three quintants to three movements.”
“We can’t wait that long!” Eva burst, thoughts going from single-track to everywhere at once. “Rick’s there too!”
“Are you sure?” Koji sounded tense.
“I’m sure. I-I had to sneak in there to get some medical stuff for Shiro, a-and I talked to him a bit.”
“Count me in,” Jordan said automatically. “It wasn’t that big of a place, was it?”
Eva stammered slightly. “Well, it was just the one building—”
“So just the four of us should be able to handle it! Right?” He turned to look at the others.
Koji was biting his lip, and Stan looked about as conflicted as Allura, though the latter turned to pull up a few screens. “It’s a smaller base, yes,” she said. “The only thing I can think of that would require Voltron would be if a battlecruiser showed up.”
“I think we might be able to handle one of those now,” Eva said, remembering one detail of the bad-idea fight she’d gotten into.
Allura looked at her for a few long seconds, before sighing. “I can see you’re all set on this. Very well. I’ll set a course for Epona-6. Be ready to launch as soon as we get there.”
That the barrier surrounding Zarkon’s central command—also having been what prevented the castleship’s teludav from operating—disappeared was a strange occurrence, but ultimately not nearly as much of a concern of what came after that.
In the span of a few ticks, the Lions were all torn back out of their hangars, and sent spiraling away into the edges of the spatial rift, communications with all five of them being lost immediately.
It was with some effort that Allura forced her thoughts to the matter at hand. The castle’s controls simply would not respond—at the most, she could bring the primary menus up, all of which were reporting errors of varying intensity, but the ship may as well have been stuck on autopilot.
“Coran, where is this wormhole going to lead out to?” she asked, looking ahead.
“The scanners were all scrambled as soon as it corrupted,” he reported, visibly tense at seeing the approaching exit point. “I can’t even get an idea on what quadrant we might end up in! Brace yourself!”
Exiting the corrupted wormhole was about as pleasant as entering it had been. Which was to say, it scrambled the systems yet again, and it felt like being physically shocked.
The castle drifted straight ahead for a few leagues, carried by the leftover momentum, before she managed to rein in the controls, which had started responding again almost immediately. Clearly, the energy radiation in the wormhole had been the source of the problems.
She sighed deeply before bringing the exterior display panels back up. “Coran? I don’t suppose you recognize any constellations here?”
The adviser stared at the display screens for a few long ticks, before slowly replying, “I’m not sure. I—I feel like I’ve seen some of these before, but I’ll have to get the navigation systems back online to be sure.” He turned to look back at her. “What about the Lions? Can you locate any of them?”
“I’ll try to.” Allura closed her eyes, reaching for the faint link tying her to the five ships. Three were about as cold as the average dark-season temperatures on the planet Crydor, even after a few doboshes of concentration on nothing else but the task, but the other two…
“Stan and Koji are both in the same quadrant as us, at least.” She sighed before adding, “But they’re still too far for me to pinpoint exactly where. I can’t feel the other three at all.”
“Well, it’s better than us not knowing where any of them are,” Coran commented, not looking away from the console, and she nodded. “And I think I’ll need their help in going over the systems,” he continued, voice taking on a weary edge. “Whatever corrupted the wormhole did a real number on the castle.”
Zarkon’s witch was behind that, no doubt. Allura had only heard rumors about her during the war, before her father had put her into stasis, but she’d finally seen Haggar herself before the others had come to rescue her.
That encounter by itself had been an ordeal and a half, and it had only gotten worse. Shiro wasn’t as good as he likely thought himself to be at hiding injuries, and Eva had been attempting to face off against Zarkon by herself.
Not by herself, she corrected herself swiftly. The Red Lion had been fighting him too. If anything, Red had probably been the one to make the push to start the fight in the first place.
A series of frantic squeaks preceded the mice scurrying up to her shoulders, all in varying states of alarm. “Oh! I’m fine, don’t worry,” she placated, looking back and forth between the four of them. “I’m sorry for worrying you.”
“Ah—a bit of good news, princess. There’s a planet nearby that should be safe to stop on, for both repairs and perhaps some resupplying.”
Allura paused. Coran hasn’t sounded surprised, not quite, but it was something close to that. “Which one is it?”
Now he turned to look at her, smiling thinly. “Alwas.”
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
One second Blue was falling away from the castle, and the next they were free-falling—and now Jordan was opening his eyes to see the roof of the cockpit above him and the lighting being…well, not much light to begin with, given that it looked like they were underwater, and the only light was a flashing red sourced from one of Blue’s many alarms.
