>While travelling to my relative's place I hadn't eaten much. >The constant motion of the train and sitting around in a rail coach hadn't done my stomach any favors. >So when we finally sat down to lunch I was absolutely famished. >That was fortunate because the table I sat down to was loaded with enough food to feed the Equestrian army! >I guessed that Aunt Roll had pulled out all the stops because it was my first meal since arriving in the Alpine Region. >Or maybe this was how she fed all visitors? >When my cousin and I sat down I noticed that there where two other stallions already sitting at the table with my uncle. >My Uncle introduced them as the hired hooves, Greenwick and Fennel. >Down in Dodge Junction we would often have our hired ponies join us for the mid-day meal. >I supposed they did the same thing here. >Greenwick, unsurprisingly, had a shaggy green mane along with a pale green coat. >He was tall but rather thin and wiry. >Fennel, on the other hand, was a bear of a pony. >He looked like a slab of muscle wrapped up in a blue coat and topped with a blonde mane. >One look and I could tell who got the chore of pulling up old tree stumps. >"I hope you are all hungry!" Aunt Roll exclaimed as she breezed in from the kitchen. >As soon as Uncle Strudel gave the word we all began to tuck in. >I immediately dished up some glazed carrots, but my cousin seemed intent on another dish. >"Ohh, my favorite!" She used one of her wings to grab a ladle and dish up some kind of soup. >I looked down, curious to see what my cousin thought was the best thing on the table... >And I nearly choked! >The soup bowl in front of Edelweiss was filled with a reddish pink mixture. >Blood? >Was my cousin a blood drinking bat after all? >Where did the blood come from? >Did they get it from wild animals? >From the cows? >Did every one regularly contribute some of their own supply? >I mean my cousin seemed cool, if a little quiet, but I wasn't sure I was ready to sacrifice my precious bodily fluids to sustain her! >My Aunt must have noticed the look on my face because she gave a small chuckle. >"Have you never had cherry soup?" >Cherry soup? >As in, soup made out of cherries? >I didn't think a thing like that was even possible. "N-no. I've never had it before." >"Ah, you must try some." the bat pony next to me enthused. "It is delicious!" >I looked over at her and she had a little bit of red on the corner of her mouth. >Her grinning, fanged mouth. >That didn't help. >Still, as long as it wasn't blood soup. >Truthfully, I wasn't a very picky eater; having three brothers helped with that. "All right, I'll try some." I slid my bowl over and my cousin deftly ladled out some of the odd concoction. >Those strange wings of hers were really useful! >Sliding the bowl in front of me I gave it a hard look. >Everything on the table both looked and smelled delicious. >And the glazed carrots I had nibbled tasted delicious. >So I dipped a spoon full and took a bite. >I had expected something really sugary, like pie filling, but it was only mildly sweet. >And, as I chewed on the whole cherry that I had dished up, I realized that it was made with sour cherries and not pie cherries. >And the reason it was pink was because there was cream in it. >The most surprising thing, though, was that it was cold, as in chilled. >It all combined to produce a really tasty dish. >Weird, but tasty nonetheless. >As I started sucking down more of the cool brew my cousin beamed. >I guess she had thought I might hate it or something. >I was just glad that she ate normal food like a regular pony. >Not that this soup was exactly normal but, well, whatever. >The rest of the meal continued like any other family meal. >At one point I offered some rolls to Edelweiss, but she declined. >"To much bread is not kind to my stomach." she lamented. "But I will have some of those tomatoes." >After we were done I felt like I was ready to explode. >That meal had been amazing! >Then Aunt Roll got up and announced, "I hope you all saved room for dessert." >Dessert. >Dart it! >I'd forgotten there was ALWAYS dessert at these kinds of meals. >Oh well, I could probably handle a small piece of whatever we where having. >I'd just have to pony up and deal with the tummy ache. >As Aunt Roll trotted from the dining room Greenwick nodded in my direction. >"So, you are visiting from down south?" "Yes, sir!" >"Ah good. You're uncle says you are going to help us out this summer, ja?" >I wanted to grimace at that promise of work, but kept a polite smile on my face. "I reckon so." I chirped. >"Well, that is good." Greenwick patted his co-worker on the shoulder. "Fennel here is always needing help with his work." >The green pony leaned in and dramatically whispered, "He is actually a very weak pony. I'm sure he could use your help hauling baskets." >Was he serious? That huge stallion? >Then I saw my uncle and Fennel rolling their eyes and knew Greenwick was putting me on. "Hah-hah." I deadpanned. >Then the supposedly weak and puny Fennel rumbled, "If you are as