The moment the meeting in the Command Center quieted, the air still humming from the activated holo-map, old man Renn stepped forward from the back, arms crossed, face unreadable. He'd been silent the whole time, listening, chewing something thoughtfully.
âI might know someone,â he said finally, voice like gravel over iron.
Vermond turned. âSomeone who can create blueprints?â
Renn nodded. âNot gather. Not steal. Make them. From scratch.â
Kiana arched an eyebrow. âSounds rare, grandpa.â
âHe is,â Renn said, with a dry chuckle. âA bit of a brat last I saw him. Kid used to draw schematics in the dirt with a bent spoon. Wasnât even ten yet, and he already figured out how to make a shield capacitor out of junkyard parts.â
Vermond tilted his head. âAnd now?â
Renn rubbed the back of his neck. âHeâs grown, I reckon. Havenât seen him in years. Last I heard, he was out in the sector called Iridian Vergeâone of the fringe zones between old Federation space and outlaw control. Real quiet region, mostly junkers and broken relay stations. But the kidâwell, the man nowâheâs the type who doesn't want attention. Builds for himself. Tests things in secret. People call him the Forge Ghost.â
âForge Ghost?â Erieâs voice came through the comms again, with a snort. âThat's either the edgiest or coolest name Iâve ever heard.â
Renn smirked. âHe didnât choose it. People just stopped seeing him and started seeing his ships flying. Prototype stuff. Quiet drives. Plasma-hull overlays. Whole ships vanish from radar and reappear behind you.â
Erie whistled. âIf even half of that is true, heâs exactly what we need.â
Vermond stared at the map again, zooming in slowly to Iridian Verge, marked faintly with flickering stars and old transmission lines. Quiet. Isolated. Unknown.
âIf we can find him,â Vermond said, âand if heâs willing to join us... we might have the key to building a fleet the Folkan canât predict.â
Kiana turned to Renn. âWhatâs his name, grandpa?â
The old man smiled faintly, like recalling a fond, distant memory.
âHis real nameâs Jeraldo Gred, but I doubt he uses it anymore.â
The map adjusted again, new markers blinking near Iridian Verge. Vermond looked to his team.
âWe go quiet,â he said. â Just a small crew and one ship. Iâll take Erie. Maybe a few elite undead to watch the shadows.â
Old man Renn stepped back a little bit. "I knew these elites are monsters."
Erie then spoke through the comms. "This old man doesn't even know until now."
"What did you say?! Say that again!"
Kiana gave a soft sigh. âWhat about me? Big brother.â
âYou run things here, Kianaâ he said, then paused. âIf the Folkan shift directions... weâll need someone sharp to keep this station safe.â
She looked like she wanted to argue, but then smiled. âFine. But if youâre not back in five days, Iâm sending Stitch and Nude Bro to find you.â
Erie coughed. â...please donât.â
Everyone chuckled, even Renn.
Vermond moved steadily through the hangar bay, his boots tapping against the polished floor, fifty elite undead trailing silently behind him like shadows given form. Beside him, Erie walked with his hands behind his head, eyeing the group and the looming bulk of the disguised undead destroyer.
"Youâre sure itâs just gonna be me, you, and these... None-breathing boys?" Erie asked, tilting his head toward the silent undead soldiers.
Vermond didnât stop walking. âThe smaller the crew, the stealthier. The smaller the crew, the faster.â
Erie grinned. âNow thatâs what I like to hear. Iâm getting excited already.â
But before they could reach the ramp, soft footsteps echoed behind them. Vermond felt a sudden warmth wrap around him from behind. Kiana had run up, her arms gently locking around his back.
âBe careful, Big Brother,â she whispered.
Vermond paused, smiling faintly as he reached back to pat her hand. âI will, Kiana.â
Then, like always, she leaned forward and kissed his cheek.
From the side, Erie stared, eyes going wide before he dramatically dropped to his knees and pointed. âStop this at once! My heart canât take it!â
Both Vermond and Kiana turned to look at him.
âYouâre just jealous,â Vermond said with a smirk.
âI am! I miss the good old days,â Erie declared, wiping imaginary tears. âChasing down cleansers, auctioning off their techânow look at me! Third wheel in a romance novel!â
Kiana giggled. âDonât worry, Erie. Big Brother can make a clone just for you.â
âI donât want a clone! I want a real person! A real person!â Erie cried, flailing his arms dramatically.
Vermond chuckled, shaking his head as he turned back to the destroyer. Kiana stepped away with a smile, her flowing white hair catching the light like silk, and her emerald eyes reflecting starlightâsoft, bright, and impossibly deep.
âStay safe, Big Brother. And you too, Erie.â
Erie straightened, giving a mock-salute. âDonât worry about me, Adorable Kiana.â
Vermond paused mid-step. âAdorable Kiana?â
âShe is adorable!â Erie shrugged, grinning. âIâm so jealous of you. Give her some more love, will you?â
Kiana, still smiling, turned her gaze to Vermond. âBig Brother, remember⦠weâre not even blood-related.â
A beat of silence.
Vermond, finally blushed.
âLetâs go, Erie,â he muttered quickly, heading up the destroyerâs ramp with a stiff back.
Erie laughed the whole way up.
The hum of the engines echoed softly through the steel bones of the undead destroyer as it slipped through the silent void, cloaked and silent. Inside, the lights were dim, and the crewâthose unnerving, still-living-looking elite undeadâstood like statues at their posts.
Vermond sat quietly on an old, cushioned couch in the observation deck just outside the Command RoomâKianaâs usual spot. The faint scent of whatever warm drink sheâd always sipped still lingered on the armrest. He leaned back, eyes half-lidded, staring out into the stars through the broad panel of reinforced glass.
He could still hear her voice.
âBig Brother⦠remember, weâre not even blood-related.â
His hand twitched slightly on the fabric beside him.
What did she mean by that...?
He shook the thought off, though it returned again almost instantly, tapping the walls of his mind like a curious ghost. She always called him Big Brother. Always stayed close. Protective, yes⦠but that smile she gave him right after? That wasnât the usual sisterly smile.
He felt his cheeks grow a little warm.
Across the room, Erie was sitting on a crate with his feet up, noisily munching on something dry and crunchy from a sealed bag labeled âDried Protein Flakes â Salted Rat Flavorâ.
âMmm⦠so crunchy. Want some?â Erie asked, waving the half-empty bag toward Vermond.
Vermond didnât even turn his head. âNo.â
Erie shrugged, tossing another flake into his mouth. âSuit yourself. You look like someone who just realized their sister might actually be into them.â
Vermond slowly turned his head toward Erie.
Erie smirked, not even looking up. âJust sayinâ. That look on your face? Thatâs a âprocessing weird feelingsâ face.â
âIâm not processing anything,â Vermond muttered.
