Chapter Text
Old Ruins
Far out in the Crimson Waste
Etheria
Three and a half Years After Catra's abduction
"Tomorrow." Lonnie stood next to him, pointing at the moonlit ruins.
Duncan saw them in the distance. There were tall building built into the side of the mountain - carved from the red-brown stone. If they were ever pained or decorated, that facade had been worn away by a thousand years of wind and dust.
There was a semicircular wall jutting out from the front of the mountain, wrapping around the ruins. The gates were eroded and hung precariously, but he had no doubt Lonnie's crew could fix that.
In fact, Duncan was fairly sure they could fix almost anything they found broken in the keep. In the fifteen days since escaping the Fright Zone, he had seen what the Bulwark had pillaged from the Horde stores.
Not all of it was weapons and armor or food and supplies. Some of it was drilling equipment and ground penetrating radar. Some of it was construction equipment and tools. Raw materials.
"Tomorrow." Ideally, they would be able to send in scouts first, but the survey notes she had purloined from Shadow Weaver suggested otherwise.
Tomorrow, they entered the ruins. They would have a fight on their hands, but not a fight they couldn't win. If they were right, the ruins would be perfect for the exiles.
No one else in the Crimson Waste wanted the ruins, and Duncan couldn't blame them.
They'll be safer. Safe enough I can go home.
He'd been with Lonnie's exiles too long now. At this rate, the girls would be on a boat and halfway to Eternia by the time he got out of the Waste! He had to hurry, but he couldn't abandon Lonnie or her exiles. Not after having come so far with them.
Honor called - and duty demanded. Who he had chosen to be - the man he had shaped himself into was no coward and not callow and selfish as to walk away from duty or dishonor himself, even though he alone would know of his dishonor. Any debt he owed Lonnie for helping him escape was being repaid with his knowledge of how to survive and thrive in the Crimson Waste. But it wasn't enough. Not until he was sure his leaving wouldn't doom them.
Lonnie stood next to him at their makeshift camp, a day's travel from the front gates of the ruins, the daymoon setting slowly and the chill of a desert night creeping up on them. Fries crackled around them as various groups set up their camp. The sound of generators humming almost buried the sound of fire, but it echoed off the metal of the tanks and skiffs parked in a circle around their camp. Soldiers walked the perimeter and stood atop the tanks and the skiffs, watching for predators. For potential enemies.
For the Horde troops that had to be following them across the desolate land they hoped to claim as their own.
"What will you do if the notes are wrong?" He had his suspicions about what Lonnie would do. And why. Technically, the exiles were invading, and if Shadow Weaver's survey notes were wrong and the ruins were inhabited by more than ancient, automated defenses. But finding out for sure before they moved in gave him a chance to her talk her out of it or at least consider alternatives.
The exiles were the invaders. Displacing the native population from their home wouldn't make them good neighbors, but the exiles had very few choices open to them.
Few enough they might decide making a few new enemies was the better plan. It was the path of least resistance in the short term, and the short term problems were nearing 'crisis' level. They had escaped the Horde - for now. But not having a defensible position would cost them their freedom and maybe their lives when the Horde inevitably caught up with them.
"Negotiate first. Ask for an alliance. To share the space. There's no clear signs of inhabitants right now, but I reckon we'll find at least a few hunkered down in places the defenses aren't active or can't get to. We know there's water. We know there's supplies. Tech. And a power source of some kind."
Duncan breathed a small sigh of relief. At least negotiation was on the table. He didn't want to be a party to an invasion and takeover, but if the natives weren't willing to ally with the exiles…
None of them had time for protracted negotiations. Or willingness to camp outside the ruins and wait while those negotiations happened.
The nature of war never changed. The nature of war didn't often allow for compassion or kindness or lengthy discussions. The Horde had declared war on the entire world of Etheria, and that war didn't respect boundaries or cultures or rules. War spread like a terrible virus of violence to every part of the continent. Hordak would not be satisfied until the magic and people of Etheria were under his rule.
