|  | 
                    
                  Chapter Three: The
                   Unpromised Land 
                    
                 The
                  mare was milk white, with a violet mane that swirled over her head 
                 and neck. Her name was Teacup, though it had not always been that, 
                 and she was learning how to feed the chickens. 
                 "You 
                 should give'm a little corn now an' then, an' it don't hurt none to 
                 toss 'em the odd vegetable or two. They prefer bugs, o'course, but 
                 they likes their feed, and they need a treat now an' then. Every 
                 once'n a while we give'm yogurt. That's our secret here at Provender 
                 Farm. 'Bout once a week, roughly." Mister Provender was talking 
                 slowly, more slowly than usual, because Teacup still had trouble with 
                 words sometimes. "Ya got all that?" 
                 Teacup 
                 thought hard about how to answer and composed an answer in Equestrian 
                 as best as she could. "Give chickens corn. Sometimes. 
                 Vegetables. Sometimes. Milk-jelly week once."  
                 Mister 
                 Provender frowned at the mare, briefly. "Not 'milk-jelly, 
                 yogurt. YO-GURT. This stuff." The aged stallion gestured to a 
                 bowl sitting on the hay, all but empty of a creamy, white substance. 
                 He pronounced the Equestrian word for the foodstuff once more, 
                 carefully, so that Teacup might learn it. 
                 The white 
                 newfoal mare mouthed the strange, unearthly Equestrian syllables that 
                 she had just heard. Mister Provender snorted and nodded.  
                 Teacup 
                 felt frustrated, she never imagined learning a new language would 
                 take so long. Of course, she had never imagined ever having to learn 
                 a new language. She dipped her head low and sniffed at the bowl. Oh! 
                 She knew what that was. It had been available in sealed containers 
                 from the food dispenser, back when she had lived in Wilmington. She 
                 mentally mapped the Equestrian word for yogurt to Eastern Zone 
                 English.  
                 Teacup had 
                 learned many things over the past six months. She had finally 
                 understood that she had somehow been named after tableware, but felt 
                 no inclination to correct the situation. 'Teacup' sounded fairly 
                 Equestrian to her, as names went in this strange new land. Missus 
                 Provender was named 'Sunflower', and Mister Provender was named 
                 'Durum', which Teacup vaguely remembered was a type of wheat or some 
                 other grain. Equestrians seemed to often be named after things or 
                 motions or even foods. They didn't take names quite the same way that 
                 humans had. 
                 So, 
                 considering that she was now an Equestrian herself, and would be for 
                 life, Tikvah Feinstein had come to the conclusion that being named 
                 after the Equestrian word for a container to drink tea from was fine 
                 with her. It sounded pretty to her new ears, and it seemed, for some 
                 reason, to make Missus Provender smile. Tikvah Feinstein was gone, 
                 and now she must learn to be a white mare named 'Teacup'. 
                 This 
                 strange situation did not exactly bother Teacup. In the six months 
                 she had been in this new land, in her new body, it had seemed not 
                 unlike heaven to her. Everyone -everypony, she corrected herself- had 
                 been friendly to her, she always had good things to eat, she never 
                 felt afraid, and above all, everything was so incredibly bright and clean. 
                 Gone were 
                 the filthy, garbage-piled streets of the megacity of Wilmington. 
                 Water was clear, and tasted fresh and pure. The air never burned, 
                 green living things grew everywhere, and the only smoke came from the 
                 stove in Missus Provender's kitchen, or in the fireplace in the 
                 farmhouse, during the three months of winter. 
                 Teacup 
                 wanted to learn how to help out on the farm. The farm itself was an 
                 exotic, magical place to her. She had never imagined ever being 
                 allowed to set foot on one. On earth, all farms had been seized by 
                 the corporate government, and were shoot-to-kill security zones. It 
                 was illegal to try to grow your own food, even on rooftops. She 
                 doubted that would have worked in any case, what with the ash-fall 
                 covering everything. There was no ash-fall here, no smog, no clouds 
                 of nanodust. 
                 She felt 
                 gratitude towards the Provenders. She desperately wanted to please 
                 them, for she had come to understand that they had chosen, somehow, 
                 to have her there. She felt as if she had been rescued from a nightmare. 