If he had to guess, the impact with the ice (he remembered seeing ice) had thrown him out of the seat, and he’d hit his head just hard enough to black out for a bit, helmet notwithstanding.
The headache he had right now was a clear enough indicator that it had made contact with something hard, probably the floor.
He pulled himself up into the chair, looking around as much as he could before asking “Guys? Any of you there?” No response came, and he hissed out a breath. Okay Jordan, it’s no big deal. They’re probably just…on the surface. Yeah. Blue hit a thinner part of the ice and we fell through, and the comms are down because of the wormhole messing up like that.
He didn’t know wormholes could get screwed up like that. By the sound of it, Coran hadn’t either.
An experimental pull on one of Blue’s handles didn’t get a physical response, but her presence flickered with some apology—she needed a bit to reboot. “You do that,” he said, looking ahead. He couldn’t see much out there, but it looked like they were sinking.
A few small blurry shapes went by, probably fish, before the Lion hit the surface of something. The seafloor, maybe. (Something was weird here. Weird in a way that was leaving him on-edge.)
Minutes later, Blue purred a split-second before the consoles came back online, lighting the cockpit up cerulean, replacing the blinking red of the alarm. “Okay, that’s one thing down,” he said aloud. “Where are we?”
The Lion hesitated, before seeming sheepish in reporting that her navigation system would need longer to bring back up. The same went for her weapon systems, which was first on the priority list, given that they didn’t know where they were—the wormhole’s energy-radiation had messed practically everything up.
“Okay, so where’s everyone else?” Blue hesitated again, uncertainty rolling off of her. “Wait…they’re not here?” The uncertain feeling stayed, sharpening with a confirmation.
The constant brain-static that he’d since gotten used to, that was the other four in the link, just wasn’t there. Jordan shoved down the tight feeling in his chest that formed as soon as that thought was processed, before sitting back in the chair, and attempted to relax.
He could clearly remember the simulation training they’d first done back on Arus, when they’d first learned about that whole thing. Everyone had felt so distinct—and for him to not even be able to feel it faintly like when he and Coran had gone out to the Balmera that first time…
The others had to be far from where he was. It would make a lot of sense, given how they’d all spiraled off away from each other before he’d lost sight of them.
A soft purr reverberated through the cockpit around him, coinciding with a calm presence moving in to smother the panic, and Jordan forced a smile. “Hey, you really think I’d forget about you five seconds after we talked?”
Or, well, not really talked, but…whatever. He still didn’t get how the whole telepathic-ships thing worked, and probably never would.
“So, uh, got any ideas?”
The Lion went over her list of damages again. The internal lighting was out, and so was the artificial gravity. Not that he’d noticed the latter, given that they were on a planet with its own gravity.
There was also the matter of her interior-temperature-regulation, which was probably why he could see little clouds whenever he took a breath; the slight pointedness when she mentioned that to him hinted that it was something he could do while she started on her headlights, which would be useful while they were underwater.
Blue directed his attention to a panel under the leftmost console, which the covering to came off easily, though it took both lying flat on his stomach and some stretching to reach the two tubular crystals that were out of alignment and click them back into place.
The change in temperature was felt in seconds, though it had been instantly heralded by the visor to his helmet fogging up, which was comical enough to get him to chuckle a bit out loud.
“Hey, quick question—how do those things even change color?”
Blue seemed to mull it over a bit, before pushing the idea of it having to do with the electrical currents reacting with what the crystals were composed of; they were typically orange, but direct contact with electricity made them turn blue. It was why they were commonly used out on this half of the universe.
I…guess that makes sense. It definitely made things sound a lot simpler.
Outside, a wide swatch of water was abruptly illuminated when Blue tested her headlights, with the one living creature caught in the rays being quick to swim out of view—but it had been there long enough for Jordan to get a quick look at it.
For a few seconds, he wondered if the crash had given him a concussion, because whatever was out there looked like, of all the possible things an alien could even look like, a mermaid.
Which prompted the thought of If it is a mermaid, and Fiona finds out I didn’t get a picture of it, she’s gonna kill me.
A seven-year-old Fiona might be, she could be scary when she really wanted to be. And while Jordan was pretty sure that coming home with a giant space lion would be enough to offset anything, he wanted to play it safe.
