"Is it hours or days that I've been making my way through this maze?" Mata Nui asked himself as he turned another corner. "I can no longer tell."

Completing his turn, Mata Nui stopped short. The path forward only continued on for another ten feet before meeting a blank wall. The warrior's shoulders dropped. "Dead end. I must have made a wrong turn somewhere." He checked his coin again. If he was reading the map correctly (and he was where he thought he was) then there should be a straight path leading into the center of the valley.

The floor began to vibrate and the walls rumbled. "Uh-oh…" Mata Nui muttered, turning this way and that, looking for what new danger this might be. Behind him, a slab of stone cut off the path from which he had come. Now he was completely boxed in.

The high walls on opposite sides of the maze path began to compress, approaching each others' faces and threatening to crush Mata Nui between them. "'Dead' end, indeed…" he said aloud. "Click?"

The small insect nodded and touched the Mask of Life, changing into his large Scarab Shield. At the same time, Mata Nui called upon the powers of the Mask of Life, causing his blade to glow with power. The walls were naught but two foot away on either side of him.

"Here we go!" he yelled, and he jumped toward one of the two enclosing panels. Swinging his sword as he moved, the blade, channeling the potent energies of the Mask of Life, obliterated the column of stone, cleaving it into two major halves. Before the halves even fell apart, they, too, crumbled into fragments before the Mask's might.

But the defeat of one trap led to another. Behind the wall Mata Nui had cut away was an array of unpleasantries. "Thornax Launchers!" Mata Nui shouted, as a hail of fire came upon him from the 12+ projectile launchers. Jumping, dodging, and rolling to evade, he saw that these were an older prototype, artificial, almost. Their projectiles were not explosive, though they were durable and spiked.

Mata Nui came back up into a standing position and blocked two more Thornax. "I'm safe behind my shield, but 'safe' won't get me where I need to go," he said to himself, crouching in a corner behind the defensive equipment. "But maybe this will…" A lull in the firing came, and Mata Nui didn't miss his chance.

He jumped into the air, the length of his body now horizontal and parallel to the ground. Twirling during the jump, he threw the shield from his hand. Two more Thornax were incoming, but missed his moving profile. The shield, however, flew into the midst of the launchers. Its four spikes and sharp edges sheared the material, destroying them with a loud crunch and explosions from each device.

Mata Nui triumphantly retrieved the shield and pressed on through the wall that had supported the launchers. "Do you worst, maze," he challenged the mysterious and impressive region. "I will make it through. My universe and my people depend on me."

Finally, after travelling for so long and fighting longer than that, Mata Nui exited this corridor of the maze to find himself on a small plain placed at the edge of a bowl. With his feet planted firmly and his weapons at his sides, he surveyed the duality of the maze's heart—how it managed to remain empty, yet inspiring.

"I've made it," he said quietly. "The heart of the maze."

Rocky slopes all around curved upward, forming the interior walls of the radially designed maze. There were only two protrusive features that stood apart from the rest of the canyon. One was the cliff he had emerged upon, the one exit and success of the maze.

The other was a massive fortress placed at the center of the bowl. It was mostly cylindrical, mechanically designed and robotically executed. It must have been hundreds of feet high and just as many feet in circumference. But Mata Nui would find himself hard pressed to get there. The cliffs at its base were steep and distant. Even if they weren't, the fortress' base met the natural rock of the Bara Magna landscape, with no inviting method of entrance to its secrets.

Locked inside that fortress are the answers I seek, I know it. I just wish I knew how to get in there and find them. Mata Nui gazed upon the large structure which rivaled Metru Nui's own Coliseum. Still, he saw no answer yet. He sighed in frustration. The Great Beings, it seems, never make things easy. And I haven't time to waste—for who knows what my ancient enemy, Makuta, might be planning even now?

X X X

Pohatu and I have journeyed to Destral. There is precious little left here. How much of the damage we see was caused by the Order's attack, and how much by Makuta Teridax himself, is impossible to say. I know one thing—nothing is left alive here. And from the shattered pieces of Makuta armor I see everywhere, it is hard not to believe that the new ruler of this universe has decided to eliminate all possible competition for his throne.

Takanuva, Toa of Light

X X X

Tren Krom stood on the shore of what had been "his" island for so many thousands of years—his home, his prison, his place of torment. For almost as long as he could remember, he had been trapped here by the power of the Great Beings. By all rights, he should hate them and their creation, Mata Nui, and want revenge.

Strangely, he did not. Yes, he had raged against his imprisonment and vowed vengeance more than once. But as time passed, he grew wiser, recalling the old saying that "no one fights in a burning house." Pulling down the Great Beings' creation would not profit him at all. In fact, it would mean his death as well. And, despite having been pushed aside for Mata Nui more than 100,000 years ago, Tren Krom still felt a sense of responsibility for the universe he once looked after, before the time of Mata Nui.

