[b]Leitmotif[/b] I must leave on the next boat, I think. The first casualty of the Battle of Myinnkyun was my music, torn from my bow and launched like an arrow, and a fiddler's days are numbered when his songs are no longer his own. Two nights before she vanished: "Play!" cried Peridot, old eyes scowling, calling a slow ballad of love long lost; But the fire of the bottle was in Shooting Star, and he levitated me two bits, calling a march to stir the blood. Peridot stayed my bow, declaring that she would not see her taxes spent on such an affront to melody, so Hotspur trotted next to the guard and hoofed me civilian bits for a march. "I see how it is," Peridot told the nocturnes, "the freaks stick together," and silence descended as she paid me triple to make the march [i]Iter Solis Invictus[/i]. I must leave on the next boat, I think, or be the musician who played the song nopony wanted, because what everypony wanted was for the others to suffer. Time crawled. Shooting Star and Peridot didn't stop glaring at each other for the entire tune. Thank the stars for Potluck, who next called Morag's Reel, and for Littlemoth, stepping up to dance, drawing the gazes of the room like a lightning-bug upon a darkened stage, golden eyes hiding among flaring arcs of grey leather and streaming bands of darkness, until Dawn Patrol fluttered to her flame and revelry retook the battleground, pony and nocturne together. I could not leave on the boat the morning after Peridot vanished. There was none. Neither will there be music, I think, until I fiddle the shanty to fill the sails with Myinnkyun at my back. [hr] [b]Cabotage[/b] Ai. Ai! I'm cursed! It's a curse, it's the only explanation. Two missing boats in a row, and now Peridot falls into the bay on a late-night walk. Not that I'm not glad the witch is dead, but suspicious suicides are never good for business. Never mind Majority's talk of murder, whipping up panic for his reelection campaign to get everypony's minds off our crippling taxes. How can anyone believe his overheated tripe? The old witch once tripped over her front porch steps and accused me of sabotaging her storefront with my magic! She didn't need help falling off a dock. Ai, I suppose I should be glad he's not pointing the hoof right at me, a week after I shouted at the town meeting he should lower taxes just to shut the old witch up. And now she's gone, and I get a double share of Myinnkyun's import trade, which—let me multiply— since the HMCS Pegafore and the SS Tradewind have both vanished into the Brahmin Ocean, is two times zero, meaning ZERO! No income since Summer Sun yet I still have to pay duties to keep the garrison drunk while an army of sand-crickets assault Myinnkyun's towering walls with chirps of song! Ai, ai! [hr] [b]Andi Quote[/b] Murder! That's what comes of all this mingling: Mayhem, miscegenation, and [i]murder[/i]! You turn your back for just one day and some idiot sailor is kissing a kelpie, then before you can shame him back home, she [i]pulls a pony into the sea[/i]! Oh, of [i]course[/i] I knew she would be trouble long before Vote said so; it's a big, big world, with a thousand races who just don't understand our cherished pony values. Why, didn't you hear that two days before Peridot was drowned, a group of tuft-ears almost assaulted her down at the common-house? If you ask me, they're all in on it together. The Guard should throw the whole lot straight into the stocks, except they hired Shooting Star to keep the tuft-ears pacified, so they'll keep sitting on their hooves as Mooken scale the walls and kelpies pull us straight into the bay! What do we pay taxes for? Why isn't that puffed-up Sunspot being held to account! Everything would be different if we'd just stayed in Equestria, but we're so far from Everfree that we can't even celebrate sunrise and moonrise when the Princesses awake. I've a mind to leave on the very next boat, and leave Myinnkyun to the savages and tuft-ears! [hr] [b]Moonstruck[/b] Damn Peridot for dying on the night that I bedded Littlemoth! To have her sneak into my shack after the honoring of moonrise, to have her share my cries as our tangled bodies sung carnal hymns to each other and the Night, to pin her with my body until dawn's rosy muzzle peeked from the covers of the slumbering horizon, as she clung to my drained form as though to anchor me from the calling of the tides… And then to have Hotspur dash in with the news that Peridot was missing, her front door wide open and her bed made… I recognized the panic in Littlemoth's face. To be blamed for something you could not have done, based only on the fear in ponies' eyes. She knew she would be suspect, having humiliated Peridot by calling a dance and setting the room to revelry after the old witch called the March of the Sun to spite the Nocturne there. I have heard Peridot's disgust from ponies thinking themselves kinder for wrapping the hoof of intolerance in a velvet shoe, and the rumors that swirl from Quote and the gossipmongers when they think us out of earshot. I am sick of the looks, sick of the whispers, sick of the job openings that vanish when I enter, and sick of the desperation that forced Littlemoth to sneak back out my window and pretend away our tryst so she could be pure for the Guard pegasus who could keep her safe. Even though Peridot was drowned by a kelpie, they say we were behind it, that the monsters conspired to avenge the witch's insults. Let them accuse us. Let the Guard come, shackles in hoof. If they wish to oppress us, they will quickly discover what monsters we can be. [hr] [b]Sailcloth[/b] Oh! Sonata! How could it be true? How could the shining-eyed kelpie with laughter like sea-bells and a muzzle cool and salty with the sweetness of the sea… How could your innocence and your delight at my gifts, the taste of shared lotus-flower paid for by a sea-melody, taught with patience in the stolen moments when the sailors left the docks for the confines of the common-house, taught with patience to a wretchedly atonal pony, blundering through the harmony as your throat shaped air-sculptures, rich, ephemeral, enveloping my eardrums with a love as endless as the sea… How could those mean nothing? You killed Peridot! —No! You could not have! Not my Sonata, whose very name must be sung: So. [i]na.