                 Only by 
                 comparison could she fully appreciate how much she had hated her 
                 life, before. It was terribly strange to live inside such a different 
                 skin, and it had taken her some time to come to terms with the fact 
                 of it, the reality of no longer being human. But, if that was the 
                 price of living in a world filled with life and color and smiles, of 
                 chickens instead of organ thieves, well, maybe being human wasn't 
                 such an important thing. 
                 Still, 
                 adjusting had been difficult, particularly so, for her. When Tikvah 
                 had been rushed to the mass Conversion Camps set up after the Bureaus 
                 had been closed, thoughts of the Holocaust had terrified her, and for 
                 a moment she wondered if she was to be exterminated. But, as it 
                 finally dawned on her that those around her were serious about the 
                 strange concept of saving the last, lost humans by converting them to 
                 Equestrians, and that it was not death that awaited but a strange new 
                 life, her fear turned to confusion. 
                 This was 
                 not what she understood about the world. She had been taught that the 
                 human form was the image of god, and that the Torah was clear on 
                 matters of what the world was about, what the future of Man would be, 
                 and what, basically, was what. But no Book nor Scroll nor Song had 
                 ever predicted the arrival of an alien cosmos out of the Pacific, nor 
                 that the End Of Days would finish in alfalfa and hooves. The fact of 
                 Equestria not only destroyed her reality, and changed her body, it 
                 destroyed her religion, too.  
                 It was 
                 impossible to cling to the distant, invisible god of her childhood 
                 when two living, talking, visible divine beings made the sun and moon 
                 rise and set each day. Suddenly her god had been replaced with 
                 goddesses, and they weren't just stories - she could go visit them 
                 someday, if she wanted to. The thought terrified her. It was one 
                 thing to sing prayers. It was another to sit down to tea with an 
                 actual deity.  
                 Then 
                 again, if the goddess-princesses were anything like those she had met 
                 in the strange dream she had experienced during her transformation, 
                 maybe it wouldn't be such a difficult meeting after all.  
                 But one 
                 thing was certain; nothing she had ever believed, thought, or held 
                 real was true anymore. As best as she could understand, there 
                 literally wasn't even an earth anymore. Equestria was the only 
                 reality now. 
                 Everyday, 
                 Teacup tried her best to accept, with all of her heart, her new life. 
                 She worked to make her new body her own. 
                 Wandering 
                 the farm, she tried out all of her parts. She had wiggled her ears 
                 and tried to walk backwards. She sniffed and nibbled and rolled on 
                 her back in the long, sweet-smelling grass by the farmhouse. When she 
                 had done that, she had heard laughter from the porch. "You 
                 really are just a lil' filly, ain't ya?" Missus Provender often 
                 seemed to delight in her efforts to understand her new body. "I 
                 used'a love rolling around in the grass like that when I was little. 
                 You just go on and enjoy yourself, Teacup. Ain't nobody here gonna 
                 worry about how old you are on this here farm."  
                 Teacup had 
                 felt a little silly at being caught, but continued for a while 
                 anyway. If it made Missus Provender glad or happy in any way, then 
                 that was a mitzvah as far as she was concerned. Besides, the grass 
                 just felt so good... and it smelled so incredibly nice. 
                 Every 
                 morning on the farm meant biscuits, and Teacup was trying hard to 
                 learn how to make them. She felt very clumsy, every time she tried, 
                 but Missus Provender was very kind, and very patient with her. 
                 "I'm 
                 sorry! I'm sorry! Sorry Sorry Sorry!" she repeated over and over 
                 when she had dropped her stirring-spoon on the floor for the 
                 umpteenth time.  
                 "Aw, 
                 shucks, honeycake... it's all right. Jus' settle down, now, an we'll 
                 try again, 'kay?" 
                 Teacup 
                 felt bad that she seemed to have such trouble using her teeth and 
                 hooves the way natural Equestrians did. So, she started practicing in 
                 the night, after everypony had gone to bed. This was back during the 
                 days before she had finally braved the stairs and been given the 
                 guest room as her own. 
                 Teacup, 
                 under the light of the moon, had taken out the long wooden spoon and 
                 practiced with it, night after night. She tried making stirring 
                 motions, practiced taking hold of it with her lips and teeth and 
                 setting it down again. She even tried flipping it into the air, and 
                 catching it, to see if she could.  
