She-ra- Princess Of Power -

“You’re different,” Catra said, her heterochromatic eyes—one gold, one blue—narrowed with a suspicion that bordered on fear. They sat on the edge of a ventilation shaft, legs dangling over a drop that would kill them both. Catra’s tail twitched. “You’ve been sneaking off. Thinking. I can hear it. Your heartbeat’s wrong.”

And slowly, impossibly, cracks appeared in the Horde’s facade. Soldiers defected. Supply lines failed. Shadow Weaver, ever the survivor, switched sides—not out of morality, but because she smelled which way the wind was blowing. Catra, promoted to Force Captain in Adora’s absence, grew more brilliant and more brittle. She conquered half of Etheria. She raised a spire of black glass from the Crimson Waste. She almost won. She-Ra- Princess of Power

“I know.”

“You’re her,” Glimmer said. “The one from the old stories. She-Ra, Princess of Power.” “You’ve been sneaking off

She turned from the stars and wrapped her arms around Catra. Your heartbeat’s wrong

“I found something,” Adora admitted. “A sword.”

She tried to ignore it. For three days, she hid the sword beneath her bunk, waking in cold sweats to the echo of that name. But the Horde’s certainties began to crumble. When she looked at her fellow cadets—at Lonnie’s hollow efficiency, at Kyle’s flinching smile—she saw not soldiers, but children wearing armor too heavy for their bones. And when Shadow Weaver, her adoptive mother and tormentor, spoke of “purifying the rebellion,” Adora heard the lie beneath the silk.