Not to mention it would also depend on just how long they were in space for. Jordan had a sinking feeling that they wouldn’t be seeing Earth again any time soon.
“Hey, uh, Blue? These suits are fine for being underwater too, right?” The Lion gave a bemused affirmative. If they worked for being in space, they’d work for pretty much anywhere—and they had a mechanism for recycling air, so he wouldn’t have to worry about that either.
The entryway to Blue’s interior was sealed off before she opened her mouth, which was a good thing considering the speed at which the water came flooding in.
To go along with the fact of the ocean’s surface being covered by ice, the water was also cold. The upside was that the suits had their own temperature-regulators—that was something they didn’t have back home.
The visors also had an infrared setting, so the darkness wasn’t a problem. That didn’t mean he was seeing the fish alien anywhere, though.
Maybe I scared ‘em off, he thought, looking around again—and then he heard someone say “Hello,” behind him. He definitely did not scream out of surprise at turning before trying to backpedal a bit, which only resulted in him flipping over because of being underwater and therefore having no footing on anything.
The fish-alien giggled a bit—they (she?) did look kind of like a mermaid, at least in the vaguely humanlike aspect, but the eyes definitely weren’t human, being a solid wet-sand color. “I did not mean to startle you,” she said, smiling. “I am Florona.”
“Uh—I wasn’t—” Jordan stammered out, before an amused purr from Blue informed him that there was no use in pretending it hadn’t happened.
“Queen Luxia sent me to guide you to our village,” Florona went on before he’d finished. “She would love to meet with you.”
“That…sounds great, but I really have to…” He trailed off, Blue pushing the idea to follow Florona. They could probably help.
You sure about that? Something feels weird about this. How did that Luxia person know he was here?
The Lion pushed a memory in response—a visit here ages and ages ago, greeted with some surprise by a largely-agricultural civilization that only had to worry about the occasional larger predator. It should be safe.
“Alright then,” he muttered, prompting Florona to turn and start off away from the Lion, with him making sure to stay close, because infrared or not, it was hard to see down here.
Besides, maybe there was an off chance of them having a long-range communicator he could use to get in touch with the others.
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
Wormhole jumps in the castleship were fine. It had taken some getting used to, but they were okay. But when the wormhole had its integrity compromised (somehow) and there was no telling where it would’ve left out—even if Green hadn’t slammed into one side of it and been promptly ejected from it—it was the exact OPPOSITE of fine.
The sickly purple color abruptly gave way to red-hued sky, and Koji just barely caught sight of the Yellow Lion also spinning out of control alongside Green before noticing the rapidly-approaching ground, just in time to brace for the impact.
It still almost resulted in him being thrown out of the seat, and had him wondering just why in the world the Lions didn’t come with seatbelts, inertial-dampeners or not. (Reeling as she was from the crash, he felt Green start thinking the concept over.)
“Well, that could’ve—gone better,” he heard Stan say between breaths after a minute, the words having no shortage of sarcasm.
“I think that’s an understatement,” Koji agreed, making note of the flickering HUD overlays. Pulling on the handles during the plummet hadn’t gotten much more than a stutter from the thrusters, and now that Green was running a system scan, everything was pretty scrambled.
Whatever had messed the wormhole up wasn’t friendly to electronics; no movement, no weapons, and no navigation. Short-range scanners still worked, though, and the air on whatever planet this was happened to be safe to breathe.
Wherever it was, red sky didn’t equate to sunset; if anything, it looked more like noon. The ground outside was primarily a sandy expanse, with a few knotted leafless trees scattered about. The two Lions had landed close-enough together to leave a single crater that was vaguely shaped like an 8. It wasn’t necessarily warm wherever they’d crashed, despite the sunlight, but it wasn’t too cold, either.
Koji made note of what looked to be the edge of the plateau they’d crashed on—of the spinning image he’d gotten of the surface of wherever this was, that was the only clear detail he’d gotten—before hearing the sound of a light impact on dirt.
A panel had slid open on top of the Yellow Lion’s head (which was angled more sideways at the moment, given how it had crashed) to let Stan out.
“How’s Yellow doing?” Koji asked.
Stan huffed a bit. “He’s got a busted jaw-hinge. Communications are out, and so is pretty much everything else. Green?”
“Not much better. What about navigation?”
Stan just shook his head, pausing before saying, “I don’t think anyone else is around. It’s too quiet.”
