The Monolith (Story Serial Continuation Project)

Ooh interesting!
A pretty nice read overall.

Chapter 4

Chapter 5

Kopaka scanned the Star, trying to find Pohatu, or any familiar locations. Unfortunately, all of the lights on the star had gone dark, and even though Kopaka’s mask could see through all the walls, it couldn’t pierce the darkness.

Maybe if he and Ivohku were to fuse, they could combine their mask powers? Could normal Toa even fuse with a Toa Nuva? And were fusions of two Toa even possible? Kopaka wasn’t sure. Regardless, their only current option was to wander blindly until they found a location Quilha recognized.

Kopaka glanced around the base of the Star, looking to see if anyone had managed to escape. He spotted a group of Toa and… Glatorian? To his surprise, Delara was among them.

If Delara’s there, perhaps the piloting chamber isn’t far, Kopaka thought. That was where Delara had been last time Kopaka had seen him. He pointed in the direction of Delara. “That way,” he said.

It took a while to find a side passage in that direction. It sloped downward at a sharp angle, making it tricky to navigate, but at least it led in the right direction. If Kopaka were alone – and if his Ice powers weren’t drained – he would’ve simply frozen the floor and skated down. Ivohku focused his power, and the force of Gravity shifted, allowing them to walk down the slope easier.

There didn’t seem to be any revived beings in this part of the Star. But apparently, it wasn’t completely abandoned. “There’s someone up ahead,” Ivohku said. “Looks like Kestora. They aren’t moving.”

Indeed, as the group got closer, they could see that the small purple-and-black figures lay unmoving in the floor. One of them lay at an awkward angle, and it didn’t look like he’d survived the crash. As for the others, since Kestora lacked Heartlights, it was hard to tell without closer inspection, and Ivohku didn’t really want to get close to the Kestora again.

Kopaka, however, lacked Ivohku’s discomfort with the Kestora. He approached and inspected the Kestora. “Only one dead. The rest are simply unconscious.”

“Do you think… do you think the Red Star can revive them?” Quilha wondered.

Ivohku stopped short of saying “Better if it doesn’t.” He realized that a part of him wanted to see the Kestora die, after what they’d done to the Toa. But that went against the Toa Code. No matter what the Kestora had done, letting them die – or stay dead, in this case – went against what the Toa stood for.

Still, there was nothing saying they couldn’t restrain them. “Kopaka, you want to freeze them?” he said. “So they don’t get up and shoot at us?”

“I still haven’t recharged enough elemental power,” Kopaka replied. “What about you? You can increase their weight.”

“I… I don’t know,” Ivohku said. “If I do it wrong, I could kill them.”

“Allow me,” Hydraxon said. He stepped forward, placing metallic clamps on the Kestora’s arms.

“Where did you get those from?” Ruhko asked.

“They were to restrain prisoners,” Hydraxon said. “I was a jailor, of… of…” Hydraxon faltered.

“The Pit?” Kopaka offered.

“Yes, that was it,” the armored warrior replied. His memories had been damaged by his death, and only meeting Kopaka and Pohatu had helped him start to remember.

“Why don’t we remove their masks?” Mavrah suggested. “If they’re like Matoran, maybe they will be weakened without their masks.”

“I’ve never seen a maskless Kestora,” Ruhko pointed out.

Kopaka nodded in agreement, removing the Kestora’s masks. Out of curiosity, he put one on, but then shook his head and removed it. “They’re powerless.”

Leaving the Kestora behind, the group proceeded onward. Ivohku found himself wondering where the Kestora leader, the one known as Makuta, had wound up. Was she still alive? Did she still have control over the Toa?

Ivohku clenched his fists. Not for long, he thought darkly.


Orde took a step back, staring at the Sound Toa. He should have known Delara would be here.

“You…” Delara groaned. Even though he was blind, he was staring straight at Orde, having heard his voice. “You left me… left me to die…”

Chiara turned to Orde upon hearing this. “What is he talking about?”

Orde remembered the last time he’d seen Delara. The two monsters that had attacked, the fight that went horribly. When Orde realized how outmatched they were, he… he had run away. He didn’t check to make sure Delara was with him, not until it was too late.

