“Alright, enough! That was… ugh, [i]terrible[/i].” Catra leaned back in her chair, putting her feet up on the terminal in front of her. She closed her eyes, pinched the bridge of her nose between her thumb and forefinger and let out a long, irritated sigh. Ever since she’d usurped Shadow Weaver as Hordak’s second-in-command, things had changed. With the exception of the leader himself, there was no one above her within the Horde’s chain of command, and that meant she was afforded special privileges. When she spoke, people listened. When she gave an order, it had to be obeyed. She never had to wait in line, no one screamed at her every time she made a [i]miniscule [/i]mistake, and, best of all, she even got Shadow Weaver’s old room! Basically, she had everything she’d ever wanted. ...And some things she didn’t. The room wasn’t the only thing she’d inherited from Shadow Weaver. As it turned out, being Hordak’s second-in-command came with responsibilities beyond coming up with overcomplicated (and, somehow, extremely poorly thought out) schemes and brooding over the Black Garnet. Though she’d done her best to delegate most of these responsibilities to Scorpia and the other force captains, occasionally she still got stuck doing something she really, [i]really[/i] didn’t want to do. Today, that something was overseeing training exercises. While she was no stranger to overseeing these exercises from above, there was something weird about watching them from a monitor. It all felt so… fake, which was strange because the exercises had always been fake. Princesses weren’t robots, and they used magic, not Horde tech. Maybe the disconnect came from her inability to hop in and do something to influence the exercise, or maybe seeing real combat had left her jaded, but whatever the reason, it made watching the exercises absolutely unbearable. “Oh, come on, I thought they did pretty well!” Catra opened her eyes and glared at Scorpia, who wore a sincere (if a little goofy) smile and was sitting in a chair that was just a little too small for her hulking, chitinous form. “Were we watching the same feed?” asked Catra, waving flippantly at the monitor. “They were awful! My team did that same course in, like, two minutes. This group didn’t even make it out of the treeline!” “We can hear you!” The voice blared from the terminal, and on the monitor Catra could see the assembled cadets looking around in confusion, undoubtedly searching for the PA system that Catra had just accidentally triggered by resting her foot on the broadcast button. “I know that!” snapped Catra, before sheepishly lifting her feet and placing them firmly back on the floor. “But that wasn’t fair!” came another voice from over the speaker, this time from a younger cadet with leathery, bat-like wings and whose hands were cupped over her mouth, shouting in what was distinctly [i]not[/i] the direction of the camera that Catra watched them through. “The princesses were, like, way harder this time!” Catra scowled and pressed the button again. “No, they weren’t.” “Yes they were!” This time, the dissenting (and somewhat nasally) voice came from behind her. Catra spun in her chair, fixing her ire on Entrapta, who waved gleefully at her with a lock of her prehensile purple hair. She was flanked on one side by Emily, her personalized robot, who greeted Catra with a chirping sound that she promptly ignored. “What do you mean, ‘they were’?” “Well,” said Entrapta, brushing past Catra and beginning to type feverishly on the terminal’s interface, “I’ve been tinkering with the training bots, implementing tactical data from our recent skirmishes with the Rebellion.” She pressed another button with her hair, bringing up side-by-side footage of the training exercise and a recording from the siege of Brightmoon. Sure enough, the robots’ movements were strikingly similar to those displayed by the Princesses themselves. Entrapta continued. “Now, while I can’t conclusively say that the test is [i]harder[/i], I estimate that the tactical reasoning of the ‘bots has increased exponentially. Therefore, I hypothesize that the difficulty of completing the exercise has—” “Enough already, I get it!” Catra shoved Entrapta out of the way, before addressing the cadets once again. “Training exercise completed [i]un[/i]successfully. Everyone hit the showers, or whatever!” There was a chorus of groans and complaints from the cadets that only served to make Catra’s blood boil. She was about to press the button again, when she felt a heavy claw rest itself gently on her shoulder. Instinct took over. She practically threw herself out of the chair, pulling away from Scorpia and loosing primal [i]hiss[/i]. Scorpia raised her arms, a disarming gesture that was somewhat less effective for someone with big, scary claws instead of hands. “Whoa, personal space, I remember!” Scorpia’s surprise melted into concern, her voice softening. “Don’t you think you’re being a little hard on them?” Catra couldn’t help but laugh. “You think [i]that[/i] was hard? If Shadow Weaver caught me talking back like that—which she did, regularly—she’d have gone