He would not reward the betrayal of the exiles with escape. Even if it took him time, he would send troops to destroy them. To maintain his power, he couldn't afford not to make an example of the exiles.
"I don't want to displace anyone. I really don't want to start shit with anyone out here. We're moving in and pissing off all the neighbors is stupid." Lonnie pulled up the map of the ruins and the survey notes on her tablet. "The roving warbands and hybrid clans avoid this place because of the defenses, and because a thousand years ago, some group called the 'first ones' built it. You mentioned them before. Who fuck are they?"
Duncan frowned at the map. "I'll explain in a moment. If these are First One ruins, why would the Horde not take over or at least garrison them? Or clean out the tech?"
Shadow Weaver had been obsessed with the First Ones. She had demanded all of Duncan's knowledge of them. As with most things, he had refused to tell her anything, relying on the protections the sorceress had imbued him with and the power of Greyskull to protect him from her spells.
The information might have seemed harmless to share, but he had no idea what someone like Shadow Weaver would do with it. The technology of the First Ones interested Hordak - he had standing orders that any Horde unit who came across it was to seize it and bring it back whenever they could.
It made no sense for them to leave a massive set of ruins untouched.
Lonnie tapped through several screens. "Supply lines, for one. It would be a huge investment in troops and materiel to get any tech from here back to the Fright Zone. To say nothing of being raided by warbands. We haven't had any raids because we're big enough and mean enough to hold them off, especially with the artillery on tanks and skiffs. But it would take a dozen convoys our size to move the tech in and out. Much less supplying a long term garrison here, assuming it could handle the defenses first."
Handling the defenses was one of the things Lonnie was worried about for the exiles. Swarms of spider bots. Energy shields. Mines. Electrified walls and floors. Oddly, no gun emplacements, but plenty of cameras. Pacifying the ruins was going to be a slog.
"It was initially scouted with the idea of being able to move supplies and people through Subtheria. Shadow Weaver wanted this place bad about ten years ago. Risked the scout units to get what little information she has on it. But this mountain might have the only cave system on the planet not connected down to Subtheria. Without an easy way through, Hordak told Shadow Weaver she had to wait until the Horde had taken the Waste."
Duncan nodded. Now it made sense. Even the Horde's resources might be stretched thin by the long trek through the Waste, and multiple convoys would compel the warbands to attack. Or swarm the ruins and force the Horde out. Taking the ruins would mean taking the Waste, and opening another front in his war on Etheria that would require more supplies and more war machines would require more than Hordak wanted to commit to a region that gave him very little but access to one set of strange ruins.
"The First Ones." Duncan sat down in one of the camp chairs, unwrapping a ration bar. He very much wanted to get home. Three and a half years as a prisoner, eating ration bars and drinking tepid, fouled water? He craved good meal. Real food. With flavor and substance - hot and fresh. A mug of cold summer ale. A long, hot shower!
To see his daughter again; to see she was hale and healthy and alive, and to beg her forgiveness for being gone so long. To see his prince and find out how he had fared under Dekker's teaching.
To see her again. Just for a few moments. They had never been allowed much. They had never had the chance. The rules governing who they were meant all they had were stolen moments. A night here and there. An hour or three hidden from the world.
She deserved so much more than he could give her. She deserved so much more than she had been allowed to have. She deserved choices that had never been hers to make. But oh, he loved her and had missed her.
But duty was duty. And his duty now was to help Lonnie figure out what they were walking into. The level of power and technology that could await them inside the ancient fortress she hoped to claim.
"They were an advanced people who came to Etheria and Eternia thousands of years ago. They came with knowledge of magic and with technology far beyond our understanding. They taught us, certainly. Helped us, true. But with their help, we became dependent on them, I think. They all but ruled both Etheria and Eternia - and it's not like we could fight them or force them to leave, even if we had wanted to! They moved entire populations around. Built massive cities. They were not alone in the universe. They were fighting a war. Their war followed them here, and we were forced to fight with them. For them."