“I will follow the Code,” Delara said. “You will die, Orde. Die, die, diediediediedie…”

“He’s gone mad,” Zaria said.

“Can you, I dunno, use your powers? Fix his mind?” Gelu asked.

Orde hesitated, and Chiara glanced at him. Gelu hadn’t been paying attention, or hadn’t heard, when Orde explained what happened the first time he tried to ‘fix minds’ with the Zyglak.

“You’ve been a Toa for millennia since then, right?” Chiara said. “You can do this. If anyone can do it, it’s you.”

Orde gazed into Delara’s eyes, or where his eyes would be. He had only worked briefly with the Toa of Sonics, but he still remembered him, all too vividly. Even if his powers didn’t give him a near-perfect memory, he could never forget Delara. There was little left of the Sonics Toa he knew.

“All right,” he said. “I’ll try.”

Orde held up his hand, using his powers to reach into Delara’s mind. Almost immediately, the first thing he saw was a wave of hatred. He hadn’t realized how much anger Delara harbored against him. It was matched by his own guilt, for running and leaving Delara behind.

He looked deeper into Delara’s mind. It was chaotic, broken. At the forefront of it was a repeating mantra: the Toa Code, Toa must kill.

You caused it, Delara’s voice said in his head. Your fault. The reason we were there.

Yes, Orde thought back. It is my fault. I should have been there with you. I should have made sure we both got away.

He swore, after that day, he’d never run again. He’d be the last one to escape, no matter what, even if it meant he died. Or got captured by Dark Hunters, as the case may be. On that day, he’d made sure the Matoran all escaped, and he got himself captured. And he’d do it again. He’d never let someone else take the fall again.

Orde focused. He’d used his powers a lot since the time he’d tried to calm down the Zyglak. He knew what he was doing.

He grabbed onto the broken parts of Delara’s mind, trying to pull them together. Delara resisted, pouring images of his death, of the day Orde ran away, trying to distract him. But Orde focused. He’d failed Delara once.

He wouldn’t fail again.


Chapter 6

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ooh cool!

Are two Toa fusions even possible??

The existence of Prototype suggests that Two-Toa are possible, but it’s not something Kopaka knows the answer to.

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Ah, forgot about that.

And be rendered comatose. Not sure if they die.

I don’t know why it took me this long to notice, but I just realized that Delara’s name starts with his Elemental prefix, just like the Toa Mata. Was this intentional?

Also:

Since Takanuva is now a Toa Nuva, does that mean he has a Nuva Symbol? If so, where is it?

Yep. I like the idea that it’s just a thing that happens sometimes, like Lesovikk or Kopeke.

I’ll admit, that hadn’t occurred to me until you asked. It would’ve shown up wherever the Ta-Matoran are set up right now, since that’s who he would consider his people.

Since I got distracted by life stuff for like a week, I’m going to try and pick up the pace again, so here’s the next chapter.


Chapter 5

Chapter 6

For the first time in his life, Takanuva found himself overwhelmed.

While Orde worked his Psionics powers, trying to fix Delara, Chiara and Gelu had caught him up on their recent adventures. The shocks just kept coming:

One: the Red Star was meant to revive everyone who had died in the Matoran Universe and send them back. But if Delara was anything to go by, something had gone very wrong. Also, Lesovikk had died, and seemed to have been taken by the star.

Two: there was a Toa-killing being known as Marendar on the loose. Fortunately, the Great Being known as Fierah had an idea that might help stop it. Unfortunately, Fierah didn’t like to share much, including her plan, but it had something to do with the Star.

Three: there was another Great Being hidden in one of the Matoran Universe inhabitants, with a dark plan that rivalled Teridax’s ambitions. The only one who might know his identity was the leader of a city of Vorox who had it out for Toa and Glatorian.

“How do we know he’s not the Great Being?” Zaria pointed out. “It could be anyone.”

“Why don’t we just have Orde read his mind?” Chiara said. “You know, once he’s done with the Sound guy over there.”

