I want to lose weight, and I started worrying that I’ve turned into a little dumpling. But my partner, came to the rescue and told me I should appreciate every phase of myself. If I gain weight, I’ve got great boobs and a nice butt, for example 😃. And when I slim down, sure, my figure gets leaner, but I lose those curves. So right now, I’m a true Slavic woman ❤ but I’m starting what you’d call a "transformation." Simple mindset exercises like this and self-acceptance are things we women need so we don’t torture ourselves with society’s expectations about how we should look.
Welp this has got me, the idea of Espresso, Latte, Pomegranate, Werewolf and Lilac Cookie as magical girls and boys has gotten to me since I saw those costumes on Cookie Run Kingdom China. Now here's Espresso Cookie ready to transform into his magical outfit, I don't know what magical item to give him so he's just holding nothing on his hand. Like precure transformations he has his own glowing outfit it's a glowing kimono. I don't know what his transformation phase is unfortunately, I guess you guys can come up with it yourselves.
I’m challenging myself starting now to see what I am capable of if I push myself and don’t give up, if I can make the hard choices instead of doing what is easiest. I’m ready to see what I can do
A light flared up behind Jayson. As Ru's eyes adjusted to the sudden brightness, she made out a large hummingbird in the center of the light, perched on top of a bush. It had a long, flowing, curled tail and tiny black feet, and prismatic feathers that gave of a sharp glittering glow. It watched them out of one white eye.
Jayson turned slowly, trying not to scare it. "I think this bird just said something."
"Parrots talk," Ru pointed out. "I don't see why other birds can't."
Jayson lifted the bill of his hat and leaned towards the bird. Its head twitched upward to meet his eyes. "Parrots don't glow," he concluded.
"Neither do pendants," Randy said.
"I'm a lytra."
The voice clearly came from the bird. It gave them no more time to speculate. It sprung into the air, its wings becoming a blur. The higher it flew, the brighter its feathers glowed, until it dissolved into a light like the Star. Ru shielded her eyes.
"You may call me Fuse," it said. It had an accent that mostly affected its vowels, but there was something familiar about the way it spoke. "I see I disturb you as I am. This may help."
The bird flashed, and the light fell away in sparks. Glowing feathers littered the ground. In the bird's place stood a tall, charcoal-skinned human. Ru had never seen a person like this before, slender but sturdy, rainbow eyes, squarish fingers. Colleen gave a small whimper, and Ru noticed she was wide-eyed and paler than ever. So much for not being disturbing.
"I ask that you listen to my story," Fuse said, "And what will be yours. No one will notice you have left your homes."
"That's supposed to make us feel better?" Jayson scoffed.
Fuse spoke similarly to the Blue Star, with a gentle but direct voice that kept all of their attention. "As I said, you are no longer on Earth, but the planet Aereka. It orbits a star on the opposite side of the galaxy, which you call the Milky Way. We know it as Loraesa." She swept her hand in an arc over her head, tracing the stars. "Loraesa is part of a system of twenty galaxies."
"We call that the Local Group," Jayson said.
His voice had a touch of mocking, which Fuse apparently missed. "The Accilean System," she corrected. "I represent this galaxy in a council that is dedicated to protecting the system and guiding its people to live good lives. You have been called here because we need you."
Somehow, she looked all four of them dead in the eye at the same time. "Your planet, which we call Skae, is outside the system. It is the one unawakened planet within the twenty galaxies. Because you are outside the system, you are the only ones who can help us. You have been chosen to be Skaeya-cyu -- "flying fighters," as you would say. Warriors who protect the System from invaders. Through the System, you can harness power to aid you, power you never thought possible on your planet. It is not an easy task, but you will not be alone."
The four responded with a silent stare.
"This is a pretty good prank," Randy snickered. "How'd you do the special effects? I bet Joe could never come up with something like this."
Prank, dream, the words did not fit right in Ru's head. They were obviously in a completely different place, and she trusted Colleen's judgement about dreams. "We're just kids," she said at last. "How can we defend galaxies?"
