Finally Deciding
Sunset Shimmer realized that she's been spending way too much times in the peaceful meadows, that she decided that it was time for her to go home.
"Okay," Sunset Shimmer said, "I think I've relaxed in the meadows for too long. So, it's time that I must carry on. Somehow, I must. I think so. Okay, that was terrible of me." Once the unicorn got up, Sunset Shimmer decided that it was time to go home.
She turned back to the meadows that she'd rest in and thought, "Well, I take it that some ponies may find it a gateway to a different world. I think." Sunset Shimmer decided to just go straight home.
She took one last look and continued forward.
"There's no limit," she'd thought as she trundled forward, "After all I was the one who'd gone though a forest of giant oversized mushrooms. And dealt with some brain-dead earth stallion. If you call that thing a stallion."
For most of the time, Sunset Shimmer was thinking about a lot of the adventures she'd gone through. And reconciling them. "There is more to life," Sunset Shimmer said, "Than just one thing after all." But still, Sunset Shimmer kept her thought to one thing. Oh, also.
Back in Dragon territory, several dragons were bored and some were so hungry that they tried to eat rocks. One tried to swallow one whole. That was until one dragon had arrived. "Oh, hey, Garble," one dragon said in response.
"I have something special for our feast," Garble announced, "For dinner tonight, roasted hippopotamus!" Garble had burned the malevolent hippopotamus to death and now, he and his friends will have the cooked hippo for dinner tonight. With a giant apple stuffed in the mouth.
"HOORAY!" all of the dragons shouted, "FOOD!" "I brought this," Garble said just as all of the other dragons piled up around him and began munching down the roasted hippo like piranhas.
"Oh well," Garble said, "There's more where that came from." There was nothing left of the malevolent hippopotamus, but bones.
Still, Sunset Shimmer continued on with her life. "There must be a choice in life," she'd thought.
