BC30: Falling Up (Cinder and Co.)-2

["Falling Up" by A Million in Vermillion]

The pirates were not found, but the kidnapped and bedraggled bunch were.

It didn't take too long to get them back to Argus.

Royal's plane would be dug out of the bay, hopefully still in good enough condition to salvage.

He took it better than you might think.

"I suppose it's not too late to change careers," he joked.

Oscar only laughed half-hardheartedly.

By some feat of misdirection by Raven and her anti-paparazzi squad of Argus workers, they were not swarmed by news reporters upon arrival. The base kept them out and even away from the front gate.

Just the team members were there, and Claw and Piper, who were worried about Royal.

Which was quite touching.

Cinder thought the reaction to her being there would be mixed at best, and she wasn't entirely wrong. Not all of the team was enthused about her presence Argus, but no one said anything mean to her.

In all this time most of them had at least learned to curb their sharp comments when someone had been through something difficult.

[Which is more than I could say for their maturity in Volumes 6-8, so that is progress.]

"I knew she'd survive," Mercury said, from behind the guys.

"Oscar!" Yang and Blake pounced on him.

Ruby, who by now had gotten Raven to use Tai to bring her there the fast way (she never had bonded with Raven herself, for some reason she didn't really know, other than Raven hardly ever spoke to her), raced to join them.

Cinder didn't like that Ruby was there and backed up.

"Mr. Zapato." Claw walked up, not noticing Cinder at first. "Good to see you are all right. Those dastardly pirates dared to steal one of our ships? They will pay for it, I promise you."

"I'm sure they will and have already, Babs," Royal nodded. "You missed all the fun, Pedro."

"It's fun I could afford to miss," Pedro said. "But I could have stopped them, easy--if Commander Raven hadn't forbidden me to use my Semblance on humans."

Raven had decided this was too much a violation of free will, and, after seeing what happened to Salem and the Grimm lands, she had no stomach to allow it.

And unsurprisingly, this had been supported by other people on base who didn't like the idea of it either.

"We all have our restraints," Royal noted.

"But what other innocent person did they nab?" Claw turned to examine Cinder now. "I'm sure it must have been quite traum--" She broke off.

Cinder wished she could sink through the floor.

She stared back stoically, however. She would never have acted afraid of Claw.

"You!" Claw explained. "Well, so much makes sense now--" She started to step forward.

Royal put a hand out and stopped her.

"Now, Barbara," he said, a bit tightly, "I get that you're surprised, and you have a reason to be, but you can take my and Pine's word for it that Miss Scarlet is the victim in all this just as much as we were, and I saw it for myself. I think the lady has been through enough without you throwing around accusations. Leave her for the Commander to deal with, all right?"

Royal, famously being the most easygoing person in the world, according to most of the people on base that Emerald had heard, could be kind of scary when he spoke like that.

And since he was much taller than Claw, she couldn't very well push past him.

She backed off a little. "I suppose the Commander will handle it."

"Bat-eared freak," Cinder didn't help herself by saying. "As if I'd want to jack one of your stupid ships anyway. You'd like that, wouldn't you?"

"How dare you speak to me that way!" Claw said. "Why, you bigoted--"

"Claw," Piper said, putting a hand on her arm. "Let it go. Didn't we cause enough trouble by this before?"

"But she--" Claw began.

"She's a b---h, but she seems to be honest about not wanting the goods," Piper said, very begrudgingly. "The rest of this will have to be settled by the higher ups. We can't do anything anyway. The last time we tried, you remembered the warning we got."

Their attempt to rat Cinder out before had gone poorly, as predicted.

Claw frowned. "Well, keep her away from me." She walked away.

Piper cast Royal a look. "I suppose you have to defend people in line of duty, but if I were you, Zapato, I would consider not keeping poor company more than absolutely necessary."

"Oh, I don't know, you should see her fly a plane." Royal didn't like people talking like that in front of him.

Piper assumed that was a joke and rolled his eyes, walking away.

"Don't do that." Cinder was salty.

"Do what? Joke?" Royal said.

"No, that. It only makes them worse, and I don't need any help," Cinder insisted.

"Excuse you? I don't like people telling me what I can and can't do," Royal said. "Especially after a harrowing experience like this. But it's no good making a fight out of it. I played it off so they'd drop it."