Jayson was already wandering off. "No thanks," he said, "I don't really want to dream about being a superhero."
"Wait!"
Fuse's voice rose in a frightening way, and startled Jayson into looking at her again. Ru saw tears brimming at the edges of her eyes. "Please, don't go. I know it is a lot to ask of Skaeyans your age, but we truly do need you."
Colleen, surprisingly, was the first one to speak up. "It isn't a dream. We should listen."
Jayson crossed his arms. "OK, let's say we're not dreaming somehow. Ru brings up a good point. Why kids? Why not Secret Service agents or the Army or Police? Why not you?"
Fuse quickly regained her composure. "Members of the Accilean Council are not allowed to fight. I cannot answer for the others. I do not choose the Skaeya."
Jayson's scowl deepened.
"You don't seem to realize how serious this is," Fuse said. "If you refuse to become our guardians, then you, everyone on your planet, everyone in this galaxy, will certainly die."
Silence fell across the clearing. "Why?" Colleen whispered.
"Because of the Lraenu."
Ru flinched. That unfamiliar word felt like it could break her ears if Fuse had said it louder. She was hesitant to ask what a "Lraenu" was, and could not pronounce it the same way Fuse did.
Fuse motioned for everyone to come closer. Jayson was the last to join their circle, his eyes sharp and gleaming in the shadows of the brim of his hat. Ru knew that stubborn expression well.
"The first of our Skaeya rebelled against the Accilean Council," Fuse said. "Since then, the galaxies have been under attack by his soldiers -- vicious, ghostly creatures we call Lraenu. The Lraenu can shapeshift, but in their true form they are practically invincible. Practically. You four have the power to stop them."
"Cool," Randy said.
"But we don't have power," Ru said.
"You will soon. Not long ago, one of our agents made contact with you. You did not know what what happening at the time, but he was taking the material necessary to make those talismans you wear. He activated your power and it has been building since then." Fuse knelt in front of Ru. "What is your name?"
"Ru."
"It's actually Prudence," Randy said loudly.
Ru stared daggers at him. Fuse seemed not to notice. She pointed at Ru's pendant. "These talismans have been granted to help you access your tools. It is important that you keep the talisman with you at all times. Consider it a part of you. Don't lose it. Don't give it up. Most importantly, don't break it. Ru, I can sense it will be easiest for you to learn how your power works. First, you must arm yourself." Fuse rose and backed up a few paces. "Call out, 'switch meteor!' as loud as you possibly can. As if you wanted the sky itself to hear you."
Ru glanced at the others, looking for a hint of what to do. All eyes were on her, Jayson skeptical, Colleen nervous, Randy intrigued. It couldn't hurt to say a few words, she reasoned. The forest was too quiet to be screaming, but Ru sucked in a slow, deep breath. "SWITCH METEOR!"
The cry echoed through the trees. After a few seconds of silence, she was sure her face was a bright enough red to see in the starlight alone. The fact that none of the others were laughing kept her calm. She expected it from Randy, but he looked disappointed instead. "What's supposed to happen?" Ru asked Fuse. "Why'd you make me yell like that?"
There was a slight smile on Fuse's lips, but a sincere one. Colleen gasped. "A shooting star!"
At first, Ru could only see the twinkle of strange constellations. Then, a glittering blue streak of light came into view. "That's too big to be a shooting star," Jayson said. "And too slow."
A breeze kicked up. The palms swayed, hissing ominously, and suddenly the stirring of air felt more like a storm was moving in. The star ballooned to the size of the moon and lost its tail. "I think it's heading this way," Randy gulped. "Run!"
The entire forest turned blue-white under the light of the incoming meteor. The trees thrashed as the wind gusted and howled. The winds were pushing everyone away from Ru. She stood motionless at the center of the storm, unable to take her eyes away from the sky. Randy and Colleen locked their arms around tree trunks to keep from being blown away. Jayson had dropped to the sand and was clawing his way back to his sister. "Ru! Ru, move!"