“And what if this Great Being knows how to block Orde’s powers, like Fierah?” Zaria pointed out. “Or even give him false thoughts?”

“Orde can tell if he’s giving false thoughts, if he knows what to look for,” Fierah said. “And if he just shields his mind entirely, well, then we’ll know if Orde doesn’t get anything from Takua. If Takua is just who he says he is, he should have no reason to shield his mind.”

“I told you, it’s Takanuva now,” the Toa of Light said.

The Great Being stared at him. “Why did you change your name?” she asked, her voice suddenly angry.

Takanuva was taken aback by her tone. “Well, I was honoring the Toa Nuva,” he said. “I thought ‘Takua Nuva’ sounded a bit weird when I wasn’t actually a Toa Nuva, though I guess I am now, but–”

“Do you even know what ‘Takua’ means?” Fierah said. “No, of course not, you ignorant Sand Bat. You were the first of our wonders, the Matoran. Your name is an ancient word for ‘success’. And you ruined it, turned it into a meaningless string of sounds.”

Takanuva blinked. “Wait, back up a bit. Did you say I was the first Matoran?”

Fierah nodded. “I was there when you first opened your eyes, Takua. All of us were. Though I suppose you wouldn’t remember that. You weren’t supposed to be… aware.”

“I’ve also lost my memories a few times since then,” Takanuva replied. Okay, so that was the fourth stunning reveal of the past hour. What next, was his Kanohi not called the Avohkii?

There was a sudden gasp from Orde, and Takanuva and the rest looked to see that the Psionics Toa had opened his eyes. Delara had gone limp, no longer struggling against Zaria’s power. The Iron Toa relaxed his power, and Orde slowly lowered Delara to the ground.

“Is he…?” Chiara asked.

“I did as much as I could,” Orde said. “Any more, and I would’ve risked tearing his mind to pieces, beyond the point where it could be fixed. But as to whether it worked… we won’t know until he wakes up.”

“All right then,” Chiara said. “Well, I guess Strakk has another body to carry.”

“What?” Strakk said. “Why do I always have to carry all the bodies? Can’t Zaria do it?”

“I could,” Zaria said. “Of course, if I’m using my powers to carry him, I can’t use them to make you a fancy new shield. Shame, I was thinking on making a cool one that looked like a Skrall shield. Everyone would think you’d defeated a Skrall. But I guess if you want me to carry the body…”

Strakk swooped in, picking up the Sound Toa’s body. Gelu grinned at Zaria. “I see you’ve finally learned to speak Strakk’s language.”

“All right,” Fierah said. “Are we finally ready to head into the Star so we can get to work on a way to stop Marendar?”

Takanuva stepped forward toward the hallway into the Red Star. But before he could activate his powers, he noticed a light at the end of the tunnel. “Someone’s coming,” he said.

“Again?” Chiara said. “Someone else here to attack us? What next, a Turaga from Zaria’s past?”

Takanuva squinted. “Wait a second… is that Kopaka?”

Indeed, it was the Toa Nuva of Ice, along with another Toa he didn’t recognize, three Matoran, and what appeared to be Hydraxon, the latter looking a lot worse for wear than the last time Takanuva had seen him. “Kopaka!” he yelled, running toward his friend.

The Toa Nuva of Ice hesitated, before apparently recognizing the voice. “Takanuva?” he said. “You look different. Again.”

“You know me,” the Toa of Light said. “Always different. So, who are these guys?”

“Refugees from the Star,” Kopaka explained. “They were trapped here. I helped them escape. Pohatu was with us; he didn’t make it out. We have to find him, if he survived.”

Takanuva blinked, taking this in. He’d forgotten how quickly Kopaka could sum up a story. “So you were on the Star already?”

Kopaka nodded. “A teleporter took us there, while it was still in space. Then another took us off the Star, just before it crashed.”

“So I take it this is one of your allies?” Hydraxon said. “But he isn’t one of the Toa Mata.”

“Yes,” Kopaka said. “Takanuva, Toa of Light.”

Hydraxon’s eyebrows raised. “A Toa of Light?” he said. “Interesting. So the universe did have need for a Toa of Light after all.”