ballistic! She’d start yelling and threatening to… I don’t know, torture me with her dark powers, or something! I’m nothing like her!” “I didn’t say you were,” said Scorpia, in a tone that Catra assumed was supposed to calm her, but was only managing to stoke her anger. “Look, I’m not telling you to go easy on her. No one went easy on us, and look where we are now! But they’re cadets—[i]junior[/i] cadets. Even if they were seniors, you couldn’t exactly compare their time to yours. Your team had you and Ado—” Scorpia cut herself off, but it was too late. Catra had fixed her with a glare that threatened to bore through her and into the wall behind her. She narrowed her eyes, as if to further focus her fury. “Me and…?” A tense silence filled the room, but it didn’t last long. Entrapta stepped between them, wearing a look of utter confusion. “I have no idea what’s going on,” she said. “Oh!” announced Scorpia, her careful demeanor vanishing as quickly as it had arrived, and she continued cheerfully, as if nothing had happened. “Let me explain! You see, Catra gets angry when we mention Adora.” “What?!” exclaimed Catra, her voice cracking. Entrapta stroked her chin thoughtfully with her hair. “Ah, of course!” “No!” said Catra, emphatically. “Mentioning [i]her[/i] does not make me angry! I’m not angry!” Entrapta drew close to Catra until their noses were mere inches apart. “Adora,” she said. Catra snarled. “Teeth bared, pupils contracted, ears folded back, breathing quick and erratic. All classic signs of anger!” Catra put her hands on Entrapta’s shoulders, holding away at arm’s length. “Fine, I’m angry, but I was angry [i]before[/i] we talked about Adora! And, for the record, talking how talking about Adora makes me angry [i]makes me angrier than talking about Adora![/i]” There was a brief pause before Entrapta replied. “So, talking about her [i]does[/i] make you angry?” Catra let out a strangled cry of pure frustration. “Look, we get it!” said Scorpia, taking a step forward. “Talking about your [i]old[/i] best buddy in front of your [i]new[/i] best buddies can be a little awkward.” Catra let go of Entrapta and looked back at Scorpia. “Seriously?” “Yup! You don’t have to worry about us, Catra, we’re with you. And you don’t have to worry about the cadets, either. No one is expecting you to fill Shadow Weaver’s shoes right away. You’ll get used to it!” Catra’s ears flattened against her head. “Fill her [i]shoes[/i]?” She scoffed. “I’ve done more than [i]fill her shoes[/i]. I don’t even wear shoes!” As both Scorpia and Entrapta’s eyes darted downward to examine her feet, Catra made the executive decision that she was one-hundred-percent done with this conversation. “Okay!” she said. “Since the two of you obviously have nothing better to do, you’re going to take over watching the training exercises.” “You got it, boss!” said Scorpia, still smiling as if Catra hadn’t just saddled her with an excruciatingly boring assignment. “It would be a good opportunity to study how the new programming fairs in a simulated environment…” Catra rolled her eyes. “Sure, have fun with that.” She made for the door as Scorpia called the next group of recruits over the PA. Exiting the small observation room into the hallway, Catra couldn’t help but wish the automated doors had an option to slam them. She stormed down the corridor, head down and shoulders slumped, grateful of its emptiness yet simultaneously yearning for someone to yell at—someone who wouldn’t try to make her feel better, thereby making her feel worse for yelling in the first place. “Fill her shoes…” Catra growled and shook her head. Scorpia didn’t know what she was talking about. Catra had accomplished more as force captain than Shadow Weaver had in her whole miserable life, and now that she was second-in-command the sky was the limit. She didn’t need to [i]get used to[/i] anything, because Shadow Weaver’s duties—while boring—were [i]easy[/i]! Make plans, yell at people, and tell the cadets how they’d never amount to anything. Yeah, Scorpia, so much to get used to. Catra had been so caught up in her own brooding that she hadn’t even realized where she was going. Before she knew it, she found herself standing outside of Shadow Weaver’s old room. No. [i]Her[/i] room. She opened the door and stepped inside. Things were different since she’d taken over: the Black Garnet was still there, of course, only now it was surrounded by tools and gadgets that Catra couldn’t even begin to comprehend. Having to share her room with Entrapta’s research project was annoying, yes, but it meant that whenever she made a discovery Catra was always the first one to hear about it, which meant she’d have plenty of time to turn it to her advantage against the rebellion. But there were changes besides the Black Garnet. The monitors Shadow Weaver had broken throwing her little tantrum had been fixed or replaced, and the little sconce she’d used for her magic had been removed entirely. There was a bed now—she wasn’t sure if Shadow Weaver had ever slept, but she did—as well as a desk and a punching bag. Well, if she was being entirely honest, it