His voice was so distant. Her ears were filled with the rush of air. The light of the meteor blocked everything out.
It hit. The impact knocked her spirit from her body. She was rising upwards at an incredible speed, through clouds, through the sky, stars and suns swirling endless all around her, all reaching for her. When they touched her, something inside shattered.
She never felt so free.
Abruptly she was back in the forest. She was keenly aware of every one of those trees, every grain of sand under her feet, all the stars overhead, even what she couldn't see. Her nerves hummed with the energy of it all. The absolute clarity of her mind and senses astonished her. Fuse was close by now, and even without light, she somehow radiated color even more vividly than when she had been a bird.
Colleen peered out from behind her tree. "You're -- you're different."
Ru glanced down. Her clothes had changed, though they didn't look all that out of the ordinary. A blue t-shirt with white sleeves, black jeans, blue sneakers with white wing decals on the side. A blue headband with long tails was tied firmly around her head, and there was a barrette above her right ear that she couldn't see. A tiny light pulsed inside the gem of her pendant, something she would not have noticed if her senses hadn't been heightened.
At the same time, Colleen and the others were different as well. It was as if Ru had stepped into a movie and they were figures in the oldest, grainiest black and white photo. They were lifeless, missing details. They approached slowly, wide-eyed.
"You are the Skaeya of the Sky," Fuse told her. "The leader of this generation."
The weight of the word "Skaeya" hit her opened mind with full force. In that instant she knew just what a Skaeya meant to the galaxies, what was waiting inside her to be awakened. She felt like a star just lit, burning with unimaginable energy.
"Hey, can I do that?" Randy asked eagerly.
Fuse smiled more openly now. "Give it a try."
Randy's meteor didn't take nearly as long to arrive as Ru's. It fell so fast Ru barely saw it land. The light it created on impact was too bright to look at. Even Fuse turned her head away. When the brilliance faded, Randy was wearing a green jersey with the number ten on it, a silver cape, black pants, and tall metal cyborg boots. He was not so stunned by his transformation as Ru was. "I mean, a jersey wasn't what I was expecting for a superhero, but whatever." A devious grin spread across his face. "What's my power?"
"You are the Skaeya of Light."
Randy's enthusiasm left in a hurry. "Light?" he scoffed. "Ru gets like lightning and tornadoes and stuff, and I get light?"
Ru hadn't given much thought to her elemental potential. She imagined summoning a big storm, and picked up the grin Randy had dropped.
"Randy, is it?" Fuse asked. To her credit, she didn't seem annoyed at all like most people did when Randy threw a tantrum.
Randy crossed his arms and gave Fuse his toughest look. "Yeah."
"Your clothes right now are similar to what you normally wear, based on what you think you should look like. When you are a full Skaeya, it will change. As for the power of light, it is wise not to underestimate any element."
Randy grumbled, but had no arguments. Fuse approached Colleen. "Would you like to try next?"
Colleen jumped. There was a panic in her eyes Ru didn't understand. Colleen was normally nervous around strangers, but this was something beyond even what an alien should have inspired.
"What's your name?"
Colleen's mouth worked.
"Sorry? I didn't hear you." Fuse inched closer.
Colleen trembled and gripped her pendant with both hands. "I-I can't be a guardian."
Fuse looked concerned but unbelieving. "Why not?"
"I mean, she is kind of a coward," Randy cut in.
"She probably has a more useful power than yours," Ru snapped.
Colleen swallowed. Her voice was barely above a whisper. "This necklace can't be what you think it is. My mother left it to me. I've had it since I was a baby."
Fuse's eyes widened. "May I see it?"
Colleen handed over the pendant and backed away. Fuse's prismatic eyes hardened as she sunk into deep thought. Her gray lips pressed together. "Strange," she said at last. "I have no doubts this is a Skaeya pendant. But you should have obtained it recently."
Ru gasped, then burst out, "Was her mother a guardian too?"
Fuse shook her head. "It wouldn't matter if she was or not, each pendant is supposed to be unique to the guardian."
