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December Challenge - The Jade Legion

Admiral2

Admiral
Admiral
The Jade Legion
by Admiral2
4674 words


Crewman First Class Archibald “Sparks” Jordan was rarely as nervous at his station as he was at this moment. Then again, it wasn’t often that he had Captain Martin Rourke and Lt. Commander Van Jensen - Commanding Officer and Executive Officer respectively of the USS Concord - staring over both shoulders as he tried to pin down an elusive signal. Still, the communications tech worked at it diligently, giving the two superiors the blow-by-blow as he managed to burn through the static. “It’s still fuzzy,” he said finally, “but I’ve managed to isolate a definite broadcast. It repeats, like an automated signal.”

“Is it clear enough to put on the bridge speakers?” Jensen asked.

“Wait one.” Jordan made a few more adjustments. “Now it is, sir.” He pressed a contact and the sound echoed through the bridge. It was a high, warbling electronic tone that pulsed at regular intervals.

Rourke looked up as he listened, frowning and working his squared jaw. “And you say it’s coming from our first stop?”

“Aye, Captain,” Jordan said. “It’s being broadcast in all directions from the Fabrini star group.”

Jensen turned to the Captain. “According to the Surprise’s logs there was only one Earth-type planet in that group, the fourth planet, I believe.” He walked over to the Science console and worked the controls. The repeater screen above it came to life, displaying a green planet along with scientific data. “Yes, that’s it,” he said, “but there was no intelligent life on the surface at that time.”

Rourke rose to his full commanding height and put his hands on his hips. “That may be, but if there’s anything intelligent sending out a signal from that region of space, it’s likely doing so from Fabrini IV.” He shrugged. “Maybe someone moved in and took up residence. Anything could have happened in the hundred years since Surprise’s landing.”

The USS Concord, the latest of the Constitution-Class vessels, was tasked with revisitng regions of space visited by the older, purely light-speed ship SS Surprise before continuing on with her own deep space probe. It had been a century since humans - Surprise’s crew - had set foot on Fabrini IV, and they hadn’t found anything alive, though they did find evidence that the planet had once harbored an advanced civilization.

Jensen leaned casually on the Science console and smirked at Rourke. “Perhaps the good doctor can provide us with some insight on the matter. I’ve heard she’s something of an historian when it comes to the old probe missions.”

Rourke met the smirk with a boyish smile. “She is at that. She’s certainly bent my ear about them enough.” He turned to the communicator. “Sparks, please have the CMO join us on the bridge.”

“Aye, sir.” Sparks turned to his controls and opened a circuit. “Will the Chief Medical Officer report to the bridge, please?” He said into the audio pickup.

The response was quick. “I’m on my way,” an alto voice sounded from the console.

Rourke’s smile grew just a bit broader before he walked over to where Jensen was standing. Jensen was grinning mischievously. “All right, all right,” Rourke said. “Let’s just have a printout of the planet’s data.”

“Aye, sir,” Jensen said cheerily. He nodded to the officer manning the console, who on cue began organizing the information for printing. The lift doors opened at almost the same moment the hardcopy was ejected from the console.

Doctor Anne Rourke - also Mrs. Martin Rourke - always turned heads when she came onto the bridge. She was tall and glamour-girl pretty, with curly, golden blond hair she wore tied in a pony-tail and an hourglass figure that her uniform tunic and slacks did nothing to hide. She smiled prettily when she spotted Rourke and walked right over to him. “It’s about time you called me out of that Sick Bay,” she said in a winking tone. “Even a girl as on the ball as me needs to get out and see her man once in a while.”

“Always happy to oblige,” Rourke said, “but I’ve summoned you on business, My Dear Doctor.”

Anne Rourke straightened and mock-saluted. “Yes, sir! And what can I do for the Captain, sir?”

“Actually...” Jensen began.

“Watch it, boy,” Rourke said, pointing. “Just show her the printout.”

Anne giggled as Jensen obeyed, then was lost in the information as the two men now looked over her shoulders. “Oh, Fabrini IV. That’s our first destination, isn’t it darling?”

“It is indeed, and it’s already trying to pique our interest.” He explained about the signal and his suspicions.

“But that’s impossible,” Anne objected. “The planet’s surface is barren. There’s nothing there but the legion.”

Jensen’s eyebrow went up. “What ‘legion’?”

