The Giga Child (Slayers Romance):


Chapter 6: Rocs and Rolls?  

*****************************************************************


Zelgadis expected to be flying to the ground, gently wafting under the power
 of his own Ray wing. Instead, he found himself caught in the gentle, but 
disturbingly unexpected grasp, of another power.    He fought against it
 briefly, but quickly realized the struggle was not worth the effort.  He was 
not really in danger, but he was subjected to forcest hat might make a less 
magic-knowledgeable person feel sick.  As it was he felt as if he were being 
pulled in and outside of himself.  Actually, that was a rather accurate 
description for someone caught in a dimensional roll.

The motion stopped leaving him standing on a jagged red rock, rather than the
 grassy mountain top he had expected.  Beside him, collapsed on the ground,
 Kari lay in a graceful curve, her hands locked together as if she’d been 
casting some spell with everything she had.  

He started to move away, but then Zelgadis expelled a short blast of breath
instead of the curse really on his mind.  Her interference had been irritating,
 but he realized he couldn’t   just leave her like collapsed helplessly 
either.   He didn’t know where he was, and chances were, she might.


The thought did not occur to him at first that they’d stepped through other 
dimensions until he saw  a village unlike anything he’d ever seen before.  
Candy pink buildings, a few in soft cream, lined next  to each other like tiny
 rows of teeth.    He folded down his cowl in the face of the desert heat that
 beat down on  him.  Judging the sky, he noticed that it must be afternoon, 
not too far after the mid-day.  He would need to  either approach the little 
village he could see, or he would need to wait to night to determine where her
 spell had  taken them.


He briefly considered leaving Kari there, but even as the thought crossed his
 mind he dismissed it.  With an  almost exaggerated carefulness he picked her 
up.  She was a lot taller than Ameria, who he’d frequently enough  had to bail
 out of situations, or even Lina.  As a Chimera, he could access far greater 
than human strength, but  she still seemed a bit heavy, and her height made 
carrying her under one arm impossible. He contemplated slinging  her upside 
down over a shoulder, but then opted to just scoop her up in both arms as she
was already curved  that way.  He slipped his head in between her locked 
hands, and resolutely started toward the little town.


As he got closer, he realized strange magic was at work in this dimension.
  Strange devices roared past him,  at high speeds that usually only flight 
could attain, but as far as his eye could determine, these were   traveling 
on the ground and wheels.  Zelgadis, unlike most magic users, did not thumb
 his nose at science.  Knowledge, to him, was knowledge.  So he could 
appreciate watching the design of these devices as  they traveled.  At the 
same time, when he got closer to the small gray path they traveled, he 
realized their  motion tended to cut him off from the dwellings or buildings 
he could see.  The stream seemed rather unending,  and crouched behind a 
strange green, spiky plant, he judged whether or not he could use his chimeric
 speed to  dodge between them.  

Just as he decided the timing, and he darted forward, his concentration tight, his mind 
controlling his every   step, Kari awoke.  Her soft hair slid with the slight movement of 
her head, falling out of the arrangement that  bound it back.  The problem was, as her hair 
slid, it threw off Zelgadis’ balance so completely that he could  only blink as the grill of 
one of the devices began to slam into him.  

A scream, from inside the vehicle pierced him as he saw it go careening off into the 
rocky, sandy ground that lined  the road.  Many of the other devices continued to hurry on 
their way, a few slowed down, and the others  swerved around those that slowed to gawk.

Of course, none of them saw why the vehicle diverted its path so unnaturally, and  
luckily, none of them noticed the strange figure hovering above the road, because in this 
world, such things  just did not happen.     Deciding that air travel would be better, 
Zelgadis hovered faster to the small village.

“I’m sorry!” Kari said as they landed.  “I didn’t mean to startle you.”

Zelgadis released his hold, so that she swung to the ground.  She blushed as she released 
her hands, and looked  around.  “Where are we?” She asked.

“Don’t you know? “ He asked a hair breath away from being annoyed.


“Oh...no...I...when you jumped, I forgot you could fly, and I just...I knew it
 was all my fault and I had  to do something, and I just reached inside, and I
 cast a spell that I was not supposed to cast, and...”

“A dimensional roll?” He guessed.

She looked up.  “Shhhhhh!  Don’t even say it...it is the most forbidden 
magic!”

“The Elves used it to leave our world....”