"Oh." Ru deflated a bit, but her mind was already running away with other possibilities. "Maybe the same person who gave us our pendants switched Colleen's mom's pendant out sometime. I don't know how because you wear it all the time," she said to Colleen, "But I don't know how I lived through getting hit by a meteor, either."
Fuse handed the pendant back with a smile. "Just try switching. It won't hurt you."
Colleen's mouth formed the words, but Ru couldn't even hear a whisper. "You're too quiet," Fuse said. "The meteor isn't receiving your command. Try again."
Ru suspected Colleen was distracted by something, but couldn't imagine what. "It's pretty cool. C'mon, let's see what your power is!"
"Yeah!" Randy gave her a thumbs up.
Colleen huffed, breathed deeply, and screamed louder than Ru had ever heard before. "SWITCH METEOR!"
The air grew cold. Snowflakes filled the air, glistening in the rosy light from the approaching meteor. It seemed to hit in slow motion. Ru felt frozen in place. She caught a glimpse of Colleen's strangely empty eyes just before impact.
When the snow blew away, Colleen appeared hunched over. Her dewy eyes darted all around. Her uniform had become a glittering, full-length pink coat. There were white gemstones and ribbons, white wings on her shoulders, and boots. "Wow," Ru breathed. "Yours is pretty!"
"What is this?" Colleen whimpered. "Why does everything feel so strange?"
"You're awakening to the system," Fuse said.
Randy was yelling, somewhere more distant than he had been. Apparently he'd already lost interest in whatever Colleen would be. "Light power! Shine!"
"That won't work yet," Fuse called to him, amused. "We'll start practicing that when you're all armed."
The group looked at Jayson. He was leaning against a tree, arms tightly crossed, hat pulled down over his eyes. "That's my brother, Jayson," Ru said. "He thinks he's dreaming."
"How am I not?" Jayson said. "This is impossible."
"He's a chicken," Randy sneered.
"That doesn't work on me," Jayson replied coldly.
Ru walked closer. "C'mon, you're next."
All coolness evaporated. "Um, no, I don't have to do this. You guys, don't you see it? Something isn't right here!"
"If you think you're dreaming --" Fuse started.
"SWITCH METEOR!"
Fuse jumped.
"There, you happy?" Jayson glared at the sky. "I don't have to do this. I didn't say I won't."
Ru grunted in annoyance, but had no time to speak. Hot winds poured in from the sky. Flames burst from the ground as the meteor struck. She was surprised none of the trees ignited.
Jayson came out of the fire. He had kept his hat, but the Sox logo had vanished and was no longer dusty and frayed. He wore a black jacket with a four-point star in red on the left side, black pants and shoes. But Ru couldn't see the rest --
"Dude, your shirt's on fire!" Randy yelled.
Jayson looked down, yelped, and batted frantically at the yellow flames that had engulfed his entire shirt.
"Stop drop and roll!" Ru shrieked.
Colleen pulled at Fuse's shirt. "How do I use ice? Quick!"
It was then that Ru noticed Fuse didn't seem worried at all, and Jayson stopped rolling in the sand a minute later. The fire apparently wasn't hurting him, it seemed to be a part of his new shirt. The flames faded significantly as Jayson rose to his feet and dusted himself off.
"It's clear what your power is, correct?" Fuse said with a smirk.
"I hate you," Jayson replied in a level voice.
Fuse grinned, gave them all an approving glance, then closed her eyes. An undercurrent of energy radiated from her feet, into the ground, spreading and circling the entire planet beneath them. Ru felt like she understood how that was done, though she could not put it into words or quite understand why Fuse was doing that. "The Lraenu do not realize we are here. I have time to grant you another ability."
"I get to learn how to shoot lasers now?" Randy made a finger gun.
"Flight," Fuse said.
Ru didn't think Randy's face could light up any more, but it did. She felt a flutter of excitement herself. "We can fly?"
"Skaeya-cyu means 'flying fighter' -- it's not just a name. I hear Skaeyan humans often dream they can fly. It's because they know they can. They were made to forget."