It took a few moments for Koji to realize what Stan meant by that, and Green went to running a long-distance scan before he could even think to ask. “Green picked up the castle’s signal,” he said after a moment, feeling uneasy. “It’s…in the same galaxy, I think?”
There was nothing on Shiro, Eva, or Jordan; the Lions were all linked to each other on a phenomenally-deep level, but the best Green could do at the time was just point them in a general direction. The castle was definitely nearby, though. Relatively speaking.
“Any idea how far they are?”
“Not really.” Stan sighed at hearing that. “Well, maybe we can take a look around? Try to find out where we are?”
A shrug was the only answer Koji got before Stan turned to stand by the edge of the plateau—and he tensed visibly. “Uh. Koji?”
“Yeah?”
“I think—I think there’s a town down there.”
“Okay, so it’s inhabited. Is this good or bad?”
“Considering that there’s other humans down there—”
“Wait what—?!”
Koji almost overshot the distance, Stan having to grab him by the shoulder so he wouldn’t fall off the edge, and the visor’s binocular function kicked in almost immediately. And Stan was right.
There really was a town in the valley down there, surrounded by an orange-hued forest, and there were other humans. “Well it—we’re definitely not on Earth because the sky’s the wrong color, so it’s gotta be one of the colonies—”
“And Elpis is the only one with a red sky,” Stan cut in, stopping Koji mid-rant.
Elpis. The same one the Red Lion had flown by, before calling the wormhole that had brought them to Arus. Of all the planets for them to have ended up on.
“Should—should we go down there?”
“Should we?” Stan’s tone was something Koji couldn’t exactly put a good description to at that time, but there was a muted spike of hope that wasn’t from Green, tinged with a deep-seated longing that he understood all too well.
This might be the closest they’d be to home in a while.
Green rumbled audibly from somewhere behind him, giving her own affirmative input on the question. It wasn’t like they could go anywhere right now anyways.
The others probably wouldn’t blame them for checking it out, right? And maybe they could even get some supplies while they were there—he mentioned the second thought aloud, which prompted “Then what’re we waiting for? Let’s go!” from Stan.
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
Pinpointing where to land the castle had been easy enough—the largest landmass the planet had featured an open plain easily large enough for the ship. The sky may have been swathed with clouds, but that didn’t mean it was chilly in any way. In fact, the first thing that had hit Allura when the doors of the main lift had opened was the sheer humidity.
The second thing was the silence. There wasn’t a single soul in sight, for the entire fifteen or so doboshes she and Coran been walking. Things looked different from what Allura remembered, but given the fact that the last time they’d been here was ten-thousand decaphoebs ago, it was to be expected.
The many ruined buildings they’d seen in the distance from the field were the most markedly different in terms of design, but the souk’s layout was more or less the same. “Coran, you don’t think they would’ve abandoned the village?” she asked, noticing a few structures that had clearly collapsed and hadn’t yet been repaired or replaced.
“It’s entirely possible, princess,” he replied quietly. “If only temporarily. This site’s considered sacred. They wouldn’t leave it for too long.”
But would it have been long enough by now? Coming to a decision, she called “Is anyone here?” while looking around again.
For one very long dobosh, the only sound heard were a few distant birdcalls, until she heard a shuffling sound, followed by a crash; Allura pinpointed the source quickly, there being three Scrubs in a building that had its missing wall covered by what was likely meant to be an awning. They froze when they saw her, and she quickly put her hands up in a nonthreatening posture.
“We’re not going to hurt you,” she reassured. “We’re only here to trade for some supplies.”
What felt like a few doboshes crawled by before they glanced at each other, one of them saying “You’ll have to run everything by the elders first.”
Caution, with a touch of hostility. Given what the paladins had told her when they’d first met, Allura simply couldn’t be surprised by it.
The trail up to the temple that served as a gathering place was the same, at least, though it also gave her a clearer view of the destruction that the Galra had wrought—the amphitheater was pocked with craters, and larger chunks of stone were still left strewn across the area below the stands.
The Scrub that led them there murmured for them to wait at the entrance before disappearing inside, returning shortly after with three others. “Yes? What do you want?” one of them asked shortly.
Coran took over from there, thankfully, and Allura let her attention wander back toward the settlement.
This was where the Red Lion had been hidden away for so long. There was no chance he would have come here on his own—if anything, Allura would have thought that he would have been on a volcanic planet somewhere—but if her suspicion was correct…he’d brought passengers with him here.