“That was a dimensional fold.  I didn’t have the power to do that.”

A thought crossed Zelgadis mind.  “Where did you learn that spell?”

She backed away from him.  “Why?”

“You know why.” He gestured at himself.  “I’ve had enough of your help, but
 that doesn’t mean I want to  stay like this.  Magic is the only way I will 
return to normal.”

“I’m not sure even that could help.” She said sweetly.  “But I learned it from
 an Elf Magic Master.”

“An Elf Magic Master?! But there aren’t any...they left--”

“Oh...they did.  But I learned it before they left the dimension....we really 
shouldn’t be here, you know.”  She looked around.  “Who knows what this world 
is like?  I’m sure they wouldn’t like us interfering anymore  in their world 
than we would in ours.”

Zelgadis frowned.  “I’m not going to interfere.  I’m just going to explore.  
We’re already here.”

“Zelgadis!” She pleaded as he began to leap towards one of the dwellings.

A startled scream later, and Zelgadis came out of the building as fast as he
could.  His cloak appeared to  be ripped, and he breathed hard.  “THEY KNEW 
WHO I AM!!! LETS GET OUT OF HERE!!!”

A squeal of something that could have been a monster or a young girl emerged 
seconds before Kari  could confirm it was the latter that made the sound.  She
 seemed to hold something small in her hands,  and as Kari and Zel flew up
 (Kari dangling from his arm, still facing the wrong direction looking down)
,  the girl aimed the box and set forth a flash of light.  Instinctively, Kari
 threw up a shield of cloud-mist,  and a protective barrier to hide them.

Down on the ground, the small girl stamped her foot.  “Now no one will believe
 meeeeeeeee!!!!!”

“What was that about!?” Kari asked as they landed back on the top of the 
rocks.  
“OUR OWN DIMENSION...NOW!” He ordered.

Kari sighed.  “Its very tiring to do that spell. I am not even sure I can 
right now.”

Zelgadis tightened his grip on her arm. “Do you mean we’re stuck here?”

She flushed and started babbling. “No...I can do the spell. Its easier than 
traveling through time in one dimension, which was the first thing I had to 
do for Ceipheed to prove I was worthy-- travel through time, so I can do that 
spell if someone’s willing to die, but full fledged dimension travel?! I just 
 don’t know what can happen!” She said as she started moving her hands. 

“So do it.”

“We might be thrown somewhere else! Zelgadis, you can’t even imagine what
 sort of place we could end up! Why I’ve heard stories that--”

He lifted her off the ground slightly, to stop her chatter.  “Perhaps you can
 imagine what will happen if you don’t.” He said it gently, but firmly.

“I can’t guarantee we’ll return..but I will try..Moon, Wind, Hear me promise
 ... Star....  Shadow.....”

*********************************************

Lina blinked at Luna.  “I...passed out.” Lina stated as she sat up in the bed,
struggling for some way to maintain her dignity and face in front of her sibling.

Her sister smiled, a genuine smile, and straightened up.  “You’re ok?”

“I....think so.  I’ve been having the strangest dream, one-man.” The   
genuine concern in her sisters voice relaxed Lina more than a magical calming
spell.  All fear vanished, and suddenly, Luna was once again the one who had 
all the answers to her problems, if only she were asked.  “I dreamed that--”

“Wasn’t a dream.” Luna yanked the soft comforting blanket away from Lina.
“Get up already.”

“How do you know what I was dreaming!” Lina objected.  “I dreamed that I was
 this great sorceress and that I...” reality caught up with her as Luna’s  
ring finger came into view.  The band was still there, glowing as faintly as 
ever.  “Oh.”

Luna nodded.

Lina gasped.  “You’re married!?” 

Luna shrugged, and turned so Lina couldn’t see her face.  “I gotta go.  Traded
 shifts to deal with that stuff.  I’m on again.”

Without further explanation, Luna exited the room, tying her apron as she 
went, balancing the neatly folded blanket on the other hand.

Lina frowned, as she tugged down the remaining sheets on the bed.  She’d just
 swung her legs to an inch above the floor,  and prepared to slide down and 
stand up, when the door swung open.

“OH...Lina, you have some explaining to do!!!” Nahga exclaimed as she stood in
 the door.

