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                  Chapter Two: Her
                   Name Is Teacup 
                    
                 The
                  violet-maned mare was a little slow to learn. Cornflower started 
                 with the basics, just as she would have with a foal of her own. It 
                 was a might strange teaching a mare like it was a foal, but, she 
                 remembered, only a short time ago this mare was some strange critter 
                 from a scary, dangerous world. Cornflower reckoned that it couldn't 
                 be easy to try to become a proper, normal pony after that, and she 
                 wouldn't have it said of her that Cornflower Provender lacked pity 
                 for them that were worse off. 
                 She had 
                 the befuddled mare up and trotting around the kitchen by the middle 
                 of the first day. Cornflower, Missus Provender, reckoned that all 
                 foals are born with the knowledge of how to stand and walk, so this 
                 newfoal couldn't be all that different. It just took a little time 
                 and encouragement for any young'n to get their hooves on the ground.  
                 The mare 
                 seemed happy to clop around the lower floor of the farmhouse, but 
                 there was no getting her up the stairs yet. Missus Provender resigned 
                 herself to having a makeshift bed in the kitchen for awhile, so she 
                 laid out another comforter and brought down a pillow from the guest 
                 room. When she got downstairs with the pillow, she was pleased to see 
                 the newfoal trying to straighten the impromptu bed as best she could. 
                 She was a bit clumsy, but there was no doubt she wanted to help. That 
                 was a good sign. 
                 Missus 
                 Provender tried to get the mare to go outside before the Princess 
                 lowered the sun, but again her guest balked at the stairs out, as 
                 well as the ice and snow. It made sense, if indoor stairs were too 
                 difficult for the newfoal, then slippery outdoor stairs would be even 
                 more intimidating. Cornflower felt foolish then, it should have been 
                 obvious. Just gettin' old I guess, she thought to herself.  
                 The 
                 newfoal was clearly interested in the world outside though, and stood 
                 at the door staring at the farm, and the hills behind, sniffing the 
                 cold air for all she was worth. It was as if she had never seen a 
                 farm before. This was getting the room cold, though, so Cornflower 
                 nudged her in the flank, moving her back into the kitchen, so she 
                 could close the door.  
                 The mare 
                 followed her everywhere, staring intently at whatever she did as if 
                 it were the most amazing thing in the world. While she set about her 
                 chores for the day, Cornflower constantly talked to the mare, hoping 
                 some words might stick. Also, she had to admit, it was kinda nice to 
                 have someone about the place during the day, while Mister Provender 
                 was out tending to the livestock. It reminded her of the days when 
                 her daughters were still home, days filled with laughter and an 
                 endless series of fusses and messes, which in retrospect, she missed 
                 a lot more than she ever reckoned she would. 
                 The 
                 newfoal mare tried to talk back to her, using whatever language they 
                 speak in strange critter land, but none of her new guest's words 
                 meant anything to her. Missus Provender went about her tasks, the two 
                 of them close and chattering to each other in different languages. It 
                 was a might silly, Cornflower felt. 
                 In the 
                 early afternoon, Cornflower liked to have a cup of tea. She had Durum 
                 get her tea whenever he went into Withers, and she was cross if he 
                 should forget. She decided to see if newfoals liked tea, and so set 
                 out cups for them both.  
                 The 
                 newfoal had some trouble at first, perching on a hay-bale seat by the 
                 table, but soon she was sitting nicely enough. She seemed both 
                 fascinated and troubled by the teacup Cornflower put down in front of 
                 her. When the newfoal put her hooves up on the table, clearly trying 
                 to pinch the cup between them, Cornflower stopped her, and motioned 
                 for her to put her hooves back down. This seemed to further confuse 
                 the poor creature, and for a moment it seemed as if she was going to 
                 cry. Cornflower couldn't make any sense of this. Maybe human critters 
                 ate with their hooves or something. 
                 While the 
                 tea was steeping, the newfoal was going on in her peculiar language. 
                 She seemed excited by the teapot, by the cups, and by the situation. 
                 It seemed to Cornflower as if the newfoal was familiar with it all, 
                 somehow. She had heard that the world the newfoals came from was 
                 somehow linked to Equestria, perhaps they had tea there. If they had 
                 tea, then they couldn't be all bad, she decided. 