One of whom who had been here before.
She excused herself quietly before heading back down the steps, making note of the activity slowly resuming around the village, now that they were deemed not a danger. Their eyes followed her, however, which was partially why she wandered away from the clustered buildings.
The oblong structures gave way to a grassy field on either side, and then larger stone structures arranged around a lake, all in varying condition. Some looked untouched, while others had all but collapsed entirely. She did not miss the singed chunks of metal lying forgotten away from the paths, either.
Further from the buildings, the grass grew longer, reaching waist-length when the stone trail arced along the cliff bordering the ocean.
Allura stopped at a curve in the path, looking out at the ocean. She recalled having walked this way, the last time she’d been here. There seemed to be a rock formation in the ocean missing, but it was otherwise the same.
Right up to a chittering sound breaking her out of her thoughts and having her turn, coming face-to-face with what, by all means, was a giant beetle.
It took every ounce of her self-control to not cry out, instead focusing the burst of energy into tensing in case she had to run, while also wondering just how in the world something of its size had managed to move so quietly. The beetle chittered again, sounding almost questioning, before seeming to shrink back slightly.
At the same time, a Scrub burst out of the grass, panting out an apology. She was wearing a murky-yellow shawl over a vest, and was holding onto a short rough-hewn staff that had a few pieces of sea-glass strung to the top of it, and while Allura couldn’t be certain, she seemed younger than the others seen earlier.
“He usually keeps his distance from everyone,” she went on, looking up at Allura. “At least, everyone he doesn’t see too often.” She paused. “You…weren’t here for the Pre-Selections, were you?”
“No, we weren’t,” she replied, slightly put-off, before an idea came to her. “He was with one of the pilots?”
The Scrub nodded. “The Nourasian team. Both of them—they both went missing.” The way she said the last two words had another implication, as did her grip tightening on her staff. “I’ve been looking after him since.”
Another quiet screech had Allura look at the beetle again, hesitating before reaching to pat his head a little. She knew from the mice that animals and other creatures each had their own kind of sentience, and she had little doubt that this one understood what had occurred.
Yet another peaceful world, left confused and in shambles by the Galra, even with the Aenidesian Blockade—and then more, in the families of the pilots who were now held prisoner somewhere in the universe.
To the side, the Scrub abruptly facepalmed. “Forgot—my name’s Mariposa.”
“Allura. It’s nice to meet you.”
Mariposa nodded, before frowning slightly. “You know, you kind of remind me of an old story we have.”
At that, the princess mentally stilled. “What story?”
“A really long time ago, I guess there was some sort of guardian that fell from the sky and hid under the ocean. And the people that came with them, the pictures aren’t really that great and they’re faded, but they kind of looked like you.”
“What happened to those people?” she asked.
Mariposa shrugged. “Dunno. All three of them were buried not too far from here when they died though.”
She’d known it was coming. She’d known since she’d first woken up from cryosleep—but hearing it hurt. “If—if you don’t mind—could you show me where?”
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
There was something weirdly surreal about it, at least in Stan’s opinion.
The excitement he’d had about it had petered out after the first few weird looks they’d gotten—because who wouldn’t give two people in armored outfits weird looks—which had been enough to convince them both to borrow something to use as cloaks while they were there.
But it was still seeing other humans after nothing but aliens for almost a month.
First thing was first, after Koji had stopped to mention it: getting some currency that’d work. Given that they really couldn’t stay for too long, as much as part of Stan wanted to, they’d have to resort to something quick.
Specifically, petty theft.
The good news was that Elpis was more urban when it came to the few towns it had, given that it was an older colony, which meant more people of varying age groups. Including some kids maybe around Jordan’s age who left their bags in the back of the truck now parked at the edge of the nearby lot near an arcade.
Yeah, he felt bad for doing it, and Yellow was giving him a mental pout for it, but they really should’ve known better. We’ll pay ‘em back someday, okay?
A soundless sigh came in response; Yellow knew there was a good reason for it all, as much as he didn’t like it, but he pushed for taking pictures of the name-tags on the bags. Koji, ever the polite one, took a pen and a piece of paper to write a short apology note for the missing currency.
The second piece of good news was that the on-duty clerk for the nearest convenience store barely batted an eye at them, being engrossed in whatever magazine she was reading.
Canned vegetables were a definite, as was anything preserved or dried in general in terms of food.