Erie munched louder. âSure youâre not.â
Silence settled in again, interrupted only by the distant echo of system pings and the soft clatter of Erieâs snack bag. Vermondâs gaze returned to the stars.
âDo you thinkâ¦â he began, then stopped.
âWhat?â Erie asked.
ââ¦Nevermind.â
âNope, too late. You started a sentence in space. Thatâs a cosmic rule, you have to finish it.â
Vermond sighed. âDo you think she meant something with that? Saying weâre not blood-related?â
Erie blinked, then smirked like a cat. âYes. Yes, she did. And it wasnât about paperwork.â
Vermond groaned, leaning his head back against the couch cushion. âStars above, Iâm surrounded by psychos.â
Erie grinned. âWelcome to your crew, Captain.â
A soft chime echoed through the command deck. A system ping from their new AI Kiana inputted.
Vermond leaned forward on the couch instinctively, eyes narrowing. A faint holographic light shimmered above the table nearby, tracing a perimeter scan that pulsed in concentric rings.
âSystem proximity scan complete,â the AI intoned smoothly. âMassive gravitational signature detected: confirmed, the black hole is still stableâapproximately 1.9 light-minutes from Station Anchor Point.â
Erie squinted at the readout while still holding his snack. âYup⦠thatâs the big olâ death marble alright. Kinda romantic, if youâre suicidal.â
The screen displayed a real-time visualâthe starless chasm stretching open in the void, ringed in faint blue light and distant matter streams. It looked less like a hole, and more like a wound in space.
Vermond stood and stepped toward the holo-table. âSo it's still there... good.â
Erie cocked his head. âGood? Thatâs a black hole, not a pet dog.â
Vermond pointed to the diagram. âWhen we get that engineer... I want the stationâs power grid rebuilt. Fully. Not just solar, not just backup cores. I want to harness that.â He pointed to the black hole.
Erie paused mid-chew. â...You're really a psycho.â
âIâm serious,â Vermond said. âBlack holes release immense radiation from the accretion disk. If we can anchor the station right, deploy specialized collectorsââ
âPsycho,â Erie repeated, louder this time, tossing the snack bag aside.
ââWeâd have infinite energy, Erie. Not just for shields or life support. For ships. Weapons. Entire fleet manufacturing. Imagine never worrying about fuel again.â
Erie slumped against the wall. âI mean, sure, if we donât get shredded by the tidal forces or cooked alive. Or⦠I donât know, sucked into the abyss like stale soup.â
Vermond smirked. âThatâs what the engineerâs for.â
Erie raised a hand like he was holding a toast. âTo the future. And probable doom.â
The black hole shimmered quietly in the screen above themâmassive, eternal, and unknowable. And yet, Vermond didnât look away from it. He saw something else in that void.
Potential.
A power that not even the Folkan or thousands of empires had mastered.
And it would be his.
The undead destroyer hummed steadily through space, its eerie silence broken only by the soft chittering of control panels and Erie's enthusiastic munching.
"Anything on scans?" Vermond asked without looking.
"Nope," Erie said, mouth full. "Just vacuum, some dust, andâwait."
He squinted. Then leaned forward. Then screamed.
âITâS HIM! ITâS THAT GUY AGAIN!â
Vermond blinked. â...What guy?â
Erie mashed a sequence on the screen. The view zoomed in.
Floating in a pod. Still spinning slowly in space. Arms folded. Face calm. Was the same Cleanser. The very same one they had captured. Still alive.
Still somehow smug.
âNo way,â Vermond muttered.
âOh yes way,â Erie said. âHeâs back! Again!â
âThe one. The spinny guy. The smug one. The cleansing maniac in a tin can.â Erie jabbed his finger toward the image. âHow is he still alive?!â
Vermond just sighed, already walking toward the docking bay.
Minutes laterâ¦
The pod clanked into the hangar. The elite undead surrounded it, weapons up.
Erie stood at the front like a circus announcer. âLadies and gentlemen, for the second time in galactic history⦠I present: The Cleaner Who Canât Quit!â
The pod opened with a dramatic hiss.
The Cleanser sat there calmly.
ââ¦Greetings, abominations,â he said in his usual cold tone. âYou may destroy my body, but my soul is puââ
Erie smacked him with a mop.
âSHUT UP.â
The Cleanser blinked.
âYou guys again?â he asked flatly.
âUs again,â Vermond replied, stepping into view. âDidnât we auctioned you back at the black spire station?â
âI escaped,â the Cleanser said proudly.
Erie looked like he was about to cry. âIâm done. Iâm so done. Letâs just lock him in the same cell. Again.â
They dragged the Cleanser back to the holding cell while he muttered things like "I will cleanse this galaxy" and "Youâre all walking violations of cosmic code."
"Yep. Dudeâs unkillable. New mop duty buddy for Stitch." Erie muttered.
The cell door hissed shut with a final clank. No more jokes. No more theatrics.
Vermond stood still, watching the Cleanser through the reinforced glass. The figure inside wasnât like before. His posture was too calm, too measured. No resistance. No raving. No smug smile.
Just silence.
Erie stepped forward, wiping his hands. âThatâs not how he acted the last time.â
Vermond nodded slowly, his eyes glowing faintlyâ213.
âHe let himself be caught.â
âOr⦠something let us catch him,â Erie added grimly.
They both turned as the Cleanser lifted his head. His voice echoed through the cellâs comm system. Not loud. Just enough.
âYouâre not the only one who learns, Necromancer.â
Vermond's expression darkened.
âIâve been listening,â the Cleanser continued. âWatching. The black hole near your station⦠the reactor cores you scavenged⦠even the little Stitch. He told me things.â
Erie stiffened.
Vermond's voice was low. âHeâs lying.â
âIs he?â the Cleanser said softly. âHow well do you really know your janitor?â
For a moment, Erie looked toward Vermond. The weight of paranoia settled thick in the room.
âI said,â Vermond stepped forward, eyes glowing brighter, âYouâre lying.â
The Cleanser just leaned back. Calm. Confident. Dangerous.
âIâve seen whatâs coming,â he whispered. âIâm not here to stop you anymore, Vermond. Iâm here to watch you fail.â
Erie broke the silence first, once they were clear of the holding sector. âStitchâs weird, yeahâbut you think heâd⦠betray us?â
Vermond didnât answer right away.
âNext call,â he said quietly, âis back to the station. If Stitchâs memory isnât wiped, or if that thing in the cell got to himâ¦â
Erie tensed. âWe end it.â
Vermondâs voice was cold steel. âYes. We do.â
The dim hum of the undead destroyer's core pulsed through the floor, a steady beat echoing with Vermondâs thoughts. He stood alone in the command deck now, Erie having gone silent after his last worried glance.
Vermond leaned over the control console, his reflection staring back at him in the dark glassâemerald eyes glowing faintly, the number 213 pulsing like a curse.
"He told me things..."
The Cleanserâs words played again in his mind, replaying over and over like a whisper behind his ear.