“Wait a second,” Takanuva said. “Hydraxon, do you not remember me? We spoke less than a week ago, back at the villages.”

“You must have me confused with someone else,” Hydraxon said. “I’ve been trapped on the Star for centuries.”

“No, no, that can’t be right,” Takanuva said. “There can’t be two Hydraxon’s. One must be a fake.”

Both Kopaka and Takanuva looked toward Hydraxon, who glared back at them. “What, you think I’m a fake?” he said. “I remember training you, Kopaka, back at Karda Nui. Also, Botar answered my call. Would he do that for a fake?”

“So, there’s likely a fake Hydraxon back at the villages?” Takanuva said. “Wonderful. Just what we need right now.”


Takanuva’s line about his mask being called something different is a reference to the fact that the Avohkii had a different name in some of the 03 promotional material.

Chapter 7

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ooh interesting. It raises the possibility (for the characters) that the replica Hydraxon is the Great Being in disguise.

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Huh.

I hadn’t noticed that until just now either.

Does this mean that Takanuva is going to start going by Takua again?

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Good stuff. Keep it up :slight_smile:

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Possibly. I haven’t figured out exactly how it’s going to go yet.

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Better Takua Nuva than Takanuva Nuva

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Chapter 6


Chapter 7

“So let me get this straight,” Kopaka said. “This Fierah person claims to be a Great Being. She says that she and her people made a living weapon to kill all the Toa, and it escaped. So she has a plan to stop it, but she won’t tell you what it is. Yet despite that, despite the fact that you have no idea what you’re doing, you’re just following Fierah.”

Orde nodded. “That about sums it up. She said something about tracking him using technology from the Star, but that’s about it.”

“Ah, Toa Kopaka, you are just as inquisitive and questioning as the day you were made,” Fierah said, staring intently at the Toa of Ice.

“Let me guess, you were there for that too,” Takanuva said.

“No, I was not,” Fierah said. “But I heard about your first day.”

“All right,” Kopaka said. “Well, we have a mission of our own: find and rescue Pohatu. Personally, I prefer not to follow a leader who refuses to share her plan, so if you wish to keep your secrets, then you can lead your team on your mission, and I shall lead my team on my mission.”

“The Star wasn’t just a way to bring people back to life,” Fierah explained. “It had another function. If something happened to Mata Nui, the Toa Mata would be summoned to save him. But if they failed, the Star was a backup plan. Six Matoran would be summoned to the surface and be zapped into special Toa, with the power needed to awaken the Great Spirit.”

“Toa Inika,” Kopaka realized. He’d always wondered why the Red Star had turned them into Toa. It seemed so random before.

“Yes,” Fierah said. “These Toa would have special masks so they could learn to use their powers quickly, and they would have lightning powers to use to give the Great Spirit a quick jolt. If they were needed, time was clearly running out.”

Kopaka’s mind flashed back to when he and the Nuva had attempted to awaken the Great Spirit. It was a painfully slow process, and Toa Ignika had had stepped in to speed things along. By that point, Mata Nui had already died, and Matoro had to revive him. Fierah was right – the Toa Mata/Toa Nuva had taken way too long to save the Great Spirit, mostly due to the interference of the Makuta.

Things hadn’t gone exactly as the Great Beings planned, though. The Inika hadn’t been the ones to awaken the Great Spirit, and they hadn’t been summoned – they had only gone to the surface by chance, in search of the Toa Nuva. Perhaps they had just gone at the right time, so there wasn’t a need to summon them?

“That device operates on a similar wavelength as Marendar’s Toa Power scanners,” Fierah said. “With it, we can find Marendar quickly, before he kills too many Toa – if we’re lucky, we might find him before he kills any Toa. That is the first part of the plan.”

“And the rest?” Orde said. He wasn’t sure why Kopaka’s presence made her decide to open up, but he was going to take full advantage of this opportunity. “Once we find Marendar, then what?”

“I shut him down,” Fierah said. “All I need to do is get close to him.” She turned back to Kopaka. “So there is our plan. Do you wish to aid us in saving all the Toa? Or do you wish to continue in saving only one, one who you might not even be able to save?”