"By who?" Jayson demanded.
Fuse eyed the stars. "I -- don't actually know," she admitted. "It happened long before my time. Perhaps long before the System's time."
Jayson was not about to let it go so easily. "And what exactly do you mean by the System? You say it differently than -- I mean -- well, we can't be outside the system like you said, because Earth is in a galaxy, right? On the edge of one, anyway."
"The System is more than the physical location of the stars," Fuse started.
Randy waved a hand between the two of them "Um, excuse me? We were about to learn how to fly, and you want to sit here and talk?"
Fuse laughed and looked to her left. There was suddenly a presence. An enormous, shadowy, but familiar presence overwhelmed Ru's mind. She knew who it was before they stepped out of the trees. The red of their cloak was fiery in the meager starlight.
"You!" Randy exclaimed.
"This is Ember," Fuse said. "He is the Council's guardian. He can help you remember."
Ember moved no closer, but Ru felt her eyes being drawn to that void where his face should have been. Her eyes and mind focused in an uncomfortable way. Then, a click. A door opened. That weightless feeling came flooding back, that rush of previously unfathomable freedom. She bolted forward and leapt into the air.
Her feet never touched the ground.
"It worked!" Randy yelled.
She heard him grunt and a heavy thud as he landed face-first in the sand. "Ember has to teach you first. You'll know when you've remembered." Fuse smiled up at Ru. "I knew you would learn quickly."
Ru kicked at the air and tried to draw herself forward with her hands, but she only made herself rotate in place. "It isn't like swimming," Fuse said. "The easiest way to start is picturing yourself going where you want to go."
Ru's eyes went straight to the sky. Pink starlight gleamed beyond the silhouettes of palm leaves. Fuse waved a hand at her. "Go on, try it out! Just don't go far, and if you see or feel anything wrong, come back right away."
The air was less dense above canopy. Ru started up slowly, taking in the full breadth of the elegant, sparkling skies. The air swirled lightly around her, tossing her hair but keeping it out of her face. There was no fear as the ground swept away from her. This was where she belonged.
A vast field of palms lay beneath her, blue and feathery in the night, littered with tiny, glistening yellow lights. Beyond, there was an ocean, a perfect crystal reflection of the brilliant arc of fuchsia stars near the horizon. The sheer size of the yellow moon nearby left Ru breathless, especially compared to their single, pale-faced moon at home. The more she sighted, the more she could feel. Every single star had its own energy. She felt like she was glowing herself.
"Wow," she heard Colleen sigh.
Ru hadn't realized she'd stopped. The others were drifting her way, she didn't even need to look at them, they had a place in her mind too. Jayson flickered, Colleen shimmered, Randy blazed, Fuse beamed. The full sky overwhelmed them all. Ru recalled the sky of her home planet, perfect blue, crystal white, wild, seething gray and black, and realized she would never look at it the same way again.
Fuse's wings hummed loudly as she drew near. "The bulk of your training will take place at the Council's complex," she said, "but the only gatestone from Skae leads here. You will have to come to Aereka before you transfer there."
There was a strange implication in the bird's voice. It was hard to tell what she was looking at. Ru squinted at the shoreline running off to the horizon. At first, she saw nothing but the thorny silhouettes of trees. On a second sweep, something caught her eye. It was very far away, but it was square and unnatural. She thought she could pick out its signal from all the others she was receiving, like a single line of smoke rising into the sky. "What's that?"
Fuse knew exactly what Ru had found. "That is a Lraenu hive. You must keep clear of it until you are well-prepared."
"What? Where is it?" Randy flew higher. "That's the bad guys, right? I'm ready, let's get em!"
"You are not ready," Fuse said gently, "But I am going to send you home now. Especially when your powers are new, you must return to Earth to keep them strong."
"Our powers are like a battery?" Jayson scoffed. "How are we supposed to protect galaxies if we have to stay home all the time?"
If a bird could smile, Fuse would be. Her voice radiated warmth. "You will see. Return tomorrow night and I will guide you to the Council's complex."