Behind her, Ameria attempted to poke her head in and say hi.  After getting 
her head stuck in Nahga’s  cape, eliciting an annoyed push from Nahga, Ameria 
ended up poking her entire head underneath the bed.  As she crawled out, she 
said, quite politely,  “I hope you’re ok, Lina?” as if nothing were strange 
about her rump sticking up in the air while she backed out.

“How did you two get here?” Lina groaned, looking up at Nahga, then down at 
Ameria.  Without waiting for the answers, Lina flopped onto the bed backwards
, her arms flailing out with another groan. “Don’t I get even one day off!!”

The two looked at her, and sighed in unison and then sat down next to her.  

“OH HO HO...you think you could hide from me!? I know you too well, Lina 
Inverse!” Nahga lectured.

“We were worried about you.” Ameria added, earning a scowl from Nahga. 

“Worry, about Lina?!!” Nahga argued.  

“Then it was FATE! Destiny--the calling of true friends who wouldn’t let 
someone suffer alone!”

Lina grabbed the pillow and tried to block them out. “No...now I’m suffering 
with you...” She muttered.

She sat up though, something occurring to her. “Ameria, what do you mean 
suffer.”

“Why...your failed marriage!  A maiden’s most precious ceremony, and probably
 your only chance   and it crumbled- ummmmp” Ameria  said as Nahga cast some
 sort of spell that left her younger sister sucking on a squid.

“Its not polite to say it that way even if it is true!” Nahga said, as Lina ‘s
 anger began to boil.

Nahga’s next words though, made it cool right down into a superembarrassed 
lump of frustration.  “Besides...her
only chance!?  I think Lina’s got quite a few admirers now...”but only 
temporarily, as Lina’s anger flared
right back up as Nahga added “even if she has no chest, charm or char--.”

As Nahga hit the wall, Ameria got the squid out of her mouth.  “OOOH....nasty....” she spat a few  times (as politely as possible) and then 
focused on Lina.  “So what are you going to do about Xellos,  Zelgadis and 
Gourry?”

Lina sighed.  “Nothing.”

“Nothing?” Ameria asked wide eyed, as Lina took her cape from the chair her 
sister had folded it over.  She began to neatly tuck her cape around her, as
 Ameria tugged on her arms.  “But you have to do something---”

“I am.  I’m  going to--” Lina started.  She meant to say she was going  to ask
 her sister how she’d ended up married to Xellos.  Or at least, she meant to
 ask Ameria  and Nahga to leave so she could think.  But it didn’t matter.  
She didn’t get the chance.

Nahga’s eyes lit up faster than the sword of light in battle.  “Say, Lina ...I
 know what you should do...Treasure hunting! I have a map to a Roc’s cave..!” She launched into action before  Ameria could finish her second round of 
protesting.  Grabbing Lina’s arm, Nahga ran out at a very fast  top rate of 
speed not caring that she dragged the two younger girls along like fish on a 
line.  “Come on  Lina...we have to get there before anyone else does!”

***************************************************************************************

Gourry, wandered down into the village.  His head still felt quite unscrewed
from his body after the pounding he’d  taken, but he knew that if he ate 
something he would feel better.  Something like a hurricane went past him
,  and briefly, Lina crossed his mind .  She also passed his field of vision, 
but Gourry was not intelligent enough  to decode the speed blur of black, red 
and yellow as Nahga carrying Lina and Ameria.    Slowly he made his  way into 
the village tavern and sat down.

“Take your order?” The waitress said.  She looked vaguely familiar.  He smiled
 at her, because that was the polite  thing to do, and not because she was a 
rather beautiful girl.  He did notice that, but what he noticed more  was that
 she looked a lot like Lina but with a  better figure.  

“Take your order...” She said a little less politely as he continued to stare,
 and predictably, like most men, was staring at that portion of her anatomy 
that her sister always envied.  

He blushed, and asked for a menu.

She shook her head, and pointed to the board behind her. 

“Um, that’ll do.” He said nodding.

If she blinked, he couldn’t tell because her bangs hid her face.   She 
probably didn’t, because  her response was “You eat like her too.”

“Like who?” He asked completely confused.

“Lina.” Luna said as she wandered into the kitchen to carry the order back to
 the chef.

Gourry was still puzzling how she knew that when Luna arrived with the food. 
 Most people might wonder  how a girl that looked so normal could carry a tray
 so laden with the food that it must weigh three times as her. Gourry was not
 most people.