"You're in the army and you don't like being told what to do. What a sad existence," Cinder mocked.

"Spoken by the woman who worked for a fake goddess who wanted to run the world," Royal said with ease.

Cinder almost choked on anger that she couldn't argue that.

"Cinder," Mercury arrested her attention. "What a nice surprise." Sarcastically.

"I don't want to talk to you." Cinder truly had no energy to fight with Mercury--which was odd since she'd just been arguing with Royal with no issue, but Mercury exhausted her.

"Good," Mercury said. "I don't want to talk to you either. I just want to know why you were here."

"Didn't Emerald tell you already?" Royal cut in. "I'm sure you've got the 4-1-1. By the way, did Ren and Sun ever realize they ditched us? If I wasn't such a reasonable man, I might be tempted to blame part of it on them."

Sun winced. "I'm sorry, man. I know I messed up."

"I was distracted with other matters." Ren did not exactly apologize.

"Maybe I shouldn't have called..." Nora said. "It could have waited till later."

"No, it's fine. It was just a big mess," Ren said.

"I see you've finally arrived." Winter came walking in from the outside, where she must have returned from her home off base.

Qrow, Shine, and Wally were all with her.

Cinder froze again.

"Oh, don't look at us like that." Raven materialized from around a corner. Somehow, even though she could no longer fly, she still managed to sneak up on people. "We're not going to arrest you, I don't think."

"I would like to know why we weren't alerted right off," Winter said. "But it's been a very, very long day. We can save the work for tomorrow."

"I was supposed to be home by now," Cinder ventured to speak finally.

"Well, you're down one plane, and the other has been grounded for various reasons," Raven said. "So until we make other arrangements, you're stuck here. Might as well make the best of it."

"We could keep you here, but I'm not sure it's the wisest location," Winter said. "I suppose there is my house."

"There is?" Qrow said.

"There's not a lot of choices," Winter said.

"I still can't believe you just showed up here without any warning," Yang commented.

"Well, that was more on me," Emerald said.

"Maybe I should just flash a neon sign next time." Cinder was cuttingly sarcastic. "Something like 'come get me!'"

"Well, I think going after smugglers without a license was a close second to that," Neptune said.

The other guys snickered.

Cinder hated being laughed at, and you could almost see smoke coming out of her ears.

"Ahem," Shine said loudly.

Neptune glanced at her and then sobered up.

"Of course, on the other hand, we should have caught this much sooner," he said weakly.

"I mean, yeah. How did we miss it?" Blake was perturbed. "I know we don't live here, but...like someone in the capital has to have been in on this, right?"

"We should so look into that when we go back," Sun said. "Your dad would be into it. He likes me more when we have a mystery to solve. You ever notice that?"

"Sun, who are you really trying to court the favor of, her or her dad?" Yang said.

"Hey, when you're with someone, you're a part of their family, right?" Sun said. "And I don't have any family, so it's my only shot at fitting in."

"My dad likes you fine now," Blake said. "Just the other week, I heard him tell Mom that he suspected you'll be coming around for the rest of his life and he might as well get used to it."

"Wow, that's real progress," Sun said with a straight face.

"She's dropped so many hints," Shine muttered to Wally and Raven significantly, "that I wonder Sun has not smothered from them going over his head."

"Kid is almost as dense as Hazel," Raven agreed.

"No, guys just do that because we're too nervous to acknowledge it," Wally said. "I'm sure he's not totally oblivious. He's just going to wait for the right moment."

"In this decade?" Raven asked.

* * *

After a long, restless night, the collective group had to face the consequences of what happened.

The press was all over it, but they found out very little from anyone who really knew what happened.

Roman, upon Raven's insistence, did attempt to check on Edwin Teach's history with the shipping industry.

Not very surprisingly, he soon discovered he'd been part of the same black market Roman had smuggled and sold supplies to from Vale--in fact, part of the reason they'd gotten those Atlas mechs to being with.

Neo claimed she didn't remember him or Calico at all among those workers, and she never forgot a face.

But that didn't mean anything. They could have just operated from a different area.

Roman's underworld connections informed him that they'd been doing this for years, but had not been stealing directly from the base until the last 6 months. Perhaps they'd thought they'd get caught, but for some reason they'd gotten cocky.

"Those Grimm are the reason." Cinder was sure when she heard all this from Winter. "I don't know how they got them."