He'd told her some of this a few days ago, but in the context of trying to explain his loyalty to Marlena and Randor. Horde indoctrination was deep - and effective. Even those who left the Horde never truly stopped being members of it. They were a nation and a people like any other. And those raised by it had no good frame of reference to understand something like the First Ones.
He barely understood them and he'd been raised knowing about them.
"A thousand years ago, they left. They vanished. Some say in a single night, when the stars went away. Our legends speak of a great battle and of great sacrifice to protect us from the horrors of the war they had brought upon us. They tell of First Ones sacrificing themselves to save those peoples dependent on them. But little else. The things they left behind - ruins, magic, technology - are often useful. Incredibly so. Bots, for example, are said to be from the First Ones. But what they left behind is also often incomprehensible, dangerous, and deceptive."
Lonnie, leaning against a tank, rolled her eyes. "So, old race. Now gone. War. Got it. Left behind fancy tech and big magic. Got it. The ruins might have both. Got that, too. I have a bunch of the R&D folk. They'll help with that. I have a bunch of people with armor and guns and explosives. We can deal with spider bots and traps. That place, if it does have water and power, is our best chance to dig in out here. For us, not connecting to Subtheria is a feature, not a problem."
Duncan's private theory on why the ruins were cut off from Subtheria was that the First Ones had cut it off. A sufficiently motivated and equipped group would be able to find and re-open a way to the subterranean part of Etheria.
He got the feeling that much like Eternia, Etheria didn't like it when people messed about with the natural order of things. The world might someday rebel much as the princesses had.
But the war to subtheria being sealed meant the Horde had one less way to approach the ruins. Ducan doubted Lonnie would have a reason to find it, much less break it open.
And with the firepower Lonnie had with her and the training she had made sure her entire unit had, he didn't think a lot of the chances of the automated defenses. The First Ones were also likely the originators of the weapon technology both Etheria and Eternia used and their long abandoned defenses wouldn't be proof against them.
They had to hope they wouldn't be fighting both natives and the First Ones' defenses.
"Tomorrow. We'll get ourselves set up, and you'll be able to leave soon after."
Duncan nodded. He would miss Lonnie and her exiles, but both duty and honor compelled him to go home and guide Adora and Scorpia through their next steps. Scorpia and Adora both needed to learn to be princesses and take their proper places leading their people.
Adora would never inherit a throne, but she would inherit the seemingly endless struggle to protect it and her people. She likely wouldn't ever become Adam's equal in rank, either. She would be one to serve him and help ensure his reign.
But Adora deserved the chance to be a princess. To meet her people. Her parents. And to see the world she came from. The right to choose her path once she was there. To know she wasn't alone in the universe (though Duncan did admit to second thoughts about her being Randor and Marlena's lost child upon learning of her biology. Were there secrets about his oldest friends he didn't know?)
Duncan patted the pocket on his shoulder where the magitech device he and the sorceress had crafted for his journey was safely nestled. "I'll need to borrow Kyle and some workspace before I head out."
Lonnie rolled her eyes. "I'm aware. He's been excited to work with you ever since you asked him. We'll make sure you're well supplied and Kyle will make sure your gadgets work right. I don't know how you plan to get from here to there, but I can't imagine it's not going to suck."
Duncan chuckled. There was no need to give away secrets that weren't his to give away, but Lonnie wasn't wrong. "I have been told I will be able to find the path if I look for it."
Lonnie rolled her eyes a second time. He couldn't blame her. "Ugh. That sounds very mysterious and magic-y. How you princess people deal with that nonsense, I'll never know. You do you, I guess. I'm going to find Kyle and try to sleep before tomorrow. I don't want to sleep through our triumphant arrival at our safe haven that will almost certainly try to kill us."
Somewhere in the Crimson Waste
Etheria
Three and a half Years After Catra's abduction
Duncan was very glad it wasn't a dark and stormy night.
Desert storms were rare, but miserable. The rain was either ice or nearly hot enough to make tea. Or a sandstorm could kill him if he stayed out in the open. And there was no shelter anywhere near the flat, rocky expanse he flew over.