"How well do you really know your janitor?"
He hated how it stuck. How it worked.
Stitch⦠the pirate, the joker, the floor mop king. And yet⦠he knew the corridors well. He always seemed to know when to disappearâand when to conveniently return. Vermond clenched his fists, the consoleâs edge creaking under the pressure.
Could the Cleanser have gotten to him? No. He was locked away. But what ifâ
What if he wasn't?
"He let himself get caught⦠again."
Vermond straightened, his face blank, but his thoughts in a whirl of shadow. He remembered what Kiana said before they leftââWeâre not even blood-related.â
Another crack in the foundation.
"She was reminding me⦠Iâm alone. All this time, I've been building this from bones and lies."
The whisper of the Watcher echoed faintly from the dark corner of his mind, ancient and amused.
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âLet me be amused by your actions, Young Godâ¦â
Vermond reached out and slowly pulled up the station schematics. Every corridor. Every lock. Every name listed on the roster. His finger hovered over Stitch's profile. Incomplete. Scrambled pirate code. But there it wasâaccess levels slowly increasing.
âWho approved that?â he muttered.
Then, quietly, Vermond opened a new line of code. A command file. A name.
Project Pale Mirror.
It blinked. Awaiting confirmation.
If betrayal came, he would be ready. He would not hesitate.
Not again.
The undead destroyer's lights dimmed just slightly as Vermond confirmed the command. The console buzzed lowâa hesitation, a flickerâas if something ancient within the system didnât want to wake up.
[PROJECT: PALE MIRROR]
Initializing...
Accessing Archive: Vault-ZERO...
Warning: Archive breach detected...
"Error. Error. Error."
Do you wish to continue? Y/N
The screen twitchedâactual twitching, like static had come alive in the shape of a jagged eye. A scraping, unnatural sound slithered through the speaker like metal being dragged underwater.
Then, in dead silence, something typed itself:
âThe reflection watches the original.â
Vermondâs breath hitched.
The screen warped again. A ripple across reality, across his command table, across his thoughts. His reflection in the glass shimmered, twistedâsmiled back.
âYou are not the first.â
A cold voice, not the Watcherâs. This one was hollow, neither amused nor curiousâjust⦠waiting.
Erie walked in right then, slurping a snack pack. "Hey, dude, the soupâs still warm in the galley if youâreâ"
He paused, catching Vermond's look. Eyes wide. Cold sweat. The screen showing nothing but black now, as if it had always been that way.
"...Bro. You look like you saw your mom become a ship AI."
Vermond didnât answer at first. He just closed the terminal slowly. "Project Pale Mirror isnât supposed to do that."
Erie raised an eyebrow. "So⦠should I be worried?"
"Yes," Vermond muttered, his voice low. "You should be very worried."
Erie blinked. "...Okay. Cool. Gonna go finish my soup and definitely not think about dying."
As Erie walked out, humming nervously, Vermond stared at his dim reflection on the dark console.
This wasnât a defense system.
It was a key.
And something on the other side was already looking back.
Back at the station, deep beneath the repainted corridors and the humming white lights, a small maintenance room flickered under flickering power.
Stitch sat cross-legged on the floor, his mop discarded beside a pile of half-washed tiles. His eyes were wide, gleaming with something off. Shadows clung to the corners of the room like they were listeningâlike they enjoyed what he was about to say.
âHehehe... Kiana... Kiana... Kiana...â he whispered to himself, almost singing now, his head tilting slowly from side to side. "So beautiful... like the stars made a girl and then gave her hair like snow... ha!"
He twirled a bolt in his fingers, giggling. âIâll protect you, Kiana... yes, yes... Stitch will protect you when the fire comes down.â
Then his smile dropped.
Cold.
Dead.
Whispers echoed behind his teeth.
âBut when the time comes... Iâll kill Vermond.â
He chuckled, softer now, biting his lip until it bled. âAnd youâll see me. Youâll see me instead... not your fake brother, no... me.â
He stood slowly, smoothing down his shirt, brushing imaginary dust from his sleeves. His voice dropped to a whisper, gentler, like a lullaby meant for ghosts.
âI just need to wait... a little longer.â
And somewhere deep inside the room, something listened back.
Aboard the undead destroyer, the stars outside streaked like whispers in the dark, a silent voyage through ungoverned void.
Vermond sat on the couch Kiana always claimed, his fingers loosely resting on the armrest. The soft hum of the ship was a quiet song beneath him. He leaned back, eyes half-closedânot sleeping, just thinking.
Her words still echoed in his mind:
"We're not even blood related."
He stared at the ceiling. Why did she say it like that? Why now? He tried brushing it offâhe had more important things to focus on. Like the engineer. Like the ship upgrades. Like... survival.
But stillâher voice wouldnât leave.
Across the room, Erie sat at a nearby console, legs up, noisily munching on something crunchy.
"You're doing that thing again," Erie said without looking up.
Vermond blinked. "What thing?"
"The brooding. Staring off into space like you're about to kill the next god you meet."
"...Maybe I am."
Erie tossed a nut in the air and caught it in his mouth. âGreat. Another galactic war. Let me know ahead of time this time so I donât show up with a sandwich in my hand.â
Vermond let out a quiet breath through his noseâa laugh, barely.
The destroyer shifted, its engines adjusting course. A low ping echoed through the command deck, alerting them they were nearing the coordinates Renn gave them.
âApproaching system edge,â the shipâs AI said in a monotone voice. âLocal interference minimal. Cloak stable.â
Vermond stood, pulling the cloak of his coat around him. His eyes flickered faintlyâ213âetched in soft, haunting green.
âWeâll find that engineer,â he said. âAnd then weâll start turning ideas into monsters.â
Erie gave a thumbs-up, chewing. âNothing like inventing war machines to pass the time.â
The stars stretched thinner nowâmeaning they were close.
A small red dot flickered on the interface.
âUnregistered civilian craft detected,â the AI said calmly. âNo transponder signal. Drifting. Partially damaged.â
Vermond stepped toward the window, eyes narrowing.
âPirates again?â
Erie leaned forward. âOr maybe just junk.â
âOr bait,â Vermond added.
Either way, they were getting close.
The undead destroyer slid silently through the shadows of deep space, its cloak shimmering faintly against the distant light of stars. The drifting civilian craft was left behindâno scans, no contact, no movement. Just a forgotten shell in the void. Vermond gave it no more thought.
Finally, the coordinates pinged green.
"Destination reached," the AI intoned. âSurface scans underway. Life detectedâlocal population minimal. Atmosphere stable. Technological activity⦠moderate. Marking potential hub site.â
The planet before them spun slow and red beneath a cloudy sky, its cities small and scattered like blinking embers. One outpost in particular stood outâa large, domed facility built into a mountainâs edge, reinforced, humming with power.