"Yes..." Winter was tapping the desk. "About that. I suppose you'll find this an impertinent question--" Coolly. "--but you of all people would be likely to know how in the world they captured Grimm like that. Surely you must have run into people like that before."

Cinder resented the question, but only because she knew it was merited.

"When I was...using Salem's 'borrowed' magic," she said, "before I had the Maiden powers, the Grimm didn't bother me. They hardly ever did with any of us. I always thought that was Salem's special ability. On the other hand, they didn't bother the rest of you Maidens as much while you had magic. Likstar explained it as magic and Grimm being from the same source. I don't know how it works, but the only explanation I can think of is, however they got them, they're using the same source."

"The god of darkness is gone," Winter said.

"I'm not the one to ask about gods," Cinder pointed out.

True.

Not too long later, Winter had Shine and Wally join them along with Oscar, Raven, Qrow, Emerald, Mercury, and Ruby.

"You all saw these new Grimm." Winter nodded at those two and Cinder and Oscar. "Perhaps we can sort this out together. Shine, about the gods--there's no way people could still use their magic powers now to control Grimm, is there?"

Shine did not deny it right off--and that was not a good sign.

"No, they're gone." Qrow became upset at once. He leaned forward. "We fought them. We went through hell to get rid of them for good. You told us they'd never return."

"I told you that you would have to watch carefully that no one ever tries to call them back," Shine corrected. "As for them returning, we ordered them not to. It may be, that that cannot be undone. We fought too hard for it to be easy for them."

"That doesn't make it impossible," Qrow said.

"Qrow, you may not like this, but in spiritual terms, everything works by invitation and surrender and grace," Shine said. "Is it possible? I can't tell you for sure. Only God has command over all other spirits. We can drive them away, but we can't kill them. And you took the world back from them, but could some other fools give it back? One day, it will be beyond human choice to do that, but for now, it's the age of man, is it not? The same in our worlds. But besides that, you seem to forget that the brothers are not the only other spirits out there. There are more than you can count. Any one of them could lend power to some crazy fool who asked for it, and the Grimm will respond to it. They are spirits also. We learned that."

"I know you said other gods," Raven said. "But they could take over."

"No, it's unlikely they'd ever take over so completely again," Shine said, "to the point where they could rule the whole world and bind people forever in life and death. I think you've destroyed that chance for them. But the Grimm are not all about that, are they? They're about temptation. They want to silence you. In fact, I think if you'll try to look carefully at the past, you'll see they only ever were about that. Their animal form distracted you from seeing that they simply cause more and more sin, and they feed off it. People hurt each other because of Grimm. They use them as an excuse to be selfish. The thing you saw on Teach, it's not new. They're only new to you because the gods bound them in physical forms. That made them more obvious, but it always kept you from realizing that the root of Grimm is evil itself. How self-aware are most of the people here?"

"We hardly had time to entertain speculation when the Grimm were at our throats," Winter said.

"That's literally her point," Wally said. "They kept you from seeing where this stuff really comes from."

"But then you've just made it worse," Mercury said. "We stopped the gods, we broke those stupid curses, all so that Grimm would get worse? What kind of answer is that? You said they'd be weaker if we stopped the magic."

"In a way they are weaker physically," Shine said. "From all you tell me, they are only materializing a part of the time. Most of what they did was inward."

"That's not better," Emerald said.

"Over time, they will likely stop being material at all," Shine said. "And they will stop being visible to anyone who doesn't have special perception. But that won't just be you--other people have that gift too. Some just do. And if some of those people are less than scrupulous individuals, they will try to use the Grimm. People have always tried to master the darkness, which is folly; it always takes it out of them in the end. Salem was only unusual here because no one else could do it that you knew of. I never thought it was likely that she really was the only one. It's something I have to deal with all the time. And I have friends who have it far worse than you do on the magic front. I'm sorry if I'm not sympathetic, but you've had it much simpler before now."

"Our lives were in danger," Ruby said.

"And if that was all that was in danger, you had it simpler," Shine said. "Our minds, our hearts, our souls, all of that is in peril all the time. Our lives are already a lower risk. Oh, I'm not saying it's a nice development that this has happened. Or that lives are not important. But the constant theme is that it's as if the rest of it never occurred to any of you before now. Perhaps this is a wake-up call this world needs."