That was why he had tricked Toa Nuva Lewa into swapping bodies with him, so he could escape the island at last. What he hadn't counted on was that he would not get Lewa's power over air in the bargain. Without this, and with no boat or air vehicle, he had no way to leave the shore. Still, that was no worry. He knew who had sent Lewa to him, and so he knew the answer to his power. Artakha, hear me.

It was a telepathic message projected over an unimaginable distance. Yet the answer came within seconds. I am here, Tren Krom. I see you are still…resourceful.

The body will be of use, Tren Krom conceded, but only if I can travel in it to Metru Nui. You can make that happen.

And should I unleash you on the universe, then? wondered Artakha. The Great Beings bound you for a reason, so that Mata Nui could rule with no rivals.

Tren Krom cursed. Stop wringing your hands, you ancient fool. If you did not need me free, why did you send the Toa? You knew what I would do.

Artakha sent no message back. Instead, the world around Tren Krom began to shimmer and fade. When his vision was clear again, he was standing in a subterranean tunnel filled with a collection of broken equipment and dust-covered artifacts. He had never physically been to this place before, but he knew what it was: the Metru Nui Archives.

My thanks, he thought.

Artakha's reply was stern. See that you carry out your end of the bargain, Tren Krom. And do not even think of keeping a body that is not yours. I will find a way to destroy it before I will let you steal it for all eternity.

Tren Krom ignored him. He was more concerned with finding his way to where he needed to go before Makuta Teridax acted to stop him. The Archives were a labyrinth of tunnels and none of the minds he had read recently knew the layout. He reached out, looking for a sapient being nearby who might know how to navigate the maze.

He found something else entirely. His mind brushed against another, one of incredibly strong will and ambition. Before he could probe deeper, he heard figures approaching. Readying Toa Lewa's weapon, Tren Krom braced for an attack.

"Lewa! Look, it's Toa Lewa!"

The happy cry came from a Matoran villager. A quick scan of his mind revealed his name was Kapura, and his companion was Hafu. But it was the blue-armored female that traveled with them that most intrigued Tren Krom. "Isn't it great, Hafu? Now we have two Toa with us—Lewa and Tuyet."

Tuyet? Tren Krom took the time to read her mind, being none too subtle about it. He saw her past efforts to take over the universe, and her plans to try again in future. This one was powerful and dangerous…but she might be useful, as well.

For her part, Tuyet just smiled. She knew this was no Toa of Air who stood before her. She had never met Lewa Nuva, but no Air warrior wearing a Mask of Levitation had the kind of mental powers she sensed. So who was this, really, and why was he disguising himself as a Toa Nuva?

"If you are opposed to Makuta, then your help would be very…ever-liked," Tren Krom said, hastily adding in some treespeak slang for the benefit of the Matoran.

"I'm sure," said Toa Tuyet. "You have a plan, I take it?"

"If I did not, I am sure you would," Tren Krom replied, looking her right in the eyes. "Perhaps we can…quick-help…each other?"

"Two Toa! What a break," Kapura said, smiling. "Don't you think so, Hafu?"

The Po-Matoran looked from Toa Tuyet, who he didn't trust, to Lewa Nuva, who didn't seem like himself. "Yeah. Wonderful," he muttered.

X X X

The small group waited until nightfall. Then they slipped out of the Archives, heading for the Coliseum. Along the way, they passed Toa Pouks and Toa Bomonga casually strolling through the city as if nothing was wrong.

"Who are they?" asked Tuyet. "Traitors to the Toa cause?"

"They're the Toa Hagah," Kapura explained. "Something happened to them…no one knows what. But they walk right past Rahkshi like the monsters aren't even there." He shrugged.

Intrigued, Tren Krom touched the minds of the two Toa Hagah. Ah, he thought, a simple trick. Teridax made these Toa see a false reality where all is peace and serenity. For them, it's an iron-clad illusion they could never break free of on their own. But for me…

A fraction of Tren Krom's mental power tore Makuta's artificial reality to bits. Pouks and Bomonga shook their heads, as if waking from a dream. Even as he restored them to the real world, Tren Krom sent his power cascading to the minds of the other Toa Hagah, freeing them as well. "Perhaps fortune will smile on Metru Nui, and these Toa will return to their senses soon," Tren Krom said. "Time will tell."

"It usually does," said Tuyet. "What will time tell about us, I wonder?"

Tren Krom looked at her. "Hopefully, nothing either of us would regard with shame."

"Oh, no, of course not," she replied with a chuckle.

"Where are we going?" asked Hafu. Then he added, "And do I really want to know?"

Tren Krom pointed to the Coliseum. "There. The Core Processor of the Great Spirit, Makuta. I have a message for Mata Nui. It may mean the difference between life and death for everyone."

"Mata Nui?" asked Hafu, incredulous. "But Mata Nui isn't there. Makuta Teridax exiled him from the universe, most likely killed him. How are you going to get a message to him? And what could he possibly do to help us now, anyway?"

Tren Krom looked at the Po-Matoran. A strange smile came to Lewa Nuva's mouth, the corners of it bent at an odd angle. "The answer to both of those questions is actually one in the same. You would be surprised, Hafu…very surprised."