                 One night 
                 she had noticed she was being watched from the shadows by the stairs. 
                 Missus Provender had come down, probably because she had made too 
                 much noise. Teacup dropped the spoon in surprise. Missus Provender 
                 stood there for a while with a strange look on her face, albeit a 
                 kindly one. "You jus' try so hard, don'cha honeycake?"  
                 That had 
                 turned out to be a particularly happy night for Teacup. Missus 
                 Provender lit the oil lantern, and set about making them both 
                 something not entirely unlike Mexican Horchata, a sweet, warm 
                 oat-based drink that she served in mugs. It was delicious, and over 
                 that, she had told Teacup about the fillies she had raised, and about 
                 her life long ago. She talked about winning a ribbon for her 
                 biscuits, and how much fun the fair was, back when. She told about 
                 how she met Durum, and how he used to bring her candied daisies when 
                 they were first courting. 
                 "Dear 
                 me, I've jawed a might long all about myself. I still don't know a 
                 thing about you, Teacup." Missus Provender poured them both a 
                 little more of the oat beverage "What was your life like back in 
                 that world you came from? I ain't never heard tales of life in 
                 another world before!" 
                 Teacup 
                 started to formulate a response, but then stopped. What could she 
                 possibly say to the kindly elder mare? Teacup looked around the 
                 clean, pleasant, homey kitchen and thought of her childhood in the 
                 favela, weeks with no food, her first rape, her human ear being cut 
                 off for no reason at all. Her new, regenerated, intact pony ear 
                 twitched at the memory of her lost human ear.  
                 Even if 
                 she could manage to somehow explain what life was like in the human 
                 world, about how humans treated each other to Missus Provender, how 
                 would that affect her? It wouldn't make her sleep well, that was for 
                 sure. And what would she think of a newfoal such as herself, a former 
                 human from such a world? How could she even speak of the world of 
                 Man, with all of its war, greed, violence and horror? 
                 It would 
                 be some kind of sacrilege, some blasphemy somehow, to bring such 
                 concepts into a place like Equestria. Even to speak of them seemed 
                 poisonous, toxic. Teacup felt deep shame, and sadness, and suddenly 
                 she felt more alone than she had ever been in both of her two lives. 
                 She was in 
                 a kind of paradise, compared to the world she had come from, and she 
                 could never talk about what she had been through to anypony, ever. 
                 Inside her was a pain that would never heal, and even to mention it 
                 would taint her new existence, and likely make those that accepted 
                 her now see her as a monster from a monstrous world. She had tried 
                 all her previous life to not be a monster like those around her, but 
                 that did not change the fact that she had seen, known, and been 
                 touched by a world run by, and for, true monsters. 
                 "I... 
                 I no talk. I'm sorry. I'm sorry, Missus Provender. It hurting place. 
                 Sorry me." Teacup couldn't look her in the eye. It was too much 
                 to cope with, after how happy the night had been until then. 
                 "It's 
                 OK, sweetie. You don't need to tell me anythin'." Missus 
                 Provender leaned over and gave Teacup a comforting nuzzle. "Let's
                  finish our mugs, and head up to bed, whatcha say?" 
                 Teacup 
                 nodded, relieved. 
                 The next 
                 years passed easily for Teacup. She had learned Equestrian well 
                 enough to pass for a local, though not without a few mishaps along 
                 the way. She became competent and useful around the farm, and Missus 
                 Provender was clearly glad of her help. Teacup liked working on the 
                 farm. She liked planting season, and she enjoyed the harvest. Fresh 
                 corn and the best hay and alfalfa and flowers were a constant part of 
                 her diet. She discovered a love of baking, and finally managed to 
                 make biscuits as good as Cornflower's, an achievement that clearly 
                 made the elder mare proud. 
                 Teacup 
                 found the world around her green and fascinating. The nearby town of 
                 South Withers held interesting shops and tasty treats she had not 
                 experienced on the farm. She came to know the names of dozens of 
                 local ponies, and became a part of the community. She was known and 
                 valued. But somehow, she never truly got close to anypony other than 
                 Missus Provender and Durum. And even with them, she only really 
                 talked about their days together, the farm, and their lives, never 
                 her own.  
                 Missus 
                 Provender had taken note of that fact, and found it a might curious. 