Toothbrushes were on the list too, since those were back on Alwas—the castleship lacked any, only having some sort of mouthwash that tasted like something between a raspberry, a peach, and a pineapple. Toothpaste went with that.
A few bottles of sunscreen, some of those little tissue packs, a new razor because that was back on Alwas too, and since this was one of those rare ones that had some cheap clothes, some of those too; Stan thought to grab a few the kids might like. And some new boots for himself.
He wasn’t expecting to see Koji staring at a shelf displaying a few seed packets, looking like he was seriously debating on picking a few up. “There’s a greenhouse near Green’s hangar,” he’d explained quietly at being asked. “I figured it—I don’t know, might be worth a try?” Stan looked at the shelf for a few seconds before shrugging and picking a few. He didn’t know anything about gardening, but Coran might.
Not to mention having some familiar food out in space would be nice, if it worked.
It looked like they’d gotten mostly the same things, though Koji had picked up a few newspapers too. “Is that everything?” he asked.
“I think so,” Stan replied, thinking it over. The clerk looked surprised for a few seconds at seeing them, made one little comment on the weird getup, but otherwise didn’t ask anything.
Though Koji did get another weird look when he abruptly paled a few shades, hissing out a breath, and Stan had to try very hard to not jump when Yellow went tense all of a sudden. The idea of being found came across pretty damn clear, and Stan was silently berating himself for not thinking of it sooner.
They crashed onto a colony planet in giant metal cats. Of course that would get some sort of response, given that the two ships were obviously alien in origin.
“Okay, so we’ll just—have to wait them out?” Koji suggested once they’d made it out of the town and to the alcove where the speeders had been left, the borrowed sheets being put back near where they’d been found. “I mean, at least—maybe if we get in there fast enough—”
Yellow shot down that idea both hard and quick enough to an involuntary exclamation out of Stan, and Koji had flinched equally hard. “What’s going on over there?” he asked in a mutter. The Lion paused, still tense, before mentioning one specific part of his damage diagnostics.
He had a barrier crystal out of alignment, which meant he had no particle-barrier. And that wasn’t covered by the self-repair protocols, if only because of the sheer odds against it happening to begin with.
The response team that Elpis’ governing officials had sent had since figured that they weren’t going to get anywhere with Green, so they were focusing on Yellow. Including bringing in some bigger vehicles in.
“Well fuck,” he muttered, before saying, “Uh, Koji? We might have to steal my Lion back.”
Koji sighed heavily. “I was afraid you were going to say that.”
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
Eva woke with a jolt, scrambling to her feet before really thinking anything through, stumbling while hissing in a breath at the lightheadedness that followed, deciding to sit down in the chair before looking up.
They’d obviously crashed, given the crater Red was currently lying in. That was also probably how she’d ended up on the floor. “Red? How’re you doing?” she asked after realizing that the screens were all dark.
A small flicker of irritation not directed at her came in response—the short answer to that was not well. He could move, sure, but he had a lot of self-repairing to do. “You start on that,” she murmured, standing up again. That was one heck of a fight.
And then some.
Zarkon had been the one to take Voltron apart at the start there, like it was nothing, with just the…just the mind-link. That he could even get into the link like that in the first place was definitely not good.
Something else hit her then. During that fight, when she’d found herself thinking about the day that her dad had left her at the boarding school and about her mother’s crash—she hadn’t been thinking about either of those things at all. Or anything even close to them, for that matter.
But if it hadn’t been her, then…nope, she wasn’t going there. Not right now. It was bad enough that she already had five other things at a time in her head, she didn’t want to think about there being a chance for anything else getting in. (All that thought did was set off another warning bell in her head, but she couldn’t tell exactly why.)
Red growled a little; the irritation became noticeable again, and part of it was at her remark this time, but it also seemed to be at least partially directed at the Black Lion.
The Black Lion. She could just remember seeing Black being flung in the same general direction as Red, now that she was thinking about it, and—
“Eva?”
The comm crackling made her jump. “Wha’—Shiro! Where are you?”
“About thirty meters behind you. There’s a canyon—can you move the Red Lion at all?”
“Well, yeah. A bit, I think. He can’t fly right now though.”
“That’s good enough. Bring him into the canyon.”
Her Lion’s motions were stiffer than usual as he stood and turned around to walk into the canyon Shiro had mentioned—easily wide enough for them both to fit in with some space between, narrowing toward the top so that it looked more like a crevice from above.