But traveling by night was better than traveling by day. He was hopeful he would find a good spot soon, though. Despite the provisions Lonnie and Kyle had given him, he really didn't want to have to make his way all the way back to the border of Horde territory. Fighting and sneaking his way through until he found the right kind of place.
And the goggles he and Kyle had constructed let him see perfectly at night - and let him find what he needed to find.
The Crimson Waste rushed passed him as he flew the single-seat skiff Kyle had modified for him. His blaster was recharged. His gear was repaired as best as he was able with the materials they had.
Twenty-seven days after escaping the Fright Zone, Duncan was finally on his way home.
There had been a few people in Lonnie's ruins, along with what felt like an endless number of spider bots. The few living there were mostly old scholars, political refugees, one semi-mad archaeologist, and a very confused sorcerer. None had minded the exiles setting up shop in the old ruins.
Or helping her clean them out. Kyle had eventually figured out the power source - a very large crystal somehow generating power. It wasn't a RuneStone, but it might have been modeled after them. (Or so said the sorcerer.) But they were able to connect up most of their equipment to it. There was a supply of the nucleonic crystals the Horde used as fuel cells and a mine with plenty more. There were several springs in the bottommost level of the ruins central citadel. Scans and investigations showed it was clean, fresh water coming from a deep and vast reservoir underground. There was even an aqueduct system to get it through most of the ruins - which the archaeologist thought was probably originally decorative. The old plumbing had long since degraded, but fixable with time and labor. He'd helped Kyle figure out a plan for restoring it fairly quickly.
He figured they would be discovering new things about their ruins for a long time to come, but they were set enough they didn't need his help. He and Kyle had spent a few days building what he needed and modifying the skiff.
He'd bid them 'good journey' and sped off.
He'd used his time well. He'd eaten more. Drunk more. The days he'd spent in what Lonnie was calling her Freehold had let him rehydrate and bathe. He'd repaired his armor and much of his gear, but he'd lost a lot of what he'd normally have on him. The one thing he needed the most had been sheltered by magic stronger than Shadow Weaver's - and had remained hidden.
He had to admit. Kyle was good at what he did. The goggles did exactly what he needed. He'd done most of the work himself, but it was Kyle who understood how Horde sensor technology worked. It was just a matter of explaining to him how - exactly - to scan for magic.
In this case, ley-lines. The heads-up display on the goggles wasn't as clear or crisp as he was used to, and with far fewer colors and none of the overlays he was used to, but he'd only had so long to program it. Mostly, from memory.
The Crimson Waste was not just a desert. It was a magical desert! There was magic, but it was buried deep underground, almost as if it were being pulled downward by some kind of greater magical force.
But there were a few places he could see that would work.
It was mere hours before dawn as he found one such spot. There was an outcropping of rocks with another small mountain about another half hour away from him - the rocks were probably leftover from a long-ago avalanche. There was a small spring burbling away, but he could smell the bitter taint to the water - something leeching in from the ground was poisoning it, leaving only sparse, hardy vegetation.
Vegetation that was likely just as toxic as the water. No wonder it wasn't marked as an oasis on the map Lonnie had given him.
Duncan puled the small wire-wrapped crystal globe out of his pocket. He stripped off the goggles and his helm, letting the cool night air run through his ragged hair. He knelt, uncoiling three of the wires. He stuck them gently into the hard-packed sand and waited.
It didn't take long. Even more than Eternia, Etheria had magic to spare. Flowing around, ambient in the air - magic was everywhere and in everything here. While Eternia had a lot of magic of its own, it was closer to the Crimson Waste than it was the rest of Etheria.
The crystal began to glow with a faint flicker in the center - just a silver spark. The spark grew with brighter and brighter flashes, until the entire globe was dimly lit.
The glow grew, brighter and brighter until a faint, wispy stream of silver light curled out from the top of it, rising into the air to slowly drift and form into an oval. Silver lines reached inward from the edge of the oval until it was filled with mist and a web of silver light.
His heart hammered in his chest. It had been so long!
