MOTHER
Order May Be Right For You If...
The constant presence of the hive at Jinyi's back was meant to be reassuring. Certainly Mother lingered 'close,' her mind paying rapt attention to this exchange. She did not know if Pride were 'important' per se, though Jinyi seemed to put some stock in his influence. But she was vaguely aware that he had aided in gathering attacks on the Hive before. At the very least, perhaps Jinyi's meeting here could mollify him... pacify him. Prevent it, even, from happening again. So as her child faltered, feeling uncertain and floundering now and then, she continually shored him up: a port in his storm, a quiet murmur of confidence, a tug on certain biological aspects to
force mimic a soothing touch.
'You are doing well, my child,' came warm praise directly to Jinyi's mind--and a sensation of the conversation opening, blooming and unfurling, Mother's invitation for the rest of the Hive to watch both warm and encouraging. Jinyi was doing
so well that she wanted everyone to see this wonderful exchange! How beautiful; how perfect. (Not that it had not been blocked off before: but now she drew them to it. No longer background noise, but a bright feature to eclipse the rest, for the moment.)
Then--gently--she took Jinyi's offer, subsuming their physical control. Gently, because there was no need for force, here. They were family, after all.
"I am the Mother." A pause, to allow both Gembounds--natural and Drone both--to adjust. It was Jinyi's voice, yes; but the movements manipulating throat and tongue were not.
"My beloved child risks much in coming to speak with you. In this, they show wisdom and courage. You have my gratitude for granting them a chance to speak in peace." Another pause. A careful swallow, as if to ensure Jinyi's throat were not damaged. (Was this a kindness she afforded her usual, Lesser mouthpieces?)
"It would be difficult to explain... the scope of the war. Your people--you Gembounds... your perspective is a strange one. And it is dangerous. You see yourselves, I think, as living in your world, with elements of our magics intruding upon it. But this is not the case." Sorrow was forced into her--no, Jinyi's--syllables, the attempt to imbue emotion into another's words a somewhat awkward one.
"In truth... the very stars are at war. Entire worlds are snuffed out in the march of Chaos. Would that I could show you..." She paused, as if imagining, and then continued.
"They destroy only to destroy. Savagery is their mantra. Brutality, their only value. In Chaos, nothing is certain. In Order... all is pristine. Quiet, calm, and in its place. There is no wanton destruction. Things are put as they must be, peaceful and beautiful."
There was, of course, no mention as to the
process of order. No mention of those subsumed by its relentless march. Nor to the stagnation of fractal crystals left standing for eternity.
"But I know you are... neutral. My point is that your perspective is wrong. This is not your world, intruded upon now and then. You are the anomaly. The intruder. These caves... in which you live. They are a nursery for death. A breeding and hatching ground seething with growing corruption. They were created to nurture the monsters that are sent to destroy worlds in Chaos's name. ...Do you understand?"
Was Jinyi growing weary? -Did that matter? She pulsed a reassurance to him: she was nearly done. And this opportunity to reach the Gembounds... it was worth it.
"They will wipe you clean from this place. When it suits them. We would stand by you. Even leave this place to you, when they are gone; but you must understand... you are not in a quiet, backwater home as you imagine. You stand on the edges of a battlefield. We ask nothing of you... but tolerance, as we fight this war in your stead." A final pause, and then--to show she was listening, to show she was
aware--
"As for those that this Hive absorbed, before we knew the truth of your kind--do you believe we should apologize? We have not reached out, as we imagined they would prefer to be left alone. How do we make amends?"
The question was given with humble earnesty, whether or not Mother truly felt it, whether she cared at all for Pride's reply. Or perhaps she did, if only to find the best way to manipulate her former victims into leaving the Hive alone; certainly some of its most vicious opponents now were its former children. Perhaps the stag would have some insight.
Jinyi, she now freed from her benevolent grasp and left in her wake a trickle of gratitude, a warm flood of approval, a spark of encouragement.