Rourke answered, “Along with several buried ruins the surface is covered with meticulously carved and placed statues.”

“Not just statues,” Anne said. “It’s like the Terra Cotta Army back on Earth. They’re ten feet tall and intricately carved in something like jade. At least, that’s what the crew of the Surprise reported.”

“Do you think their creators might have come back to collect them?”

Anne folded up the report. “Well, there’s really only one way to find out isn’t there?”

“There is indeed,” Rourke said. He walked over to the command chair, moved the cobra-headed repeater aside and sat down. “Address Intercraft,” he ordered. Sparks toggled the right switch and Rourke’s voice echoed throughout the Concord. “This is the Captain. We’re moving up our arrival time to the Fabrini Star Group to investigate a signal we’ve received. Our Time Warp will be Factor Six.”

The rest of the bridge crew assumed departure stations. Commander Jensen took over the helm and got on the Intercraft himself. “All decks prepare for hyperdrive!”

As Jensen got reports from the different sections of the ship, Doctor Rourke went to stand next to the command chair. Captain Rourke leaned over and said in a low voice, “There. Now you can’t say I never take you anywhere.”

“That doesn’t count,” she whispered back with a sly grin. “You were going that way anyway.”

“All Decks report ready,” Jensen called.

Captain Rourke settled back in his seat and commanded, “Engage!”




The Concord pulled into orbit around the fourth planet of the Fabrini Star Group. As Jensen settled the ship in, Sparks called out, “The signal’s definitely coming from the planet, Captain, but it’s strange. It seems to be coming from the across the surface.”

“The whole planet is signaling?” Anne said. “Intriguing...”

“Keep working on it,” Rourke ordered. He stood and walked around the chair. “Doctor, Exec, care to join me on an excursion to the surface?”

“Absolutely,” Jensen said.

“I wouldn’t miss it,” Anne said.

“All right. Lieutenant Radha!”

The olive-skinned young man at the Science station turned and stood. “Yes, Sir?”

“You have the bridge. We’ll equip a landing party of six. Have a security team meet us in the transporter room.”

“Aye, sir,” Radha said. The Rourkes and Jensen were already headed for the lift.




Soon, the Captain, XO and Doctor were outfitted in field jackets and carrying hand weapons and communicators. They arrived in the molecular transporter room and met three similarly-equipped Security crewmen that were waiting there. All six stepped onto transporter pads while two jump-suited engineers worked the complex controls. After a few moments one said, “We’re ready here, Captain.”

Rourke nodded. “Energize.”

The engineer worked the energizer slides and the trilling, repeating sound of the transporter effect filled the room as the visual effect obscured the landing party. In moments they disappeared from the transporter room...

...and reappeared on the surface of the planet. Once they had solidified and looked around, they realized they’d rematerialized around one of the statues. “My goodness...” Anne breathed as she looked up at it.

It was a humanoid male figure, with a bald head and chiseled face and piercing green eyes that stared straight ahead. Sure enough, it stood ten feet tall and was made of a material that felt like jade, but was colored a deep blue. It had been carved to appear as if it were wearing a skintight bodysuit with a belt wide enough to cover his midsection. The buckle was shaped like a diamond and completely obscured his abdominal muscles. It looked like a display screen.

Jensen kept looking around. “They really are all around us!”

As far as the eye could see, arranged in perfect rows that followed the contour of the ground, were hundreds of similar statues. They all seemed to be staring in the same direction. “It’s amazing,” Rourke said. “Imagine how long it took to make enough of these to arrange across the entire world.”

“They’re so lifelike,” Anne said, still transfixed by the one she was looking at, “and so grim. It’s as if they really are standing vigil.”

“Against what?” Rourke asked.

“I’d hate for it to be us,” Jensen smirked. “Imagine seeing one of these characters coming at you on a battlefield. Brother, I’d sign the discharge papers right then!”

The Security troops chuckled and Rourke smiled. Anne dismissed them with a wave. “Oh, honestly! I don’t think they’re meant to be an actual army. We really don’t know if they have a purpose.”

Just then the Captain’s communicator whistled. He took it out and lifted the cover open. “Rourke here.”

“Sparks here, sir. I’m still having trouble pinpointing the origin of the signal. It’s like it’s coming from millions of points around the planet.”