Gradually, her face began to take shape; the high cheekbones. Pert nose. Wide eyes. Her voice echoed, as if the magic acknowledged the distance between them.
"Duncan!" She wasn't pretending to calm or serenity; her voice was eager, anxious - an exhale of waiting for so long to hear from him.
The sound of her voice released the tension in his chest and he sucked in a shuddering breath, quietly laughing at the sound of her. The sight of her. Joy, love, longing - yearning - ached and burned and his eyes stung.
He smiled, his hand reaching up. Tears streamed down his face as his fingertips touched the edge of the image of her face.
"Zoar…" His voice caught, but he didn't care. It wasn't her true name; she had given that up when their daughter had been born. Passed it along to their child - the child she had only been able to hold for a moment. She had kissed their daughter on her brow and given her to him to be raised never knowing he was anything more than her adoptive father. Never knowing her mother. Never knowing her heritage.
It wasn't their choice, but the choice of the Council of Elders, the ancient beings who had first established the need for guardian over Greyskull and the power it represented.
Zoar was the name she had chosen for herself, so long ago. It was the name he used now, though he had first known her by her true name.
The sorceress of Greyskull smiled, wiping at her eyes. The image of her slender hands brushing over her face, pulling away the tears made him want to reach out and hold her until they had both cried themselves out.
"You're alive. You're alive and free!" She half laughed, half sobbed. "I was so afraid. So afraid I had sent you to your death - or worse…I'm so sorry. So sorry. I never should have asked you to - "
Duncan shook his head. "No! None of that, now. You know better. I was the right choice, love. I really was. I failed to find the answers to the questions about Hordak and Keldor, but…"
He steeled himself. He drew in a breath and let it out, centering. Steadying. What he was about to say would change everything. Forever.
"…I found her, Zoar. I found Adora."
They had promised each other. They had promised Marlena and Randor. They had all sworn, because the King and Queen had been heartbroken the night it happened. They didn't speak of it. Of that night. Of her.
Zoar gasped and he knew the sudden movement in the image was her stumbling. She had blamed herself for so long for not being able to protect Adora. To save her from the portal that had reached out and taken her.
They had blamed Skeletor and Evil-lyn. They had been at the castle that night; a last ditch attempt at reconciliation. To end the war that had raged so long by inviting them to the celebrations of Spring's Tide, and the announcement of the twins. To find some way to make peace.
Eternia was tired of war. They had not wanted to raise their children under the specter of war.
But it was not to be. Skeletor had tried to strike down Randor. While Randor and others - including him - had battled Skeletor, Evil-lyn had slipped away. She fought Marlena, but Evil-lyn's cultivated dark power was far more than Marlena's innate magics could overcome. Marlena had made her last stand outside the twins' room, holding a shield around them all.
Adora had vanished into a portal that shattered Marlena's shield; even Evil-lyn had been shocked into stunned silence and retreat.
Zoar had told them all the truth. Evil-lyn had not taken Adora. Nor had Skeletor. The magic was different. Old magics drawing on a deep well of power.
No sorcerer or scientist could track the portal. Ancient lore and modern knowledge both failed to provide a clue as to who could have taken her. Or where she might have gone.
Zoar stared at him, struck silent.
Duncan slowly nodded.
"You're sure? Duncan, my love, please! Was it a trick...or wishful thinking? How can you be sure?"
He'd long suspected an Etherian connection; ever since he had learned about the other world in their quest to defeat Skeletor. He had been thought mad - or a gullible fool. Convinced by Dekker's student before him, a qadian named Askar who spoke of another realm called Etheria.
Until they had intercepted one of Skeletor's couriers, carrying ancient data crystals and books from a dig far down in the darklands. In those notes and lore, they had found the truth of Etheria. The sorceress had spent years translating and untangling the knowledge, proving Etheria existed - and discovering more, hidden deep in the catacombs of Greyskull. The knowledge of guardians past who spoke of Etheria.