                 The 
                 newfoal was trying to lift the cup by the handle. She had learned not 
                 to use her hooves on the table, and had seen Cornflower bring the tea 
                 things to the table in her teeth. The newfoal had grasped the handle 
                 of the teacup in her mouth with some effort and was lifting it. It 
                 was a good thing there was no tea in the cup, because if there had 
                 been, it would have been all over the table by now. Cornflower 
                 figured she had better show the mare how to properly use a cup. 
                 Cornflower 
                 caught the mare's attention and said "That's a teacup. Teacup.
                  Let me show ya how to use it." Cornflower lowered her head, and 
                 lifted her upper lip in an exaggerated way to show the newfoal how 
                 she used her teeth. She clamped the lip of the cup between her upper 
                 and lower jaw, then lifted it up. She held it a spell, and even shook 
                 her head a twitch to show that she had the cup held firmly. Next she 
                 tilted her head back a might, and made a slurping sound with her 
                 lips. Finally she lowered the cup to the table and set it down. 
                 The 
                 newfoal mare looked at her own cup, then at Cornflower, and appeared 
                 to be considering. She duplicated the behavior Cornflower had 
                 demonstrated to her. Then she set her own cup down. It wobbled and 
                 fell over, so she nibbled at it until it stood upright again. 
                 "Teacup.
                  Tea-cup." Missus Provender intoned. "Go ahead, you try it. 
                 Say Teacup."  
                 Suddenly 
                 the mare blurted out, in perfect Equestrian "TEACUP!".  
                 "Yes!"
                  It was her newfoal's first word, and Missus Provender could not be 
                 prouder "Yes! Teacup! That's right. Teacup! Very good!" It 
                 felt like she had a daughter at home again. Warm memories filled her 
                 mind.  
                 The 
                 newfoal seemed very proud of herself. "Teacup!" she 
                 repeated, and put a hoof to her chest "Teacup!" Then she 
                 added a string of words from her own language that made no sense. 
                 Next she pointed at Cornflower and surprised her by saying "Cornflower!" 
                 "I 
                 guess you've been payin' more attention than I gave ya credit 
                 for." Cornflower was happily surprised. She used a hoof to 
                 gesture at herself "Cornflower!" Then she pointed her hoof 
                 at the newfoal. 
                 The mare 
                 responded "Teacup!" 
                 "No, 
                 I wanted your name. Your name, honeycake." Cornflower gestured 
                 again "I'm Cornflower, and you're..." 
                 "Teacup!"
                  The mare pointed at Missus Provender "Cornflower!" Then 
                 she pointed at the tea cup in front of her and said a word in her own 
                 language. After that she rattled on a bit, nothing of which made any 
                 sense at all. 
                 "Oh 
                 dear." Missus Provender poured tea into the two cups. "I 
                 guess we'll just call you 'Teacup' then. Here, have some tea, Teacup." 
                 Teacup 
                 looked down at the tea and called it something in her own language. 
                 "Cornflower?" Teacup was now staring intently at Missus 
                 Provender with a glad expression on her muzzle "Teacup...." 
                 She paused a moment, and then hugged her front hooves to her chest 
                 "...Cornflower." The newfoal looked grateful, that was the 
                 only word for it. 
                 "You're
                  welcome, honeycake." Cornflower sipped her tea. 
                 There was 
                 a bit of a mess, but in the end Teacup managed to get some tea down 
                 her, and likely had learned how to use cups in the process. As Missus 
                 Provender cleaned up afterwards, Teacup looked a might embarrassed. 
                 There had been various assorted spills, and one time the newfoal 
                 nearly broke her cup when it dropped as she was setting it down. 
                 Messes and fusses. "It's OK, Teacup. Shucks, ain't nothin' I 
                 haven't dealt with before!" Memories of her daughters flooded 
                 back.  
                 Although 
                 she wasn't about to fully admit it, maybe having an untrained, 
                 refugee newfoal on her farm wasn't such a burden after all. 
                 Cornflower hadn't had such a fun day in many a year. 