Gourry didn’t even realize it was strange. 

 If he had, he might perhaps have made the connection to Lina again.

Or not. This is Gourry Gabriev, and there’s not much he doesn’t miss.  That 
is, there are just so few things he can catch onto without Lina’s not so 
patient explanations.


“You gonna marry her?” Luna asked, in the same off hand bored tone a waitress
 might say “Do you want  a refill” when your coffee cup is still full from the
 last one.  

Gourry chewed through the piece of roast chicken, and paused before his next 
bite.  Not eating with Lina, he  could take a bit more time with his food--no 
one would snatch it from him.  So he’d only finished most  of the chicken and
 a third of the other dishes in the time it took Luna to ask her question.  If
 Lina had been  there, all the food would have been gone.  Of course, if she’d
 been there--

“Do you need more time?” Luna prompted.

Gourry had a realization.  A rare event, but it happens.  “YOU’RE HER 
SISTER!!!!” He said excitedly.

Luna looked around, noted the emptiness of the room, and then took off her 
apron and sat down.  “Yeah.”

“You’re not what I pictured.” He said.  Then he resumed eating.

“Yeah. So?” Luna prompted as she poured herself a glass of water.

“You’re not scary at all...wow Lina made me think you were some kind of 
monster...and seeing how  she’s so scary, well, I pictured...but I 
mean...wow....*you’re* her sister.” He repeated, in between bits of food.

She nodded calmly, and sipped her water.

“You look alike..but not that much...I mean you’ve got a much bigger...” He
 paused, narrowly averting his eyes from staring at her chest again.   “Say,
 where is Lina?”

“With friends.  I’ll take that as a yes.”

“To what?”

“Don’t worry about it, Brother.” She said standing up.  “But upset her, and 
you’ll see why she says  I’m scary...”She delivered that threat in the same 
offhand tone as she said” And here’s the check.”

Gourry blinked.   He had the familiar feeling that he’d missed something.  
“Ano, Luna-sama, what are you talking about?”

Luna smiled a smile more intense than a cat licking cream.  A smile that 
rivaled those of Xellos.    “Nothing.  Call me Luna-Onne-sama, okay?  She’s 
at the Mountain...”

She turned and walked away with the empty trays of food. 

By the time she came out with a damp rag to wipe the table down , the room was 
empty.
    She paused by the window, looking out at the mountains rising up in the 
distance, a tiny fleck of gold and blue rapidly traveling
up its surface.  She smiled warmly at the sight until a cold breeze tickled 
her skin and she turned around fast.  
For a second the quiet in the restaurant grew thicker until she could feel it, 
as she stared at the intruder.  The sound  of water dripping from the rag she 
held broke the pause, her hand unclenching from the tortured piece of cloth, 
wrung  dry of the small amount of moisture it had held seconds before.


“Xellos.” She said as she looked at the demon in front of her.

“AH!!!  The sister of the incomparable Lina Inverse...” He said bowing 
politely.  “I should not have underestimated you earlier..but I won’t again.”

“You always did...” She commented as she retied her apron.  “Wasn’t the first 
time...and you said the same thing then too.”

A rare thing happened.  Xellos had no response to that comment, no flip pithy 
observation, or even the amused smile, he bestowed so frequently on his 
victims, er, friends.  Firia might have made him lose his cool with extreme 
irritation, Ameria might have made him giggle, Lina might have blown him away, but Luna stunned him completely.

“You knew me before?!” He asked, his eyes opening, as he became serious.

“You could say that.” She replied  “Enough to marry you anyway. Shift’s over.
Gotta get to my next job.”  She said and walked out, without any visible 
effort, into a dimensional shift.

Xellos might have gone after her.  He might have asked her to explain.   As it 
was, he didn’t even have a chance  to move.  A trail of smoke flitted across 
his vision. Without turning, he knew what summoned him.

“I’m working on it.” He said calmly.

“Working is not results.  I said I wanted results.” Her voice was not so calm.
  Threats danced in every word.

“I met someone from my past.” He said conversationally.

A soft sound of surprise sent another puff of smoke his way.  “Indeed.  Do you
 know who it was?”
For the first time, he heard uncertainty in that iron voice.

“No.” He replied, being less than candid about what it was he did know.  