"That seems a bit calloused, Shine," Raven said. "The atrocities that would follow the use of the Grimm, if it spreads--there could be wars. There could be massacres."

Wally almost laughed.

"What?" Qrow said.

"Oh...it's just...that's not a yearly occurrence for you?" Wally said.

They stared at him.

"I did used to think you were sheltered," Shine said. "I thought: How could a world with such open darkness be sheltered? And maybe you weren't in that way, but somehow you're...almost naive."

"Naive?" Winter said.

"Wars...genocides." Shine shook her head. "Plagues...slavery. Gang violence. Child slavery. To you, they are small problems, limited to one or two locations. They aren't in every area of your world practically. Not to say that doesn't matter, but still, gangs, GMOS, chemical warfare, droughts, diseases, things that your Aura practically seems to prevent from happening to you as much, but happens to us by the thousands every day. Injuries, deformities, scandals, scams--why, you could get phone calls or emails by a half dozen of these in one day. And that's something we laugh off at home. You would not believe what's on our TV, internet, in our schools..."

She trailed off. "Well, it's best not to put burdens on you that you don't need to have. But suffice it to say, one book would not be enough to hold them all. I'm sure there's plenty going on here you don't tell us about, but even you don't seem as aware of it as you should be. Cinder's entire story was news to many of you."

Cinder raised an eyebrow.

"As was what Bandits do," Shine shrugged. "Frankly, the Grimm are just showing you what was already there. If your world was not so messed up, they wouldn't be here. Evil cannot live while there is no fuel. A curse without a cause does not alight. Do you really want to point the finger at us for destroying the thing that was simply holding it into one form?"

"Our world has a lot of what you mentioned," Oscar said. "And some I have no idea what you're talking about."

"There's almost too few of you," Wally said. "I mean, it's weird, but you have been in such high gear all the time, you almost can't be as petty--you have to work together. Maybe that was better in one way. What if the Grimm become harder to find? People like Teach don't even realize they have problems. But they always did. I guess when people are free, they're free to do the wrong thing."

"And always have been," Shine said. "And when they call down judgment on themselves for it, those of us who stick to this path will be left to pick up the pieces. If you haven't learned this as much, it's only because you had no time to notice. But I'm sure Ozpin noticed the patterns of man, even on the small scale the Grimm and Salem kept it on. We didn't spend all that time teaching you how to fight Grimm, and how to resist temptation, just for kicks. You will need all that, and more, going forward."

"This is not the encouragement I was hoping for," Winter said.

"Winter, life is not easy," Shine said more gently. "But would you really go back to 3 years ago?"

Pause.

"No, I wouldn't," Winter said. "Somehow, you can't really un-know things and wish to be blind and in the dark again."

"Unless you're in that one Matrix movie..." Wally reflected.

"In the end, I believe this will all be for the best," Shine said. "And despite my warnings, this is not saying your world is not getting better. But what you must learn is that evil and good are always going to be in a battle until one wins. What we did was not the final battle, and we told you it wasn't. It was the end of an era. The new era has its own trouble. But it has its own joys also. You will see good and bad grow up together like wheat and tares, as Jesus compared it to. One day they will be harvested and sorted, but for now they exist in the same space, and humans have to choose what they want. If you want the good to outweigh the bad, only you can make that happen. And teach others to do the same. I find that it's what you focus on that you see. If you try to make the world better, you're likely to see the good happening. If you're a cynic, you're likely to see evil. We see ourselves in the world."

"That would make it hard to judge the real improvement," Raven said.

"Not really, Raven. If what you see is the good in the world growing because you are growing in goodness yourself, you see the truth," Shine said. "Because you are making it better, you'll see the fruit of your labor and of people who you will be working with. Same with evil. You will see what you choose to see. That's why we're told to fixate on what is good, noble, pure, praiseworthy, and of good report. And a famous philosopher of my world said, 'Be the change you want to see in the world.'"

"That's Ghandi, right?" Wally said.

"Yes," Shine said.

"Cute." Cinder didn't sound sincere. "But it doesn't fix our problem. Those Grimm are dangerous."

"They sounded like a small enough matter if you'd know how to stop them," Shine said airily. "Why didn't you bind them?"

"Is that what I had to do?" Oscar asked. "Crap...I just thought to kill them."