was less of a punching bag and more of a scratching post, not that she’d let anyone else call it that. There were long gouges down and across the leather bag, and taped to its surface at eye-level was a photograph of the Horde’s greatest enemy: [i]She-ra[/i]. Okay, so it wasn’t [i]technically[/i] She-ra. The photo was of Adora, and it was a little out of date. It had been taken for an ID card when they’d made senior cadet, long before either of them had made force captain. Long before Adora had betrayed her. Anger took over once again, and Catra lashed out at the bag. She raked her class across it, shredding the leather and exposing tufts of stuffing that did their best to escape the tight confines of their prison. The picture remained, as it always did, completely untouched. There was nothing sentimental about it, Catra assured herself. She couldn’t look at the picture without wanting to shred Adora’s pretty little face, but having to print a new picture every time she wanted to use the bag was simply uneconomical. Besides, if anyone caught her printing a bunch of pictures of Adora, they might start asking questions. Catra groaned. She couldn’t even take a swing at a punching bag without it being weird. What was wrong with her today? Sleep. That’s what she needed. She was tired from running around doing second-in-command things all day, of course she needed a catnap! She’d feel better after a little sleep, and then she could get through the rest of her duties without strangling anyone. The bed wasn’t anything special. The Horde didn’t bother with luxurious four-posters even for its highest-ranking officers. In fact, the bed was not only identical to the ones in the force captain barracks, it had once been one of those beds. Catra had enlisted Scorpia’s help to drag the thing what at the time had felt like half the length of the fright zone. It had been a lot of work, yes, but the resulting privacy was more than worth it. Or so she told herself, anyway. Laying in the bed, staring up at the barren ceiling, she couldn’t help but notice the silence. After years of sleeping in the barracks, surrounded by cadets, the change was unnerving. Even the force captain barracks had been manageable due to Scorpia’s incessant snoring (though, if she thought about it, she’d been fairly annoyed about that at the time, too), but here there was just… nothing. After a few minutes of tossing and turning, Catra threw off the covers with a huff. She gathered them at the foot of the bed and stuffed a pillow underneath, before curling herself into a tight ball and laying next to them. It was a poor use of space, she knew, but that hadn’t mattered when she was a cadet, and it didn’t matter now. It was only natural to seek out the familiar when faced with an unfamiliar place, and though a rolled up pillow was a poor substitute for the warm, bony feet of a friend, Catra finally managed to get some sleep. [hr] There was someone in her room. Catra was awake. There was no mental lag, no grogginess or wondering where she was. She was a Horde soldier, trained to be ready for battle at a moment’s notice. The intruder (Catra guessed there was only one) crept lightly—too light for Scorpia, who at her quietest moved like a well-laden tank, and without the telltale [i]swoosh[/i] of Entrapta’s hair or Emily’s accompanying skittering. But if it wasn’t them… Catra leapt from her bed, landing silently and dashing to the Black Garnet, which lay between her and the mystery intruder. None of the guards would be foolish enough to sneak into her quarters, and no one else would have any reason to be there, meaning that whoever it was must either have been daring or stupid enough to risk her wrath for trespassing. She could only think of one person who fit that description. She didn’t know it was Adora for certain, but who else could it be? She’d already snuck into the Fright Zone once, and even though they’d since doubled the patrols and changed many of the security measures, Adora wouldn’t be so easily deterred. Maybe she’d found out about Entrapta’s current residency and was here to perform a rather late extraction, or maybe she was after Catra herself. Whatever her plan, Catra wasn’t about to let her get away with it. The intruder moved, and Catra moved with her, carefully sidestepping to keep the Garnet between them. From the sound of things, she hadn’t been alerted to Catra’s presence, giving her the advantage. She stopped near the punching bag, and Catra felt a blush creep into her cheeks. There was nothing out of the ordinary about putting a picture of one’s enemy on one’s punching bag, but Catra just knew that Adora would take that and make it weird. But as deeply embarrassing as that promised to be, it gave Catra the opportunity she needed. She deftly circled the Black Garnet, her pace quickening with her heartbeat as she prepared to pounce. She leapt out from around corner, raising her sharpened claws and bringing them down on the unsuspecting neck of… …the young, bat-winged cadet. Catra stumbled, fighting her momentum that threatened to send her tumbling into the cadet. She managed