                   
                   
                   
                 Snow fell 
                 outside the multi-paned windows of the kitchen. It was obviously a 
                 kitchen of some kind, food was prepared there. Tikvah had never seen 
                 one made entirely of wood before, and such wood as well! If she had 
                 to be a pony, well, this was not so bad. The comforter was warm and 
                 soft under her belly, and the nice lady had tucked her in, as she had 
                 the previous night, and given her a nuzzle before going upstairs.  
                 Tikvah 
                 couldn't help but think of the light gray mare as a nice old lady. 
                 That's who she was in her mind. A world of talking ponies, and now 
                 she, Tikvah Feinstein, was one of them. She wondered if the human 
                 world was truly gone. Had the great 'Purification' already happened? 
                 All of human history, all of humanity itself, swept away like so much dust. 
                 Then 
                 again, she thought, maybe it was for the best. 
                 Tikvah had 
                 been living, when she was human, in Wilmington, Jersey. Just a ride 
                 from Newark, faster if you took the maglev. She had worked as a 
                 nanofabricator in the huge plant they had opened - she was one of the 
                 lucky 11% in the North American Alliance that had a job at all. After 
                 all, 89% unemployment was the norm, but she didn't feel special, just 
                 fortunate. She had known somebody that knew somebody. That's how it 
                 worked. That's how it always worked. 
                 It was a 
                 pretty crappy job, really, but Tikvah was beyond grateful to have it. 
                 She took the maglev to work, even though the plant was only a few 
                 miles away, because it was safer. It cost a lot to ride the maglev, 
                 but that was better than being slashed open and harvested for organs. 
                 A lot of that had been happening on the regular routes, but so far 
                 the organ muggers hadn't dared the high security of the maglev. 
                 It was 
                 nicer, too. The maglev cars were in disrepair, like everything else, 
                 but the seats still had covers on them, and that was much better than 
                 riding on bare springs.  
                 Nanofabrication
                  was a tedious task. Every day, at the start of her 16 hour shift, a 
                 list of morphological parameters would be uploaded to her 
                 workstation, and she would begin sorting them into topological 
                 groups. Then she performed transforms on the data so that the quantum 
                 system could digest it more efficiently. When that was done, she 
                 moved to the fabrication center and checked the bins and tanks, 
                 topping them up as needed. She was one of only five people in the 
                 entire, vast building, each isolated in their own section. 
                 Outside, 
                 the streets had been packed with an ocean of the destitute and the 
                 dying, makeshift shelters and the endless favela that encrusted the 
                 world like cardboard and sheet-metal barnacles. Ninteen billion 
                 humans lived on the earth, all but one tenth of one percent of them 
                 impoverished slaves working for the most minimal of wages, or merely 
                 starving.  
                 Tikvah was 
                 fortunate to be a slave now; her contract, like all employment 
                 contracts, was so arranged that no matter what her pay rate, she 
                 would always fall deeper in debt to the corporation. Having work 
                 meant that she was restricted to purchases from her employing 
                 corporation, so all of her food, shelter and power had to come from 
                 Eastern Corporate. Fortunately, Eastcorp owned everything that 
                 existed in her sector of North America, so all it really meant was 
                 that she couldn't buy anything off the hypernet.  
                 Tikvah had 
                 to be careful with loading the nanohoppers, because everything she 
                 worked with was perilous. She spent much of her day inside a sealed 
                 environment suit, but her actual task was pouring something grey into 
                 something a different shade of gray. A tear or rip in her thin suit, 
                 and it could mean two weeks quarantine without pay, and possible 
                 mutilation or death. Naturally, she tried to be careful, but failure 
                 to complete her tasks adequately was a firing offense, and of course 
                 the debt she was already in for having a job at all would be with her 
                 for life. Then, if she was lucky, she could hope for industrial 
                 prison, or if unlucky, she could return to the world-spanning favela, 
                 and the usual life of the sickness and barely surviving. 
                 Actually, 
                 her degrees in nanoscience weren't really elite enough to hope for 
                 industrial prison. So, it would be the slums if she was ever fired. 
                 She'd still have to pay back the corporation, even from there, or end 
                 up part of the mandatory organ donator selection pool. She wondered 
                 if she should have studied law, or finance, instead. 
                 Her home 
                 was a living pod in the Union Park megacomplex. She was lucky to have 
                 it, it was just within her budget. Two meters long by a full meter 
                 and a half tall and wide, she had space to stretch out, plus just 
                 enough room for a microfridge and her threevee tablet. She slept bent 
                 around these items, and she liked to imagine they were friends she 
                 was cuddling with. She felt so fortunate! 