Erie leaned over the console. âThatâs gotta be him. Renn said the guy was a genius, yeah? Looks like he's carved a whole little empire out here.â
Vermondâs eyes glowed faintly. âScan for weapon emplacements. Any automated defense systems?â
âMinimal,â the AI replied. âNo orbital presence. Planetary shield only active at half capacity. Entry possible with minimal risk.â
âGood,â Vermond said. âThen weâll pay him a visit.â
Erie stood and cracked his fingers. âFifty elite undead, us two, and one broken engineer on a lonely mountain. Thisâll go well.â
Vermondâs mouth tilted into a faint grin. âIt will.â
The destroyer descended slowly, cloaked still, until they entered the upper atmosphere. Winds howled against the outer hull as the massive ship coasted low between mountain peaks, black and unseen.
Within the dome, scanners began to blinkâsomeone had noticed something was wrong.
And far below, nestled in his fortress of cables and blueprints, he stood up from his desk, setting down a half-assembled plasma core. The ground trembled faintly. A shadow moved across the sky.
He turned slowly toward the main screen.
And smiled.
"Youâre finally here,â he whispered.
Vermond, Erie, and the Undead approached the location where the engineer was stationed. They found him standing at his workspace, as if he had been expecting them.
Vermond stepped forward with the others close behind.
"Are you an engineer, by any chance?" he asked.
The engineer looked up and replied calmly,
"My name is Jard. Nice to meet you."
Jard stared at Vermond, expression tightening, as if pieces of a long-forgotten puzzle were slowly slipping into place.
"I always saw you," Jard said quietly, almost to himself. "In those dreams. Standing in the dark. Eyes glowing⦠the number always changed."
Vermond didnât say a word. His gaze was steady, unreadable, the light in his eyes flickering 213. Erie looked between the two, his mouth full of dried protein sticks.
"Dreams, huh? Thatâs not creepy at all," Erie muttered, chewing.
Jard let out a short breath. "You stood on a throne made of bones. You didnât speak, but I could feel itâyou were waiting. For something. For someone."
Vermondâs voice was calm, low. âMaybe you were meant to find us.â
Jardâs brow furrowed. âMaybe.â
A silence hung for a moment before Erie broke it, wiping his hands on his coat. âWelp. Dream-talk aside, we didnât come all this way for hugs and horror. We need an engineer. A real one. You still designing your own ships?â
Jard blinked, as if snapping out of a trance. Then he smirked. âI donât collect blueprints. I make them. Designs that breathe, move, adapt.â
Vermond nodded. âThen youâre what we need.â
Jard hesitated. âWhat for, exactly?â
Erie leaned forward. âYou ever built something designed to orbit a black hole without dying instantly?â
Jardâs eyes lit up with interest. âNo. But Iâve always wanted to try.â
Vermond looked at him, voice even. âWe have a station there. Fully restored. It needs a new heartâone that can feed from the black holeâs edge. We want you to design that heart.â
Jard stood up slowly. âYouâre serious?â
âWe donât joke much anymore,â Vermond replied.
Erie grunted. âExcept when we catch cleansers. Thatâs always fun.â
Vermond moved toward the boarding ramp. âPack your tools. Weâre heading out. And donât bring anything you want to keep pristineâour place is alive, but itâs far from gentle.â
Jard looked back once at his workshopâtools, half-finished hull blueprints, models scattered around. Then he followed.
As they boarded the undead destroyer, the lights along its corridor flickered dimly, the hull humming like something breathing in the void. Jard paused, laying his palm on the metal.
âThis ship is dead,â he whispered. âBut it listens.â
Vermond just kept walking. âWelcome to the fleet.â
The ramp closed behind them, sealing Jardâs old life away.
The undead destroyer drifted silently through the void, cloaked in shadows, its engines humming with the low, haunting resonance of necromantic energy. Inside the dim-lit command chamber, Erie had taken the co-pilotâs seat, boots up on the console, munching on something crunchy again.
âSo,â Erie said through a mouthful, âwhat do we call this trip? Operation: We Found a Nerd?â
Jard, seated near the engineering terminal, looked up with a raised brow. âI prefer the term genius, but sure, letâs go with that.â
Vermond stood in the center of the room, arms crossed, his glowing eyes locked onto the stars ahead. âThis journey isnât just about you, Jard. Itâs a test. For all of us.â
Jard leaned back in his chair, hands steepled behind his head. âThen why does it feel like Iâm the only one getting the pop quiz?â
Erie grinned. âBecause you are, nerd.â
They passed a dying moon along the way, its crust shattered like a fractured skull. A derelict ship slowly tumbled through its orbit, its hull scrawled with claw marks and half-erased warnings in alien languages.
Jard gazed at it from the viewport. âWhat happened here?â
Vermond replied quietly, "Someone pooped at it. The crew didnât survive.â
âLovely,â Jard muttered.
They pushed on.
Hours passed in silence, broken only by Erie occasionally playing old music through the commsâancient stuff, all static and sorrowful guitar. Jard pretended to hate it, but never turned it off.
Then came the storm.
A nebula-like pocket of swirling debris, caught in the wake of two colliding gravity wells. Vermond didnât hesitateâhe guided the destroyer straight through it.
Lightning danced across the hull.
Alarms flared.
Jard hung onto his seat. âThis is insane! Weâre going to get torn apart!â
Erie just laughed, his hair a static mess. âRelax. this is the shortest way.â
The destroyer groanedâbut held.
And then... silence again.
Beyond the storm, a clear stretch of stars opened up. A beacon shimmered in the distanceâthe edge of their sector, and just beyond it, the blackhole system that housed the Pale Station.
Jard sat there, sweating, eyes wide. âYouâre all lunatics.â
Vermond smiled faintly. âWelcome to the crew.â
They passed the last set of abandoned relaysâsigns that once, this space was guarded. Not anymore.
As they neared the station, the immense shape of it came into viewârebuilt, rearmed, still partially shrouded in its cloak. It hovered like a silent guardian just near the curve of the black holeâs gravitational pull.
Jard leaned forward.
âThat... is a masterpiece.â
Vermond said nothing, but his chest rose with something between pride and anticipation.
Minutes later, The massive hangar bay doors opened with a mechanical hiss as the undead destroyer slid into its berth, docking with eerie precision. Inside, the pale lights of the station flickered slightly, reacting to the necromantic energy pulsing off the shipâs hull.
Kiana was already waiting.
She stood with her arms crossed, white hair neatly pinned back, and eyes scanning the ship as if she could sense every soul aboard. As the ramp lowered, Erie strolled down first, waving dramatically.
âWe brought the blueprint wizard,â he called out. âAnd no, I didnât crash the destroyer this time.â
Jard followed behind, eyes wide as he took in the stationâs interior. âYou really rebuilt this⦠near a black hole?â
âYes,â Vermond said simply as he descended last, his coat trailing behind him like a shadow. âAnd it runs better than most Federation husks.â
Kiana smiled and gave a polite nod to Jard, but her eyes flicked past himâlanding directly on her brother.