to stop barely a foot away from the cadet, but her stealthy approach was completely ruined. The cadet whirled around, tearing her eyes off the punching bag and looking at Catra with abject horror. She screamed. Catra clapped her hands over her ears. They weren’t [i]that[/i] sensitive, but there was no sound more piercing than the shriek of a terrified child. “Hey,” she said, “cut it out!” The cadet clapped her hands over her mouth. “I’m sorry!” she said, though the words were somewhat muffled. Catra took her hands off her ears and put them on her hips. The girl didn’t look a day over ten, but Catra had always been horrible at guessing ages. She had a mop of stringy brown hair, and before she’d covered her mouth Catra had noticed she was missing one of her front teeth, the same one Adora had been missing when the two of them had… A blind rage took over. Catra stepped forward, the cadet cowering beneath her baleful glare. “What do you think you’re doing in here?!” “T-the door!” said blubbered the cadet, stammering over her words. “It was open—I knew I wasn’t supposed to come in, but I saw the p-picture on the punching bag and I wanted to—” “To what?” demanded Catra. “I thought it might be a princess! I’ve never seen a real princess before, but she’s really pretty! Is she—” Catra reached over the cadet, grabbing hold of the picture and crumpling it in her hand, leaving nothing behind but the corners where it had previously been taped. “That’s none of your business!” she snapped. “Now, get out of here, before I put your face on the punching bag, and I’m not talking about a picture!” The cadet turned, tripping over her feet as she fled desperately to the door. Catra followed her, ensuring that she was gone before punching the door’s terminal, which she once again wished she could slam. Now it was Catra’s turn to scream. But this wasn’t a scream of terror, but a guttural expression of anger and frustration. She stalked over to the punching bag, embedding her claws deep into the top and dragging them downward until its fluffy innards spilled out onto the floor. It wasn’t enough. She suddenly wished Adora [i]was[/i] there, so she could punch her stupid, pretty face. She whirled about, searching for something else she could destroy, when she caught a glimpse of her reflection from within the Black Garnet . Except it wasn’t her reflection. It was Shadow Weaver’s. When she looked again it was gone. She stepped forward, resting a hand on its glassy surface. The reflection that stared back at her was dark and distorted, but it was undoubtedly her own. Catra’s shoulders slumped. What was she doing? She’d told Scorpia she was nothing like Shadow Weaver, but the moment some cadet had snuck into her room she’d exploded at her. And why? Because she’d gone somewhere she wasn’t supposed to? Catra did that all the time. Because she had the same tooth gap as Adora had had literally a decade ago? That was way more pathetic, even if that particular wound had been reopened by their shared experience in the First Ones’ hologram chamber. Her chest felt tight. She took a deep breath, but it didn’t help. She needed air. Not the recycled air that was pumped through every building in the Fright Zone. Real air. She slammed her fist against the door’s terminal. It didn’t open. She hit it a second time, then a third, and was prepared to hit it yet again when the door finally slid open. She practically fled through it, but forced herself into a slower, calmer pace. She wasn’t calm, of course, but part of her brain that was still somewhat rational reminded her that it wouldn’t look good if the new second-in-command was seen running through the halls having a panic attack. So she walked, each step an agonizing test in resolve as she slowly made her way through the labyrinthine halls. She’d almost made it outside when she heard a familiar voice calling out to her. “Catra, hey!” She froze. Heavy footsteps echoed from behind her, and after a few seconds Scorpia entered her field of view. “I was just looking for you!” If Catra’s heart wasn’t racing she was certain it would have sank. “Why?” she asked through gritted teeth. “Oh! Well, Entrapta and I had just finished overseeing the training exercises when we got to talking. Did you know she was working on a robot that makes tiny food?” Catra didn’t respond, but Scorpia didn’t seem to mind. “Anyway, she was saying that her recent prototypes were making [i]mostly[/i] edible food, when I thought ‘hey, who do I know who likes mostly edible food?’” She looked at Catra expectantly, but still received no response. “That’s right! You!” Catra resumed walking. “Hey, hold on!” To Catra’s immense displeasure, Scorpia matched her pace. “Are you okay?” [i]No[/i]. “I’m fine.” “Are you sure? Because if it’s about earlier—” “It’s not!” hissed Catra, which was at least partially the truth. “Do you want to talk? I’ve been told I’m a great listener!” “No!” Catra stopped abruptly, turning on her heel to look Scorpia directly in the eyes. “I just want to be alone, okay?” Scorpia hesitated for a moment, then nodded. “Got it. Entrapta and I will be in the