“Good.  You have no past.  Except the pain of when you became what you are,
and you will have no future  except the pain of that experience ending if you 
do not hurry.  They are nearing the cave where the Giga sleeps.”

“I know.” He said.  He bowed without turning around.  The beastmaster was 
already gone, but he knew that too.

The emotion he experienced confused him, tore him into momentary indecision. 
  For a second, he looked  down at his hand as a band appeared there, of 
trapezoids formed of a thin blue design.  A trail of smoke appeared,
around his finger, covering the band  and he disappeared to the mountain, 
dismissing the memories that tickled  at him.  

****************************************************************************

“Wait...how is it that Luna and Xellos were married?” A young girl asks.

You frown, wondering how small children got into your tavern.   A particularly 
sneaky set of boys are attempting to  drain a mug of ale you’d sent to another 
customer.  A quick sling on your part sends the ale mug down to a semi-  
conscious gawky man at the other end, leaving two mugs of water for the boys.  
The place, already full before is now packed with customers and others who 
usually walk by your tavern with their nose in the air.

Stories have a way of gathering listeners, you suppose and sigh.  At least
 you’ve been doing a hefty business.


“Come on Old man, tell us...what’s the deal with Luna and Xellos?” A young man
pleads as he tugs the old man’s sleeves.

“Oh that....” The old man coughs.  “It gets the story out of sequence, because
 that happened about a thousand  or so years before what I was telling you 
about.  And its not really *part* of this story...at least, he didn’t
tell me about that....I’m not sure She ever told him all of that 
anyway.....didn’t matter, when they got married again and all...besides, I’m 
telling you how Lina had a child. Don’t interrupt!” He growls. “I’m telling a 
story, I’m not testifying so don’t cross examine me..stop asking so many pesky 
questions.”

“Yes hush, children..SO..old man, In the story, what happened to Lina and 
Gourry....did he catch up to her!?” A woman gushes.  “Did she realize  she was 
meant to be with him!? So its his child!?”

“Him...NO WAY!” A portly woman with two kids under each arm explodes.  “Lina 
doesn’t belong with  that twit...NO...Zelgadis, the poor boy, that’s who she 
needs to be by her side! He’d make a fine father.”

“ICK...A Chimera! Ma, if I brought a monster like that home...you’d go 
fireball on me.” A teenage girl protests.


“You’re not bringing anyone home until you are 16!” A man said, who looked 
enough like the girl to be her father. She wasn’t a very attractive girl, as a 
result of the resemblance.  As such, it was a good bet she wouldn’t be 
brining anyone home with her even if she was past 16, unless she met someone 
far less shallow than the people in the village.

You sigh.  You didn’t know you were running a family feed show here...so much
 for your nice quiet bar, a slow evening with the even slower citizens of the 
village.


“A pretty face will only break your heart.  You need a man to take care of 
you.....believe me, your mother knows.” ‘Mother; the large woman, says.  “A 
homely husband is a good husband.”

The girl makes a face like someone eating live worms, while “Father” suddenly 
becomes redder than  the drunk at the end of the bar.  “What was that 
Mylene?!” He shouts.

You turn back to the old man who is continuing the story despite your lack of
attention.  The conversation makes you think. Secretly,  you’d been hoping 
Lina would be paired up with Xellos.  But now he’s married to her sister...so 
such a pairing would be awkward  in itself, not to mention anything else that 
would make a romance between the two an uneasy proposition.  Still you’d 
always liked Xellos’s irreverent attitude toward life, and he was powerful 
enough to stand up to Lina.  Gourry was such a pushover that he didn’t 
challenge Lina the way she craved to be challenged.  At least, that’s how you 
saw it.  Course, you could make a case for Zelgadis too. Only, in that case, 
the good would be the other direction.  Zelgadis took himself too seriously, 
and swam so much in angst he could win the world record for it.  Lina’s 
wackiness would pull him away from that. If anything, she could help him find 
a way to make him live with his condition, rather than view it as a problem in
 need of a cure.

Course, Ameria’s relentless upbeat perkiness could do that for Zelgadis if she 
were not so fanatically extreme about justice.  But you dismiss her because 
she’s somehow too young to experience love, other than as a crush.  Nahga on 
the other hand, seems too likely to fall in lust, which doesn’t last any 
longer than two weeks to three weeks.  Kari...well, you can’t get a good 
feel about her.  The others you’d heard about in stories before, but this
 girl, she was a new element that you couldn’t judge too well.   So far it
 sounds as if she’s gotten attached to Zelgadis.  He doesn’t seem to return
 the sentiment, any more than he had with Ameria.  