"What if the Lraenu are here waiting for us?" Colleen said fearfully.
"You must be prepared at all times," Fuse warned. "They can travel to Earth. You have a few advantages there -- your power is strengthened and theirs is weakened, and you have allies on your planet watching over you. Eventually, though, you must learn to defend yourselves."
They summoned their meteors again to change back into normal. Fuse lead them back to the gatestone with a few words of encouragement, then they were on their way home. Ru's sneakers touched down lightly, as if she was still part of the air, part of the fog that had collected in Tanager Park sometime during the night. The park had been so striking when they'd left the planet, now it was just old. Quarterhill's backyard. The Quarterstone, the gatestone, was no longer illuminated.
"This is awesome," Randy exclaimed.
Jayson's eyes were hidden under the brim of his hat, the corners of his mouth turned sharply downward. Colleen clutched at her pendant, which had returned to its original dolphin shape. Ru's head was spinning, but Randy's enthusiasm was contagious. They had powers. They could fly. They had just met an alien, of all things. Was it real?
Blue light illuminated the hedges. The Blue Star and Ember were near. There were four bracelets in Ember's hands. He swept closer and fastened one around Ru's wrist. Without understanding, she touched it, and gasped as symbols appeared in the air above it. The others gathered around her, even Jayson looked intrigued. "What is this?"
"These are each copies of a book of Accilean legend and prophecy, written before the system came into being," the Star explained. "Learning the Accilean language will help you master your abilities, and we hope, in turn, you may help us better understand its contents."
Ember handed out the other bracelets as Ru poked the symbols. They scrolled sideways with her finger, rows disappearing on the right and more appearing on the left. "I've never seen this language before," she protested. "How will we know where to start?"
"It will come to you." The Star's voice was soothing. "The Accilean language is a little different from any of Earth's. Anyone can understand it when it is spoken, but to read, write, or speak it takes practice."
"Anyone can understand it?" Ru repeated. "How? Like pictures?"
"You never noticed that I am not speaking English?"
All four pairs of eyes snapped to the star. "Say something again," Randy said slowly.
It was true. The words that whispered from the Star's tranquil flames were unlike anything Ru had heard before, yet the meaning of the words stood out to her instantly. "You understand now. Return home. Come back to the stone at midnight."
The Star winked out. Ember was gone with it.
"Like I need extra homework," Randy said. "At least it'll give us powers."
"You guys, you know we gotta keep this a secret, right?" Ru said.
Randy rolled his eyes. "Yes, Mom."
"Dude, we all know you'd be the first one to call down your meteor if you were about to get in another fight with Joe," Jayson said. "Seriously, they said the Lraenu are here, and it's probably better if they don't know who we are."
Colleen's voice trembled. "We don't know what they look like."
"Hopefully we don't need to know yet," Ru said.
With that, they all rushed home. Ru noticed she wasn't the least bit tired. She and Jayson talked about the bracelet books on the way -- they didn't want their mother to find the books by accident, but she was rarely around to take care of the house anyway so it wasn't likely she'd stumble across them.
"But I guess aliens would explain all the weird stuff that happens in Quarterhill," Ru whispered.
"Or dreaming," Jayson said flatly. "I'm going to try and sleep."
"How can you? There's no way I can." Ru was about to take her pendant off, hesitated and left it hanging around her neck. "Hey Jayson? Just because you think it's a dream, it doesn't mean you can't play along, right? Why wouldn't you want to be a superhero?"
Jayson paused at the door. "Flying is pretty cool. I just don't trust the bird. I think she was hiding something."
"Like what?"
"Who knows? We've apparently got twenty whole galaxies to deal with. Good night."
She hugs you, the faked horror in her eyes giving way to genuine concern, "Relax, I was just winding you up. didn't know it would work so well."
"Look, remember I told you that my uncle Jean-Jacques was a Mechanicus, right?" She says as she lets go, "I know things about the Knights, he even let me take a peek inside the one we have here once, so even if it rejects you as it did me, it simply won't wake up"
Her confession jogs your memory, - you remember a rumor from a few years ago about a girl that had spent every night within the Noble Machine performing UNSPEAKABLE RITES! in order to force it to accept her as its mistress.