lunch room… or the infirmary, depending on how things go. Come find us when you’re ready.” Catra waited until Scorpia’s plodding was barely audible before continuing her march, a fresh helping of guilt added to the pile that weighed down her every step. She could clear things up with Scorpia later, right now she had to push forward. And then, she was outside. Real air [i]stank[/i]. The emissions given off by the Fright Zone’s various factories and industrial complexes flooded the air, giving it a truly awful smell. It filled your lungs, sticking to your insides and making them feel [i]itchy[/i]. It was nothing less than an extremely unpleasant experiences that Catra wouldn’t wish on her worst enemy, and it was exactly what she needed right now. Despite the suffocating stench, climbing the exterior of the building was child’s play. It was built in the Horde’s typical style, twisting and jutting, emphasizing function absolutely over the primitive notion of aesthetics. When there was nothing to leap to she scrambled up sheer surfaces, digging her claws into the almost imperceptible cracks between massive steel slabs. It was a path she’d taken hundreds of times before, and though it might look next to impossible to an outsider, Catra could follow it with one hand tied behind her back. The top of the building jutted out like a balcony over the Fright Zone. Catra walked to the edge, sitting down and dangling her feet over the industrial abyss below. Now that she was here, there was just one thing missing. Catra opened her clenched hand, gingerly unfolding the crumpled paper within. “Hey, Adora.” She sighed, looking down at the picture cradled in her hands. Yeah, she’d carried the picture all the way up here, but that was nothing new. Sometimes it felt like Catra dragged Adora everywhere with her—not literally, of course, though when they were kids it might as well have been. They’d been inseparable, doing everything together, until… Catra shook her head. Adora had always been a weight dragging her down, she just hadn’t realized it until recently. She’d achieved so much since Adora’s betrayal, become more than anyone had ever dreamed of her. Now that she was free of that weight she could accomplish anything, and there was no one to steal her glory or take what was rightfully hers! “But, despite all that, I’m still up here talking to [i]you[/i].” It was stupid, Catra knew that. The picture was about as ‘Adora’ as the pillow had been, but nevertheless there was something comforting about it. Maybe it was because the picture couldn’t talk back, or maybe it was because it was from a time before everything had become so… complicated. “Look, I’m just going to start talking. Don’t make this weird, okay?” She groaned. It was already weird. “I got a new job—Shadow Weaver’s old one.” She smirked. “I’m a higher rank than you ever were.” The smile faded. “But things are different. I have responsibilities now—me being responsible, can you imagine? Probably not, I was always just an unreliable sidekick to you, wasn’t I? Well, not anymore.” A light breeze wafted over the rooftop, tugging at the torn edges of the picture and carrying with it a fresh (or not so fresh) dose of the putrid air. Catra continued. “I’m getting distracted. The thing is, everyone is expecting things of me now, you know? No, it’s more than that. They’re expecting… ugh, they’re expecting me to be the new Shadow Weaver!” The anger began to bubble up within her once again. She felt her shoulders tense, and her grip on the picture was such that it was pulled taught between her hands, the points of her claws threatening to poke through the other side. She took a deep breath of the rancid air. This time it did help, if only a little. “You wouldn’t understand; you always were her favorite. You didn’t have to suffer through the years of abuse that she dished out on me! Not sweet, perfect Adora, no, you never—” Another deep breath. “I’m not like her. At least, I don’t want to be, but then this cadet snuck into my room and I totally lost it! I pulled a total Shadow Weaver: freaked out, threatened her, the works! And earlier I blew up at Scorpia and Entrapta just because they were talking about…” Catra bit her lip. “…nothing.” Now she was lying to pieces of paper, too. Perfect. “I’m not like you, either. You can talk to people; people [i]like[/i] you, and if you were here, you’d know exactly what to do.” She looked up, looking past the picture toward the red, bloated sun that hung hazily over the Fright Zone. “But you’re not here.” She sighed again. “Ugh, this is stupid! I can’t be like you, and I [i]won’t[/i] be like Shadow Weaver, so what do I do? If you were here, you’d say something like ‘stop worrying about what everyone else would do’ or ‘you’re a good person, Catra, do it your way!’ But how do I even know what [i]my way[/i] is?” The picture didn’t respond. “I guess I’ve got to figure that out for myself, huh?” She supposed that had always been the answer. And although she’d needed to climb to the very top of the Fright Zone and have a heartfelt (if one-sided) conversation with a photograph of her ex-best-friend to find it, next time she wouldn’t have to. “It was nice, catching up, but we can’t keep doing this. People might talk, you know? Besides, in the end, I didn’t really need you, did I?” She looked back at the picture. “Maybe I never did.” The breeze welled up once again, and this time Catra didn’t resist it. She let the picture slip from her fingers, watching as it twisted and tumbled through the air, before getting caught up in a gust that carried it off towards the Whispering Woods. She waved. “Bye, Adora.” [hr] “What are we even doing here?” The junior cadets shifted nervously in their spots, each of them wondering the same thing. Normally at this hour they would be going through weapons drills, but today was different. Instead of their normal weapons instructor, the group had been met by Force Captain Scorpia and lead somewhere called the ‘observation room’. The observation room was a large, empty room, unremarkable save for one wall which was made up entirely of one enormous monitor. None of them had ever been in the observation room before, but given the interruption of their normally extremely consistent schedule, paired with their [i]abysmal[/i] performance at that morning’s training exercise, speculations were running wild. “Maybe they’re going to show us a recording of the exercise, then point out everything we did wrong,” said one cadet, a red haired boy with a generous smattering of freckles. “Or maybe it’s a video of what happened to the last group that did as bad as us,” said another, a lanky girl with short, blond hair. “Don’t be ridiculous,” said another, “no one’s ever done [i]that[/i] bad.” But as the group continued offering guesses—each more dire than the last—there was one among them who stayed silent. The cadet with the bat wings and messy hair, known to the others as Screech, didn’t share in the gossiping. She stood still, her eyes glued to her feet, wishing more than anything that she could simply disappear. While the others assumed that they’d been taken aside over the training exercise, Screech knew better. No, this wasn’t about anything as simple as a poor performance, it was about something much more serious: she’d broken into second-in-command Catra’s chambers, and this was to be her punishment. She hadn’t done it on purpose, but in her heart she knew that didn’t matter. The excuse that the door had been open was a flimsy one at best, as any cadet with half a brain could tell you that poking your nose where it doesn’t belong will only lead to trouble. But she couldn’t help herself, no, she could never help herself, could she? Her darn curiosity had gotten her written up more times than the rest of the team combined, so she couldn’t even use the excuse that this was a first offence. But this, this was worse than the other times. She’d managed to get on the bad side of the second-highest ranking person in the entire Horde. They were going to throw the book at her, she knew that, the only question was [i]how[/i]. Screech was fairly certain she knew where they’d begin. First, second-in-command Catra would arrive and have her step forward. She’d tell everyone about how Screech had broken into her room, and how such an egregious offence could only be met with the most serious of punishments. Then, Lord Hordak himself would appear on the big monitor (that’s why they’d come to the observation room) and personally give the order to have her stripped of her rank and banished forever from the Fright Zone. Her former teammates would look on in shame and horror as she was dragged off to the Whispering Woods, where she’d spend the last, miserable hours of her life fleeing from packs of savage princesses. Oh, and at some point Catra would take her face and tape it to her punching bag. She just wasn’t sure where that would fit into the timeline. Screech’s morbid thoughts were interrupted by the sound of a door opening. She looked up, expecting to see the second-in-command’s furious visage, only to be met instead by the smiling face of Force Captain Scorpia. “Hi, everybody!” The cadets, silenced by their collective confusion, didn’t respond. “Sorry about the wait, we’re just having a few technical difficulties.” A scuffling sound came from the hallway, and Scorpia poked her head out to investigate. “Oh, nevermind, here they come now!” Scorpia stepped out of the way of the door, allowing two other figures to enter. The first Screeched recognized not by name but by reputation. She was an engineer of some kind, and from all accounts she was quite mad. Her long, purple hair moved unnaturally, dragging along a tangle of wires to a terminal on the wall, ignoring the interface entirely to wire them directly into the system. Behind her, scuttling along the ground was a large security robot, though there was something… [i]off[/i] about it. It moved strangely, less like something following strict programming and more like an animal happily plodding along after its master. This did not bode well for Screech. Everyone knew that these were to of the second-in-command’s best. If they were here, there was little doubt in Screech’s mind