hard a worker as little Edelweiss then I am sure we will have the summer harvest done in no time." >I looked over at the target of his compliment to see my cousin blushing as red as her favorite soup. >My uncle chuckled. "Well, she will have to work very hard to beat Edel." >I just grinned. "I'll do my best." >Aunt Roll came back in with a large platter on her back and a copper bowl perched on her head. >"Here we are! I hope you all like it." >It turned out that desert was a spiced cake roll with a whipped cream filling. >My aunt cut four slices and spooned a generous dollop of even more whipped from the bowl she had brought it. >I was hoofed a slice and tried to pass it on to my cousin but she refused it. >"Oh, no little Cordial," my aunt explained, "I brought something different for her." >On the large cake platter was a small bowl that held more cherries. >These ones looked sweet and were done up in a thickened syrup. >After a huge dollop of cream it was passed down to my cousin. >It didn't take a genius to put two and two together. "Is cake rough on your stomach too?" I asked gently. >Edelweiss looked down at her bowl of cherries and cream and nodded, frowning. >"Mmh, too much of anything with grains and I feel sick. I mostly just eat fruit and soft vegetables." >Wow. So I guess she did eat a bit differently than most ponies. "Well..." I hadn't meant to get her down. >Then something my mom always said popped into my head. "I mean, bread's just a carrier for the jam and butter anyway. Right?" >She looked up from her bowl and got a thoughtful look on her face. >"I- I suppose so?" >Greenwick snickered. "A carrier for the jam and butter. That is pretty good." >Edelweiss smiled quietly and went back to her dessert. >Oh, well. At least she wasn't gloomy anymore. >After lunch Uncle Strudel asked Edelweiss to show me around. >Apparently we would save any real work for tomorrow. >Joy. >Overall, it was a really nice farm. >There was the main house with it's high gables and two stories. >Next there where the two barns, one for the farm animals and the other for the fruit harvests. >Beyond that was a rather large tool shed and finally there was the bunk house for the hired hooves. >Not terribly different from our set up back home, but then I supposed that there only so many ways to set up a successful orchard. >We were currently in the fruit barn. >While my cousin showed me the storage bins and other equipment I started thinking about her situation. >Why did my relatives adopt her in the first place? >Us cherry folk were generally a pretty practical bunch. >A bat pony would probably have a difficult time living on an earth pony orchard. >She would have had to learn things that an earth pony would have already known by instinct. >Still, I was pretty sure that my relatives hadn't been thinking about all that when they adopted her. >Had they seen her, abandoned in an orphanage, and decided to give her a home? >And why did she wear those fake pegasus wings? >Was she just ashamed or did she really get a lot of grief when other ponies saw her bat wings? >Forget patience, I needed at least a few answers now! "So," I tried to sound nonchalant. "Do you always wear those wings when you go out? They must get awfully warm." >My cousin stiffened at my question. >Darn it! I didn't want to set her off again. >Then she relaxed a bit and started messing with a piece of canning equipment. >After a few moments she responded. >"Yes, I always wear the wings." she nearly whispered. >Well that begged the obvious question. "Do the people in town know that you're a bat pony? Or is it a secret?" >She shuddered, visibly. >I was starting to feel bad for asking her about all this. >"I think some of them know. I go to school when it is not summer and I don't wear my wings there. So my classmate's parents all know, I think." "Shoot, that's got to be half the town right there! Why worry about the other half?" >Edel's head shot up and her eyes got big. >"I- I- I..." her breathing got erratic. >I had clearly gone way beyond her comfort zone. "Whoa, whoa, whoa." I sidled up to my cousin and put a comforting hoof on he shoulders. "You don't have to do anything you don't want to." I soothed. "I was just wonderin'. I'm sure you got good reasons for wearing those things." >It took a few more minutes to get her fully calmed down. >Obviously, further questions about her status in town were off the table for the time being. >As we left the barn I couldn't help but feel that I had been left with even more questions. >If she didn't wear her fake feathers when she was at school, then that probably meant that her classmates where OK with her being a bat pony. >And knowing how mean fellow kids could be, I couldn't imagine the adults of Horne being any worse. >So why was she so terrified of walking down the street in her own skin? >Right then and there I determined that I was going to find out. >And before I left to go back home I was going to find a way to get her to stop wearing those silly fake wings. To be continued...