Mind you, the rumor mill of castle Drachengaard is not the most reliable source of news, considering what it had to say about you for these past few months: Maidens' wails in your chambers in the dead of night, disappearance of some of the kitchen staff, and that perennial favourite, UNSPEAKABLE RITES! Quite incorrect, though not entirely wrong.
Alexandra's hugs do little to comfort me in the wake of her alarming words. I punch her in the shoulder after breaking the hug. "Now's not the time to rile me up. You know better than that." I retie my robe trying to calm down once more thinking carefully on the words I just heard. These rites, these UNSPEAKABLE RITES that needed to be performed in order for the Knight Machine to accept me. "Am I ready, Alexandra? What if it rejects me as it did you? What if it doesn't reject me? What if I secretly enjoy the RITES too much and it changes me into ... Oh I don't know." My legs go weak with worry and I feel faint. Alexandra wraps her arms around me and takes my into my chamber and sets my on the end of the bed and hugs me until the panic subsides once more. "Help me Alexandra. You saw inside the machine. I know it didn't work for you. You must have learned something. Please what should I do?" I look up to her. My eyes filled, glistening with tears I refuse to let go.
((First, the rumors, in order: 1) THE RUMOR: You've abducted two kitchen maids and sacrificed them in a magic ritual. THE TRUTH: You've caught them having sex on your bed, and after a talk with them helped them quietly leave the castle to marry each other. 2) THE RUMOR: The staff in the castle disappear all the time, and some (or all) of the higher-ups are involved. THE TRUTH: It was just the two kitchen maids whom you helped run off. 3) THE RUMOR: Alexandra wants to be a Knight-machine pilot so badly, she resorts to magic rituals in order to become one. THE TRUTH: She wanted to be a Knight-machine pilot so badly, she asked her uncle (who was involved with maintaining it) let her inside it once. You do not know the specifics, but she spoke of it "Rejecting" her, and she was a little upset afterwards))
((KNIGHT-MACHINES AND YOU))
((Here's what you know: 1) They are giant walkers deployed by various states as siege engines, line breakers, mobile fortresses, and general problem solvers))
(( 2) They are normally kept on the castle grounds of whichever royal family owns them. ))
(( 3) They are maintained and repaired by the people called Mechanicus Savants. Alexandra's uncle was one of them))
(( 4) Being a pilot of one involves going through something called "Rite of Becoming". You are unsure what that involves, but today's your turn.))
(( 5) A pilot usually comes from the same royal family that owns the knight, but exceptions are known to happen (Alexandra hoped to be one))
(( 6) A Knight does not accept another pilot while the current one is still alive))
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Turnaround rest The most essential aspect that one should consider while selecting shopify developer is to check the transformation stage offered by the developer for providing needing the venture. This is enough duration of rounding out a venture. Though the transformation time can be different amid regards to size of the projects and the stereotype apropos of complexness complex in the make an effort. One should never obviate deciding round about the transformation interval about the get under way.<\p>
Project Price Money is the primary aspect that decodes wherefore everything and cannot be prevented in any cigarette case. Price of the venture can plus be disaccordant minutiae in contemplation of its complicated detach and kind of growth. One should day and night compare the prices in point of the solutions uncalled-for farewell the Shopify developer. Remember to quotation your the transaction schemes and expenses rate and also settle the price fountain.<\p>
Support and Servicing After the successful realization the enter on another the facts respect is make no doubt render assistance and maintenance by the shopify developer. Persevere is a significant issue for the investment after achievement for proper function of the locale. The Shopify Developers need provide carry out tech assistance reserves through healthy interaction.<\p>
Shopify movement can develop rugged and entertaining web page in aid of websites according to your requirements. Inner man are experts inwards creating web portals, bodily pleasure management system (CMS), collaborative networking systems, consumer power carts, API Integration and thousand web applications.<\p>