"She lives. It's her. The Horde captured me - Hordak and his dark witch Shadow Weaver set a trap for me. They knew about Eternia. About Eternos! They knew more of us than we knew of them, but I have learned much in my years here. But it is proof there is some connection." He stepped forward, getting closer to the image of her. "Shadow Weaver brought her to me, a year after I was captured. Cackling with glee, smug with triumph, she brought her to me. Called her by name and ordered me to train her as I would my own prince or princess. Her foul shackles wouldn't let me tell the girl anything!"
His voice rumbled with rage and his hands curled into fists at his side. He looked at Zoar. "It's her. She looks just like him! She sounds like Marlena! I know why they took her and not Adam - her magic! She has magic the like of which I've never seen. Transformative power, but it seems always imbued in her. I did as the witch bid, and I taught her. I taught her everything I could. How to think. Why to fight. Her and her friend Scorpia - another lost princess, if you can believe that."
Laughing through her tears, Zoar stared at him through the image-spell. "Of course you did. How could you not? Where is she? Can I bring you both home?"
Duncan shook his head. "She's safe. I know that much. We were separated when we broke free of the Horde. We were ambushed by a champion who wanted to get revenge on her for something her friend did when they were children. We defeated the ambush - Adora finally manifested her magic! - but Shadow Weaver came and took her away after Adora stood up to her."
He was leaving a vast amount of detail out of his explanation. How could he not? He had been on Etheria so long now. There was so much to say and so little time to say it.
"Scorpia and I had to separate to rescue her." His laugh was bitter. "I told them what you told me. To sail across the Growling Seas to find Eternia. I have to get home before they get there!"
Zoar bowed her head, red hair falling over her forehead. "Duncan…"
"Scorpia's people are enslaved here. I told her - gave her my word - we could help. We would help. Randor and Marlena owe me enough favors, and it would get us the foothold on Etheria we need to keep Hordak and Skeletor apart - and access to what we want to know about whatever their association is."
And if his King and Queen couldn't? Well, he knew retired soldiers and old warriors who would want to help. Who would want a purpose again! But he had faith in them. He had faith they would let him take at least a small force back through and help the scorpioni. All volunteers, of course - Marlena and Randor were loathe to command troops to missions like this, but they would let volunteers go, supported by Eternos.
"Duncan."
He stood taller, grinning fiercely. "You'll have to help Adora with her magics, Zoar. She has rudimentary control, I think. She's terrified of magic. Shadow Weaver and her damn crazy apprentice used it to terrorize her far too long. It will take time for her to trust you, but I'll be there. She trusts me, I think. I hope! I have tried to be there for her, but - she's grown up in such misery. Lost so much…"
"Duncan!"
Her shout got his attention and he shook his head to clear it. He needed to get home - and he needed Zoar's help to do it. He looked back at her and saw the sadness in her eyes.
"Duncan, they can't get back here! Not without you! Eternia and Etheria are separate planets! They are not what you were told - or what I was told! I found an old map built into the catacombs, and records of what the Old Ones did to exploit the links between our worlds. There are thirteen portals still active between our worlds, and what I did to send you there is an artifact of my magic! It is because of what I am and who I am that I can reach between worlds."
Duncan froze. He raked his hand through his hair. "What?"
Zoar leaned closer to her crystal. He could see it as her face shifted in the image. "Duncan. Etheria and Eternia are not part of the same world, as we first thought! My spell to send you there only worked because I am the guardian of Greyskull! I have - magical dispensation, you might say. But the path home we thought existed, across their Growling Seas to our own seas, is one of the thirteen portals! Another, we think is on Qadia. There is at least one in Subternia and another near or in Snake Mountain. You would have been lost at sea had you tried to take that route back unless you knew precisely where it was. I was to tell you when you contacted me, but we started to think you were…"
"No!" Duncan gasped. He staggered back. "But I told them - I told them to take a ship across the Growling Seas to reach Eternia! I have to find them! Before they set sail. Before they become lost!"
He turned, looking back at his skiff. He had the maps Lonnie had given them. Which port would they go to? Salineas was further away, but had more (and better) ships, but Seaworthy was closer. It was in the kingdom of Bright Moon, which the Horde feared more than the others. Their military was strong and their queen was powerful enough she was considered a demon of storm and light - a mercurial huntress who killed without mercy and commanded terrible magics.