Rourke’s brow went up. “Millions?”

“Yes, sir. In fact there are several points right near where you landed.”

The landing party looked around then. “Well, it can’t be!” Anne said.

“They’re just statues!” A crewman said.

“Well, there’s nothing else in the immediate area that might be doing it,” Rourke mused.

“Could there be some kind of transmitters built into them?” Jensen asked.

“It seems so unlikely,” Anne said. “They appear to be carved from a single block of material. There are no seams that suggest they were hollowed out.” She reached out to touch the statue’s side. “It’s so smooth, so uniform. Surely they must have...”

Then, incredibly, impossibly, the statue raised its right arm.

“Anne, get back!” Rourke yelled. He was too late. The statue’s fingertips brushed Anne’s forehead. She screamed and fell back, but froze before she hit the ground, suspended in mid-air.

The screen in the statue’s buckle began to crackle with power. It was reminiscent of the visual transporter effect, but one against a pitch black background. Along with the crackling came an unearthly wailing that pierced the landing party’s ears. As the wailing increased in crescendo the statue rose from the ground, and Anne rose as well.

Jensen and the crewmen had their weapons out. “Fire!” Jensen called out.

Four bright beams lanced into the statue’s chest, their electronic whirring drowned out by the wailing. The men kept the beams on the carving for several seconds before giving up.

“It hasn’t even been touched!” A crewman complained.

Rourke finally drew his weapon and changed the setting. “Again,” he said, “Full power! Shoot the buckle!”

The other men adjusted their weapons, then all five took aim at the buckle and fired into the crackling energy. This time they kept the beams pouring into it for almost a full minute. As they fired, they barely noticed the statue’s other hand rising. When it was high above them, the hand emitted a wave of energy. When the wave hit the landing party, all the beams turned off, leaving the men unaffected.

Rourke looked at his weapon in shock, aimed again and tried to fire. Nothing happened. The others had a similar reaction.

Jensen approached him. “We could pinpoint it from space, use the main weapons...”

Rourke dismissed that with a shake of his head. “Even if it worked, we might disintegrate Anne in the process. If it didn’t...well, you’re the one that didn’t want to face them on the battlefield. What if it just ticks him off?” He opened his communicator again. “Rourke to Concord.”

“Radha here,” Lieutenant Radha replied.

“I want you and a full survey team to land at my coordinates on the double. Equip as necessary.” He closed the communicator and looked at Jensen. “We can’t rely on brute force. We have to find a clue in the statues themselves.” He looked up at Anne, watched her floating there helplessly, then his resolve doubled.

“We’ll save you...” he muttered.
 
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Anne opened her eyes to find herself floating in a dark, starless space. In fact, from what she could tell by craning her neck, the only light in the space was coming from her body. She couldn’t move any of her limbs. It felt like she had been strapped into a hospital bed. Frantically, she looked around for any sign of life. “Hello!” She called out. “Is anyone there? Can anyone hear me?”

Suddenly, the words “WE CAN HEAR YOU” boomed in her head, making her wince in pain. It was as if thousands of voices had screamed the words directly into her skull.

“Please...listen to me...” she groaned as she recovered. “My name...is Doctor Anne Rourke. I’m from the United Space Ship Concord. We came to this planet in peace.”

There was no response for what seemed like a very long time. Then stars began to appear in the darkness. Anne found a little comfort in that...until she realized the stars were rapidly approaching her. For terrifying moments she watched this strange universe cave in on her, the descending stars slowing only when they were close enough for her to make out fine details.

They weren’t stars at all. They were faces, ones with chiseled jaws and blue jade skin and piercing green eyes that kept coming on until they were gargantuan in size in comparison to her meager form. And now they crowded the space around her, their skins and eyes creating a blue-green haze that it hurt Anne’s eyes to look into.

She bit back a scream, gathered her flagging courage and forced to herself to say in an even tone, “I mean you no harm.”

The voices slammed into her mind again. “YOU HAVE WHAT WE WANT.”

She was trying so hard to recover from the mental assault she almost missed what was said. “I don’t...what do you...”

But the faces were no longer interested in conversation. They invaded her mind once more, this time with deadly purpose, and Anne’s screams pierced the night as the fire in her brain consumed her.