âYouâre tense,â she said quietly as Vermond approached.
Vermondâs eyes, now a steady and silent 213, didnât meet hers at first. He scanned the corridor, the shadows, the walls. Then he spoke lowly. âThe cleanser⦠the one we captured before.â
Kianaâs expression tightened. âWhat about it?â
âIt said one of your pets will bite you first.â
Kiana blinked, slowly understanding. Her gaze shifted toward the hallway that led deeper into the stationâwhere Stitch had been reassigned to the maintenance level.
âYou think itâs him?â
âI know itâs him,â Vermond said. âSomethingâs changed. Heâs not the same simpering idiot anymore. Heâs hiding something.â
Kianaâs eyes narrowed. âWant me to scan his room?â
Vermond shook his head. âNo. Heâll know. Iâll watch him. Closely.â
Erie had overheard and leaned in, whispering with mock suspicion, âCreepy ex-pirate janitor with a secret obsession and possibly a death wish? Why do we always collect the weird ones?â
Vermond said nothing. He just started walking again.
Back in the shadows of the lower sector, Stitch sat hunched over, his mop leaning forgotten against the wall. The lights buzzed overhead. He was whispering to himself again.
âKiana⦠Kiana⦠he doesnât deserve you⦠Heâs just a shadow⦠Iâll prove it⦠soonâ¦â
His smile widened as he slowly carved something into the steel floor with a sharpened maintenance bolt.
The shape was unmistakable: a twisted mirror⦠fractured down the middle.
The Command Center was quietâits usual hum softened under the glow of starfields and drifting data streams. Vermond sat with one leg lazily draped over the side of the Command Chair, half-asleep, his dark emerald eye flickering dimly with 213. For once, the station felt calm.
But far below, past bulkheads and maintenance tubes, Stitch was moving.
He crept through the ventilation like a shadow, crawling on all fours, eyes wide, unblinking. He whispered her name again and again under his breath.
âKiana⦠Kiana⦠Kianaâ¦â
He grinned, holding a stolen blade made from melted tool-parts and a broken coolant core. Madness dripped from his breath like venom.
âSheâs too perfect⦠too pure for him⦠Iâll show her. Iâll be better. Sheâll seeâ¦â
He dropped into a side corridor with a thud, landing silently despite the metal. The air around him seemed to tightenâhis heart racing as he neared her location.
Kiana was alone.
She stood by the observation deck outside the Command Center, sipping from her favorite carved mug, eyes reflecting the swirl of galaxies. Her white hair gently shifted as if touched by unseen wind.
Stitch stepped from the shadow, clutching the blade. âKiana⦠Iââ
Then everything stopped.
The lights dimmedânot from a power loss, but from something else. Reality itself bent.
And then it happened.
Behind Kiana, something bloomed into being.
A presenceâradiant, ancient, terrifying in its beauty. It wasnât just a goddessâit was beyond divine. A celestial being of white flame and gold shimmer stood tall behind her, mirroring her stance with arms crossed, the air crackling with quiet might.
Her eyesâher true eyesâopened.
Stitchâs blade clattered to the floor.
His knees buckled.
âI⦠Iâ¦â
Kiana slowly turned to face him, her smile calm, serene. âDid you think I was unaware, Stitch?â
The energy surged, her hair lifting gently as if moved by cosmic tides. The air thickened with light. Her voice rang like glass bells and distant thunder.
âYou thought I needed protecting?â
Stitch, trembling, fell forward, bowing instinctivelyâgroveling before her unknowable power.
Kiana tilted her head, expression never changing.
âTry again, and youâll learn what lies beneath divinity.â
She didnât need to raise a hand. She didnât need to command.
Stitch collapsed in fear and awe, twitching as the goddess figure slowly faded back into her.
Then she turned back to the stars, took another sip, and softly said, âBig brotherâs resting. Keep it down.â
From the Command Chair, Vermondâs eye opened.
He had felt it.
ââ¦Kiana,â he murmured.
And for the first time in a long whileâ¦
He didnât feel like the most dangerous one on this station.
The lights in the Command Center were low, casting long shadows across the sleek floor. Vermond lay still on the reclining command chair, eyes closed, breathing slow and steadyâtoo steady.
He wasnât asleep.
He could feel itâthe air shifting, the faintest scrape of metal against metal.
Stitch.
Slithering through the shadows like a rat high on madness, Stitch crept in, silent, breathing through clenched teeth. In his hand, a needle-thin vibroblade stolen from the medbay, barely visible in the gloom. His lips curled into a feverish grin as he approached Vermond.
âThis is itâ¦â he whispered. âWithout you⦠sheâll be mine.â
Vermond's fingers twitched slightly, barely noticeable. He waited.
But before Stitch could moveâbefore the blade could lowerâa presence dropped like a divine hammer upon the room.
The air thickened. The lights flared.
Kiana appeared.
No doors opened. No sound warned. She was just there, a vision wrapped in white light. Her hair drifted as if underwater, and her glowing emerald eyes burned with something ancient and terrifying.
Vermondâs eyes remained shut⦠but his heart skipped.
âI already gave you a chance, Stitch,â Kiana said, her voice carrying a resonance that didnât belong to a girl anymore.
Stitch froze mid-step, every part of him seized by invisible pressure. He dropped the blade. His mouth opened, but no words came.
Vermond remained still, struggling to process what he was hearing. Was this still his sister?
Kianaâs smile never wavered.
âNobody,â she whispered sweetly, âcan touch my big brother.â
Her tone sharpened like breaking glass.
âNobody can kill my big brother.â
Her eyes flared blindingly nowâcosmic, celestial.
âNobody can love my big brother.â
Then she pointed one delicate finger at Stitch, her smile stretching just a little too wide.
âIâm the only one who has the authority to love him.â
Stitch screamedânot from pain, but from a primal terrorâhis body contorting as if the universe itself had turned on him.
And thenâ
He vanished.
No sound. No flash. Just⦠gone.
Only a faint, echoing ping from the floor where he once stood.
Kiana turned calmly toward the chair, eyes still glowing.
âI know youâre awake, Big Brother.â
Vermond opened one eye slowly, meeting her gaze. â...What are you?â
She walked to him, leaned close, and whisperedâ
âStill your little sister.â
Then she gently kissed his forehead, and walked out like nothing had happened.
Vermond blinked, eyes wide.
ââ¦I think I just saw the real monster on this station,â he muttered.
The soft hum of the station echoed quietly around the Command Center. Vermond stood before the wide glass panel, watching the starless void beyond, the reflection of his emerald eyes dimly etched in the glassâstill showing the number 213. His mind racedânot with plans, not with tacticsâbut with the image of Kiana, her eyes glowing like something not from this world, her voice carrying the weight of divinity.