Kopaka hesitated. Logic was telling him to aid Fierah; his heart was telling him to go find Pohatu. Which one was correct? Finding this Marendar sounded like it needed to be done as quickly as possible. On the other hand, Pohatu was a capable Toa Nuva. If he had survived, he could probably handle himself for a while.

Besides, Fierah seemed to know quite a bit about the Red Star. She would know how to get back to the Send-back room, where Pohatu had been last. In fact, if the Send-back room and the scanner Fierah spoke of were both part of the control center of the Star, there was a chance they were going to the same place.

“All right,” Kopaka relented. “We’ll follow you, for now.”


A few minutes earlier…

The Rock Agori known as Atakus stared up at the massive hunk of metal. He had expected the Star to be a massive pile of wreckage, but it had remained mostly intact during the crash. Unfortunately, that posed a problem: how was he going to get in?

As he was puzzling over that problem, he heard someone approaching. He quickly hid, watching the new arrival. He was a Toa, though not one Atakus recognized, clad in white and gold armor with highlights of bronze. Atakus followed him to see where he went.

The Toa soon met up with another group, one Atakus was all too familiar with. A group that last time he’d seen them, he’d left them trapped in an underground bunker. Yet clearly, they had escaped, and were about to enter the Red Star using an opening one of them had made.

The new arrival introduced himself as Takanuva, Toa of Light. Shortly afterward, the group was attacked by another Toa, though they managed to subdue him. Then, Takanuva began to talk to this group, and Atakus learned something very disturbing: they knew about his boss.

They didn’t know much, but they knew that he existed, and had a vague idea of his plans. This was terrible news, and Atakus was glad to have found out about it. He immediately relayed this information to his contact. Perhaps this would make up for his last failure.

Once the group finally quit chatting and entered the Star, Atakus trailed behind, unseen. The group quickly met up with another group, and launched into another conversation. Atakus didn’t stay to listen, slipping off through a side passage.

His mission was simple: he needed to find one of the Kestora, the little creatures who ran this place, and find out who had survived the crash. Once he had learned what he needed to know, kill the Kestora and leave before anyone knew he was here.

His glowing blades lighting the way, Atakus descended into the darkness of the Star.


Author’s notes: long has it bothered me exactly why the Red Star had a Failsafe that turned the Inika into Toa – and why it never affected the Mata Nui Matoran or the Voyatoran, only the Toa Inika. This is the explanation I’ve come up with.

Chapter 8

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Yes. Yes it did. I like this explanation.

Every single part of this makes a ton of sense, and I’m surprised I haven’t seen a similar theory before now.

The Toa Nuva would have been outside the universe at the time, so perhaps the Red Star couldn’t detect them and activated the Inika protocol? (Which is more or less what you said, with Jaller and his crew emerging right around the time the Toa Nuva went “missing”.)

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Ah very nice. I quite like your explanation for the Toa Inika.

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I just realized something upon rereading this:

These paragraphs seem to imply that Fierah already knew about the Toa Inika, but… would she? She’d obviously know about the system, and that it could be used to track Marendar, but how would she know that it was ever used? If anything, the fact that Kopaka is right there would suggest to her that the Toa Mata were completely fine, and that the system definitely wasn’t used.

Obviously this doesn’t really affect the plotline in any way, since she would still have her knowledge of the system, and that’s what’s important here, I just found her reply to seem a bit off.

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Right, I can see how that could be misread. You’re correct, Fierah doesn’t know that it was used. In fact, her next line is stated as a hypothetical – “these Toa would have special masks…” since she assumes it’s something that hasn’t happened.

However, Inika is the Matoran word for “energy of a Star” (from Power Play), so Fierah just thought Kopaka was saying “Toa with energy from a Star”. That’s what she was responding “Yes” to --“Yes, Toa with energy from a Star”.

(I’m going to edit Kopaka’s line to just “Toa Inika” to make that a bit clearer, thanks for pointing that out)

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I see, that makes sense.

This is so satisfying.

Also Fierah is betraying everyone, isn’t she

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