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She had laughed. I will wipe them out.

As Jade walked across the plains, her brothers and sisters saw her. Thousands of scorpions bowed before her, hissing in reverence, stingers rising in respect.

"Mistress!" they hissed.

"Great huntress!"

"Predator queen!"

"Bane of humans!"

She nodded at them, smiling thinly, accepting the titles. None in the empire had slain more humans. Her wrath was legendary.

Yet one scorpion scuttled toward her, hissing in scorn. He was a massive beast, his shell as dark as the void between galaxies. He huffed and kicked sand at her.

"Look at her!" the scorpion said. "She's not one of us. She's one of the humans."

Around him, other scorpions squealed in dismay.

"The emperor himself gave her this form!"

"She is Skra-Shen, a holy arachnid!"

"She is the Great Deceiver!"

But the burly scorpion spat. "Lies. I know what I see. I see a weak, frail human. Vermin! She is vermin among us."

Jade doffed her cloak and approached the scorpion. He was several times her size, his teeth the length of her forearms. He snarled and thrust his stinger toward her.

Jade leaped aside, and his stinger drove into the ground. She lashed her claws, slicing his stinger right off his tail.

Yellow blood spurted.

The scorpion screamed and reared, pincers raised.

She lifted the severed stinger, spun like discus thrower, and hurled it. It impaled the scorpion's chest.

The beast fell, dead before he hit the ground.

Jade spat on the corpse, then lifted her skin cloak, dusted it off, and placed it across her shoulders. As she kept walking, she heard the other scorpions leap onto their dead brother and feast.

She walked across barren hills, and she beheld the imperial palace ahead.

The palace had two towers, representing the two claws in a scorpion's pincer. The towers grew from a shared base, soaring so tall they scraped the edge of space. Here was the heart of the Skra-Shen civilization. Here was the heart of the entire Hierarchy, this axis of scorpions and thousands of other species who served them. And here lived her father, Lord Emperor of the Hierarchy.

"The palace of Baal Skran," she whispered in awe, gazing upon the building. "Hall of Masters."

Jade began moving faster, bounding across the jagged plains, leaping over canyons, until she reached the palace. The main gate rose before her. The archway was carved from sandstone, shaped like two scorpion stingers meeting at the keystone.

Jade stepped through the archway, entering a hall of scorpions.

Large scorpions with black shells, the male warriors, stood guard by doorways that led deeper into the palace. Golden females, the emperor's harem, sprawled everywhere, some carrying their translucent young on their backs. The floor was a mosaic formed of human bones, the skulls screaming in silent agony. Human skins hung on the walls, stitched together, forming tapestries the size of starship hulls. Murals had been tattooed into the skins, depicting ancient battles, the scorpions smiting their enemies.

Jade walked across the hall, her heavy boots crunching bones. In the center of the room rose a hill of human bones, and she climbed a staircase paved with femurs. At the hilltop, she found a depression like a volcano's vent. Teeth filled the pit. Human teeth. Millions of them, filling the hollow mound.

Upon this clinking lair of teeth he stood. Sin Kra. Emperor of the Skra-Shen.

Jade stood before him. "Hello, Father."

Sin Kra was twice the size of the largest scorpion in his army. Rather than black or gold like common scorpions, his exoskeleton was a rare crimson color. The color of human blood. He was the most ancient among them, centuries old, wisest and mightiest of the hunters. He was a predator among predators. The top of the food chain. The tip of the Hierarchy. Ten thousand worlds bowed before him, for he was the destroyer of worlds.

And I'm his daughter, Jade thought. And one day this palace, this planet, this galaxy will be mine.

"They are so fragile . . ." Sin Kra hissed. "So weak . . . Yet they scream so beautifully."

He was pinning down a human, Jade saw. A young man, stripped naked. The pest was lying on the pile of teeth, trussed up, trembling.

"Please," the man whispered, looking at Jade. "Help me. Please."

A scorpion's front limbs ended with massive pincers, each large enough to slice through a man whole. Tucked in beneath them, rarely noticeable, were smaller arms tipped with articulated digits. The scorpions used these "hands" to manipulate tools, build starships, and sometimes—like today—torture their victims with beautiful delicacy.

Pinning the human down with his legs, Sin Kra reached into the prisoner's mouth, grabbed a tooth, and yanked it out.

The man screamed.

Sin Kra tossed the tooth onto the pile. It clinked.

"You shouldn't play with your food," Jade said.

The emperor laughed, a sound like cracking ribs. "Torture is not a game, my beloved Jade. It is an art."

He pulled out another tooth, a molar this time. The man howled. Another tooth clinked onto the pile.

"Tooth by tooth," Sin Kra said, "and I raise this mountain. World by world, and I build an empire."

"I can't hear you over all the screaming," Jade said. The man was weeping, begging, crying out in agony.

Sin Kra grunted. He clacked his claws, and several servants scuttled forth, small arachnids with furry black bodies. They wrapped the man in webs.

"Keep him fresh," Sin Kra said. "I want him still screaming when I pluck out the rest of his teeth."

The spiders nodded, bowed, and carried the prisoner away.

"Father," Jade said, "the humans attacked us. Again. They stole several hundred prisoners. They destroyed several of our strikers. It was the Heirs of Earth again. The rebels." She clenched her fists and bared her teeth. "But I killed many of them. I destroyed two of their starships. If you will allow me to chase them into the Concord, I—"

"No," said Sin Kra. "Not yet."

Jade stepped closer. "But the humans muster for war! They build warships, they mock us, they—"

"They will all die, daughter. Fear not." He lifted a human bone from a pile, cracked it open, and sucked the marrow. "First we will slay all humans in Hierarchy space. And soon, very soon now, the Concord will be ours as well, and the skins of their humans will hang in our halls!"

Jade raised her chin. "I can't wait for that day. I yearn for it! A galaxy free of humans, and myself returned to my true form, a scorpion proud and strong."

Sin Kra nodded. He stroked her cheek, his claw scraping across her alabaster skin. "Yes, child. Once the humans are all gone, you will become a scorpion again, and you will rule at my side."

Jade shivered with delight, but then she grimaced, sudden shame flooding her.

"Father, I had the dream again last night." She closed her eyes. "Like so many times before. I was a child. A human child. My hair was golden, not blue, and I wielded a crystal sword. I lived in a glowing cave among other humans. I had a human mother. A human father. Foul vermin! I lived among them like a rat." Tears burned her eyes. "You came to me in my dream. You saved me from them. But I still remember their song. A song of Earth . . ." She opened her eyes and looked at him. "I've never known fear in battle, but that dream terrifies me."

Sin Kra grabbed her in his claws. He pulled her close. His jaws loomed before her, lined with teeth, and his golden eyes blazed like cauldrons of molten metal.

"The humans infected you with a false memory," he hissed. "They have dark powers. They always seek to deceive. They've deceived the galaxy itself, claiming that they have a homeland named Earth. And they've deceived you, making you remember what never happened, making you doubt your true heritage. You hatched here in this chamber, Jade. You were a beautiful Skra-Shen, translucent and shimmering, even as a hatchling. I broke you myself. I molded your exoskeleton into a human shape, so that you may walk among the humans, earn their trust, and lead them to slaughter. Do not let them deceive the deceiver!"