On the surface of Fabrini IV, the landing party had expanded to encompass more than a quarter of Concord’s 200-person crew and now included scientists, engineers, technicians and a full platoon of security troops. There was also a gaggle of tripod mounted portable sensors and portable power units to run them. The most powerful sensors were trained on Anne Rourke and her captor. Neither had moved since the figure had disarmed the original landing party and now they were hovering at least a meter above everyone’s heads. The buckle continued to crackle and sparkle with energy, but the wailing had died down enough to allow members of the landing party to communicate normally. Other sensors were trained on other statues, the idea being that ones in their “dormant” state might offer more clues.

Rourke rarely took his eyes off his wife and the figure that held her captive. He found he had to constantly remind himself of what he’d told Jensen: brute force would be useless. That kept him from trying something foolhardy, like trying to snatch her out of the sky or tackle the statue. Such things would have been difficult under the circumstances anyway, but knowing that didn’t keep him from thinking of ways to accomplish them, so he remembered what he’d said and worked to keep his passions in check.

Several people approached and interrupted his train of thought. The first was Doctor Amelie Sarkozy, the mature, handsome woman who served as Concord’s Science Officer. “Captain, our initial scans of the surrounding statues show no indication of any embedded technology.”

“How can that be, Doctor?” Rourke said. “This one couldn’t possibly do the things it’s done without technology.”

Next to speak was Lieutenant Joachim Levi, Concord’s bookish Chief Engineer. “That may be true, sir, but we’re hanged if we know how. My people can’t figure out the source of the anti-gravity effect or the suspension effect...”

“...or even the signal,” Sparks said, frustration plain in his voice. “I’ve managed to confirm only that the statues are broadcasting the signal, but not the nature of the technology behind the broadcast.” Even that confirmation was due less to the communicator’s skills than the fact that the statue holding Anne had started broadcasting more powerfully once it had activated.

Rourke frowned and crossed his arms. “You mean to tell me that we brought all this gear down here and we’ve learned nothing about how these statues work?”

Sarkozy nodded grimly. “And as long as that’s the case, we have no way of counteracting them.”

“That’s unacceptable, Doctor! Anne’s life may depend on us finding a way, quickly!”

“I can only report our findings, sir.” She smiled and tried to sound reasonable. “You’re right, of course, but we’re limited by the reach of the sensing devices available to us.”

Levi was more optimistic. “Look, there’s something in there making all of this happen. It may be too small or too integrated for us to see, but it’s there. It’s just a matter of finding it and turning it off.”

Before Rourke could respond someone else came over. It was the slim, pretty and raven-haired Abigail Knightley, the Medical section’s Head Nurse. “We do have some good news, Captain,” she said. “We’ve been monitoring Doctor Rourke’s vitals since our team landed. So far the only indication we’ve had that she’s in any physical distress is a slightly elevated heart rate and temperature. Neither is high enough to cause any permanent harm, so she’s certainly in no danger of dying.”

“All right,” Rourke said a bit less stridently, “but you emphasized ‘physical’ distress.”

Some color rose in Knightley’s cheeks as she continued. “Well, we do have indications of elevated brain activity, including three large spikes.” She showed him the ranges on her medical scanner’s display. “The spikes preceded each increase and the level of activity settled only to a level higher than the previous one.”

This made Rourke look up at Anne again, leaving Sarkozy to respond. “Do you mean she’s conscious after all? Is she aware of what’s happening?”

“It seems that way, Doctor. The spikes could mean she’s trying to communicate with us...”

Rourke just had a horrible thought. “Or, she’s trying to communicate with him.”




“Please...stop...” Anne hissed. “You’re...killing me...can’t stand it...” She gasped as the assault on her brain ceased. She tried to catch her breath and shake off the residual pain as she said, “Please...please let me go...”

All the giant faces except for the closest one retreated back into the darkness. As the last head stared at her and through her, the voice in her head boomed one more time. “THAT IS ACCEPTABLE. OUR TASK IS CONCLUDED.”

Without further discourse, Anne felt her arms and legs being released. She breathed a sigh of relief as she moved her hands and fingers...

...then she screamed once more as she felt herself plummet.




Sarkozy gasped and pointed up. “Captain!”

Rourke would be forever grateful that he was looking right at her the moment whatever was holding Anne let her go. He had a split-second to get into position to break her fall. He fell to the ground on impact, but managed to catch Anne and keep her from hitting her head.