                 Teacup was such a good mare, always helpful, kind to a fault, honest, 
                 friendly, but she was closed. Closed like a stuck door to a dark 
                 room. She liked things and had interests, but she never had any 
                 friends over, or went to spend time with anypony else. The farm was 
                 her life, and while it was wonderful to have such a dedicated 
                 farmhoof around, Missus Provender had come, inside her heart, to see 
                 Teacup as just a little more than a refugee worker. She had come to 
                 see Teacup a little like she was her own filly, somehow. 
                 And it 
                 just weren't right for one of her fillies to be all lonely like that. 
                 All her own brood had left the farm and made lives for themselves, at 
                 the very least they had always had friends about the place, ponies 
                 they had crushes on, ponies they eventually got involved with. 
                 Missus 
                 Provender could tell that, however happy a face she put on, there was 
                 some terrible sadness deep inside Teacup, and it had something to do 
                 with her past, which she wouldn't ever talk about. 
                 So 
                 Cornflower put her mind to the problem, and started asking around.  
                 Most all 
                 the newfoals from the other world had long since moved out to the 
                 Great Expansion, far away from the lands close to Canterlot, 
                 Hoofington, even Manehattan. As the other world had been devoured by 
                 her world, Equestria had somehow grown larger, and now there were 
                 endless lands Cornflower had never heard of. All were now properly 
                 part of Equestria. Those lands were so vast that there was more than 
                 enough room for all the newfoals -and apparently there were a whole 
                 lot of them too- to go found new towns and cities in, with space for 
                 generations untold beyond that. 
                 That was 
                 all too big for Missus Provender to take in, but what did matter to 
                 her was that there just weren't many of the newfoals around anywhere 
                 nearby anymore. And this was a problem, because Cornflower figured 
                 that if her Teacup couldn't talk to her, or to any other natural-born 
                 pony, maybe it would help her to talk for a spell with a pony like 
                 herself. A pony from that other world. A pony that might have 
                 something more in common with whatever was bothering her. 
                 It took 
                 Missus Provender three years to track down a likely candidate. In a 
                 town called Clydesdale, not all that far away, she finally heard tell 
                 that one of its citizens was a newfoal that had stayed behind when 
                 all the others had moved on out to the new frontier. The newfoals 
                 seemed a restless lot, most of them, and besides there was only so 
                 much room in any one place. 
                 But in 
                 Clydesdale, there was a newfoal that lived there, and best of all for 
                 her plans, that newfoal had started having troubles of her own. As 
                 she learned more, Missus Provender found out that those troubles 
                 seemed not unlike the kind Teacup was having.  
                 The 
                 Clydesdale newfoal was a mare. She had been quite popular up until a 
                 few years ago. Then she started seeming sad, and acting more and more 
                 withdrawn. While this mare had been very openly social, unlike 
                 Teacup, she too never seemed to have any truly close friends. Those 
                 that knew of her said she seemed happy on the outside, but that 
                 somehow there was a cloud hanging over her, like she was carrying a 
                 burden, inside. 
                 By this 
                 time it had been ten years since Teacup had come to her farm, and 
                 joined the Provender family. And she had truly joined the family, as 
                 far as Missus Provender and Mister Provender were concerned. So 
                 Cornflower reckoned that it was only right to try to help her 
                 more-or-less semi-adopted daughter. 
                 She 
                 figured that she would throw a little shindig to celebrate Teacup's 
                 tenth anniversary on the farm. And she figured that she might just 
                 invite a special guest from Clydesdale to stay a while on the farm 
                 and enjoy some hospitality as well as a change of scenery. It would 
                 also be part of the payment for her services - the Clydesdale mare 
                 specialized in doing parties for ponyfolks, and she figured that 
                 hiring a pony that knew how to make a shindig proper would be the 
                 perfect cover for getting the two newfoals together. 
                 Missus 
                 Provender smiled at the thought. She felt mighty clever, what with 
                 all the planning and the searching and the sneaky way of getting the 
                 two to talk and all. Cornflower felt like a regular Agent Of The 
                 Crown, what with her fancy plan and all. 
                 And maybe 
                 it just might help fix her lonely, broken little Teacup. 
                   
                  TO
                   NEXT CHAPTER 
                  1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 
                   
                  Return
                   To TCB Story Index                
                   Return
                   To Jenniverse
                   Index 
                    |  |