[/i] Ta. I know your song, Sonata, it is curled around my mind rich and sweet and innocent, and the memories of our laughter peal the bells of Peridot's funeral dirge. You pulled her into the bay, they say, and the Guard pegasi flew to hunt you. I need to know why, Sonata. If we meant so little, if I meant so little. I cannot live like this. I will wait for an explanation on the still and silent docks where no boat has landed since the Night of No Moon, and if your answer is to pull me into the embrace of the depths until the air flees my lungs, then I shall be the next to die. [hr] [b]Sonata Dusk[/b] [How…] [How could he?] [How could he [i]do[/i] this to me?] [All I did was tell him I wanted more time! Like, he makes me laugh and loves my crappy singing and his tongue is so warm and smells of spiced tea, but he's a [i]unicorn[/i], he can't even breathe underwater!] [He said he'd hire out on a line-ship and earn big money as a trader and buy his own little island and we could share a lagoon, but, like, that's a lot to think about, you know? And I wanted some time to think!] [So I came back two days later to say yes and he wasn't there and he sicced the guards on me!] [How [i]could[/i] he? Is that really how ponies are, all smiles while they get their way, then murder you the instant you hesitate?] [The spear's barbs still scream above my left pectoral fin, near where I bit through the shaft when the pegasi tried to pull me to shore. I dodged their nets and dove, trailing the thick brine of blood and the thin brine of tears, and now I hide in the grotto beneath Myinnkyun Point until the wound closes and the sharks swim away.] [How could he? What did I do to him? Was opening my heart a mistake?] [I'd better go see Adagio. She warned me about ponies. She's so smart, she'll know what to do.] [hr] [b]Majority Vote[/b] Cabotage is STILL talking of taxes yes even at a time like this well it's only to be expected with the missing boats I'll pressure Sunspot about them again tomorrow the important thing is to keep the complaints from growing one lone voice is a crank but two voices equals a minority thank the stars that Peridot was the other loudest voice Andi's all caught up in the drama over her murder and I shouldn't have any trouble planting thoughts in her ear I suppose the missing ships are a blessing in disguse as ponies want a strong leader in a time of crisis maybe a speech to pull us all together shaming those tuft-ears into pulling their load should be popular with the merchants if the town seizes Peridot's estate I can shuffle the bits to cover my debts then tell Sunspot to fire one soldier and lower taxes before the next election (that'll play well with voters)             though timing will be tight I'll have to let the kelpie scare fade back away which means I'll have to keep Sunspot chasing the Mooken and keep panic at a dull roar [hr] [b]Spotlight[/b] "Chance smiles once upon the lucky," they say, "and the second time upon the fool." I have thrown away my [i]mahua[/i] bottles. Now is no time to be foolish. I was convinced that the Mooken were wild foals' tales, told to scare open the purse-strings of the fat and lazy. "Without the walls," they said, "without the garrison," they said, "the first Myinnkyun was found silent and gutted, absent even of corpses." From this, and fables of minotaurs in the [i]tawtwin[/i], came the new Myinnkyun, huddled on the tip of the peninsula, a hundred acres of surrounding brush fired and plowed into bare sand, keeping the shadows of the jungle far away from our little lights. Why wouldn't I volunteer for the watch? Paid to drink and gamble as the stretch of sand lay silent and birds trilled from the jungle beyond. But two weeks after the night without a moon, as I lay in my cot opening a bottle instead of pacing the wall, came a great shout from the rampart. When I dashed out, hastily buckling my armor, a minotaur was sprinting away across the sands, carrying a watch-spear stolen from my post, and dozens of ponies were staring up at the wall, whispering about what might be outside. Sunspot galloped up to demand an accounting, so I told him I threw my spear at an attacking Mooken. Dawn Patrol said he came outside just in time to see a Mooken run off, and so I escaped discharge for spinning tales with drink on my breath, taking only a turn under the lash. And now Peridot. I have thrown away my [i]mahua[/i] bottles. To be foolish now is death. Yet my heart whispers that we cannot out-gallop folly. How can a garrison save us when earth and sea conspire to bring a second end to the colony of Myinnkyun? We have built walls against the land, but we cannot hold back the ocean! [hr] [b]U Low Kene[/b] [hr] [b]Dawn Patrol[/b] Littlemoth