He clenched his fists, unsure if it was fear or awe he felt.
Thenâ
Light steps approached. Familiar. Gentle.
Without a word, Kiana slipped behind him and wrapped her arms around his waist, resting her head against his back. Her presence, warm and calming, contrasted deeply with what had just happened earlier.
âBig brotherâ¦â she said softly, âdonât fear me.â
Vermond tensed slightly.
âI love you more than you think,â she whispered, her voice like stardust against his mind. âAnd youâre stronger than me. You just⦠donât use your power correctly.â
Before he could reply, Kiana gently turned him around and guided him to the old couchâher couchâand pushed him down to sit. She leaned close, her white hair brushing against his face, her smile glowing brighter than any star.
âBig brother has such a good personality,â she said sweetly.
Vermondâs throat tightened.
Kiana then stood, straightened her hair with a graceful flick, and headed for the door.
She looked back one last time, and with that same smileâthe kind that hid galaxies and storms behind itâshe said, âBig brother should get stronger soonâ¦â
She stepped into the hall, her silhouette framed by light.
ââ¦because I might hug you so tight next time you canât escape from my hug, Big brother.â
The door hissed shut.
Vermond sat motionless on the couch, heart thudding.
ââ¦Iâm really not ready for this,â he muttered to himself.
The door had barely closed behind Kiana before silence returned to the Command Center. But it wasnât the usual silence of idling systems and empty corridorsâthis one had a presence.
Vermond leaned back into the couch, his expression unreadable, eyes half-lidded as if lost in thought. But he wasnât.
ââ¦You can come out now, Erie,â he said calmly.
A soft rustle came from behind a panel near the holo-table. Then, with a sheepish grin and crumbs clinging to his collar, Erie popped out like a poorly timed ghost from a cheap haunted house.
âWhew⦠okay, okayâhow the hell did you know I was there?â Erie asked, brushing grease and potato chip fragments from his jacket.
Vermond just raised a brow. âYou talk in your sleep. You were muttering about fried fish and... 'Kiana's elbow' for some reason.â
âI did notâwaitâshut up.â Erie crossed his arms, but then blinked. âWait. No. Seriouslyâhow did you know? I was completely hidden. Not even sensors caught me.â
Vermond turned his gaze to his hand, flexing his fingers slowly. There was a faint, green-black mist swirling briefly around themâsomething ancient, something refined.
âI didnât hide you,â Vermond said slowly. âNot intentionally. I just⦠didnât want Kiana to know you were watching.â
Erie tilted his head. âSo?â
âI felt it,â Vermond muttered. âThe moment I thought it⦠the shadows around you shifted. Like they listened to me. Wrapped around you.â
Realization dawned. Vermond clenched his fist, and the shadows flickered out.
âI used necrotic energy... instinctively,â he said. âNot to control the deadâbut to manipulate presence. To veil someone. Thatâs new.â
Erie blinked, then let out a low whistle. âSo, waitâdoes that mean you can cloak people with that creepy dead magic now? Dude. Thatâs cool.â
Vermond stood, eyes glowing faintly. âItâs more than cloaking. I didn't force the energy. It agreed with me. Like itâs becoming⦠part of my will.â
Erie looked genuinely impressed for once. âOkay, now youâre sounding like a real necro-lord. Stillâuh, kinda creepy how Kiana basically deleted Stitch.â
Vermond glanced at the door Kiana had left through. ââ¦Yeah.â
Erie smirked. âAnd you're still gonna pretend you're not a little scared of her, huh?â
Vermond sighed. âSheâs not to be feared. Sheâs to be understood.â
Erie rolled his eyes. âYeah well⦠good luck with that, Romeo the Undead.â
And with that, the two stood alone in the Command Centerâone slowly awakening to powers heâd never known, the other halfway through a bag of chips.
Time passed.
Kiana had always been close to Vermondâquiet, observant, sharp with her scans and efficient in her tech workâbut lately⦠something had shifted.
She no longer stayed in the background or kept her distance when the crew discussed plans. She followed Vermond nearly everywhere, always close, always watching. In the Command Center, in the hangar, even when he was walking the dark, quiet corridors of the stationâKiana was there.
And she didnât hide her affection anymore.
Sometimes, sheâd wrap her arms around his arm while they walked. Other times, sheâd sit right beside him on the couch, her shoulder pressed to his, watching the stars on the central screen. Her smile had changed tooâno longer soft and cautious, but confident. Even possessive, at times.
âBig brother,â sheâd say, her voice light as always, âYou think too much. Just sit. Let me stay beside you a little longer.â
Vermond didnât protest. Heâd noticed it, of course. The subtle change in her eyes, that divine shimmer that sometimes flickered behind them. The way her energy felt nowâno longer just human. Something deeper. Something powerful. And protective. Fiercely so.
He wasnât sure when it beganâafter Stitch tried to kill him? Or was it earlier, after the raid? After she said those words: âWeâre not even blood related.â
And yet⦠despite all of it, Kianaâs presence calmed him. Maybe it was her warmth, or maybe that strange cosmic strength she now heldâsomething far beyond what Vermond could explain. Whatever it was, her touch no longer felt like a sisterâs alone.
One evening, as Vermond was reviewing ship schematics on the holo-table, Kiana snuck up behind him and wrapped her arms around his neck, leaning over his shoulder.
âYouâre always thinking of building,â she whispered softly, âWhen will you start thinking of yourself?â
Vermond didnât respond immediately.
ââ¦I am,â he said finally. âIâm building for the people who chose to follow me. For you.â
Kiana smiled against his neck. âGood answer, big brother. But still... Iâll never let you go. You know that, right?â
He nodded silently.
And from somewhere in the corner of the room, Erie peeked in and sighed heavily. âHere we go againâ¦â he mumbled, shaking his head and turning back before they could spot him. âTheyâre gonna drive me insane one day, I swear.â
The meeting began.
The meeting room inside the command center was dimly lit, the holographic projection of the ship schematics casting shifting blue lights across everyoneâs faces. A calm hum from the system filled the silence, interrupted only by the occasional beep or flicker from the display.
Vermond stood at the head of the table, tall and quiet, as alwaysâbut this time, Kiana was pressed to his side, her arms wrapped gently around his arm, her head resting lightly against his shoulder. She wasn't saying much, but her presence said everything: heâs mine.
Across the table sat Renn, with Ruen next to him, arms crossed, expression unreadable. Jard, newly returned, was fiddling with a small handheld schematic projector, adjusting the parameters of the next build. Erie slouched in his seat, chewing on a protein bar he claimed tasted like burnt plastic.
And then, the mood shifted just slightly when Erie muttered under his breath, breaking the quiet tension.