that it was at Catra’s bidding. Perhaps her punishment would be more complex than she’d thought. “Got it!” The engineer withdrew from the terminal, lifting the metal mask covering her face and gracing Scorpia with a toothy grin. “Great!” said Scorpia. “I’ll let Catra know we’re ready to start!” Scorpia reached out with a claw, grabbing a communicator and pressing it to her ear. “Hello, Catra?” she spoke into the device. “Yeah, it’s me. Uh-huh, yup, Entrapta just got it set up, so we’re good to go when you are. Anyway, how are you doing? I know it’s only been a few minutes, but it feels like hours since we’ve—hello?” Scorpia lowered the communicator. “She hung up. It’s funny, you know, she gets me with that one all the time, but I never see it coming! Classic Catra. Oh, it’s starting!” The cadets’ attention was torn away from the bizarre spectacle as the giant monitor flashed to life. Displayed upon it were images of the training room, taken from all sorts of angles covering every inch of the facility. Princesses (or their robotic equivalent, anyway) patrolled the simulated woodland, preparing to blast the next Horde soldier that dared get in their way. “I knew it,” muttered the red haired cadet, earning him a volley of glares from the others. Talking out of turn would only get them in more trouble… though in Screech’s case she wasn’t sure that would matter. A voice came through the speakers. “[i]Training exercise initiated[/i].” One of the video feeds showed the door to the training room opening, but instead of the group of cadets unaware that they were about to get the worst time in the test’s history, there was a figure, standing alone with her hip cocked, practically dripping in confidence. The blond cadet gasped. “Is that—?” “[i]Begin[/i],” said the voice, and before anyone could ask why second-in-command Catra was taking the test alone (or why she was taking it at all), she was gone. “Did she just turn invisible?” asked a portly, black haired cadet. “No,” said the redhead, “look! She’s up there! No, shoot, she’s gone again!” Catra’s silhouette darted from feed to feed, never staying still for more than a second or two as she moved silently from tree to tree. The princesses seemed as confused as the cadets: some of them simply carried on their patrols, unaware that their quarry was among them; while others fired wildly into the air, none coming anywhere close to hitting their target. It didn’t take long for Catra to reach the edge of the simulated forest and enter the clearing where the final battle (a battle the cadets had heard of but had failed to reach) was set to begin. She changed her strategy, abandoning stealth in favor of a mad dash to the center, where the final robot—the queen—rose ominously into the air. It fired upon her, but Catra nimbly dodged between the beams of energy and danced over the hexes on the floor that threatened to give way beneath her. She leapt into the air, extending her standard-issue electric quarterstaff and plunging it deep into the queen’s mechanical heart. The robot shook and sputtered, sending out gouts of sparks from its fatal wound. Catra sprung off, sending the queen tumbling back into the pit below as she flipped through the air, landing gracefully at on the precipice. “[i]Training exercise successfully completed.[/i]” The cadets stared, mouths agape. “What [i]was[/i] that?” asked the blond cadet. “That,” said Scorpia, “was a successful training exercise. And a new record, too! Oh, Catra’s going to be so excited!” “Wait, hold up!” exclaimed the redhead. “How did she complete the exercise? She only blew up, like, one robot!” The black haired cadet cleared their throat. “The objective of the exercise wasn’t to [i]blow up[/i] all the robots. It was to infiltrate an enemy controlled area and eliminate eliminate a key target. So she—” “Eliminated the target.” Every head in the room turned as they heard Catra’s voice. She stood leaning on the doorframe, her arms folded and her tail drifting lazily back and forth behind her. She was smiling, but it was a cocky, almost predatory smile that only served to deepen Screech’s unease. Had that all been a display of power? An excuse to show the cadets (and Screech in particular) exactly who they were dealing with? There were rumors in the barracks that Catra was a poor replacement for Shadow Weaver, that she was promoted not on her own merits, but due to the failings of her predecessor, but after what they’d just seen, Screech doubted anyone would ever dare voice those rumors again. “Catra!” said Scorpia. “That was incredible! All the jumping and sneaking, and then that flip at the end! Just wow!” “Thanks, Scorpia,” said Catra, rolling her eyes, “but the point of that wasn’t just for me to show off. Does anyone know what it was?” Screech bit her lip, keeping her theories on mass intimidation to herself. When no one else spoke up, either, Catra sighed. “Look, I’ve observed a lot of these tests since I became a force captain, and I do mean [i]a lot[/i]. Do you have any idea how many times I’ve watched cadets—juniors and seniors—just run in and get blasted by the