*****************************

Luna collapsed against the bed in the room she counted as hers.  She pushed 
back her hair, and shut her eyes tight.  As much use as magic was, there was 
no comfort it could give her in her current situation.

Legends were legends, and prophecies were prophecies, and words from Gods were
 not to be ignored--except when they were lies.  She sighed as she looked at 
the tiny band on her hand. She missed him.  Luna was a simple person, for all 
that she knew more magic than any other human in the world.  She’d learned 
spells easily, the way some people remember recipes.  And she was good at it. 
 So good, that she’d never needed to cast something like the Giga Slave.  She 
often wondered why the one who cast that spell turned out to be her sister?  

Luna frowned as she turned over the small clues she’d gathered.  The legend of
 the Giga child was old, it seemed to have lasted for centuries.  Of course, 
when time travel is possible, what is genuinely old and what is not can be a 
tricky question.  She knew, because she’d traveled to the past herself.  And 
when she had, there hadn’t been this legend.  So when did it develop, and more 
importantly, who manufactured it?  Because all though she wasn’t exactly on 
personal speaking terms with L-Sama, she knew a hoax when she saw it.  The 
question was, why was someone making all this up? Why did someone want the 
Mazokou and the Dragons to focus on Lina, and to focus on courting her (of all 
things?).  

At times like this, Luna wished she didn’t work alone so she could talk the
 situation over with someone.  Kari, for all she meant well, was really the 
sort to get overly involved with whatever she did and mess it up.  Ran in her 
family, Luna supposed, or at least, the human half of it.  The Sneaky side 
probably had more sensible genes.   Of course, Kari virtually never appeared in 
her serpent form, and actually seemed ashamed of being a hybrid creature 
rather than fully human. 

So was someone playing with her younger sister? And for what purpose?


Far off, in another dimension, a group of strange lights and shadows blended.  “So far she 
does not seem to have chosen a mate.” Voices, or rather tones, pure and full of harmony 
rang out.

“Stubborn humans...I told you this  would not work.”


“I still think its wrong to use her like this. She saved our people on
 Mypross.” A higher pitched voice complained.

“And destroyed that Orihalcon-plated destruction weapon of ours.  She really 
is remarkable.” A second voice observed.

A third voice asked. “Remarkable yes, but is she the one we want to use?”


“We must chose someone.” The first explained. “The alternative is unthinkable.”

“And lets face it, he’s entirely too stupid, but he is the only one left 
carrying our genes.   He is our last link to our home dimension.  Unless he 
passes that on, and to someone with more magical talent, we will never get out 
of this nonexistence we trapped ourselves in.”


“Bright idea prime, to move us to this dimension.” A chorus of voices grew 
angry and intense.

“Hey, the brochure made it look great!” Prime defends himself. “Besides, 
elves, he’s not our ONLY link...there s the Priestess! We will have bodies 
once again. And if we can get Lina’s magic using genes, those bodies will be 
powerful enough to last.  We just have to give her a little more time.”

“And the Mazokou?”

“They bought the story, and won’t harm her as long as they think the prophecy 
is true.”

“But what if she falls in love with that Mazokou?”

“And why did you tell the Mazokou this story as well as the Dragons?”

If a ball of light can laugh, then the shimmering waves were its laughter. 


“Consider the Mazokou just a match to light the fire we want.  When its lit, 
he’ll disappear.  He is a mere catalyst for the relationship we want.”


“But the Light Holder wasn’t jealous, or at least, he didn’t seem it...The 
stone one seemed more upset.  And the Mazokou may not disappear so easily.”


“Oh really?” The light shimmered and became a puff of smoke. “I think he will 
disappear as easily as we want.”

The others seemed surprised.  “How did you learn that Prime?”

A white light appeared, and rolled downwards becoming bigger.  Prime shimmered and 
turned into a purple mist   “Can thank our old friend Raudy for that one. Its the snow ball 
effect. One small event back in time changes many things...”

“But what did you do Prime!?” The others splintered into disco like lights, vibrating wildly.

Prime flashed in bright purple blasts, slowly. “Ah...That is a secret.”




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