âHey old man,â he said, glancing toward Renn with a crooked smirk. âYouâre too old for this kind of atmosphere. Makes you look lonely.â
Renn didnât even look up from the projection. âShut up, you muscle head,â he grunted. âGo lift something useful.â
âAlready did,â Erie shot back. âLifted Vermondâs ego earlier after that mission.â
Jard stifled a laugh but didnât look up.
Kiana, without lifting her head from Vermondâs arm, spoke quietly but clearly. âErie, youâre loud.â
âI know,â Erie said proudly.
Vermond finally spoke, his voice calm and grounding. âFocus. Jard, how long until we can get the new cruiser designs running through the fabricators?â
Jard blinked, snapping back into professional mode. âWeâre close. Iâve already adjusted the design algorithms to match the undead hull requirements. Weâll need more core-grade alloy, though. The reactor output needs to withstand extended warp capability.â
âThen we raid again,â Vermond said without hesitation.
Kianaâs grip on his arm tightened slightly, but she said nothing.
Ruen finally spoke, his voice soft. âAnd what about defense systems for the station? If we keep pulling attention, someoneâs going to come knocking.â
âWeâll have a ring defense grid,â Jard said. âOnce the outer turrets are in place, the black hole can help us. If we angle the gravity pulls right⦠we can slingshot enemy vessels into it.â
Erie grinned. âNow thatâs brutal. I love it.â
Kiana slowly raised her head from Vermondâs shoulder, eyes glowing just faintly. âJust donât let any of them get close. If they do⦠I wonât be happy.â
Everyone in the room paused. Even Renn glanced up, slightly unsettled.
Erie whispered to himself, âWhat happened to that sweet girl who used to fix scanners?â
Vermond only smirked.
âSheâs still here,â he said. âJust⦠more powerful now.â
And as the room settled back into strategy, none of them could quite ignore the gentle pressure of Kianaâs hold on himâor the divine shimmer that seemed to linger just behind her smile.
Then here comes the unexpected plan.
The meeting slowly shifted from strategy into deeper planning, the holographic maps now switching to a three-dimensional schematic of the god-tier frigate. Vermond, still with Kiana wrapped gently around his arm, tapped a glowing symbol on the consoleâbringing up hidden blueprints embedded deep within the shipâs core files.
The schematic shifted, transforming before their eyes. Panels folded inward. Cannons retracted. The entire god-tier frigateâs shape began to shift into something far more linear and menacing.
Vermond narrowed his glowing eyes. âI almost forgot⦠This thing can transform.â
Jard leaned forward, squinting. âWait, waitâwhat is that configuration?â
Erie blinked. âYeah yeah, when some of the crew pressed something inside it, it transformed back then.â
Jardâs eyes went wide as realization hit. âIt is a railgun. A massive one. Built into the frigateâs hull itself. This isn't normalâthis is a prototype hybrid-class. It wasn't supposed to exist.â
Vermond smiled faintly, gaze locked on the model. âCan we place it above the Command Center? I want it facing outward⦠like a divine spear.â
Jard slowly turned to him with a grin. âYes. We can. Itâll take work. A lot of reinforcement. Power rerouting. But the core structure of the station can handle it. Weâll have to mount it with shock-absorption fields and run it on its own energy cell or itâll melt the top off the station when it fires⦠but itâs doable.â
Renn leaned back, his jaw slack. âYouâre planning to put a god-tier railgun on top of the station? Thatâs either genius or suicide.â
Erie crossed his arms, grinning. âSounds like Vermond to me.â
Kiana finally let go of Vermondâs arm just to clasp her hands behind her back, eyes shimmering. âI think it sounds beautiful.â
Ruen, watching from the corner, sighed. âAnd people wonder why we scare everyone.â
Vermond looked up at the projection of the station, imagining the railgun mounted like a crown. âGood. Let them be scared.â
And just outside the station, the god-tier frigate was already being slowly moved into position. It hovered with dignityâan ancient weapon now finding a new purpose.
Soon, it would become a spear aimed at the cosmos. A symbol that the undead were not just survivors.
They were builders of war.
The station buzzed with lifeâif it could be called that. Elite undead moved like precise machines, shifting metal, welding supports, dragging fusion cables across reinforced walkways. The top of the Command Center had been opened up, the dome peeled back to make room for something massive.
On one of the scaffolds, Erie stood, arms crossed, watching as the god-tier frigate was slowly maneuvered into position by thruster drones and magnetic clamps. âSo this is really happening,â he muttered, mostly to himself.
Below, Jard paced back and forth with a data slate in hand, shouting out commands. âI want that rotation joint connected before the stabilizers go in! Weâre not blowing this thing off the roof the moment we fire it!â
An undead with a white mask gave a slow nod, moving to comply. Another team dragged up a huge power conduit the size of a small shuttle.
From the lift, Vermond stepped out, Kiana beside him. She walked close, holding his hand like a possessive shadow, eyes gleaming as the construction unfolded above.
Jard saw them and jogged over, nearly tripping over a loose panel. âVermond! Youâve got timing. The coupling rings are in place. Weâre halfway to mounting the railgun.â
Vermond looked up at the beast of a weapon, the god-tier frigate now just a shell with purpose. âWill it be stable?â
âOnce we secure it to the platform and reroute the stationâs main coil flowâyes. The feedback loops will take time to calibrate, but itâll hold.â
Kiana whispered softly, eyes on the railgun, âIt looks like a divine weaponâ¦â
Erie snorted. âYeah, divine destruction.â
Renn came limping up the walkway with Ruen in tow. The old man squinted at the construction. âYouâve turned our station into a damn shrine to vengeance.â
Vermond didnât look at him. âNo. A fortress. A warning.â
Ruen crossed his arms. âWhat are we calling it?â
Everyone turned. Jard raised a brow.
Vermondâs light eyes gleamed with the number 213. âPale Mirror.â
Kiana tilted her head. âWhy Pale Mirror?â
Vermond smiled faintly. âBecause when they see it, theyâll see the reflection of their end⦠and nothing more.â
Jard gave a whistle. âThatâs metal as hell.â
Erie chuckled. âI like it.â
Suddenly, a heavy vibration shook the scaffold as the final clamps locked into place. The god-tier railgunâs spine aligned with the stationâs core, lights flickering to life as the weaponâs own system synced with the Command Center.
A low hum filled the airâdeep, ominous, powerful.
Jard stared at the readings. âItâs syncing perfectly⦠Weâve got charge control. Give me a day, and we can test fire.â
Vermond nodded, then turned away. âYou have twelve hours.â
âOf course I do,â Jard muttered.
Kiana tightened her hold on Vermondâs hand, leaning her head on his shoulder. âBig brother⦠Pale Mirror suits you. So cold, so beautiful, so deadly.â
Erie leaned toward Renn. âIâm worried about her. She's gotten... weird.â
Renn sighed. âJoin the club.â
But none of them looked away from the railgun now gleaming above their headsâsoon to be the heart of a legend yet to be written in fire and silence.