Half the landing party closed in on them. Nurse Knightley knelt down and took new scans of the CMO. “Stretcher!” At her call, two orderlies rushed over with a stretcher they’d brought earlier, then carefully lifted Anne off Rourke and strapped her onto it. While Sarkozy and Jensen helped Rourke up, Knightley reported, “I don’t understand! Now I’m not reading any brain activity!”

Rourke blanched. “Are you sure?”

Knightley was focused on her equipment. “This scanner is working fine. All of Doctor Rourke’s other vital signs have stabilized, but her mind has shut down! I don’t...” The scanner started beeping frantically. “Another spike!” Knightley whirled to look at Anne’s face. “She’s back! I have no idea what happened but she’s back. Just unconscious.”

“Good enough,” Rourke said. “Get her back to the ship right now! Do what you can for her!”

As Knightley complied, Jensen came up to Rourke. “Man, I am done with this planet!”

“You and me both,” Rourke said. “Get everybody moving. I want this equipment broken down and this party ready to...”

The wailing rose to ear-splitting volume then, forcing everyone to cover their ears in a vain effort to block out the noise. It was impossible to converse in a normal tone of voice, but Sparks managed to be heard by screaming at the top of his lungs, “IT’S COMING FROM ALL OF THEM!”

Everyone looked around as best they could through wincing eyes. The belts on all the other statues around them - in fact all the ones in sight - had started to crackle and spark, and it wasn’t long before those statues rose to match the altitude of the first one, whose arms were now stretched out over the scene. As the statues rose the equipment the Concord’s crew had brought with them shorted and went dead. When the statues were all floating at the same height the ground beneath them began to quake, throwing the landing party and anything not properly braced to the dirt. All the while the wailing threatened to deafen everyone. Finally, a blinding light washed over the entire scene. One final massive tremor tossed people and machines around just before the light dissipated.

When everything was quiet, all the statues had completely disappeared. “They’re gone,” Sparks said in disbelief.

Rourke didn’t hear. He’d made his way over to where Anne’s stretcher was lying on the ground. Knightley was checking on her. “I never got a chance to call the ship,” she confessed. “She’s still stable, though...”

Rourke confirmed it for himself by looking at Anne’s face. She just looked as if she were asleep, but that could mean anything. He pulled out his communicator. “I’ll call the ship.”




Anne Rourke’s eyes fluttered open. It took a few moments for her to adjust to the light, but she forced herself to keep them open. She was sure she’d been out for a long time and she wanted someone to update her on her condition. She looked left and saw her nurses and orderlies attending to other casualties.

Then she looked right and saw the smiling face of Martin Rourke looking down at her. After what she remembered of being in the black space with the giant blue faces, it was a more-than-welcome sight, one that made her smile weakly.

Of course, she couldn’t let him get a swelled head about it. “What’re you doing here?” Anne mumbled. “Don’t you have a ship to run somewhere?”

She’d probably never know how relieved Rourke was to hear her joke, however feeble the delivery. “I’d like to get back to that, but my Ship’s Doctor is goldbricking. I came down here to find out when she’s getting back to work.”

Hearing that made her frown. “How long was I out?”

Rourke checked the time readout on a nearby chronometer. “Looks like eighteen hours and seventeen minutes, give or take a few seconds.”

Now she winced. “Eighteen hours?!” She tried to get up, but Rourke held her down.

“That’s right, and you’re going to stay in that bed until you can stand up for more than three seconds at a time.”

“Says who?”

“Says me.”

“Oh, so you’re going to do my job too, Captain?”

“No, but Doctor Vijay is, and he agrees with me.”

Anne settled back. “All you men ganging up on me. It’s shameful.”

“I agreed too, Doctor,” Knightley chimed in.

“You keep out of this,” Anne ordered.

Knightley smiled. “Try not to excite her too much, Captain.”

Rourke nodded. “I’ll only be a little while longer.” When Knightley moved off, he asked Anne, “Are you up to answering some questions?”

“They’re gone, aren’t they?” Anne asked.

Rourke nodded. “From all over the planet. They left in spectacular fashion. The general consensus is that they used advanced molecular transporters. No way to confirm that, unfortunately. What happened down there? Were you communicating with the statue that had you?”

“I don’t know if I’d call it that. Communication is usually a two-way affair. It was more like he invaded my mind.”