"You're going to have to stop thinking in terms of killing them," Shine said. "A higher power than you would have to do that. Get rid of them. But realize that other people can give them a place to live. Teach makes his own choices. You might not have been able to stop him. But you can stop others. Some of them may want your help. As you'll recall, we did not have complete success here either."

She meant Ironwood.

"But that is just the precise thing we don't want to happen again," Winter said.

"It will happen again, Winter," Shine said, point blank. "Give up now on thinking you will save everyone. Someone will not be saved because they don't want to be saved. Did Tyrian want it? We proved that even someone like Salem can be, but she didn't like being the way she was, despite all her attempts to convince herself she did. Some people can be made to see that. Some can't. Do not kill yourself trying to change their minds. If they will not be swayed, let them go."

"But you didn't give up on--" Ruby glanced at Cinder and then said, "--on really challenging people you knew."

Cinder frowned at the table.

"First, stop saying that in front of her," Shine said. "And second, I count you as one of the people. It was hard at times to not give up on Ruby."

"What?" Ruby's jaw dropped.

"I wouldn't normally tell you this, but it looks as though I need to be clear about it," Shine said. "Many times I did wonder if you'd ever get over your critical need to save everyone and block out anyone else's input. Your pride wasn't always like that, but it was getting to be like that when we arrived. I think deep down you knew better, and you did come around, but it took the fall of Atlas, and you might say that it took the same effort for other people."

Not looking at Cinder carefully.

"So, in that way, I didn't see many of you as that different," Shine said.

"To be honest, I wanted to punch some of you good guys way more often than the bad guys," Wally admitted. "Even though I love ya."

"Yeah, the feeling was mutual at times," Qrow said dryly.

"I'm sure it was," Shine said. "And some people just don't hit it off immediately. Or ever. Wisdom is learning to see the difference between someone you don't like and someone who will never listen to you. It takes a while."

This puzzled them.

"I don't know if Teach is going to want help, if he's even alive now," Oscar spoke up. "Something about him didn't strike me that way. Maybe that's just me--"

"No, Oscar, you've always been able to spot that in people," Shine said. "I would trust your instincts here."

"I guess the only thing to do, then, is for you to tell us more about how to fight this," Emerald very pragmatically pointed out.

That took up the rest of the meeting.

* * *

Afterward, Cinder walked up to Shine while she was getting more coffee.

"How did you test me?" she asked.

Shine didn't even act surprised by that random question.

"Do you remember when you told me about your past?" she asked.

"I remember not listening to you," Cinder said.

"Yes, but I began to press you with questions about it. I listened to how you answered very closely," Shine said. "There was a trace of uncertainty in it. I knew you were not totally narcissistic. Though you tried to be. I came to see why Watts got to you. It seemed to me that for all this woman was trying to be so sure of herself, she had never gotten away from that gnawing fear that she wasn't good enough and never would be."

Cinder blinked at her.

"That's what you got out of my insistence that I was fine with destroying you all?"

"Cinder, some people protest too much," Shine said. "9 times out of 10, people like you do not change--they love sin too much to let it go, even if in more lucid moments they know it's wrong. Your one saving grace is that you do not like to be controlled to the point where suspecting that that evil itself was controlling you was what got you to give it up. No shame in that--it's just how we should feel about it. But what you do with this gift of yours is up to you. You can spend the rest of your life either apologizing or refusing to apologize for what you did in the past." She gave her a meaningful look. "Or you can keep learning humility."

"Sure, learn to be a doormat," Cinder said.

"You think I'm a doormat?" Shine asked.

"No, do you think you're humble?" Cinder asked.

"What a question," Shine laughed. "I'm not always humble. Far too often I'm still proud. But I'm more humble than I used to be, and here's how I know it: I could not have laughed at you saying that when I was younger. A wise person in my world said, 'Pride is not the opposite of shame, but its source.' [Uncle Iroh] Your shame is because of your pride. You still think you must prove yourself to be something, either worse or better than other people. But you're neither. You are exceptional in ways that you have not even begun to understand, and you're common in ways that you think you are exceptional. Nothing is special about evil or anger, Cinder. Everyone has those. They're easy. I used to laugh at you for not realizing that. But I think now you've lacked the opportunity to do so. Don't waste what opportunity you have now."

Cinder frowned at her, but less annoyed now. "What did you learn about the pilot?"

"Not much," Shine said. "But he's not a threat. I'm sure you knew that already by now."