Inside the dimly lit interior of the undead destroyer, where flickering necrotic lights crawled like veins through the walls, Kiana moved like a ghost. Silent. Intentional. Her white hair shimmered under the blacklight veins pulsing in the corridor, her emerald eyes calm⦠almost too calm.
She reached the cell where the captured cleanser stood chained in a containment field, unmoving as alwaysâuntil she arrived.
The cleanser's blank eyes flickered, perhaps sensing something far beyond its comprehension.
Kiana stepped forward, whispering, âYouâre not like Stitch⦠But you're the same. You wanted him dead, didnât you? You all want him dead.â
The cleanser didnât respond. It couldnât. It just stared.
Kiana tilted her head. âHeâs mine. You donât get to touch him.â
Suddenly, footsteps echoed down the hallway, silent but familiar. Behind one of the nearby corners, Vermond and Erie hid in the shadows. Vermondâs face was unreadable, though his eyes shimmered faintly, already feeling the strange divine pressure leaking from his sister.
Erie leaned in and whispered, âShe snuck off like a cat⦠I told you sheâs been acting weird.â
âQuiet,â Vermond said. But his eyes never left her.
Kiana raised her hand slowly. âStitch didnât listen either⦠I gave him a chance. Iâm generous. I really am.â
The energy around her fingertips glowedâno, radiatedâwith that same divine light that had appeared when Stitch vanished. Her voice, though soft, echoed with a power that didnât belong to this universe.
âYou wonât have another chance.â
With one gentle flick of her finger, the light expandedâand just like that, the cleanser vanished. Not destroyed. Erased.
Silence fell.
Kiana turned around.
And saw Vermond standing there.
Her face remained calm, but her smile curled upward. âOh⦠Big brother, were you spying on me?â
Vermond stepped forward slowly, eyes narrowing. âWhat are you doing, Kiana?â
Kiana tilted her head and walked toward him, her voice sweet. âCleaning the dirt from your path.â
Erie, stepping beside Vermond, squinted. âYou just erased it. Just like that?â
Kianaâs glowing eyes didnât even blink. âHe was never important. Only my big brother is.â
Vermond stared at her, feeling the weight of something vast and ancient inside his sisterâsomething that might not even be human anymore.
Still, he said nothing. Just turned and walked away.
Kiana followed like a shadow, humming softly.
And Erie whispered to himself, âWhat the hell is she becomingâ¦â
Back aboard the station, the hallways hummed with activityâundead workers moving supplies, Jard overseeing construction, and the massive God-tier frigate now restructured as a towering railgun being slowly installed atop the Command Center. But beneath the noise and bustle⦠Vermond and Erie walked in silence.
They said nothing until they reached the overlookâa dark, enclosed walkway that gave them a full view of the void outside. Only the stars, the growing station silhouette, and the slow rotation of the black hole in the distance kept them company.
Vermond leaned on the railing, his eyes narrowed.
Erie stood beside him, arms crossed. âYouâre thinking the same thing I am, right?â
Vermond didnât look at him. âShe didnât hesitate.â
âNo,â Erie said. âShe didnât. And that energy... That wasnât necrotic, wasnât tech. That was something else.â
Vermondâs fingers tightened around the rail. âShe erased a cleanser like it was a speck of dust. And that wasnât the first time.â
Erie grunted. âStitch. And now this one. I saw her smile. Like she enjoyed it.â
They fell quiet again.
Vermond finally said, âThis isnât Kianaâs power. Not fully. Something else is using herâor maybe sheâs letting it in.â
Erie looked at him sideways. âAnd whatâre you gonna do? Confront her?â
Vermondâs voice dropped. âNot yet. Not unless she crosses a line. Right now⦠she still calls me big brother. She still listens.â
âBut how long till that changes?â Erie asked.
Vermond stared out into the stars, the number in his eyes briefly flashingâ213.
âI donât know,â he said. âBut if it does⦠Iâll stop her.â
Erie exhaled and looked away. âDamn it⦠I hate this quiet tension stuff.â
Vermond smirked faintly. âYou prefer screaming and explosions?â
âHell yeah,â Erie muttered. âAt least you know who to punch.â
Vermond gave a low chuckle⦠but deep in his chest, a knot was tightening.
Only the two of them knew now.
And for Vermond, that made it even more dangerous.
As the time passes, The station's hum grew deeper, almost menacing, as the God-tier frigateânow fully transformed into a massive railgunâsat at the apex of the Command Center. The cold steel of its barrels gleamed under the station's lighting, an ominous reminder of the raw power it now possessed. It towered over everything, a weapon capable of bringing down entire fleets, and possibly... more.
Vermond stood at the overlook, his eyes tracing the railgun's form as if it were an extension of himself. Kiana had left his side for now, but her presence still lingered, like an unseen weight on his shoulders. The machine, too, felt like a reminder that things were changingâdarkening.
Beside him, Erie stood, arms crossed, eyeing the structure with a mix of awe and disbelief. "Thatâs... a hell of a piece of tech youâve got there, Vermond. Are we really gonna use it?"
Vermond didn't answer at first. He could feel the railgun's potential, the way it thrummed with a barely contained energy that whispered of destruction. His eyes flickered momentarily, reflecting the number 213, but it didnât matter. What mattered was the question Erie had asked.
"We're gonna use it, alright," Vermond finally replied, his voice quiet but firm. "Weâre building something bigger than ourselves now. The Federation, the Folkan, the Outlaws... theyâll all have to understand one thing."
Erie raised an eyebrow. "Whatâs that?"
"That weâre not just surviving anymore. Weâre taking control." Vermondâs gaze shifted back to the railgun, as if the sight of it was giving him clarity. âAnd if that means a little destruction along the wayâ¦â
The hum of the stationâs energy systems deepened.
Vermondâs lips curled into a small, calculating smile.
"Weâll send a message. No one messes with us. Not anymore."
Erie paused for a moment, looking at the railgun again. "A message, huh? Thatâs one hell of a way to send it."
As the station's core systems powered up, the lights flickering with an eerie pulse, the railgun hummed louder, as though it was eager for what was to come. The cold air around them grew heavier.
From a distance, the power of the railgun was undeniableâa singular, terrifying piece of machinery that could wipe out entire fleets in a single shot.
âLetâs make sure itâs ready,â Vermond said, finally breaking the silence. âWeâve got a lot more to do before we leave this place. But we need the message to be loud, clear, and unmissable.â
Erie nodded slowly, a grin tugging at the corner of his mouth. âHell of a thing to wake up to, huh? The galaxy better hope we donât get bored.â
Vermondâs eyes flickered once more, the number in them blinking â 213.
âWeâre not just going to get bored,â he said, his voice colder than before. âWeâre going to take the galaxy by storm.â
As the power surged through the station, echoing through its halls, it was clear: the stage was set. The next chapter had begun.
And the universe was about to feel the full force of what they had unleashed.