princesses?” The blond cadet raised her hand. “A lot?” Catra snapped her fingers and pointed finger-guns at the cadet. “Bingo.” “So, what?” asked the redhead. “You’re telling us we should be sneakier?” “What?” said Catra. “No. I did it that way because moving quickly and quietly is what I’m good at. If Scorpia was taking the test, she’d probably have an easier time smashing all the robots with her claws, and if Entrapta took it she’d probably… I don’t know, hack all the robots and make them fight each other, or something.” The engineer, or Entrapta, as she’d been called, let out a snorting laugh. “If I’d hacked them all I wouldn’t make them fight, because they’d all be under my control! Instead, I would—” “[i]Anyway[/i],” said Catra, cutting her off, “the point is that you’re going to come up against a lot of problems in your life, and you’re going to have to make decisions. Sometimes someone will tell you the best thing to do, and other times that person will be dead wrong. “Things are changing around here. You don’t know who’s going to fall from grace or who’s going to step up. I’m not like Shadow Weaver, I used to be a cadet just like you. I got in a lot of trouble because I’d do things differently, because I wasn’t [i]perfect[/i].” She practically spat the last word, her voice dripping with venom. “...But look at me now: I’m Lord Hordak’s second-in-command. Not because I was the perfect little soldier, but because I [i]wasn’t[/i]. I did things [i]my[/i] way, not anyone else’s, and I’m better off for it.” Catra closed her eyes and scratched the back of her neck. “Look, I’m not good at making speeches, or whatever. I just wanted to say that sometimes it’s okay to mess up. It’s not easy figuring out what your way is—trust me, I’m still working on it—but if you need help… well, unlike some people, I’m not going anywhere.” Catra paused for a moment, as if lost in thought, before continuing. “Anyway, that’s pretty much all I wanted to say. You can all go back to your… what was it, weapons drills? Yeah, that was it. Dismissed.” The cadets didn’t need to be told twice. They swarmed the door, already abuzz with conversation. “I knew we weren’t in trouble.” “[i]Uh-huh[/i].” “I did!” “Sure, whatever. But what was all that stuff about [i]doing it your way[/i]? Isn’t that, like, the exact opposite of what they taught us in basic?” Screech spared a glance over her shoulder as they filed out of the room. Catra appeared to be fending off Scorpia, who was doing her best to wrap her superior in a big, almost assuredly bone-crushing hug. Screech tried and failed to stifle a laugh, and to her horror accidentally locked eyes with the second-in-command herself. Oh no. She turned, making a desperate dash out the door when she heard it. “Cadet Screech,” said Catra, “a word.” Screech’s shoulders slumped. Almost immediately her team distanced themselves from her, like she was carrying some sort of plague. She couldn’t blame them. She walked back towards Catra, dragging her feet on the floor as she approached her inevitable doom. With a wave, Catra dismissed Scorpia and Entrapta, who followed the rest of the cadets out of the room, closing the door behind them. Catra placed her hands on her hips, looking down at the young cadet before her. “Do you—” “I’m sorry!” Screech blurted out. “I know I shouldn’t have gone in your room, but I swear I didn’t know it was yours! The door was open and I saw the big gem thing and the punching bag and I—” “It’s okay.” “—[i]please don’t banish me to the whispering woods, I’m too young to[/i]—wait, what?” “It’s okay,” repeated Catra. Screech blinked. “You’re not mad?” “Oh, I was [i]really[/i] mad,” said Catra, “but that wasn’t your fault. Not entirely, anyway.” Screech rubbed her face on her sleeve. Through all that blubbering she hadn’t even realized she’d been crying. “A-am I in trouble?” Catra shook her head. “Don’t get me wrong, if you get caught snooping around places you’re not supposed to again, you’ll [i]definitely[/i] get in trouble. So,” she said, and shot Screech a playful wink, “don’t get caught.” [hr] As Cadet Screech disappeared out the door of the observation room, Catra let out a long sigh of relief. She wasn’t sure that anything she’d said had gotten through to them—heck, she wasn’t sure if any of it had made sense at all!—but it didn’t matter. When Hordak had promoted her to his second-in-command, she received more than just power, she received an opportunity. Shadow Weaver had used that opportunity to torture, to punish, and to hurt. She’d spent years chipping away at Catra, and who knows how many others before her, and where had it gotten her? Catra wouldn’t make that mistake. She wouldn’t run from her problems like Adora had, no, she would take the opportunity she’d been given and she’d use it to make sure no one would ever have to suffer like she had. She’d take that opportunity—that responsibility—to turn the Horde from something she’d spent her life resenting into something she could actually be proud of. She might not always know exactly what to do, but that was okay. She’d figure it out, and she’d do it her way.