"I suppose." Cinder was begrudging about it. "It looked that way."

"Only to you."

"But he's still a very strange person," Cinder insisted. "He makes no sense."

"He'd not be the first. I rather liked him," Shine said. "He seems very eager to learn. You ought to have answered more of his questions. That's your job now--we just told you that back there."

She had dwelt on this a lot in the meeting.

"Me? Do that? Please. I'm no one to teach anyone anything," Cinder said. "And I hate it."

"Oh, you always did like to sound smarter than other people. You're clearly not as bad at it as you think," Shine said.

"Hey!"

"We don't choose our gifts, you know. If you're a teacher, you'll teach by accident as much as you will on purpose. I can't help it, and you can't either. Mr. Zapato seems to have taken an interest in your case, and I can understand why."

"Because of his past?" Cinder asked.

Shine gave her a blank look. "Huh?"

"Oh..." Cinder had thought he'd have explained that to Shine, easy. She got it out of everyone.

"Well, you know something I don't," Shine surmised. "I suppose you had plenty of time to talk after the plane went down. Oscar said he was out cold and you were talking when he woke up."

That little snitch!

"It was just to kill time," Cinder said.

"I'm sure," Shine shrugged. "So did you plot to kill him?"

"I'm not planning to kill him, and if you think he's harmless, I have no reason to  pay him any further attention," Cinder said.

"Not sure you get a choice about that. He seems quite determined to follow all of you around till he gets what he wants," Shine said.

"So he's a d--- stalker, but I can handle that," Cinder said airily. "As long as it's just morbid curiosity."

"Yes...because you're so good at that," Shine smirked. "You know, if I didn't know better, I'd say you kind of like this guy."

"What?" Cinder turned red without knowing it. "I can't stand him! He's infuriating. And has worse jokes than that stupid Yang."

"That's hard to imagine," Shine said. "Somehow, I don't quite believe you. He's a very amiable person."

"It's probably an act."

"Not one to judge, are you? You know, we don't get so many chances for new friends at our age that you should just snub them."

"I'm not interested in making new friends, especially not with arrogant pilots."

"Wow, spoken so highly for a woman who was once an arrogant pilot herself," Shine said. "I'm sure you like him, deep down."

"These jabs of yours are not charming, nor are they clever." Cinder glared at her.

"And you're not intimidating," Shine said. "So stop trying to be."

"Why, you--" Cinder stopped.

"Well, you never did like nice," Shine mused, as if she hadn't spoken. "He's not that nice though. Just decent. I think he'd be a good pupil. A pity I can't take him on myself, but I can't hang around long enough for it to be worth it. Wouldn't let him slip away though--you all need more support. And he's begging you to let him be part of the group."

"Don't you find that weird?" Cinder said. "I mean, even if there's a story behind the reason for it, who's that honest about it?"

"Cinder, not everyone has a deep, dark secret to hide," Shine said. "And not everyone is ashamed of their past enough to cover it up. In fact most people share far more of it than you'd expect if you just listen, very carefully. We all want to be understood. I'd venture to say that if you had learned something, it is because it seemed you would understand it. And that, my friend, is perhaps the biggest clue you need as to what's drawing you towards this person."

"Drawing? Me? Nothing is," Cinder insisted. "If anything it's the opposite."

"Oh, no, I'm pretty sure he likes you," Shine made her more annoyed by saying. "I could tell."

"What? That's stupid."

"I didn't say in what way, but, I mean, you can be intriguing when you're not screaming at people." Shine was just teasing her now. "Why not? You used to try to make people interested in you."

"I don't need anyone to be interested in me now; I'm trying to be invisible."

"Well, you're not good at it. Maybe you should just accept that. You're hard to shake."

"You know, I'm never going to understand how I didn't kill you when you had your guard down and I still hated your guts," Cinder said.

"You knew deep down it wouldn't have done any good," Shine said. "I told you it wouldn't. I warned you you could cut me into pieces and I would be the same. And you knew I meant it. And if you find that resolve yourself, I think you won't need to worry about people like Teach anymore. Love is a powerful thing. We may hurt when we feel it, but we don't mind the hurting so much anymore. For love, people will do anything. For hate? For greed? I don't think so. Love is power."

https://youtu.be/IDWhCaDgd3Y

 ["Hard Love"--NEEDTOBREATHE]

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