He could -
"Duncan! My love. Breathe. All is not lost! The mariners of Etheria - will they take them across the Growling seas? Do they know of the portal?"
Duncan shook his head. "I don't - I don't know. I never saw any recognition from any one when I mentioned Eternia or Eternos. The only ones who said anything spoke of children's stories and legends. Mocking me for my jokes. I don't - I don't think so. No."
His first months in Etheria was spent traveling. He had walked through several countries in his search for the Fright Zone and the Horde. He had spoken to a lot of people, grateful for Zoar's magic letting him speak with anyone he needed to. The mystic strength and endurance given to him by his oaths gave him the ability to offer labor and aid to many, but his mechanical skills were just as useful. He'd learned so much about Etheria in those months, but other than jests, no one had recognized Eternia. He hadn't thought about it much - he had been with the Horde for so long, and both Shadow Weaver and Hordak knew about Eternia.
Which had proved the need for his mission. He had failed in his mission, but he who he had found made it all worth it.
"Then you can still find them. Protect her. Duncan, I am bringing you back now. I am bringing you home, my love. We cannot tell Randor and Marlena - and Adam cannot know, not until Randor and Marlena are ready to tell him. But we will send you back again, through one of the portals. You will find her, and you will get her home."
He ached. He wanted to go home. He wanted to see his daughter. See Zoar again. He missed the smells of home. The sounds. The feel of the air. He missed everything about his home.
But honor called and duty demanded. He had a duty to the Princess of Eternos. He was the only one from Eternia currently on Etheria who would help her. And the Horde was allied with the snakemen, now. How long until one of them made the connection?
Already, Elieth had sensed her connection to Greyskull - to Eternia. Had known the flavor of her magic. She and Scorpia were on their own, on a fool's errand to find a path that didn't exist to a place that would welcome them.
He had to find them. Guide them. Protect them. Help her get home and help them both discover who they were meant to be.
Duncan couldn't go home. Not yet.
He knelt, bowing his head. He couldn't bear to look her in the eye when he told her was choosing his duty - his oaths - over even a moment with her. "My lady, I…"
The words caught in his throat. He could not leave a girl as hurt, as alone as Adora to face Etheria on her own, not without a path to safety. Not without a safe direction. His ignorance had possibly set them on the road to disaster or worse. It was his responsibility to help them.
She was lost, and it partly his doing. She was his princess - the girl his best friends had put in his arms just after her birth. One of the children he had sworn his life to protect and teach. His own ahran stood by Adam and his daughter.
Only Scorpia - as lost as Adora - was stood next to his princess. And as far as he knew, everyone on Etheria saw them as the enemy. Everyone on Etheria would want them hurt or dead or worse, because of who they had been. Who they had been forced to be.
Would any on Etheria give them a chance to be who they could become?
"Look at me, Duncan of Eternos. Do not hide your face from me, my love. I do not condemn you for following your honor, your calling. It is why I could let myself love you. Because you understand the sacrifices duty demands and thus - you can live with what my duties have called me to be."
He slowly raised his head to face the woman he loved; her smile and her eyes were sad, affectionate, warm. "Tell me what I can do to help you."
He smiled, her image blurring through his tears. She was - magnificent. After all these years away, she still loved him. She still believed in him. And she understood. She, who had given so much of herself for a world who didn't know anything of her - she continued to give of herself for him. For those he served and protected.
"Money - gems work well here, but gold will do in a pinch. Supplies. Food and water, mostly. Any gear I might have left at Greyskull. Tokens, maybe, for Adora. Something…"
His voice caught again, but he cleared his throat. She smiled, soft and gentle. Her voice was a caress, even across the vast distance between worlds. "Easily done. Wait here. I will return."
It was terrible, but right to speak of what he needed to save them. To ask for things, when he had already been gone so long. Had spent so long away from them. From her.