“Why?”

“He said I had something they needed.”

“What was it?”

Anne settled back and closed her eyes. “I couldn’t tell at first. While it was happening it was all I could do to keep my head from exploding, but now...” She thought a moment, then said, “I think I know. I can almost remember the things that flashed by my mind’s eye while he was in there. Nothing definite, but they triggered...emotional responses in me. Compassion, Mercy, Charity, anything that might inspire selflessness on my part.”

“But why you, or just you? They could have found such things in any of us.”

Anne opened her eyes. “I’m not sure, but I think they needed a certain amount from a single member of our race. Maybe I was the best choice. There’s my oath as a doctor to consider...”

“‘First, do no harm...’” Rourke quoted.

She turned to him and smirked. “And, I’m a woman, after all.”

“Claiming superiority for your gender, Doctor?”

“Well, there weren’t any women in the Surprise’s crew, and the statue didn’t bother plugging into any of you masculine types. It seems evident that they sensed superiority in my gender.”

“Well, that’s an easy theory to prove. If we find one of them, we’ll let you ask him about it.”

Anne shot up in bed. “Not on your life!” That was all she had time to say before the dizziness hit. “Ohhh...”

“Back down, sweetheart,” Rourke said as he helped her to lie prone.

Anne thanked him with a smile and closed her eyes until her equilibrium returned. Her face suddenly became serious. “I don’t think we’ll ever find them again. I get the feeling that what they took from me was the final piece of information they needed before embarking on some great mission.”

“Any idea what that mission might be?”

She shrugged. “None, but if compassion and mercy are key information for carrying it out, it can’t be all that bad, can it?”

Rourke stood and offered a final smile. “You can ask them that too the next time we see them.”

With that, Martin Rourke left Sick Bay.




Jensen met him at the lift on the Bridge. “We’re ready to proceed, Captain. Lt. Levi thinks we can repair or replace most of the components we lost on the surface without turning back for resupply.”

“Very well,” Rourke said.

“Did she give you any new insights?”

“Aside from an over-developed sense of the importance of the female mind, she knows what we know. They were waiting for something, we brought it to them, and they took it and left. She doesn’t know where they went.”

“I’m not worried about where they went. What worries me is...”

“...what they’ll do when they come back.”

“You read my mind, sir.”

“Well, let’s not be here if that happens.” Both men took their stations on the bridge and settled in, then Rourke ordered, “Set course for our next destination, Exec.”

“Course plotted and laid in, sir,” Jensen responded.

“Engage!”

With that command, the United Space Ship Concord pulled away from Fabrini IV and sped out into deep space, heading to her next encounter.
 
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This had an interesting old-school feel to it. A nice little story even if the real nature of the mystery is never fully revealed.
 
^^^I thank you both.

CeJay: Sometimes the story's more fun when you're left with a mystery.


admiralelm11: Actually, I thought I was being kind of blatant about the "The Cage" connection. Oh, well. As long as it came across eventually.
 
This was great. It felt very much like a self-contained adventure. Very full and rounded with some engaging characters. I have to say, the planet full of Jade Legion soldiers was a stunning visual that you created. Wow. It just seemed such an impressive image in my head, very sci-fi in feel and TOS like in the mystery of it all. Super job.
 
That would make a great TOS-era episode (if FX would be advanced, not TOS era TV technology with huge, funny dummies that is ;)).

I liked the mystery and I liked the idea of Jade Legion...warriors, guardians, explorers?

Superior female mind? :D
 
That would make a great TOS-era episode (if FX would be advanced, not TOS era TV technology with huge, funny dummies that is ;)).

Hey, all the TOS eps were digitally remastered. They can just remaster this one.

I liked the mystery and I liked the idea of Jade Legion...warriors, guardians, explorers?

When The Mummy III came out the History Channel did one of their usual tie-in documentaries about the Terra Cotta Army and I've been wanting to do something sci-fi-ish with the concept since I saw it. This is just the latest of several ideas.

Superior female mind? :D

Superior Female Empathy. (Let's not get cocky...) ;)

Thank you for the positive review!
 
Several years ago I had been to an exhibition of Terra-Cota army. They were only copies of the ones in Xi'an, but made an impression on me nevertheless. So your story reminded me of that exhibition a bit :)
 
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