dances behind my eyelids. Hooves stamping the rhythm of the reel, flanks swaying, tail lashing, until I close my eyes and [i]she is ripped screaming hurtling through the void[/i] [i]sister bowing crowned head[/i] [i]as her cries fade into the silent arc of the moon[/i] I shove Littlemoth from my thoughts and suddenly can see the mob behind her, the stiff and ghoulish form of Peridot holding a torch. I can't I can't I can't let them know. [i]screaming hurtling through the void[/i] [i]sister bowing crowned head[/i] How could Princess Luna snap? "Rumor is," Sextant said, "she felt like ponies didn't love her." I guess that explains the night without a moon, when it chased the sun over the horizon and we saw a skyful of brilliant stars: the lightgivers were warring over Equestria. Back in Equestria, Sextant said, the Night Watch and Nightmares rose up against the rest of the Guard, and even the civilian Nocturne hoisted arms. "Well, we've had none of that here," I said. "Not with so many dead of marsh fever. You'd better make for Maretaban and let the sickness run its course." I watched his ship come about, and flew back to Myinnkyun to finish my patrol. Cabotage said he was expecting a trade ship from Ponsylvania, so I scared them off too. As soon as word spreads [i](screaming hurtling through the void)[/i] Littlemoth will … I can't. I can't save them all, and I can't watch Myinnkyun turn on them, but I [i]can[/i] show Littlemoth the love Celestia couldn't show Luna. I can take her hoof as I did in our dance, as I do in our tender moments in passing in the streets, and we can wing over the walls and brave the jungle. If we can make it past the Mooken we'll fly down the Maregui to the maneland. Just as soon as I can get off patrol. Just as soon as I can get her alone. [hr] [b]Littlemoth[/b] how can it be they don't suspect me yet i was so careless i know they'll find her any day now where are the boats [i]where[/i] [i]are the[/i] [i]boats[/i] [hr] [b]Peridot[/b] [color=#888888][i]How could I have lived so close to[/i][/color] [color=#888888][i]the sea for so long, and yet[/i][/color] [color=#888888][i]never have known this peace?[/i][/color] [color=#888888][i]The kelp curls around me like[/i][/color] [color=#888888][i]a lover's embrace[/i][/color] [color=#888888][i]muffling Myinnkyun's murmurs[/i][/color] [color=#888888][i]The tide cradles me, rocking[/i][/color] [color=#888888][i]the sun in its distant orbit, shimmering[/i][/color] [color=#888888][i]like a solitary gemstone in an endless sea[/i][/color] [color=#888888][i]Silence[/i][/color] [color=#888888][i]surrounds and[/i][/color] [color=#888888][i]I merely wish[/i][/color] [color=#888888][i]I had known[/i][/color] [color=#888888][i]that that[/i][/color] [color=#888888][i]was what[/i][/color] [color=#888888][i]I wanted[/i][/color] [hr] [b]Tommyrum[/b] Fecking pikers, 's all they are. Too good for us, unless it's to use us to fight for'm. Pin a medal to y'chest like the weight o' the bronze balances out the missing leg. "Hero of the Poppy Wars!" all the unicorns cry, then they walk right by when y'just want a bit for another bottle to dull the pain. Always knew Peridot didn't give a shit about us, calling the March of the Sun for the town's one Night Guard. Feck you too, y'fat cow. I ain't a leatherwing but us troops stick together. Spend a week shovin' pigstickers into waves of charging qilins and see how far y'taxes take ya. 'S just yeh and y'mates on the line that bring y'home. Feck 'em both. Gonna wake me up by trippin' over me at half past midnight stumblin' toward the docks, least the damn hornheads could do is share a bit for another bottle to get me back to sleep. [hr] [b]Shooting Star[/b] What are you doing here? Who are you? Don't act so surprised. The Night Guard is trained to notice dream incursions. Who— Save your lies! Answer my question—who are you? Nnh— Feisty, aren't you? Can't say I was expecting a Nightmare, on top of everything else happening in this stars-forsaken town. We can do this the easy way or the hard way. I may not have the skill to trace you from here, but I can buck in the door of every Nocturne in town until I find you. So save yourself some trouble and— Oh no you d— [hr] [b]Sunspot[/b] I shouldn't say she deserved it, but Peridot deserved it. Complaining about taxes as if I'm not scrambling to keep every pony in Myinnkyun alive on a beltstrap budget! I'd laugh at how she was killed by the natives that she [i]isn't[/i] paying the garrison to repel, if that didn't also mean we're all downright fecked. The Mooken have been watching from just beyond the firelight since we cleared the sands, but now they're on the move. Controlling the kelpies to kill us from within, and stealing spears as links for sympathetic spellcasting, to ruin our fighting force before the invasion. An island full of minotaur shamans, and what magic have we got? A captain ten years out of shape, that useless drunkard Spotlight (who we only hired because his father's the mayor), and whatever crazy black-magic powers Shooting Star never talks about. With some reinforcements perhaps we could wait it out, but I didn't act fast enough. I had hoped that killing the kelpie in the harbor would prevent her from calling more of her kind for the Mooken to control, but since they're now sinking inbound ships, it's clear: we've only got one chance. Press-gang every able-bodied pony, march into the jungle, and slaughter the Mooken before they can slaughter us. First thing in the morning, it's time.