She returned quickly. Her magic would let her summon most of what she needed, but she would need to pick something for Adora. Her voice was teasing. "I don't think you realized how much you've left here over the years, my love."
"I suppose not!" They had been together for over a decade. He knew he had a lot more equipment and useful tricks hidden at Greyskull than he remembered, but she would know what he needed. Maybe better than he did.
She closed her eyes. Breathed out. And the air next to him twisted, shimmered and distorted into a spiral of light and lambent fog. When the magic retreated, there was a small pile of things for him.
She sagged a bit. He couldn't imagine how much energy it took to create a path between worlds. What had it cost her to send him here? How could she think of bringing him - and two others! - back?
"Please tell me you included a map to the thirteen portals. It might be easier to travel through one of them, I think."
He could make their return trip easier. Once on Eternia, he could find his way home from anywhere in the world. (Of course, where those portals came out on Eternia did matter - Snake Mountain would not be a good place to return to.)
She rolled her eyes at him. "You can't fool me, Duncan! Yes, it is tiring to open a way, but sending you, sending these things, was far more taxing, as I wanted to do it undetected. When I bring you home, I will not worry about such! Yes, there is map, in case you cannot contact me, but I would rather you trust my magic rather than a portal of the Old Ones. They were often less then wise and they were often less than kind."
She would never say it, but she would want to see him. She would trust only herself to protect him. And she would want to see - to meet - Adora. To know with her own senses the princess lived.
He could give her that.
"You are always my first choice." It was as true as it could be; duty came before all, and then their daughter. But she understood his meaning, as he understood hers. They had been together for too long not to.
"I love you, Duncan of Eternos. Good journey - and may magic stand between you and harm in the dark places where you must walk."
He stood as the image of the Sorceress of Greyskull vanished in a swirl of silver.
He looked up at the moons of Etheria and let the cool night air brush over him. He had to check - and load - the supplies she had sent him. He would return to Lonnie's stronghold and tell her what he could. Just in case.
And then, he had a princess (or two) to save.

Truebw3 on Chapter 2 Thu 13 Feb 2025 05:38AM UTC
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mangawriter77 on Chapter 2 Thu 13 Feb 2025 01:14PM UTC
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Truebw3 on Chapter 2 Thu 13 Feb 2025 02:37PM UTC
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AoifeForrester on Chapter 2 Thu 13 Feb 2025 06:30AM UTC
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Stavaros_the_arcane on Chapter 2 Thu 13 Feb 2025 06:55AM UTC
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CanadianBear on Chapter 2 Thu 13 Feb 2025 07:18AM UTC
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DarSelLa on Chapter 2 Thu 13 Feb 2025 07:26AM UTC
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jeeperso on Chapter 2 Thu 13 Feb 2025 11:03AM UTC
Last Edited Thu 13 Feb 2025 11:06AM UTC
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PinkStorm on Chapter 2 Thu 13 Feb 2025 12:32PM UTC
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mangawriter77 on Chapter 2 Thu 13 Feb 2025 01:13PM UTC
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Nienna (stillonpatrol) on Chapter 2 Thu 13 Feb 2025 04:50PM UTC
Last Edited Thu 13 Feb 2025 04:53PM UTC
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Crystal_Moon_08_89 on Chapter 2 Thu 13 Feb 2025 07:23PM UTC
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Ri2 on Chapter 2 Thu 13 Feb 2025 08:06PM UTC
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TimberWolf89 on Chapter 2 Thu 13 Feb 2025 08:10PM UTC
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nbc22 on Chapter 2 Thu 13 Feb 2025 08:29PM UTC
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Trans_Sweets on Chapter 2 Thu 13 Feb 2025 08:45PM UTC
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Trans_Sweets on Chapter 2 Thu 13 Feb 2025 08:42PM UTC
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AuthorWithoutaName on Chapter 2 Mon 19 May 2025 01:31AM UTC
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neongreenpurple on Chapter 2 Fri 20 Jun 2025 07:48AM UTC
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Trans_Sweets on Chapter 2 Sun 06 Jul 2025 08:32AM UTC
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