Eva paused to pat one of the side consoles a bit after standing again, murmuring “You take it easy, handsome,” before starting out. Red directed her toward the secondary exit—a hatch above the pilot seat—before she could go through the doors. A wave of dry heat hit her as soon as it was open, and she squinted against the sunlight that was directly ahead of them now.
Further beyond the crater Red had made, Eva could see another, larger one, which suggested that Black’s landing had been rougher than theirs. She winced a bit in sympathy before finishing pulling herself up on top of Red’s head, then becoming aware of something like a faint stinging sensation in her right side. She didn’t notice any difference when she experimentally poked at the spot it seemed to be coming from, though.
Getting down from Red was a little trickier than getting up to the escape hatch—she opted to slide down his back a bit before relying on the jetpack to slow her fall, taking the chance to look around again. The canyon went on behind the two Lions, too dark for her to see anything, and she’d already gotten a look at the outside—but she couldn’t shake the suspicion of them not being alone here.
“Shiro?” she called out, not seeing him anywhere.
“Over here!” Eva paused, confused at the strain in his voice, coming from the other side of Black. She was about halfway around the bigger Lion when the stinging feeling got stronger; it felt dull, like a bad bruise, and Eva had half a mind to go back into Red just to make sure that there wasn’t a mark there or anything.
She hadn’t really thought about the size difference between the two Lions until now, either—Black was an absolute mountain of a ship. Red huffed in amusement at the comparison, and she turned her head to stick her tongue out at him.
She saw Shiro after turning around Black’s paw, sitting down by a circle of rocks that featured a bunch of dry-looking sticks in the middle, and was holding his actively-glowing prosthetic near it. “You’re…trying to start a fire?” she guessed.
“Trying to,” he repeated, wincing. “Not having much luck though. You were out for a few minutes. I was starting to get worried.”
Eva shrugged, before realizing something. “H-Hang on, where’s everyone else?”
Shiro hissed in a breath before saying “I don’t know. We were all separated when the wormhole started falling apart, and Black can’t get a signal from anyone.”
“…oh.” So that was the different thing—there were only two background-noise sources in her head right then. “Okay, what about where we are?”
There was a pause of a few seconds, Shiro looking momentarily distracted, before replying “The planet’s called Epona-6. And there’s a base not too far from here.”
And that was probably why he’d asked her to move Red under cover. Eva looked up toward the top of the canyon, then at the walls of it, before saying “I’m gonna climb up there for a better look around,” and heading back out.
The cliff face went on for what was probably miles in either direction, but there were some thick patches of some kind of moss or lichen scattered over the ledges, sticking to the rock hard enough for her to use it to scale it for at least part of the way.
After that, a thin ledge trailed along the wall and into the canyon. She paused for a second when she felt a brief third mental touch, a sort of wordless be careful making up its entirety, and she eyed the dim-eyed Black Lion briefly before continuing.
The ledge widened eventually, along with the canyon narrowing, all while sloping upwards more, before giving way to a plateau that dropped off abruptly after a minute’s worth of walking, and she saw the base Shiro had mentioned almost immediately, off sitting on another plateau, with a ravine between it and the one she was on. Eva could barely make out a river far below.
The base itself had one narrow building with one addendum to the right, with angled arches making up the primary part’s roof. To the left, there was a high fence, though the base’s plateau being at a lower altitude meant it didn’t matter much. Within the confines of the fence were multiple aliens, all wearing outfits like the one they’d first seen Shiro in.
Eva swallowed reflexively at that observation, and she took a deep breath. Okay, so there are some prisoners there. Shiro’s probably gonna want to know about that. At the same time, one part of her was curious in a dark sort of way—what if she recognized any of them?
Her visor’s binocular function kicked in as soon as she thought about it, helpfully zooming in on the base. The first group of aliens she saw weren’t familiar in any way, but the second group—all staying to what shade there was provided by the wall—were five Scrubs. One of which she recognized as the second person she’d raced on Alwas, and a second as the one that had been manning their star-racer’s defenses.
Further to the side was someone unmistakable: Rush. And a bit further to the left was…was…
Eva flinched, shutting her eyes for a few seconds before shaking her head, looking to the other end of the field. She remembered Ceres after a few seconds, among a few other vaguely-familiar faces that she couldn’t put names to.
Then she froze, all the air leaving her lungs at once. She blinked once, twice, took off her helmet to rub at her eyes before putting it back on, and looking harder to make sure she wasn’t imagining it.