                 But the 
                 best part was the hatch. Each pod had its own locked hatch. The lock 
                 was a quantum lock, and could not be broken by anything short of the 
                 might of a corporate entity. Inside her pod, she was safe. She would 
                 never be raped again, never lose her other ear, never be beaten, 
                 never be hurt while she slept. Her living pod was more than a place 
                 to sleep, it was a fortress, a castle, and for the first time in her 
                 34 years, Tikvah knew what it was to feel safe. 
                 When 
                 Equestria first rose from the sea, Tikvah didn't really pay it much 
                 attention. Her work was demanding, and she only allowed herself a 
                 half an hour to surf the hypernet, just enough for half of an old 
                 show, before dropping some Noeticin for two hours of concentrated REM 
                 sleep. It simply wasn't part of her personal world. 
                 She first 
                 discovered her world had changed irrevocably when she lost her job. 
                 It was a very strange situation, because not only was she discharged, 
                 but everyone at Eastcorp, at every division, everywhere in North 
                 America had been fired simultaneously. All debts were cancelled. No 
                 severance, no debt, no hope of prison, no nothing. Eastcorp was 
                 simply gone. The single, monolithic, singular industry of the entire 
                 east coast had pulled out of North America entirely. No person was 
                 employed anywhere in the North East Zone. 
                 There was 
                 a cryptic explanation: Due to current events, all employment has 
                 been terminated without penalty. 
                 She hadn't 
                 heard anything. As far as she knew, nothing was going on, the company 
                 had never mentioned anything in their employee bulletins. There had 
                 been no mention in the net shows she watched, then again she only 
                 watched reruns of old favorites, so there was that. She never 
                 bothered with newsfeeds, there was no point - there was nothing she 
                 could do about anything, hell, it was all she could do just to stay 
                 employed.  
                 Her life 
                 had been so insular - pod, food dispenser, maglev, work, maglev, food 
                 dispenser, pod - that she had basically missed the last five years. 
                 On that last day, she finally met one of her co-workers at the 
                 nanofabrication facility, the woman shrieking about something as she 
                 ran past her, clearly outside of her normal workspace. Tikvah was 
                 lost, her world, her life, everything suddenly destroyed. 
                 In five 
                 years the world had changed. With her robotic schedule gone, Tikvah 
                 wandered, in shock, away from the secure tunnels that led from work 
                 to maglev. For the first time in five years, she found herself above 
                 ground, and in her stunned state had forgotten to put on her Resperex 
                 breather to deal with the smog and ash. 
                 There 
                 wasn't any. 
                 The 
                 perpetual smog and ashfall that blackened Wilmington was simply... 
                 gone. The vast skyscrapers that towered over the ramshackle favela 
                 huts and constructions were as grimy and dark as always, but 
                 something impossible glowed behind them. A vast field of blue, a 
                 color Tikvah had not seen outside of images on the hypernet, filled 
                 the sky. It was the sky. The original sky, which she had read about 
                 in her childhood. The sky was supposed to be blue, somehow. 
                 She was 
                 breathing easily. As easily as in her living pod, as easily as in her 
                 envirosuit. Her lungs almost stung from the raw freshness of the air. 
                 She couldn't take it in. It was impossible, insane. The sky was ...blue. 
                 And that 
                 is the exact moment she saw her first pegasus, turquoise with a 
                 crimson mane, gliding overhead. It was followed by others, many 
                 others, and as she felt her sanity failing her, she whipped her head 
                 down and crouched low to the ground, hands on the side of her head, 
                 staring intently at the crusted plascreet walkway, as if somehow that 
                 patch of normality could bring her mind stability. 
                 "Excuse
                  me, are you alright?" The voice was eerily kind, as though it 
                 were genuinely concerned. It was a soft voice, high of pitch, and it 
                 wasn't asking for money, or demanding her kidneys. Somehow she 
                 managed to look up, her curiosity overcoming her fear. She couldn't 
                 take much more. 
                 "Do 
                 you need help? I'll help you!" It was a peach-colored unicorn, 
                 wearing saddlebags and a Jersey Nets baseball cap. 
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